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Born out of genocide; born to live off
genocide
by
Jacques Depelchin
Capitalism
has been so genocidal that it is worthwhile to posit that it cannot do
otherwise, despite attempts to humanize it. How it came about, how it has been
portrayed (by friends and foes) over the centuries but especially now,
reinforces the idea that it cannot be done away with. How and where it has
slaughtered in massive and horrific ways should be understood as only the
smallest manifestation of its genocidal nature - not just against one group of
people, but against all human beings. Could it have been otherwise?
Those
who are convinced that capitalism can be humanized shall argue yes.
Unfortunately, the data are so skewed in their favor that to argue the opposite
is as huge an obstacle as the challenge faced by the slaves who rose up against
slavery in Haiti in 1791. If the above question is going to be discussed
adequately, capitalism and its history must no longer be treated as if, by
definition, it is immune from evil. The hypothesis is that the principles which
have sustained it, propagate death. Capitalism kills everything it touches,
especially when it claims to do otherwise. It has devised as many ways of
killing as there are declared and undeclared worshippers.
Capitalism
and how victims of genocides become killers
Self-appointed
certifiers of evil can easily be blind to their own actions. For former US
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, the death of half a million children in
Iraq as a result of US imposed sanctions was considered "worth" the effort. Yet,
why does it seem easier to accept the description of a Hutu machete-wielding
genocider as beyond barbarism? It is as if certain epithets and words can only
be linked to certain peoples. Yet, victims of genocides can easily become
killers; more easily than can be imagined. In its history of always imposing its
principles, rules and laws, capitalism shall eventually face the very practices
it has attributed to its enemies.
As
capitalism inaugurated itself, about 500 years ago, so it has continued to
reproduce itself, modernizing its ways and refining how it sells itself. The
current occupation of Iraq is a modernized, updated visual illustration of how
Amerindians were stripped of their land and how Africans and Asians were yanked
from their homes and land by what came to be known initially as The System -
meaning slavery and all that grew out of it.
There
is a tendency, even among the most critical voices (e.g. Howard Zinn's History
of the United States), not to see the connections between what could be
described as the inaugural homelessness of the Amerindians and the Africans,
Hitler's lebensraum, today's homelessness in the richest countries of the Planet
and the same phenomenon in the streets of Fallujah, Palestine and South Africa.
At this rate, for how long will humanity be able to call Planet Earth
home?
I do
not claim to say anything new. Many have said it before, more eloquently,
forcefully and inspiringly (e.g. Fredy Perlman, Against His-tory, Against
Leviathan; Bertram Gross, Friendly Fascism). The tradition of resisting the
system did not just start from 19th century Europe, as it included those who
left no writings, but screamed and fought like hell against their kin predators.
It has included the survivors of certified and uncertified holocausts. It must
include the voices which continue to be silenced because their suffering did not
register on the Richter Scale of genocidal certification, and remain stubbornly
unacknowledged. Repetition, in different multiple ways, can be helpful in
strengthening resistance to capitalism, in its terrorizing and/or user-friendly
forms. For example, the well-known genocidal sequences of the twentieth century
have been identified (and certified) in ways which, in one stroke, exempt and
anonymize the real culprit from closer scrutiny.
Why
‘Never Again’ has always been applied selectively
And,
if the famous ‘Never Again’ should really be stood by, it is necessary to look
at capitalism with less benevolent, opportunistic eyes simply because the
pillars of power today (military, economic, political, juridical, cultural and
religious) have been molded by the manner in which capitalism emerged and sees
itself as angelic, in triumphal colors. One of the measures (and by no means the
only one) of how total the triumph has been, can be seen, most recently, in how
the current US administration is forcing the nation-state signatories of
environmental and international criminal laws to retreat from signed agreements,
whether in Geneva, Kyoto or Rome. But then, this ignoring of international
conventions and covenants is not new, as, for example, can be seen today by how
the Convention Against Genocide (1948) has been ignored by the signatories.
Globalization
as being portrayed today by the G8 has been sold in the same fashion over the
last 500 years: through a combination of military conquests, territorial
occupation, minimal social and humanitarian programs, corruption, severe and
protracted punishment for those who, collectively or individually, do not submit
(e.g. Haiti, Cuba, Grenada, Nicaragua, Lumumba, Malcolm X, Martin Luther King,
Leonard Peltier, Mumia Abu Jamal, to only mention a few).
By
definition, capitalism carries within it an unrelenting need for total control
not just of the market, but of everything, of life and death. There is no other
morality or ethics but the triumph of the power principle "might is right".
‘Never Again’ cannot just apply to the WWII Holocaust, but must be linked to the
genocidal sequences unleashed by capitalism, otherwise, ‘Never Again’ will never
apply (or ever so selectively as has been the practice).
From
slavery until today, the system has been regularly updated and modernized. In
times of crisis, when its real nature is difficult to hide, capitalism takes on
a reformist mantle as it did through the abolition of slavery, or in other
transitional phases, such as from colonial rule, or from Apartheid in South
Africa.
