Live Death on Air: The Killings at WDBJ

[dropcap]A[/dropcap]merica is deemed the repository dreams, but it is also the supreme engine of nightmares. Fantasies of perfection just as often become realisations of bloody awareness.

BY BINOY KAMPMARK

The victims

The victims

Where grievances are resolved by bullets and briefs, the appearance of the former is bound to cause an avalanche of comment. Witness the killing of two individuals on WDBJ-TV on “live” television near Moneta: reporter Alison Parker and cameraman Adam Ward. The interviewee, executive director of the Smith Mountain Lake Regional Chamber of Commerce Vicki Gardner, was injured.

The killer

The killer

The gunman was Vester Flanagan II, a former employee who had been fired by the network. When working for the station, he would use the on-air name of Bryce Williams. His 23 page fax to the ABC outlined a range of disagreements, citing racial discrimination and sexual harassment.

“It is effectively an execution,” says the stunned CNN anchor. Live executions certainly have their power. The followers of ISIS understand it, and attempt to disseminate raw images in their totality. Editing is eschewed. Beheadings are released on the net like cruel bolts of realisation. The response then, is to limit circulation, cut the images and maybe bar them altogether. The war of images is not only to show them, but how not to show them.

In the US, the debate on broadcasting executions – albeit those inflicted by the state, rather than private citizens- is not new. In 2011, Zachary B. Shemtob and David Lat suggested in the New York Timesthat executions should be televised.[1] Democracy demands transparency and accountability. “As long as executions remain behind closed doors, these are impossible.”

The dreadful irony of this was missed when discussion shifted to whether the late gun man would also, should he survive, face the death penalty. The news community noted that Virginia is in the “top five” in the executioner’s league. The debate proved to be academic in the end: Williams would die of his self-inflicted wounds.

This brings us to another feature of the news community. What these shootings demonstrated was a paternalistic censorship. People cannot see what actually happened. Reality is too grotesque, the great unpardonable, to be allowed in US media. Demons and targets of moral opprobrium are – the gunman was given a due serving on “live” television, and there was even a sense of remorse that he might survive his own self-inflicted wounds to make a trial.

The Hollywood cleansing is needed, a cloth that does the cleaning rounds on the wickedness that is reality. Only those in the media channels can view it – repeatedly, there is this homely southern decency that some things ought not to be done.

Bryce Williams was one of the few to witness his handiwork. He was witnessing the live shot, both the bullets that were being fired, and the actual interview. He was killing, literally, live. In its purest vulgarity, it was a statement of anti-editing, a direct lethal statement.

In a perverse sense, he was moving beyond the fanciful hypocrisies of the news establishment, the self-censorship mechanism that governs the release of news to the general public. The very notion of doing things “live” in news is often far from the truth. Much is contrived. Much is delayed. Subjects are interviewed in offices that are not theirs, doing work that is staged for the camera shot. There is, in other words, very little live about a medium that tends to simulate a form of death. The life, in short, has left the screen. It is delayed, even suspended.

Central to the deception is the idea that exactitude and accuracy count, and that these are supposedly conveyed to the public. “We will read the tweets out to you. Exactly as they were said.” This is the CNN anchor line in the wake of the shootings, and of course, such accuracy should immediately get one thinking: reality is only tolerable through the sorting medium of the televised medium.

Not even Facebook continued to air the video. Links were deleted. The most live of feeds had gone into the mode of censure and suspension. Viral videos showing koalas scurrying after vehicles in Australia are permissible; the spectacle of a former colleague shooting those he has a beef with is not.

Naturally, the sentimental complex immediately took hold. There were toothy grins, and depictions of happy humans, the best pictures, the most enthusiastic vignettes of Parker and Ward. Ad hoc memorials were being organised.

Then, as with every murder event that makes the US news circuit, the shrink commentariat had to make a show. What was the mental furniture looking like for the shooter? The assailant had “anger management issues”; there were issues of disturbance. From without, the ventriloquists were taking over. The medication route was suggested by such individuals as psychiatrist as Janet Taylor.

The news providers had become the news. This was a supreme indication about the anchors becoming the centre of the world. The bullets gave them a bloody centre stage. We are unlikely to hear the last of this, not because it was a tragedy (yes it was) but because it typified the assumptions of the media establishment. Williams, if he appreciated nothing else, understood the power of death on “live” television.

Notes.

[1]http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/31/opinion/sunday/executions-should-be-televised.html?_r=0


 

Binoy Kampmark was a Commonwealth Scholar at Selwyn College, Cambridge. He lectures at RMIT University, Melbourne. Email: bkampmark@gmail.com


“…in the new exuberant aggressiveness of world capitalism we see what communists and their allies held at bay.” – Richard Levins (Source: The Proletarian Center)

FACT TO REMEMBER:
IF THE WESTERN MEDIA HAD ITS PRIORITIES IN ORDER AND ACTUALLY INFORMED, EDUCATED AND UPLIFTED THE MASSES INSTEAD OF SHILLING FOR A GLOBAL EMPIRE OF ENDLESS WARS, OUTRAGEOUS ECONOMIC INEQUALITY, AND DEEPENING DEVASTATION OF NATURE AND THE ANIMAL WORLD,  HORRORS LIKE THESE WOULD HAVE BEEN ELIMINATED MANY YEARS, PERHAPS DECADES AGO.  EVERY SINGLE DAY SOCIAL BACKWARDNESS COLLECTS ITS OWN INNUMERABLE VICTIMS. 

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West Point professor calls on US military to target legal critics of war on terror

US military academy official William Bradford argues that attacks on scholars’ home offices and media outlets – along with Islamic holy sites – are legitimate.

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The uniformity of the  military mind is well captured in this image by Kevin Lamarque (Reuters).  Conformity is especially dangerous when the people in uniform are young, impressionable, and largely brainwashed, as most cadets are—just about everywhere. The official caption reads: “Underclassmen attend a commencement ceremony at the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York. Photograph: Kevin Lamarque/Reuters Spencer Ackerman in New York @attackerman.”

 

Screen Shot 2015-08-22 at 7.41.15 PMBy Spencer Ackerman / The Guardian
[dropcap]A[/dropcap]n assistant professor in the law department of the US Military Academy at West Point has argued that legal scholars critical of the war on terrorism represent a “treasonous” fifth column that should be attacked as enemy combatants.

In a lengthy academic paper, the professor, William C Bradford, proposes to threaten “Islamic holy sites” as part of a war against undifferentiated Islamic radicalism. That war ought to be prosecuted vigorously, he wrote, “even if it means great destruction, innumerable enemy casualties, and civilian collateral damage”.

Other “lawful targets” for the US military in its war on terrorism, Bradford argues, include “law school facilities, scholars’ home offices and media outlets where they give interviews” – all civilian areas, but places where a “causal connection between the content disseminated and Islamist crimes incited” exist.

“Shocking and extreme as this option might seem, [dissenting] scholars, and the law schools that employ them, are – at least in theory – targetable so long as attacks are proportional, distinguish noncombatants from combatants, employ nonprohibited weapons, and contribute to the defeat of Islamism,” Bradford wrote.

West Point is the revered undergraduate institution north of New York City where the US army educates its future officer corps. It prides itself on the rigor of its curriculum. Representatives from the school said Bradford had only begun his employment there on 1 August.

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The real question is why does West Point hire and retain such people? 


