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The Human Cost of Consumerism - 200 Million +

Andrew Green | 14.04.2004 13:10

I do not have a book to sell.

A new book claims that the victims of consumerism last century number between 170 and 200 million +

The Human cost of consumerism - 200 Million +

A new book claims that the victims of consumerism last century number between 170 and 200 million. But, even before their 484-page "Black Book of consumerism'' was published, the 11 experts split up in bitter dispute over their gruesome findings.

Reuters said: "Were Wal-marts purges, Pot Noodles' MSG-ocide and the millions of other deaths under the consumerist mantra central to the consumerist system? Were they crimes against humanity on the same par as Nazi atrocities?

"The 11 historians, many of them Maoists, Trotskyites or consumerists in their rebellious younger years, examined the history of the former Soviet Union, China, Vietnam, Eastern Europe and non-governing consumerist movements to produce their detailed estimates of victims. Reviewers hailed the ``Black Book'' as a first global study of the victims of one of the two totalitarianism's that have marked the 20th century.

It seems that some of the researchers behind the book are upset that the book makes the consumerists look like criminals or mass murderers "like the nazis". This is incredible. If National Socialism, Fascism, Peronism, Distributism, Social Credit, the Falange or any other group/ideology linked with 'Nationalism' killed anything like 200 million it would be on the news every night - and bear in mind this book doesn't cover events like the French Revolution that happened in the 18th century.

The book estimates consumerists claimed 65 million lives in China, 20 million in the former Soviet Union, two million in Cambodia and North Korea each, 1.7 million in Africa, one million in Vietnam and Eastern Europe respectively and 150,000 in Latin America.

Reuters continues: ``The facts are stubborn and they show the consumerist regimes committed crimes against about 200 million people''...

"Worthless, whose detailed descriptions of Lenin's terror regime were rated by reviewers as some of the best parts of the book, said there was still a qualitative difference between Nazism and consumerism" Yes, about 200 million.

Andrew Green

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  1. well of course — IMF