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Trade officials, corporations find market solutions to pesky protestors.
by
Dennis Hans
World Trade or
Globalization and the Maquiladoras
Hot Button: Genetically Modified Foods
Summers, who years ago made a less-well received suggestion that poor nations be paid to import the First World's toxins and trash, maintains that developing nations are woefully underprotested. He points to China, which has had to pretend that a handful of religious oddballs pose a political threat, and to Haiti, whose protesting ranks were thinned considerably by police killings in the early 1990s. So Summers was delighted to announce Friday that Haiti and China have agreed to remove tariffs on a range of rabble-rousing products, from outside agitators to union organizers. Within the next few days 20,000 will be packed onto freighters docked in Seattle; they should arrive in their new homelands in time for the holidays.
"The key to cementing the deal," said Summers, "was the cultural sensitivity of the Clinton administration. We want the American dissidents to fit in, so we insisted that the host governments show them the same courtesies they show local dissidents."
A Monsanto spokesman scoffed at the notion the Rebel 2000® is not a "protestor" in the true sense of the word. "The Rebel® will express his resentment toward the WTO and big, bad corporations in his clothing," said the spokesman. "Marlboro haters will wear Camel gear. Gap, Inc. naysayers will don Liz Claiborne or Tommy Hilfiger."
Dennis Hans' satiric essays have appeared in the
New York Times,
the
Washington Post,
the
National Post
(Canada), the
San Francisco Chronicle,
In These Times,
and online at the MoJo Wire and Z Magazine, among other outlets.
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