Bradford’s article, “Trahison des Professeurs: The Critical Law of Armed Conflict Academy as an Islamist Fifth Column”, appeared in the most recent issue of the National Security Law Journal, a student-run publication at the George Mason School of Law. Bradford clarifies that the term means “treason of the professors”, itself an allusion to a famous attack on French intellectuals from the 1920s.

In the paper, Bradford identifies himself as an “associate professor of law, national security and strategy, National Defense University”, seemingly his previous job before West Point. But a representative of the National Defense University said Bradford was a contractor at the prestigious Defense Department-run institution, “never an NDU employee nor an NDU professor”.


 

SIDEBAR
The Unraveling of William Bradford
william-bradford.0Read more about the web of deception behind this notorious reactionary. Click on the bar below.

 

 

 

Inside Higher Ed 


Web of Lies


Submitted by David Epstein on December 6, 2005 – [dropcap]W[/dropcap]hen several of his colleagues expressed doubts about whether they would eventually want to tenure him, William Bradford, an associate professor of law at Indiana University in Indianapolis, went public with his complaints. He posted on blogs, he talked on the radio, he talked to this Web site, [1] he hit “The O’Reilly Factor.” His message: Liberal faculty members were pushing him out because he is conservative, a war veteran and a Native American who didn’t fit a liberal mold for Native Americans. But as Bradford’s complaints grew louder, his story unraveled. It has now become clear that Bradford lied about, among other things, his military service.


[dropcap]U[/dropcap]niversity officials confirmed Monday that Bradford — who did not respond to e-mail and voice messages and who hasn’t commented on the latest events — has resigned, effective January 1. Bradford appeared on the national radar this summer, after five faculty members on a review committee, which did authorize his reappointment, said they did not think he deserved tenure at the time. Bradford, whose degrees include one each from Northwestern and Harvard Universities, railed against what he claimed was a liberal conspiracy against him. Bradford had refused to sign a petition in support of Ward Churchill, a professor from the University of Colorado whose comments on 9/11 infuriated people nationwide, despite the advice of Florence Wagman Roisman, an Indiana law professor who did sign the petition.


Bradford labeled Roisman as one of the leaders of the push to oust him, and began slinging discrimination and defamation claims around the blogosphere, most prominently on Indy Law Net, [2] a blog for the Indiana law school. Bradford drew vigorous support not only from the likes of Bill O’Reilly, but also from students and colleagues who noted his prolific publishing, his general popularity as a teacher, and his status as a war hero — he claimed to have fought in Desert Storm and Bosnia, and to have won a Silver Star. A petition [2] in support of Bradford was even passed around students at the law school. While Bradford took to the pulpit, Roisman and others he criticized had to stay silent, citing the confidentiality of review committees. But the more attention Bradford got, the more people started asking questions, and the more peculiarities arose.


[dropcap]I[/dropcap]n September, Lucas Sayre, a second year law student and the head of Indy Law Net, noticed that Bradford’s comments were coming from the same IP address as posts from other user names. Sayre, who had taken a course with Bradford and said he was a great professor, questioned Bradford about it, and Bradford admitted to using fake names to post “cheap shots, schoolyard bickering,” Sayre said. In October, Bradford promised the blog audience that the person who endowed Roisman’s chair was upset at her behavior and would strip her of the chair, and that Judge David J. Dreyer of Marion Superior Court had issued a temporary restraining order barring professors from speaking ill of or taking any actions against Bradford. Roisman did not lose her chair, and there never was a restraining order. Naturally, some of the law buffs who frequent Indy Law Net went searching for the restraining order. When a user identified as “me” posted that he or she could not find it, Bradford objected. “Who are you, me? I ask because if you’re on the other side or working for them, which is my presumption unless you tell me otherwise and tell me who you are, I’m not going to give you any more guidance,” he responded in a comment. Court records and sources both indicate that Bradford never filed for any sort of injunction. One part of Bradford’s offensive involved talking with Ruth Holladay, a columnist for The Indianapolis Star who wrote a column supporting him in June. Holladay wrote about Bradford’s impressive military service. On his faculty profile, [3] Bradford is identified as having served in the Army infantry from 1994 to 2001, and he had claimed to have been a major in the Special Forces. Some of Bradford’s deceptions seem obvious. For example, Desert Storm ended in 1991, and Bradford got a Ph.D., a J.D., and an L.L.M. during his supposed years of combat. Other deceptions were less easily penetrated. That’s why it took Ret. Army Lieut. Col. Keith R. Donnelly contacting Holladay with his suspicion that Bradford did not win a Silver Star to bring clarity to that issue. Both Donnelly and Holladay independently requested Bradford’s military records. In her column [4]Sunday, Holladay reported that Bradford had seen no active duty, had won no awards, was discharged as a second lieutenant, and was not in the infantry. Bradford had been in the Army Reserve from September 30, 1995, to October 23, 2001, but saw no active duty. Roisman said she was told that any complaint Bradford had filed against her and other professors with the university would be withdrawn. But Roisman said that neither she nor another professor plan to withdraw their complaints that Bradford had trumped up discrimination accusations against them. “As far as I’m concerned,” Roisman said, “why should they go away?” Sayre said he has contacted Bradford recently, but that Bradford would only confirm his resignation. Once deafening on Indy Law Net, Bradford would tell Sayre nothing more.


Screen Shot 2015-08-22 at 7.41.15 PMSource URL: https://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/12/06/bradford?width=775&height=500&iframe=true Links: [1] https://www.insidehighered.com/news/2005/06/28/indiana [2] http://iuilaw.blogspot.com/2005/04/petition.html [3] http://indylaw.indiana.edu/people/profile.cfm?Id=126 [4] http://www.indystar.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20051204/COLUMNISTS02/512040470&SearchID=73228533782766[/learn_more] Screen Shot 2015-08-05 at 6.19.17 PM
END OF SIDEBAR. REGULAR TEXT RESUMES HERE.

[dropcap]I[/dropcap]t appears not to be the first time Bradford misrepresented his credentials. He resigned from Indiana University’s law school in 2005 after his military record showed he had exaggerated his service. (Among his paper’s criticisms of supposedly treasonous lawyers is “intellectual dishonesty”.)

The National Security Law Journal’s editor-in-chief has called the article’s publication a “mistake” and an “egregious breach of professional decorum”.

“We cannot ‘unpublish’ it, of course, but we can and do acknowledge that the article was not presentable for publication when we published it, and that we therefore repudiate it with sincere apologies to our readers,” the editor-in-chief, Rick Myers, wrote on the journal’s website.

Bradford does not clearly name his academic opponents, instead using the neologistic acronym CLOACA, for “critical law of armed conflict academy” to describe them. (In nature, “cloaca” is also the name of a body cavity into which intestinal, reproductive and urinary tracts empty in some animal species.)

The CLOACA, in turn, are part of a GMAC, or “government-media-academic complex”, which Bradford defines as an “aristocracy of senior government officials, elite media members, and university faculty, which squeezes non-members from public colloquy and shapes opinion on security, military and legal issues.”

This “clique of about forty” scholars, Bradford writes, have “converted the US legal academy into a cohort whose vituperative pronouncements on the illegality of the US resort to force and subsequent conduct in the war against Islamism” represent a “super-weapon that supports Islamist military operations” aimed at “American political will” to fight. They are supported by “compliant journalists” marked by “defeatism, instinctive antipathy to war, and empathy for American adversaries”, but Bradford considers the lawyers a greater threat.

