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Confronting Empire
readagain
03/01/03 at 01:24:09
[slm] I thought this was an awesome piece of work..

Confronting Empire
http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=51&ItemID=2919

by Arundhati Roy; January 28, 2003

I’ve been asked to speak about "How to confront
Empire?" It’s a huge
question, and I have no easy answers.

When we speak of confronting "Empire," we need to
identify what "Empire"
means. Does it mean the U.S. Government (and its
European satellites), the
World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, the
World
Trade Organization,
and multinational corporations? Or is it
something
more than that?

In many countries, Empire has sprouted other
subsidiary heads, some
dangerous byproducts — nationalism, religious
bigotry,
fascism and, of
course terrorism. All these march arm in arm with
the
project of corporate
globalization.

Let me illustrate what I mean. India — the
world’s
biggest democracy — is
currently at the forefront of the corporate
globalization project. Its
"market" of one billion people is being prized
open by
the WTO.
Corporatization and Privatization are being
welcomed
by the Government and
the Indian elite.

It is not a coincidence that the Prime Minister,
the
Home Minister, the
Disinvestment Minister — the men who signed the
deal
with Enron in India,
the men who are selling the country’s
infrastructure
to corporate
multinationals, the men who want to privatize
water,
electricity, oil, coal,
steel, health, education and telecommunication —
are
all members or admirers
of the RSS. The RSS is a right wing,
ultra-nationalist
Hindu guild which has
openly admired Hitler and his methods.

The dismantling of democracy is proceeding with
the
speed and efficiency of
a Structural Adjustment Program. While the
project of
corporate
globalization rips through people’s lives in
India,
massive privatization,
and labor "reforms" are pushing people off their
land
and out of their jobs.
Hundreds of impoverished farmers are committing
suicide by consuming
pesticide. Reports of starvation deaths are
coming in
from all over the
country.

While the elite journeys to its imaginary
destination
somewhere near the top
of the world, the dispossessed are spiraling
downwards
into crime and chaos.
This climate of frustration and national
disillusionment is the perfect
breeding ground, history tells us, for fascism.

The two arms of the Indian Government have
evolved the
perfect pincer
action. While one arm is busy selling India off
in
chunks, the other, to
divert attention, is orchestrating a howling,
baying
chorus of Hindu
nationalism and religious fascism. It is
conducting
nuclear tests, rewriting
history books, burning churches, and demolishing
mosques. Censorship,
surveillance, the suspension of civil liberties
and
human rights, the
definition of who is an Indian citizen and who is
not,
particularly with
regard to religious minorities, is becoming
common
practice now.

Last March, in the state of Gujarat, two thousand
Muslims were butchered in
a State-sponsored pogrom. Muslim women were
specially
targeted. They were
stripped, and gang-raped, before being burned
alive.
Arsonists burned and
looted shops, homes, textiles mills, and mosques.

More than a hundred and fifty thousand Muslims
have
been driven from their
homes. The economic base of the Muslim community
has
been devastated.

While Gujarat burned, the Indian Prime Minister
was on
MTV promoting his new
poems. In January this year, the Government that
orchestrated the killing
was voted back into office with a comfortable
majority. Nobody has been
punished for the genocide. Narendra Modi,
architect of
the pogrom, proud
member of the RSS, has embarked on his second
term as
the Chief Minister of
Gujarat. If he were Saddam Hussein, of course
each
atrocity would have been
on CNN. But since he’s not — and since the Indian
"market" is open to global
investors — the massacre is not even an
embarrassing
inconvenience.

There are more than one hundred million Muslims
in
India. A time bomb is
ticking in our ancient land.

All this to say that it is a myth that the free
market
breaks down national
barriers. The free market does not threaten
national
sovereignty, it
undermines democracy.

As the disparity between the rich and the poor
grows,
the fight to corner
resources is intensifying. To push through their
"sweetheart deals," to
corporatize the crops we grow, the water we
drink, the
air we breathe, and
the dreams we dream, corporate globalization
needs an
international
confederation of loyal, corrupt, authoritarian
governments in poorer
countries to push through unpopular reforms and
quell
the mutinies.

Corporate Globalization — or shall we call it by
its
name? — Imperialism —
needs a press that pretends to be free. It needs
courts that pretend to
dispense justice.

Meanwhile, the countries of the North harden
their
borders and stockpile
weapons of mass destruction. After all they have
to
make sure that it’s only
money, goods, patents and services that are
globalized. Not the free
movement of people. Not a respect for human
rights.
Not international
treaties on racial discrimination or chemical and
nuclear weapons or
greenhouse gas emissions or climate change, or —
god
forbid — justice.

So this — all this — is "empire." This loyal
confederation, this obscene
accumulation of power, this greatly increased
distance
between those who
make the decisions and those who have to suffer
them.