To
those who argue that what we are seeing is no different from how previous
empires have come and gone, one can only say that it is the first time in
history that humans have mastered the capacity to instantly destroy all life on
the Planet. From the end of World War II, or more precisely, since Hiroshima and
Nagasaki, efforts have been made to control the proliferation of nuclear
weapons. Those efforts have failed, are failing and shall continue to fail
unless the deep, rarely acknowledged causes which led to WW I, WW II, WW III
(The so-called Cold War) and WW IV (Worldwide Structural Adjustment Programs
which have come full circle to the US via the attempt to do away with social
security) and WW V (the current war, without end, against terror) are looked at
without complacency. As of now it is possible to argue that nuclear power is to
the physics world or to nature as capitalism is to economics: both are
untamable.
The
submission/integration to capital has now reached an unprecedented level:
geographical, political, ideological, legal, cultural and religious. In an
analysis of the crisis of political leadership in the DRC, Ernest Wamba dia
Wamba (2005) pointed out that the state (as fashioned in Africa by capital, from
colonial to post-colonial times) appears as genetically coded to be at the
service of capital, regardless of geographical borders. Capital has no
allegiance and can be truly described as "sans foi ni loi" (faithless and
lawless), rewriting rules and laws as it spreads, facilitating its never ending
expansion. All and everything is fodder to its insatiable appetite. Could it
ever have been emancipatory as envisaged at one point? What can be answered with
certainty is that, from how it has unfolded, humanity must extract some sort of
emancipatory breathing space, while avoiding falling into the very same
practices of seeking power by any means necessary.
What
if evil had always been at the core of
capitalism?
The
process of definitively extricating ourselves from its shackles will require
applying the following principles: resist its further spread through constant
and systematic non-violence against all of its manifestations wherever and
whenever they are seen and understood. Affirm the mortality of capital by
upholding the immortality of the human.
‘Unrealistic’
will say some. When millions of human beings on earth are faced with living off
less than 5 dollars a day, the only realistic position ought to strive to change
it as urgently as possible; maybe under the form of ‘A Declaration Against
Capital as Genocidal’ which could signal the beginning of a truth procedure
toward rendering capitalism and its sustaining structures obsolete.
The
genocidal nature of capital is hidden from view, in great part, because the
rules for identifying a genocide are written in such a way that capital is
safely disconnected from responsibility. In that process basic notions like
justice lose their universal integrity because the system has become extremely
adept at justifying and rationalizing the most unacceptable, the most
unjustifiable crimes. The very history of the WW II Holocaust has preferred to
focus on the personalization of the culprits while, at the same time, trying
very hard to erase or downplay corporate responsibility. But even at the level
of corporate responsibility, personalizing evil by actually naming corporations
which benefited from the Holocaust is not very helpful from the perspective of
determining with as much precision as possible what is responsible for the
inability, reluctance and refusal to identify the most intractable source of
evil.
It is
obvious why capital, its history and all of the structures which have grown out
of it should not be considered as the ultimate source of evil in today's world.
Most people, even among those who suffer the most from capital's impact world
wide, are willing to give capital the benefit of the doubt, if only on account
of a list of "positive things" which are associated with capital. Yet, if given
a real viable choice, most people would certainly prefer to be able to feed
themselves without having to rely on charity.
The
convergence and concentration, through and thanks to corporations, of military,
economic, financial, political, scientific and religious power in the hands of
very few individuals worldwide, is unprecedented. Sometimes it looks as if WW II
never really ended, and that the fight for world supremacy was reconfigured for
the benefit of the one capable of frightening the rest of the world into
submission because its military arsenal had the demonstrated capacity to destroy
life on Earth. This capacity is easy to understand when referring to the nuclear
armament industry and militarism, but most advocates of peace on earth are not
willing to confront the system which, according to them, sustains both the
positive and the negative; because the unstated assumption is that capitalism,
by definition, cannot be evil, cannot lead to evil behavior. Thus, such evil
institutions as The Gulag cannot be associated with the US in any way, as
Amnesty International found out upon publishing its latest annual report in
which it compares the prison networks maintained by the US to the Soviet Gulag.
Entertaining such comparisons, thoughts and hypotheses would undermine the basis
upon which the triumphal histories of the so-called most advanced nations have
been written.
Global
capital vs. US capital to capital vs. all the peoples of the
world?
Sometimes
the proof that something no longer works takes several failures to be accepted,
but what if capital has no way of recognizing failure? Capital can no longer
impose itself through wars of conquests, even if some continue to think that
owning the biggest military machine in history gives them the right to keep
re-conquering the Planet, over and over.