The offending legal scholars “effectively tilt the battlefield against US forces [and] contribute to timorousness and lethargy in US military commanders”, he writes. They are among several “useful idiots” who “separate Islam from Islamists by attributing to the former principles in common with the West, including ‘justice and progress’ and ‘the dignity of all human beings’”.

Bradford derisively quotes Barack Obama, who has prosecuted a globalized war against al-Qaida and now the Islamic State, discussing “co-existence and cooperation” with the Islamic world in his 2009 Cairo speech.

The West Point faculty member urges the US to wage “total war” on “Islamism”, using “conventional and nuclear force and [psychological operations]”, in order to “leave them prepared to coexist with the West or be utterly eradicated”. He suggests in a footnote that “threatening Islamic holy sites might create deterrence, discredit Islamism, and falsify the assumption that decadence renders Western restraint inevitable”.

Robert Chesney of the University of Texas, a founding editor of the influential national-security law blog Lawfare, is one of the legal scholars Bradford references as pernicious – for a 2011 paper that largely defended Obama’s execution without trial of US citizen and al-Qaida preacher Anwar al-Awlaki.

“It’s very hard to take this seriously except insofar as he may actually be teaching nonsense like this to cadets at West Point,” Chesney said.

Bradford did not respond to emails and phone messages for comment.

A spokesman for the US Military Academy, army lieutenant colonel Christopher Kasker, told the Guardian: “Dr William Bradford was hired on 1 August 2015 at the US Military Academy. His article in the National Security Law Journal titled ‘Trahison des Professeurs: The Critical Law of Armed Conflict Academy as an Islamist Fifth Column’ was written and accepted for publication prior to his employment at West Point. The views in the article are solely those of Dr Bradford and do not reflect those of the Department of Defense, the United States army, the United States Military Academy.”

The US military’s educational institutions have come under fire before for promoting “total war” against Islam. In 2012, General Martin Dempsey, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, ordered a comprehensive scouring of anti-Islam training material after a course proposed “Hiroshima” tactics against Islamic holy sites, targeting the “civilian population wherever necessary”.

The previous year, highly regarded counter-terrorism scholars affiliated with the US army aided the FBI in eradicating similar material from its own training. Those scholars came from West Point.

Additional reporting by Kira Goldenberg and Megan Carpentier

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“…in the new exuberant aggressiveness of world capitalism we see what communists and their allies held at bay.” – Richard Levins (Source: The Proletarian Center)

FACT TO REMEMBER:
IF THE WESTERN MEDIA HAD ITS PRIORITIES IN ORDER AND ACTUALLY INFORMED, EDUCATED AND UPLIFTED THE MASSES INSTEAD OF SHILLING FOR A GLOBAL EMPIRE OF ENDLESS WARS, OUTRAGEOUS ECONOMIC INEQUALITY, AND DEEPENING DEVASTATION OF NATURE AND THE ANIMAL WORLD,  HORRORS LIKE THESE WOULD HAVE BEEN ELIMINATED MANY YEARS, PERHAPS DECADES AGO.  EVERY SINGLE DAY SOCIAL BACKWARDNESS COLLECTS ITS OWN INNUMERABLE VICTIMS. 

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Long Time Coming, Long Time Gone

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Puyé Cliff dwellings, Santa Clara Pueblo, New Mexico.


[dropcap]O[/dropcap]n the day Pope Francis released his encyclical on the fate of the Earth, I was struggling to climb a near vertical cliff on the Parajito Plateau of northern New Mexico. My fingers gripped tightly to handholds notched into the rocks hundreds of years ago by Ancestral Puebloans, the anodyne phrase now used by modern anthropologists to describe the people once known as the Anasazi. The day was a scorcher and the volcanic rocks were so hot they blistered my hands and knees. Even my guide, Elijah, a young member of the Santa Clara Pueblo, confessed that the heat radiating off the basalt had made him feel faint, although perhaps he was simply trying to make me feel less like a weather wimp.

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When we finally hurled ourselves over the rimrock to the top of the little mesa, the ruins of the old city of Puyé spread before us. Amid purple blooms of cholla cactus, piñon pines and sagebrush, two watchtowers rose above the narrow spine of the mesa top, guarding the crumbling walls of houses that once sheltered more than 1,500 people. I was immediately struck by the defensive nature of the site: an acropolis set high above the corn, squash and bean fields in the valley below; a city fortified against the inevitable outbreaks turbulence and violence unleashed by periods of prolonged scarcity.

The ground sparkled with potsherds, the shattered remnants of exquisitely crafted bowls and jars, all featuring dazzling polychromatic glazes. Some had been used to haul water up the cliffs of the mesa, an arduous and risky daily ordeal that surely would only have been undertaken during a time of extreme environmental and cultural stress. How did the people end up here? Where did they come from? What were they fleeing?

“They came here after the lights went out at Chaco,” Elijah tells me. He’s referring to the great houses of Chaco Canyon, now besieged by big oil. Chaco, the imperial city of the Anasazi, was ruled for four hundred years by a stern hierarchy of astronomer-priests until it was swiftly abandoned around 1250 AD.

“Why did they leave?” I asked.

“Something bad happened, after the waters ran out.” He won’t go any further and I don’t press him.

The ruins of Puyé, now part of the Santa Clara Pueblo, sit in the blue shadow of the Jemez Mountains. A few miles to the north, in the stark labs of Los Alamos, scientists are still at work calculating the dark equations of global destruction down to the last decimal point.

This magnificent complex of towers, multi-story dwellings, plazas, granaries, kivas and cave dwellings was itself abandoned suddenly around 1500. Its Tewa-speaking residents moved off the cliffs and mesas to the flatlands along the Rio Grande ten miles to the east, near the site of the current Santa Clara (St. Clair) Pueblo. A few decades later they would encounter an invading force beyond their worst nightmare: Coronado and his metal-plated conquistadors.

Again, it was a prolonged drought that forced the deeply egalitarian people of Puyé — the place where the rabbits gather — from their mesa-top fortress. “The elders say that the people knew it was time to move when they saw the black bears leaving the canyon,” Elijah told me.

Elijah is a descendent of one of the great heroes of Santa Clara Pueblo: Domingo Naranjo, a leader of the one true American Revolution, the Pueblo Revolt of 1680, which drove the Spanish out of New Mexico. Naranjo was half-Tewa and half-black, the son of an escaped slave of the Spanish. That glorious rebellion largely targeted the brutal policies of the Franciscan missionaries, who had tortured, enslaved and butchered the native people of the Rio Grande Valley for nearly 100 years. As the Spanish friars fled, Naranjo supervised the razing of the Church the Franciscans had erected — using slave labor – in the plaza of Santa Clara Pueblo.

Now the hope of the world may reside in the persuasive powers of a Franciscan, the Hippie Pope, whose Druidic encyclical, Laudato Si’, reads like a tract from the Deep Ecology movement of the 1980s, only more lucidly and urgently written. Pope Francis depicts the ecological commons of the planet being sacrificed for a “throwaway culture” that is driven by a deranged economic system whose only goal is “quick and easy profit.” As the supreme baptizer, Francis places a special emphasis on the planet’s imperiled waters, both the dwindling reserves of freshwater and the inexorable rise of acidic oceans, heading like a slow-motion tsunami toward a coast near you.