Our fight, our goal, our vision of Another World
must
be to eliminate that
distance.

So how do we resist "Empire"?

The good news is that we’re not doing too badly.
There
have been major
victories. Here in Latin America you have had so
many
— in Bolivia, you have
Cochabamba. In Peru, there was the uprising in
Arequipa, In Venezuela,
President Hugo Chavez is holding on, despite the
U.S.
government’s best
efforts.

And the world’s gaze is on the people of
Argentina,
who are trying to
refashion a country from the ashes of the havoc
wrought by the IMF.

In India the movement against corporate
globalization
is gathering momentum
and is poised to become the only real political
force
to counter religious
fascism.

As for corporate globalization’s glittering
ambassadors — Enron, Bechtel,
WorldCom, Arthur Anderson — where were they last
year,
and where are they
now?

And of course here in Brazil we must ask …who was
the
president last year,
and who is it now?

Still … many of us have dark moments of
hopelessness
and despair. We know
that under the spreading canopy of the War
Against
Terrorism, the men in
suits are hard at work.

While bombs rain down on us, and cruise missiles
skid
across the skies, we
know that contracts are being signed, patents are
being registered, oil
pipelines are being laid, natural resources are
being
plundered, water is
being privatized, and George Bush is planning to
go to
war against Iraq.

If we look at this conflict as a straightforward
eye-ball to eye-ball
confrontation between "Empire" and those of us
who are
resisting it, it
might seem that we are losing.

But there is another way of looking at it. We,
all of
us gathered here,
have, each in our own way, laid siege to
"Empire."

We may not have stopped it in its tracks — yet —
but
we have stripped it
down. We have made it drop its mask. We have
forced it
into the open. It now
stands before us on the world’s stage in all it’s
brutish, iniquitous
nakedness.

Empire may well go to war, but it’s out in the
open
now — too ugly to behold
its own reflection. Too ugly even to rally its
own
people. It won’t be long
before the majority of American people become our
allies.

Only a few days ago in Washington, a quarter of a
million people marched
against the war on Iraq. Each month, the protest
is
gathering momentum.

Before September 11th 2001 America had a secret
history. Secret especially
from its own people. But now America’s secrets
are
history, and its history
is public knowledge. It’s street talk.

Today, we know that every argument that is being
used
to escalate the war
against Iraq is a lie. The most ludicrous of them
being the U.S.
Government’s deep commitment to bring democracy
to
Iraq.

Killing people to save them from dictatorship or
ideological corruption is,
of course, an old U.S. government sport. Here in
Latin
America, you know
that better than most.

Nobody doubts that Saddam Hussein is a ruthless
dictator, a murderer (whose
worst excesses were supported by the governments
of
the United States and
Great Britain). There’s no doubt that Iraqis
would be
better off without
him.

But, then, the whole world would be better off
without
a certain Mr. Bush.
In fact, he is far more dangerous than Saddam
Hussein.

So, should we bomb Bush out of the White House?

It’s more than clear that Bush is determined to
go to
war against Iraq,
regardless of the facts — and regardless of
international public opinion.

In its recruitment drive for allies, The United
States
is prepared to invent
facts.

The charade with weapons inspectors is the U.S.
government’s offensive,
insulting concession to some twisted form of
international etiquette. It’s
like leaving the "doggie door" open for last
minute
"allies" or maybe the
United Nations to crawl through.

But for all intents and purposes, the New War
against
Iraq has begun.

What can we do?

We can hone our memory, we can learn from our
history.
We can continue to
build public opinion until it becomes a deafening
roar.

We can turn the war on Iraq into a fishbowl of
the
U.S. government’s
excesses.

We can expose George Bush and Tony Blair — and
their
allies — for the
cowardly baby killers, water poisoners, and
pusillanimous long-distance
bombers that they are.

We can re-invent civil disobedience in a million
different ways. In other
words, we can come up with a million ways of
becoming
a collective pain in
the ass.

When George Bush says "you’re either with us, or
you
are with the
terrorists" we can say "No thank you." We can let
him
know that the people
of the world do not need to choose between a
Malevolent Mickey Mouse and the
Mad Mullahs.

Our strategy should be not only to confront
empire,
but to lay siege to it.
To deprive it of oxygen. To shame it. To mock it.
With
our art, our music,
our literature, our stubbornness, our joy, our
brilliance, our sheer
relentlessness — and our ability to tell our own
stories. Stories that are
different from the ones we’re being brainwashed
to
believe.

The corporate revolution will collapse if we
refuse to
buy what they are
selling — their ideas, their version of history,
their
wars, their weapons,
their notion of inevitability.

Remember this: We be many and they be few. They
need
us more than we need
them.

Another world is not only possible, she is on her
way.
On a quiet day, I can
hear her breathing.


—Arundhati Roy

Porto Alegre, Brazil

January 27, 2003



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