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The boss of world car maker Nissan  — arrested and under intense surveillance around his luxury mansion, and charged with gorging himself with about $140 million of unauthorized pay — makes a daring escape from under the nose of Japanese authorities and across half the world. It will take months for details of how Carlos Ghosn ran away to become public, and probably years to verify which of them are true and which are diversionary stories. However, the lessons about global capitalism are already plain to see.

While the press debates the inhumane procedures of Japanese courts and confinement versus the illegal flight of Ghosn, it gives little attention to the fact that the Ghosn-Nissan-Renault affair is a clash among thieves over the profits sweated from hundreds of thousands of workers. For twenty years the press adored Ghosn for his talents at exploitation.

The escape drama underlines that the globalization of corporations, production, and supply chains does not create a unified capitalist class. Just the opposite, the battle of capitalist interests becomes global, too.

Despite intellectuals who chatter about the surpassing of national sovereignty, state power remains more important than ever. Ghosn found refuge in Lebanon. Japan and Lebanon have no extradition treaty. State boundaries define limits of coercive state power, a reality that currently infuriates Japanese authorities.

Incidentally, the detail about workers forced to urinate in their pants was published by a mainstream newspaper in Japan almost a year ago, when the capitalist media there were in the process of removing Ghosn’s crown.

Hollywood will most likely make a suspense thriller about Carlos Ghosn’s escape. The movie might portray the contention between capitalists, but it will hardly underline the fact that it is all a fight over the spoils of exploitation. The Godfather is a brilliant epic showing that the mafia reproduces big business in miniature, but the first part in particular hides what the mafia is about: it extorts small businesses, preys upon working people susceptible to the vain hope of gambling and the doomed refuge of drugs, and hires out thugs to employers when workers want to unionize.

There is no greater drama than socialist revolution. Hollywood has yet to make a movie about how Lenin got out of tsarist-imposed exile in neutral Switzerland during the First World War and traveled with associates in a special closed train to Russia shortly after the revolution of 1917 began. History will tuck Carlos Ghosn away in a footnote — and see new triumphs on the path that Lenin took.

            <p class="postmeta">This article was posted on Tuesday, January 7th, 2020 at 10:41pm and is filed under <a href="https://dissidentvoice.org/category/asia/middle-east/lebanon/beirut/" rel="category tag">Beirut</a>, <a href="https://dissidentvoice.org/category/europe/france/" rel="category tag">France</a>, <a href="https://dissidentvoice.org/category/capitalism/global-capitalism/" rel="category tag">Global Capitalism</a>, <a href="https://dissidentvoice.org/category/arts-and-entertainment/hollywood/" rel="category tag">Hollywood</a>, <a href="https://dissidentvoice.org/category/asia/japan/" rel="category tag">Japan</a>, <a href="https://dissidentvoice.org/category/asia/middle-east/lebanon/" rel="category tag">Lebanon</a>, <a href="https://dissidentvoice.org/category/media/" rel="category tag">Media</a>. </p>