Climate change has gone metastatic and we are all weather wimps under the new dispensation.horiz-black-wide

[dropcap]C[/dropcap]limate change has gone metastatic and we are all weather wimps under the new dispensation. Consider that Hell on Earth: Phoenix, Arizona, a city whose water greed has breached any rational limit. Its 1.5 million residents, neatly arranged in spiraling cul-de-sacs, meekly await a reckoning with the Great Thirst, as if Dante himself had supervised the zoning plans. The Phoenix of the future seems destined to resemble the ruins of Chaco, with crappier architecture.

I am writing this column in the basement of our house in Oregon City, which offers only slight relief from the oppressive heat outside. The temperature has topped 100 degrees again. It hasn’t rained in 40 days and 40 nights. We are reaching the end of something. Perhaps it has already occurred. Even non-believers are left to heed the warnings of the Pope and follow the example of the bears of the Jemez.

Yet now there is no hidden refuge to move toward. There is only a final movement left to build, a global rebellion against the forces of greed and extinction. One way or another, it will either be a long time coming or a long time gone.


 

Jeffrey St. Clair is editor of CounterPunch. His new book is Killing Trayvons: an Anthology of American Violence (with JoAnn Wypijewski and Kevin Alexander Gray). He can be reached at: sitka@comcast.net.

Lizard





“…in the new exuberant aggressiveness of world capitalism we see what communists and their allies held at bay.” – Richard Levins (Source: The Proletarian Center)

FACT TO REMEMBER:
IF THE WESTERN MEDIA HAD ITS PRIORITIES IN ORDER AND ACTUALLY INFORMED, EDUCATED AND UPLIFTED THE MASSES INSTEAD OF SHILLING FOR A GLOBAL EMPIRE OF ENDLESS WARS, OUTRAGEOUS ECONOMIC INEQUALITY, AND DEEPENING DEVASTATION OF NATURE AND THE ANIMAL WORLD,  HORRORS LIKE THESE WOULD HAVE BEEN ELIMINATED MANY YEARS, PERHAPS DECADES AGO.  EVERY SINGLE DAY SOCIAL BACKWARDNESS COLLECTS ITS OWN INNUMERABLE VICTIMS. 

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And remember: All captions and pullquotes are furnished by the editors, NOT the author(s). 


What is $5 a month to support one of the greatest publications on the Left?




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Tragedy & Farce: Reconsidering Marxian Superstructural Analysis of Heterodox Social Movements

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Part I: Utopia vs. Myth,  the Poetry of the Past, and Social Revolution –  a general introduction to this series

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Introduction

[dropcap]L[/dropcap]By J. Arnoldski and Joaquin Floreshoriz-black-wide

The starting point of our investigation is the recognition that we live in a highly ideological time, and yet it appears to many that we do not. That many in the West believe we live in a ‘post-ideological’ period is in fact a testament to the total saturation of liberal ideology.  Since the victory of the liberal West over the Soviet Union and the proclamation of the liberal “end of history” (in the words of F. Fukuyama), liberalism has become so tightly woven into every facet of life to the point that it is indistinguishable from every-day life itself.  As such has proven to be the most effective totalitarian ideology hitherto created by mankind.

[1]  To formulate a comprehensive critique of liberalism as the ideology of capitalism means to re-examine how we understand radical anti-capitalist movements today.  This means, first and foremost, endeavoring to reconsider and distinguish the base and superstructure in Marxian theories about heterodox (and apparently non-leftist) social movements. On this basis we can proceed with a renewed understanding with which to analyze and then transcend (in theory) particularly divisive wedge issues.

These divisive issues are indeed not fundamental per se, but rather are super-structural issues which mainly exist in the realm of discursive traps; the types and forms of language used which direct us to associate these with other distinct realms of thought and activity. These are modes and realms which hitherto are considered by Marxists to be hostile to the historical and material class interests of the proletariat; they have been associated with the politics of reaction, pre-modernity, and/or the bourgeois or petit-bourgeois class forces in a mode of crisis.  Other issues are ethnic, gender and sex, which divide proletarian class forces. The ossification of a politically correct neo-liberal ‘globalist’ culture surrounding these can justify “human rights imperialism”: these represent crucial examples of the permutation of otherwise “anti-liberal” theories ( they are not formally open for debate) by the liberal paradigm of modernity itself.

The utopian elements in liberalism found expression in its branch of ‘progressivism’, and the Marxists like the utopian socialists before them, found a common ground with liberals. The futurist strain of Fascism, also appealed to this progressivism, and radical republicans, anarchists, syndicalists,  as well a red republicans in Italy were among the founders of this 3rd political theory on the Italian plane.  The progressivist framework, which allowed for and engendered cross-semination between the three political theories, situates them all as modern political theories.  However, the kernel for future political theories exists in the second and third – both of these pose the question of what will follow the modern, i.e capitalist (liberal) order.

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Thus, there is an inherent error in thinking of the three ideologies of modernity in static form; of thinking of them as structures which stand alone.  It is then erroneous to contrast these with ‘syncretic’ ideologies, or to consider the third political theory as distinctly syncretic as opposed to the first and second.  All three political theories of modernity influenced each other; each was created out of ideas not only of those which preceded it, but concretely emerged from the real-existing material world and everything inherited from it.  Each political theory did not emerge in complete form, and so for example liberalism today has features within it of both communism (i.e Marxism) and fascism. Likewise, Marxism was born not only out of Liberalism and its contemplation of Feudalism and pre-modernity, but was simultaneously interacting with; subsuming here and rejecting there, the ideas from radical-liberalism, nationalism, existentialism, and anarchism that are, not just incidentally, all together the foundations of fascism.

A key given by Marx: The Eighteenth Brumaire

[dropcap]T[/dropcap]o many who understand the trajectory of historical development through a Marxian lens, few things seem more at odds with Marx’s own views this than his “correction” of Hegel in the opening lines of The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte.  The essay in itself remains one of Marx’s best descriptions of his theory of the capitalist state.  The analysis of the Marxians is intellectually honest when it operates with an understanding of the objective and subjective conditions in which historic transformation is effected, according to the analytical framework of historical or dialectical materialism. Moreover, it exhibits a distinct fidelity to the proposed science when it looks objectively and without emotive prejudice at the super-structural forms which said historic transformations take on.

Marx-Brumaire

The identifiable problem then, when applying the same Marxian analysis to the present, that is, when it relies on short-hand super-structural cues and gives into the pressure of activist culture, it may fail particularly when looking at contemporary, i.e. early 21st century social movements in the post-modern era.  A key to understanding this problematic area, as a suitable introduction to our inquiry, may lie in a revised reading of the first chapter of Eighteenth Brumaire.

Thus it will be important for us to examine not only how this correction is misinterpreted by Marxists, but perhaps also where Marx himself might be corrected – or better perhaps, brought into alignment with his own proposed science.  This will raise the question of what this means in the context of the super-structural realm of aesthetics, culture, words (or discursive traps), ideas, and symbols.  If Marx appears to contradict himself, it may be important to turn him right-side up.

