And
they call this democracy?
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When governments or regimes aren’t quite to the liking of the richer
democracies then a little help in getting it right doesn’t go amiss.
Money can be channelled in through lobbyists, media groups and NGOs.
Western-leaning candidates can be hailed and promoted and propped up
until they run out of uses or worse, transgress the controller’s rules
at which time, in an Orwellian switch, regime change becomes necessary
yet again.
The long-running saga (open sore) of Palestine/Israel continues. The
most recent history of these lands shows that democracy is acceptable
for some but not for others. Even after the overwhelming victory of
Hamas in the internationally acclaimed free and fair elections the big
powers couldn’t accept this as a suitable democracy. Democracy must fit
into strict parameters condoned by the powerful. Funds were withdrawn
by the EU, the US backed Israel’s withholding of payments, even when
Hamas agreed to include members from the losing party Fatah to attempt
to make a unity government.
The world’s largest democracy, India, has a few pertinent examples of
how capitalism and democracy are incompatible. Arundhati Roy (novelist
and activist) is a well known critic of the governments there, both
local and national and is a defender of people’s rights on the issue of
big dams. In her book The Cost of Living, on the topic of the Sardar
Sarovar dam on the Narmada River, she says that what began 10 years
previously as a fight for one river valley eventually “began to raise
doubts about an entire political system. What is at issue now is the
very nature of our democracy. Who owns this land?” The dam site and
adjacent areas were already under the Indian Official Secrets Act when
in September 1989 50,000 people from all over India gathered in the
valley pledging to fight ‘destructive development’. What followed was
more democracy in action. The site was “clamped under section 144 which
prohibits the gathering of groups of more than 5 people.” Local people
continued to protest and many pledged to drown rather than move from
their homes. The Japanese Friends of the Earth’s campaign resulted in
getting their government to withdraw 27 billion yen loan to finance the
project and more international pressure mounted on the World Bank. The
democratic knock-on was more repression in the valley with government
policy being described by one minister as to “flood the valley with
khaki.” At stake were huge contracts involving important and already
wealthy people. Never mind that big dams have long been discredited for
reasons including devastation of farmlands and forests, sedimentation
creating shorter than estimated life spans, salination and waterlogging
of land irrigated downstream, etc etc. It’s even questionable whether
there will be enough water to reach Gujarat’s towns at the end of the
chain – the original stated purpose from as long ago as the early
1960s. At stake also were the lives and livelihoods ultimately of
millions of people, but these people had little or no money so couldn’t
be part of the equation. They were simply disposable and although
supposed to be compensated or given new land this simply isn’t
happening. Democracy forges ahead, enriching minorities and further
impoverishing millions.
In the free world, in the long-established democracies, in the newly
fledged wannabe democracies, the virus of the anti-terrorism crusade is
spreading fast bringing tighter laws and increased controls, reining in
freedoms with world-wide use of police and/or troops against civil
protest, laws akin to those foretold by Orwell and Huxley – too weird
to be thought true by many. Take care of being suspected of even
thinking about committing a subversive act. This really brings to life
one of Joseph Heller’s characters of some 40 years ago who “was
jeopardising his traditional rights of freedom and independence by
daring to exercise them.” Complacent populations allow it to happen.
Uninformed, ignorant populations allow it to happen. People have
accepted the one-sided terms and conditions with little or no question,
without signing a contract. There is no contract, just a one-way edict.
It’s commonly said that everyone has an equal chance in life, something
that, to anyone with a working brain bigger than a peanut, is patently
not true. A system so stacked in favour of a few over many can’t be
seen as just. How has this crumbling edifice called democracy managed
to stand for so long? “Nothing’s perfect,” people say. No, but how long
do you wait before you pull a rotten tooth? Are these governments and
their democracies relevant to their populaces? Are they credible?
This has all been said before, in other ways, in other places, by other
people but it seems not loudly enough yet, not often enough yet, not
yet by enough people. “Is it monstrous to think about how to create the
possibility of human relationships based on equality, on social justice
and on solidarity and relationships from which the use of violence,
terrorism and war is excluded by common accord?” wrote Gino Strada, an
Italian war surgeon for ten or so years, in his book Green Parrots.
Enough people speaking out and acting in accord with their conscience,
not cowed down, refusing to be brainwashed, not suffering from the
comfort of amnesia or the ostrich syndrome can bring about social
change. Howard Zinn stresses that “our most deadly enemies may not be
hiding in caves and compounds abroad but in the corporate boardrooms
and government offices where decisions are made that consign millions
to death and misery – not deliberately but as collateral damage of the
lust for power and profit.”
When and where, if ever, was a population last asked how they would
define democracy? We, the people, in countries large and small, are
told that we have democracy. We are told this by leaders who say we
should trust them, who keep information from us because that’s in our
best interest, who deliberately lie to us, who can have us stopped and
searched in the interest of national security, who have us watched
night and day in our town centres, who listen in to telephone
conversations, who have access to more and more of our personal
information, bank details etc., who can put blocks on our access to the
internet, who have centralised computer records to use, (or lose) as
they choose, who can rein us in and let us out with special measures,
who decide whether we can show dissent. And they call this democracy.
And people buy it.
Nearly 40 years on from Chomsky’s talk at the New York Poetry Centre
what can be said about the incompatibility of capital and democracy?
That capital continues to widen the rifts between people, between
sections of community, between countries; that capitalism is enabling a
tiny minority to own an ever-increasing share of the world’s wealth to
the detriment of billions of people; that capitalism turns a blind eye
to democracy, preferring simple acquisition.
Democracy needs no self-aggrandizing leaders with big egos to polish,
no experts and specialists with projects linked to big business and
personal gain as motivation. Democracy needs no rallying cries causing
flag-waving nationalism. Democracy, in essence, is simple and easily
understood. Democracy speaks the whole truth (without an oath), reveals
all the evidence, enables informed discussion and decisions and
requires inclusion for all in dialogue. Democracy means common
ownership and control of the world’s assets for the benefit of and in
the interests of all. Democracy’s responsibility is to every member of
the world community.
Janet Surman
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