lunes, 24 de agosto de 2015

El derecho fundamental a elegir lo que consumimos

 
 
El texto entero de la visita del autor a "El Corte Inglés" de Pyong-yang en 1989 puede leerse aquí, vía  Newmarksdoor. Es digno de leerse porque encierra una sorpresa acerca de la verdadera naturaleza de estos grandes almacenes.
 
Department Store Number 1 was a tacit admission of the desirability of an abundance of material goods, consumption of which was very much a proper goal of mankind. Such an admission of the obvious would not have been in any way remarkable were it not that socialists so frequently deny it, criticising liberal capitalist democracy because of its wastefulness and its inculcation of artificial desires in its citizens, thereby obscuring their ‘true’ interests. By stocking Department Store Number 1 with as many goods as they could find, in order to impress foreign visitors, the North Koreans admitted that material plenty was morally preferable to shortage, and that scarcity was not a sign of abstemious virtue; rather it was proof of economic inefficiency. Choice, even in small matters, gives meaning to life. However well fed, however comfortable modern man might be without it, he demands choice as a right, not because it is economically superior, but as an end in itself. By pretending to offer it, the North Koreans acknowledged as much; and in doing so, recognised that they were consciously committed to the denial of what everyone wants.
Theodore Dalrymple

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