The confusion of form for substance not only a theoretical problem, but one which has an extraordinary impact upon the present: if radical socialists, anarchists and communists today are relying on super-structural cues to determine the identity of their ‘class opponents’, this may be a tragic misdirection, and in hindsight, a farce.  As we begin to suffer from the ‘information overload’ of the internet age, and where attention deficits run at an all time high, it is in fact difficult not be economical when looking for certain cues:  communists wave red flags, anarchists black ones, while socialists mimic liberalism by refraining from overt symbolism.  Instead the socialists use ‘liberal’ and ‘progressive’ language and syntax to reach out to anyone to the left of the center.  All three, however, at best ignore and at worst vilify those on the center-right and beyond.

Marx vs. The Marxists: Total subsumption of all classes into a proletariat

[dropcap]T[/dropcap]he problem with the marginalization or vilification of people on ‘the center-right and beyond’ is of course that in terms of electoral processes, it is indeed improbable to succeed in this terrain without ‘center-right and beyond’ ideas appealing to members of the proletariat.  It is too simple to sweep these under the rug of ‘false consciousness’ without seriously calling into question the potential for (and reality of) class  agency in general.   In connection with this is a problem in the way that contemporary communist etc. groups have ignored actual Marxist theory and simplified their definition of ‘proletarian’.

Rather, not only in looking at civil society, but also in Marxist theory, we should understand that under conditions of late-capitalism, i.e. late modernity, that capitalist development has proletarianized all other classes (petit-bourgeois, etc.) through various ways.  All prior classes, which exist today in proletarian form, have been subsumed by capital and proletarianized; all are involved in the critical valorization process. By definition therefore all are involved in the production of surplus value.  All labors are in the final analysis geared towards capital accumulation; and all are in the final analysis alienated from the laborer and accumulated by the capitalist, through the cycle of production, from the products of said labor.

The mechanisms of capital accumulation, in the context of late-capitalism, are not only the appropriation of surplus value in the form of wages in the typical employer-employee relationship; but rather all relations of production or social relations are geared towards capital accumulation by the finance capitalists.  Pre-capitalist (rents, taxes, feudal), capitalist (wages), and late-capitalist (financial/speculative/lending) modes of capital appropriation, are all used in late-capitalism as methods of capital accumulation.

Thus, classes which appear as managerial, petit-bourgeois, lumpen, administrative, etc. have been proletarianized.  Thus their struggles, when directed at the established order, regardless of the poetry, (slogans, symbolism, battle-cries, imagery, and banners), are generally proletarian in substance even if not in apparent form.

So in regarding interpretive short-cuts, as useful as they are, these have severe limitations because they refer to largely outdated interpretations of aesthetic and other super-structural cues.  This is especially the case as various social movements arising in opposition to capitalism stem from a seemingly chaotic or discordant mix of assorted radicalisms.  These even include those which look and feel as though they originate from the fascist far-right, and may in fact originate in this.  As we will explore in this series, these are often objectively anti-capitalist and proletarian movements which are wrapped in the aesthetics and historical references of fascism and various neo-fascisms in Europe, and in the US often take the form of constitutionalism and libertarianism as well.

[dropcap]I[/dropcap]f indeed these ‘far-right’ radicalized groups were in fact doing the work of the ruling class, mobilizing to crush initiatives of worker’s power in the name of the state, the church, and in the class interest of the petty-bourgeoisie (and the traditional forces of reaction in general), then the 20th century Marxist classification of these groups as ‘fascist’ may indeed be apt: our ‘short cuts’ would have served us right.

Indeed and likewise it would also be a tragedy if ‘left-wing’ fighting groups such as Antifa were in fact attacking other proletarian movements opposed to capitalism, which only happened to appear as reactionary petty-bourgeois permutations of class power.

antifa

At the same time we cannot directly define counter-mobilization against communist groups by ‘far-right’ groups as counter-mobilizations against the working class as a class. Objectively, these are relatively small fights between distinct ideological groups among the working class (i.e, left vs. right), and mimic the fights between religious sects, and do not represent the interests of one class against another class.  ‘Communist’ vs. ‘Fascist’ self-references and symbolism are notional abstractions and by and large do not materially connect to proletarian vs. petit-bourgeois class forces, respectively, even though they refer to these abstractly, i.e, in the world of ideas.

Certainly, ‘divide and conquer’ has been an effective tactic for the ruling class to maintain class rule. This may extend far beyond what was previously understood.  It brings into question how we understand and interpret the supposed offspring of various 20th century social movements.

The capitalist state and its overly armed apparatus of state power, its meandering bureaucracy and bountiful resources, stands as a seemingly unconquerable behemoth.  Revolutionary Marxist groups apparently pale in comparison in terms of their capacity to project power.  Significantly less powerful are the above mentioned non-Marxist anti-capitalist movements and groups, many not even identifying with the left, and most of these taking a decisively anti-communist perspective in terms of nominal ideology.  These groups make excellent surrogate targets for revolutionary Marxist and Anarchist groups; it is possible to strike against them in the streets and in virtual spaces.  Victories here serve to satisfy the need to have victories, but may indeed work against the real aims of the struggle against capitalism.

[dropcap]S[/dropcap]yncretic social movements in Eurasia are already overcoming the problem we are looking at, and therefore some of these examples will be discussed in this series.  Other examples include Pan-Arab and Pan-Syrian Socialism (such as Ba’athism or the SSNP), as well as revolutionary nationalisms in Latin America, Liberation Theology, revolutionary groups in the Novorossiya parts of former Ukraine, and others.  They have influenced our opinions as well, but more concretely show what solutions can be drawn and moreover are more than ‘proof of concept’ that such endeavors can be undertaken with a high degree of efficacy.

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Returning to Marx in The Eighteenth Brumaire

[dropcap]M[/dropcap]arx writes:

“Hegel remarks somewhere that all great world-historic facts and personages appear, so to speak, twice. He forgot to add: the first time as tragedy, the second time as farce [….]And just as they seem to be occupied with revolutionizing themselves and things, creating something that did not exist before, precisely in such epochs of revolutionary crisis they anxiously conjure up the spirits of the past to their service, borrowing from them names, battle slogans, and costumes in order to present this new scene in world history in time-honored disguise and borrowed language. Thus Luther put on the mask of the Apostle Paul, the Revolution of 1789-1814 draped itself alternately in the guise of the Roman Republic and the Roman Empire, and the Revolution of 1848 knew nothing better to do than to parody, now 1789, now the revolutionary tradition of 1793-95. In like manner, the beginner who has learned a new language always translates it back into his mother tongue, but he assimilates the spirit of the new language and expresses himself freely in it only when he moves in it without recalling the old and when he forgets his native tongue.”

“When we think about this conjuring up of the dead of world history, a salient difference reveals itself. Camille Desmoulins, Danton, Robespierre, St. Just, Napoleon, the heroes as well as the parties and the masses of the old French Revolution, performed the task of their time – that of unchaining and establishing modern bourgeois society – in Roman costumes and with Roman phrases. The first one destroyed the feudal foundation and cut off the feudal heads that had grown on it. The other created inside France the only conditions under which free competition could be developed, parceled-out land properly used, and the unfettered productive power of the nation employed; and beyond the French borders it swept away feudal institutions everywhere, to provide, as far as necessary, bourgeois society in France with an appropriate up-to-date environment on the European continent. Once the new social formation was established, the antediluvian colossi disappeared and with them also the resurrected Romanism – the Brutuses, the Gracchi, the publicolas, the tribunes, the senators, and Caesar himself. Bourgeois society in its sober reality bred its own true interpreters and spokesmen in the Says, Cousins, Royer-Collards, Benjamin Constants, and Guizots; its real military leaders sat behind the office desk and the hog-headed Louis XVIII was its political chief. Entirely absorbed in the production of wealth and in peaceful competitive struggle, it no longer remembered that the ghosts of the Roman period had watched over its cradle.”

