..continued from previous page 11
Might is Right
Economics
Marxists
who have analysed these bourgeois revolutions have explained the
“rights of man” as an ideology accompanying the development of
the market economy which these revolutions both reflected and
encouraged (see, for instance, The Political Theory of Possessive
Individualism by C.B. Macpherson). On the market, especially the
ideal free competitive market, all commodity-producers are equal in
the sense of the market not according special privileges to any of
them (hence the call for the abolition of all titles of nobility);
they are also free agents in the sense of making their own decisions
independently of each other about what and how much to produce and
sell; the market, the outcome of these decisions of the free and
equal commodity-producers, operates independently of the government
(hence it is the duty of the government to accept that all men are
free and equal).
It
is not only Marxists who associate “human rights” with the market
economy. So do advocates of the so-called “free” market. Here’s
what the Cato Institute, a free-market think-tank in America, had to
say in a document put out in 1996 (opposing trade sanctions against
China for its bad “human rights” record):
“Free
trade is itself a human right and rests on an individual's rights to
life, liberty, and property - rights the U.S. Founding Fathers
regarded as inalienable and self-evident ( . . .). The proper
function of government is to cultivate a framework for freedom by
protecting liberty and property, including freedom of contract (which
includes free international trade) - not to use the power of
government to undermine one freedom in an attempt to secure others.
The right to trade is an inherent part of our property rights and a
civil right that should be protected as a fundamental human right.
The supposed dichotomy between the right to trade and human rights is
a false one. Market exchange rests on private property, which is a
natural right. As moral agents, individuals necessarily claim the
right to liberty and property in order to live fully and to pursue
their interests in a responsible manner. The freedom to act without
interference, provided one respect the equal rights of others, is the
core principle of a market economy and the essence of human rights.”
(http://www.cato.org/pubs/journal/cj16n1-5.html)
This
association of human rights and political democracy generally with
the market economy and private property is the official policy of the
US government. When it criticises the human rights record of Syria or
Iran or North Korea (or, less stridently these days, China), what it
is criticising is not so much the imprisonment of dissidents as the
fact that these countries have state-run economies which don’t
allow US corporations free access to invest and buy and sell.
That
the US government uses “human rights” to try to impose its form
of capitalism on other countries must be an embarrassment to
organisations such as Amnesty who are interested in these rights for
their own sake. It allows the governments they criticise to dismiss
them as tools of US and Western foreign policy. Which objectively -
even if quite unintentionally of course - they are.
Lowered
sights
This
wouldn’t be the criticism we would make of them. We would criticise
them for having set their sights too low. In confining themselves to
only taking up individual cases, they are missing the big picture.
There’s nothing wrong with writing to prisoners (any prisoners, not
just political ones) and taking up their case with the authorities.
This will ease a little the lot of the prisoners chosen, but can’t
really be called political action.
We
would of course like Amnesty and the others involved in this sort of
humanitarian work to work for socialism. Or even, to work for the
coming of political democracy to those countries without it, as the
best political condition under capitalism for the development of the
socialist movement. But the various human rights organisations have
deliberately chosen not to do this. This is not just because it would
close all channels of communication with the political authorities
they have to deal with to have any chance of achieving something in
the individual cases they take up. It is also because they, either
implicitly or explicitly, regard working for something bigger such as
political democracy (let alone socialism) as to set too unrealistic a
goal in the sense of something not likely to be achieved in the near
future.
Human
rights organisations are not the only ones to take up this position.
In the last thirty or so years it has become the general position of
people concerned about some problem or other thrown up by capitalism.
In the past such people would have joined the Labour Party or the
Communist Party to try to solve the problem by national political
action. Now they have given up on this and dispersed into hundreds of
single issue organisations (Amnesty, Shelter, Greenpeace, Child
Poverty Action, etc, etc.). It is as if they have accepted that
capitalism is here to stay and have adopted the tactic of merely
trying to make things a little less bad in the field of their
particular concern. It’s a reflection of the pessimism that has
resulted from the failure of reformism, in which so many people had
previously placed such high hopes.
No
doubt such people gain some satisfaction when they make progress in a
particular individual case, but can they really be satisfied with the
prospect of endlessly having to fight such cases again and again? Can
they really be happy seeing the future as capitalism continuing for
ever with them trying to stop it stamping so hard on people?
Hopefully
not. Hopefully they will eventually come round to realising that it
makes more sense to work for a world in which there will be no
violation of human rights since there will be no governments
representing the interest of minority ruling classes with an interest
in violating them to protect their privileges and rule. In other
words, a classless, stateless world based on the common ownership and
democratic control of the means of life by and in the interest of all
the people, in which there would be no market as there’d be
production directly for use.
In
such a world the whole concept of “human rights” would be part of
the in-built democratic nature of a classless society (whether as
procedural rules or as spontaneous behaviour patterns). There would
be no minority ruling class or armed political centre against which
people would need protection - no institutionalised might against
which a counter-might would need to be exercised.
ADAM
BUICK