Just
recently (June 20-24), Beijing was flexing its muscles in a bid to buy one of
the US oil companies, (UNOCAL). As if this was not enough of a sign of the
changing times, Mr. Greenspan, Head of the US Federal Reserve Bank, has warned
the Bush administration against trying punitive measures against Chinese imports
because such a move would not help increase jobs in the US market. However,
neither Greenspan's proposed remedy (among other things, specializing in "smart
jobs" as once advocated by Robert Reich, Secretary of Labor under the first
Clinton Administration) will not work because, across the board, from India to
China, via Malaysia, Taiwan and South Korea, blue and white collar workers have
become smarter and more productive than their US counterparts. Mr. Greenspan's
thinking is typical of a believer in the global capitalist system, joining hands
with the CEOs of IBM, Intel, financiers, bankers, etc. who look at the Chinese
market as the ultimate promised land.
Is
it bio-technology (life) or thanato-technology
(death)?
The US
ruling establishment has convinced itself and a great part of the world that its
monopoly of weapons of mass destruction is the safest protection against evil,
even though the 500 year build-up to this supremacy demonstrates the opposite.
And the situation is getting worse. One of the most important indicators of how
much more lethal capital has become, is the privatization of the US Army and the
flow of profits to the corporations. This domination of the military industrial
and prison complex is complimented by domination in the
entertainment/sport/leisure industry (which includes the food industry, the film
and advertising industries) whose combined function is to prevent the citizens
from thinking, or better to have the illusion of thinking, under the sedation of
the entertainment industry. Thinking outside the box is only meant for profit,
for increasing consumption, not for solving social issues. Outside of the box is
actually within an already prepared larger box.
Empowerment
within the pyramidal configuration of the existing power structure can not help
but reproduce that structure when what is called for is its dissolution in favor
of the sphere (as beautifully shown by Ayi Kwei Armah in his last novel KMT: In
the House of Life, Per Ankh, 2002) where the emphasis is away from competition
and confrontation and toward cooperation and harmony among people and with
nature.
The
emphasis on competition has been so severe that it has transformed, for example,
the meaning of words like healing. As practiced today in the US, the health
industry is not about healing, it is much more about how, as the popular phrase
goes, to "make a killing" by looking for (and selling) the miracle cure or the
miracle medical technical procedure. The market reigns supreme in the collective
and individual minds. Its relentlessness so completely blinds those who should
be served that it has acquired a life of its own as though nothing can be done
to dampen or control its most destructive features. Simple, common sense
understanding of the relationship between one's health and what is eaten and
drunk as the best and most effective way of maintaining health is losing
credibility, thanks to skilful advertising.
Primitive
accumulation is no longer about separating the producers from their means of
production, but about stripping human beings of their capacity to think. This
divisive mechanism has been so refined, so internalized, that individuals are
instinctively more concerned about the survival of the system which is killing
them rather than about the survival of their bodies.
Which
way forward?
A
criminal running away from the crime ends up committing more and more
horrendous
crimes in order to cover up the previous ones, and so it has been and continues
with capitalism. Since the crimes have never been acknowledged as such, runaway
genocidal sequences continue and are getting worse despite ethics courses being
taught in law, business and medical schools, and despite the proliferation of
human rights organizations. When the G8 and their formal and informal acolytes
vow to fight for Africa and make poverty history it sounded like previous pious
vows about abolition. The source of poverty is greed. Capitalism thrives on
greed, poverty, violence, warfare and injustice. Why not make capitalism
history?
A
system which has been genocidal cannot help but seek to reproduce itself through
what it perceives as "having worked" even though the price is becoming less and
less acceptable. Given the economic, financial and legal system, conviction will
never happen and could only happen if people battle for another world on the
basis of principles framed by a higher law, a law which is not framed by the
dictates of capital, but by the principles of solidarity, cooperation, justice
and peace with all peoples of the Planet.
Every
year on August 6th and 9th, the Hibakusha (survivors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki),
along with nuclear abolitionists and supporters try to remind the world,
anxiously, that no one should ever suffer what they went through. Should it not
be obvious that the triumphant managers of capitalism and their millions upon
millions (generation after generation) of nameless victims are generic
Hibakusha, before their time, of a system gone mad.
The
anxiety in the voices of the Hibakusha from Hiroshima and Nagasaki comes from
wondering what will happen when they die. But one is also encouraged by the
inexhaustible fidelity to what is best in humanity, exemplified by Haitians from
1791 to 1804 and through to today (2005), by survivors of the WW II Holocaust
battling for Palestinians, by anti-apartheid militants who have refused to cash
in on their dues because, as they saw the seamless slide from South African to
global apartheid, their conscience called on them to continue in the spirit of
those who, in 1791, in Haiti, faced unimaginably worst
odds.
Jacques
Depelchin is Executive Director of the Ota Benga Alliance for Peace in
the DRC.
This article was originally published by
Pambazuka News
http://www.pambazuka.org Reprinted with permission.
Posted October
25, 2005
URL:
www.thecitizenfsr.org
SM
2000-2011
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