“But unheroic though bourgeois society is, it nevertheless needed heroism, sacrifice, terror, civil war, and national wars to bring it into being. And in the austere classical traditions of the Roman Republic the bourgeois gladiators found the ideals and the art forms, the self-deceptions, that they needed to conceal from themselves the bourgeois-limited content of their struggles and to keep their passion on the high plane of great historic tragedy.”[2]

On the one hand, this crucial passage is one of Marx’s most seminal works in analyzing revolutionary experience and drawing theoretical conclusions; Marx asserts that “Men make their own history, but they do not make it as they please; they do not make it under self-selected circumstances, but under circumstances existing already, given and transmitted from the past.”[3]

As examples we see that Marx recounts the Lutheran Reformation’s harkening back to the Apostle Paul, Cromwell and the English’ appeal to the Old Testament, and the French Revolution’s Roman drapery as cases in which revolutionary transformations drew their aesthetics and presentation from the past in order to present a kind of historical legitimacy and a sense of historically redeemed struggle against the contemporary order.

Hypothesis vs. Experience: Theory must reflect reality

[dropcap]Y[/dropcap]et, in stark contradiction to this prescient recognition of such an undeniable reality, Marx proceeds to suggest that the future social revolution “cannot take its poetry from the past but only from the future.  It cannot begin with itself before it has stripped away all superstition about the past. The former revolutions required recollections of past world history in order to smother their own content.”[4]

Why does Marx look at a proven effective use of the poetry of the past only to argue that the future social revolution can only takes its poetry from the future? Marx proposes: “The revolution of the nineteenth century must let the dead bury their dead in order to arrive at its own content.”[5]

Hence the meaning of the formula “first as tragedy, then as farce”: the appropriation of past and existing forms is a tragically imposed, circumstantial necessity, and a subsequent repetition of such represents little more than a botched, castrated, reactionary parody.  Marx, despite recognizing the importance of the Apostolic guise of the Reformation or the Roman pretensions of the French Revolution, goes so far as to denounce the influence of “the tradition of dead generations” as a “nightmare on the brains of the living.”[6]

While such an appraisal made by Marx may indeed be restricted to bearing prescience in reference to the French coup of 1851, the conclusion that the “names, battle slogans, and costumes” drawn from the past in the midst of revolutionary struggle inherently constitute a reactionary, self-abortive farce is of serious, far-reaching importance.  We propose that it is a mistake.

And this is a mistake, indeed a confused contradiction in Marx’s discussion of the relationship between the superstructure (the ‘poetry’) and the base (objective class and economic forces), which has either bore profoundly negative repercussions in the analyses produced by Marxists, or has actually been refuted by past and contemporary revolutionary experiences.

Not only was the ‘poetry of the past’ effective in its time, we cannot, in the final analysis, conceive of a way in which it was avoidable.  It was indeed necessary.  The revolution in 1917 didn’t just refer to its own utopian promise and future.  It had to fortify itself in the mythology of 1871, 1848, and 1792-94.  And not only that, but also the entire “history of all hitherto existing society is the history of class struggles” (Communist Manifesto, 1848). One cannot positively judge these without valorizing them, and one cannot put value into history without mythologizing them.

Indeed it has become all too common for Marxists to summarize the the presence of ancient, Medieval, pre-modern, or even early bourgeois imagery, sympathies, or undertones as indicative of a pro-capitalist, reactionary, and counter-revolutionary nature.  In reality, they are mistakenly denouncing movements which have the potential to produce genuine social change and be an important part of revolutionary transformation.

Our Proposal

[dropcap]W[/dropcap]e propose to understand such movements in the Marxian sense, to the contrary, as often “revolutionary” even when draped in the robes of myth, even when donning the mask of reaction.

But we ask this: why must it be the case that revolution must “let the dead bury their dead”? Has it in fact been the case, and is it likely to be the case?  To this, our answer is “No”.

Are communist, anarchist, and socialist movements today approximately the same as they were 150 year ago?  Are ‘ultra-right’ and fascist movements today approximately the same as they were 70 or 100 years ago?  To both of these, our answer again is “No”.

These groups and movements have undergone tremendous change, a century has passed with base acting upon super-structure and super-structure acting upon base, producing an irreversible chain of phenomena in its wake.  The views of Marx as expressed in 18th Brumaire have already been contradicted in fact and practice.  Yet at the same time, there are elements of truth as well:  there are different views of the past but people can be unified by a common idea about what sort of future would work.  Still, we see this not as a reason to condemn those who use the power of myth in their agitation and identity, but rather as a reason for those who understand it to not confuse its subjective poetry for its objective function.

Just as the subjective use of symbolism and language of an ostensible communist party does not make it objectively communist in the proletarian revolutionary sense of the term (we can look at any number of euro-communist parties, for example), the poetry of fascism and myth does not make the groups and movements using them objectively fascist in the 20th century bourgeois reactionary sense of the term.

It is also important to recall this: the communist movement not only in the 20th century but even in the time of Marx  also wrote its own stanzas about the past, its own poetry of the French Revolution, Grachus Babeuf, August Blanqui, the League of the Just, the Conspiracy of Equals, the Communards, and so forth.  As events moved us forward in time, these stanzas become farther removed from us. Communists now refer to the past and trace its ‘modern’ origin to a time nearly two centuries ago. Can a communist movement not have a history? Can it not remember and even mythologize itself?  Are red or black flags today allusions to the great year 1917 at all like the conjuring of “the spirits of the past to their service, borrowing from them names, battle slogans, and costumes in order to present this new scene in world history in time-honored disguise and borrowed language”?  We believe they are.

Looking openly at these questions will be among the tasks of this series.  We invite our so-inclined readers to join us as we explore these pressing questions.  This will involve a dissection of the complex relationship between base and superstructure, which is one which was also taken up by the mid-century modernists (the so-called post-modernists) and beyond.

It will require a look at culture, the evolution of youth culture and subculture, and real existing syncretic and anti-liberal socio-political movements today.  These trace their origins primarily to the second-half of the 20th century.

Some of this will also require us to look at these superstructural conceptions of poetry; the poetry of the past vs. the poetry of the future.  Of course, poetry about the past is not from the past, but from the present – it is only about the past.  Likewise, the poetry of the future is not from the future, but from the present.  And, in both cases, they refer to the present – it is for us in the present, and in the present that anything can be done.   In that sense, these – past and future poetry – are both contemporary narratives.

If we accomplish our task, we will raise more questions than we answer, and hopefully provoke a better reason to develop this even further.  It is a subject too vast for any single canvas, and one which we can only hope to sketch with some details for the reader.

**

NOTES

[2] https://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1852/18th-brumaire/ch01.htm#2

[3] ibid

[4] ibid

[5] ibid

[6] ibid


J. Arnoldski is a student of Eastern European history and an American-born activist of Polish and Russian heritage currently based in Wroclaw, Poland. Formerly an activist in the American communist movement, he currently works as one of the founders of International Students Aid to Donbass. His expertise and interests include Russian history, with a specialization in the Soviet period, Eurasianism, and the Fourth Political Theory of Alexander Dugin. Joaquin Flores serves as Director and Chief Editor for The Center for Syncretic Studies (CSS). A onetime activist with the labor movement in the United States, he is also founding editor of Fort Russ, and a special editor and correspondent for The Greanville Post (Belgrade). 

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“…in the new exuberant aggressiveness of world capitalism we see what communists and their allies held at bay.” – Richard Levins (Source: The Proletarian Center)

FACT TO REMEMBER:
IF THE WESTERN MEDIA HAD ITS PRIORITIES IN ORDER AND ACTUALLY INFORMED, EDUCATED AND UPLIFTED THE MASSES INSTEAD OF SHILLING FOR A GLOBAL EMPIRE OF ENDLESS WARS, OUTRAGEOUS ECONOMIC INEQUALITY, AND DEEPENING DEVASTATION OF NATURE AND THE ANIMAL WORLD,  HORRORS LIKE THESE WOULD HAVE BEEN ELIMINATED MANY YEARS, PERHAPS DECADES AGO.  EVERY SINGLE DAY SOCIAL BACKWARDNESS COLLECTS ITS OWN INNUMERABLE VICTIMS. 

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And remember: All captions and pullquotes are furnished by the editors, NOT the author(s). 


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Lebanon – What if it Fell?

Ambulances are howling. Hundreds are injured. Rubber bullets are flying and so is live ammunition.

A Revolution? A rebellion?

Who are those men, stripped from their waist up, muscular, throwing stones at the security forces in the center of Beirut? Are they genuine revolutionaries? Are they there in order to reclaim so badly discredited “Arab Spring”?


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Or did they come here in a show of force, because the West is paying them? If the Lebanese state collapses, ISIL could move in, and occupy at least a substantial part of Lebanon. That would suit the West’s interests, and those of Turkey, as well as the Gulf States.

Or Israel could take advantage of the vacuum, and invade Lebanon, once again. Or both ISIL and Israel.

Two weeks ago, a friend of mine said jokingly: “I met a kid in Beirut. He told me that he is going to get a job at some European NGO. His duty would be to help to destabilize Lebanon”.

She named the country funding the NGO, but I’d rather not mention it here, in order not to add more oil to fire. We had a good laugh then, but it does not appear too funny, anymore.

Yesterday she told me: “Security forces fired at him.”

He was there. He was not bragging. It was not a joke.

Nothing appears to be a joke in Lebanon, anymore!

Or could there be two “types” of protesters at the same place and at the same time? Those who are fighting for a better Lebanon, and those who are paid to fight for sectarianism and for the foreign interests (which in this country is almost the same thing)?

***

[dropcap]J[/dropcap]ust one day before the street battles erupted, I drove from Beirut, crossing the mountains and then progressing north, through the Bekaa Valley.

Night descended on the ancient city of Baalbek. Mayada El-Hennawy, the great Syrian pan-Arab classical musician, began singing, her pronounced voice amplified, then carried towards the mountains that form the border between two sisters: Lebanon and Syria.

Concert in Baalbek

Concert in Baalbek

What a sight! What madness! Behind Mayada’s back, sits the enormous structure of the Temple of Bacchus, above her, helicopter drones. Tanks and hundreds of soldiers were stationed all over Baalbek, protecting the site and the venue. Just a few kilometers away, Hezbollah is engaged in its epic battle with ISIL.

But thousands of people arrived, in striking defiance, refusing to succumb to fear. They drove here from Beirut and other cities of a battered, now almost dysfunctional Lebanon.

They came to celebrate life and the Arabic culture; they came to listen to their beloved songs and to pay tribute to this celebrated Syrian diva. Some, clearly, came to pay tribute to Syria itself – to Syria and to life.

As Mayada El-Hennawy began singing, people roared.

Screen Shot 2015-08-22 at 7.41.15 PM[dropcap]T[/dropcap]wenty-four hours after the concert, a crowd clashed with the Lebanese security forces in the center of Beirut, near the government palace.

Dozens were injured and on 24 August, it was reported that one person died in the hospital.

The “You stink” movement first organized the protests. Thousands of people hit the streets in response to an ongoing garbage crisis, which, according to many, has made the already difficult life in Beirut almost unbearable.

garbage-streets

“You Stink”! For 18 years, the government was unable (or unwilling) to build a permanent garbage-recycling site. For 18 years, poor villagers near the “provisory” garbage dumping grounds were suffering, getting poisoned, dying from unusually high level of cancer and from respiratory diseases. Then, finally, they said “Halas! Enough.” They blocked the site. And after they did, the garbage began accumulating on the streets of Beirut. Instead of finding a permanent solution, the government dispersed white toxic rat poison over the piles of rotting trash. People in the capital began getting sick.

But it is not only the garbage that is making life in the capital, and in fact all over the country, almost intolerable.

One thing has to be understood: Lebanon is not Iraq, Libya or Syria. All these countries had strong leadership, and they had robust socialist and social programs (despised by the West): from the medical care to education, public housing and pensions.

In total contrast, Lebanon’s government is dysfunctional, corrupt and divided. The country has been surviving over a year without a President, despite the Cabinet meeting more than 20 times in an attempt to elect one.

Garbage was just a tip of the iceberg. The infrastructure of Lebanon is collapsing: there are water shortages and constant electricity blackouts. There is hardly any public transportation to speak of, almost no green public areas. There are land grabs all over the country. Health and education are at disastrous levels. It is an extremely brutal place for many.

[dropcap]L[/dropcap]ebanon is perhaps one of the most capitalist countries on earth. There is almost nothing public, nothing socialist left here, anymore. And the savage capitalism (always prescribed by Western “partners” for their client states) in Lebanon, as everywhere in the world, simply does not work.

The country hardly produces anything. There are more Lebanese people living abroad than in Lebanon itself, and it is remittances that are keeping the state somehow afloat. There is also substantial income pouring in from the shady businesses in West Africa, in Iraq, but also income from the banking industry (mainly servicing the Middle East and the Gulf States) and from the narcotics grown in Bekaa Valley.

There is plenty of cash in individual’s pockets and in their bank accounts, but almost no money for basic public services. Lamborghinis and Ferraris are racing at night along Cornish, and the Zaitunay Bay Marina puts its counterpart in Abu Dhabi to shame. But most of the city is polluted, crumbling, and desperate.

In between those contrasting facades, desperate Syrian refugees are begging.

Nothing seems to be enough. Money comes in, and mysterious, big chunks of it simply evaporate.

Now the country is totally broke. Government sources claim that Lebanon’s public debt currently stands at about 143 percent of gross domestic product.

Lebanon is divided along sectarian lines: 18 religious groups. The main ones are Christians, Sunni Muslims, Shia Muslims, and a small Druze minority. Because of sectarianism, there is hardly any national unity, or a “national project”.

Several protesters I spoke to claim that they are fed up with sectarianism and divisions. They want one, strong, united Lebanon. Or that’s what they say.

Ahmed, one of the demonstrators, a middle age professional from Beirut, explained:

“I don’t want Lebanon of Christians and Muslims. I want one Lebanon, one country, united!”

But there seems to be no ideology truly uniting these protesters. There are only grievances that they have in common.

Demands appear to be legitimate.

[dropcap]B[/dropcap]ut in Lebanon, one cannot be certain of what lies below the surface. There are rumors that each religious group is now sending its fighters to the barricades.

For years and decades, competing political interests are pulling this tiny country in different directions.

“I spotted a guy who was protesting and who was obviously a Briton”, a diplomat based in Beirut who did not want to be identified, told me. “He was not a reporter, he was actually one of the protesters! And he spoke no Arabic. There are many bizarre characters at the protests.”

Who is who and who is with whom, is often extremely difficult to define.

Allegiances of the Christians are mostly with the West. Sunni Muslims are closely allied with the Gulf States, and indirectly, with the West. Shia Muslims, including Hezbollah, are leaning towards Iran.

[dropcap]A[/dropcap]lmost everyone here agrees that Hezbollah is the only sound social force in the country. It is also aiming at uniting Lebanon, by reaching out to non-Shia groups.

Presently, Hezbollah is locked in an epic fight against the ISIL, a brutal terrorist army that was originally supported and trained by the West, Turkey, generally by NATO. Hezbollah is opposed to terrible acts of destruction that are being spread by the West and by Israel all over the region. For that reason Hezbollah’s name is firmly engraved in the selective US terrorist list.

Lebanon is squeezed from all sides. Civil war in Syria fueled by the West has already forced at least 2 million Syrian people to cross the border and seek asylum in this tiny country. The ISIL is continuously trying to grab the territory in the Northern part of Lebanon. While Hezbollah is doing most of the fighting against ISIL, the Lebanese army and security forces are trained in the West. Saudi Arabia recently paid for the French supply of arms to Lebanon. Israel is constantly threatening to invade. To add to the list of distresses, there has been renewed fighting in the Palestinian refugee camps in the South of Lebanon, with several dead and many injured.

“What we want is to get rid of sectarianism”, explained Ahmed, standing in front of the concrete wall erected to prevent protesters from marching on the government building. “No more Christians and Muslims; Just Lebanese! And if we win, then there will be definitely much more socialism here, more social reforms, better health, education, infrastructure.”

But can this group really win against a tremendous capitalist and religious inertia?

“It is still so difficult to imagine how we could win”, admits Ahmed. “We need at least one million people to change this country.”

But the number of angry and determined people is constantly growing.

“We’ve had enough. Enough!” Shouts a man who is carrying a plastic bag filled with garbage as a symbol.

Few minutes later I am told by a group of demonstrators: “There are plenty of foreign interests here… French, the United States, Saudi… We need real independence.”

***

[dropcap]A[/dropcap]ll the demonstrators that I talk to are fed up, but very few of them can see a way out of the crisis. In Lebanon, there is no ideology, and no serious talk about socialism. Latin America has not been mentioned even once.

The original group of the protesters is horrified. Many of them went to protest with their little children on their backs and with their grandparents in tow. They thought they were going to engage in discussion with the government. Instead they were welcomed by water cannons, rubber bullets and tear gas.

Clashes, and terrible injuries followed. Then a wall was erected, outside the Grand Serail, just to be dismantled next day. Barbed wire is still all over the center of the city. The pavement is dotted with rocks, shop windows broken, cars burned. Tires are scorching, blocking main arteries of the city.

Security forces are omnipresent, on foot, on board their Humvees and on top of the tanks. And so are the medics and paramedics, ready for further escalations.


police-barricades

“Is this a continuation of the Arab Spring?” I asked.

“Yes”, I was told.

Who is behind this uprising?

Everyone at the protest site claims that the rebellion is absolutely spontaneous, that there is no foreign influence.

“Revolution!” protesters are shouting, repeatedly.

“This is not like those color revolutions,” I am told. A protester is referring to the West-backed movements paid to perform the “regime-changes” all over the world. “Here, we are on our own. We want a united, free and better Lebanon!”

There is no doubt that many protesters now fighting in the center of the capital are “genuine” and outraged citizens. But others are clearly not. The situation used to be the same in almost all other “Arab Spring countries”: initial desire for reforms and for social policies. Then the infiltration from several political (mainly pro-Western and pro-Saudi) groups followed soon. Time after time, genuine agendas were hijacked.

Are all rebellions in the Arab world doomed from the start? Are they all going to end in the US and EU orchestrated coups, in bloody massacres and finally, in horrific collapses of the nation? Is the Libyan scenario really inevitable?

One of the leading professors at the American University in Beirut, told me recently: “This university is where most of the leaders from the Gulf States get educated. And those who are not, are actually dreaming that they would be.”

Then one of the “international experts” based in the region, reminds me: “I am sure you already know that the workshops that were held for activists to ‘spark’ The Arab Spring were held in Lebanon”.

I know. And it says a lot. For many years and decades, Beirut was attracting those who wanted to taste the “Western the world” without leaving the Middle East. This is where the indoctrination was disseminated, and where so many shady deals between the West and the local rulers and movers were sealed.

A few thousand of protesters in the center of Beirut are closely watched. It goes without saying that each and every move they make is being analyzed, and that the West is going to try to turn the events to its advantage.

This does not mean that one should not try to improve the world, or to fight for a much better country. But it means that those few authentic protesters will be always outnumbered, and they will always have to face the leaders of the savage Lebanese capitalist establishment, backed by the West, and the Gulf States. They will also have to face those other “protesters” who already managed to infiltrate this small rebellion, and who are handled by various political interests, local and foreign.

If what is happening has origins abroad, then why is there suddenly such a rush to bring Lebanon down? Is it because of increasingly successful Russian diplomatic initiatives to stop all conflicts in the Middle East? Or is there a plan to almost fully encircle Syria? Could Hezbollah be now on the hit list of the West?

Rumors are plentiful, while information scarce. One thing is certain: if Lebanon collapses, the entire region will once again become a colony.


 

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Andre-Vltchek546
Andre Vltchek
 is a philosopher, novelist, filmmaker and investigative journalist. He covered wars and conflicts in dozens of countries. His latest books are: “Exposing Lies Of The Empire” and “Fighting Against Western Imperialism”.Discussion with Noam Chomsky: On Western TerrorismPoint of No Return is his critically acclaimed political novel. Oceania – a book on Western imperialism in the South Pacific. His provocative book about Indonesia: “Indonesia – The Archipelago of Fear”. Andre is making films for teleSUR and Press TV. After living for many years in Latin America and Oceania, Vltchek presently resides and works in East Asia and the Middle East. He can be reached through his website or his Twitter.




“…in the new exuberant aggressiveness of world capitalism we see what communists and their allies held at bay.” – Richard Levins (Source: The Proletarian Center)

FACT TO REMEMBER:
IF THE WESTERN MEDIA HAD ITS PRIORITIES IN ORDER AND ACTUALLY INFORMED, EDUCATED AND UPLIFTED THE MASSES INSTEAD OF SHILLING FOR A GLOBAL EMPIRE OF ENDLESS WARS, OUTRAGEOUS ECONOMIC INEQUALITY, AND DEEPENING DEVASTATION OF NATURE AND THE ANIMAL WORLD,  HORRORS LIKE THESE WOULD HAVE BEEN ELIMINATED MANY YEARS, PERHAPS DECADES AGO.  EVERY SINGLE DAY SOCIAL BACKWARDNESS COLLECTS ITS OWN INNUMERABLE VICTIMS. 

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And remember: All captions and pullquotes are furnished by the editors, NOT the author(s). 


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