Friday, December 7, 2018

Totalitarian capitalism

During the Cold War (1945-1991), the world was officially divided between two competing ideologies, the first of which some comic geniuses in the dominant “Western” bloc decided to call “free enterprise”, while also deciding to identify the rival ideology by the much more prosaic and demeaning vocable of “totalitarian communism”. In fact, the bloc of countries professing to support “free enterprise” included quite a few more dictatorships than it did states pretending to be governed by thoroughly supine political parties engaging in periodic election campaigns. Not to mention the fact that most of the major corporations controlling the economies of those same countries were seldom very enterprising, and indeed distinctly more inclined to oligopoly than to anything like a genuinely “free market”. Which according to the dictionary is supposed to be as open to small investors, even micro-credit investors, as it is to  much bigger ones.

As for the bloc of countries associated with “totalitarian communism”, many of them were certainly totalitarian, but not any more fundamentally socialist or communist than several of the countries belonging to the so-called “free world”. A small number of those not-very-free-world countries had developed social programs that were certainly never socialist or communist as such, but were designed instead to placate parts of their populations that seemed to be attracted to the merely rhetorical promises of the opposing ideological bloc. It turns out, however, that those programs were often more generous than most of the ones being adopted for real inside the only theoretically “communist” bloc.

From a more realistic point of view, the ideological slogans being put forward by both sides were just book covers poorly hiding a multifaceted fight between two conflicting forms of imperialism, one of them centred around the USA’s “American” empire and the other centred around the “Soviet” (Russian) empire. Both of which were much stronger back then than either of those two entities have become nowadays. Starting in 1979, the same comic geniuses who had originally invented the deliberately false name of “free enterprise”, decided instead to adopt the only slightly more neutral term of “neoliberalism” to describe their system. Which in spite of the name change is and always has been based on the straightforward maximization of private-corporate profit, whatever the consequences for everyone else. Following the collapse of the “Eastern” bloc in 1989 and the subsequent demise of the USSR (1922-1991) itself, neoliberalism soon became the world’s most important political, economic and social ideology.

The Eastern bloc’s implosion came about largely because of the constantly increasing dichotomy between the “dictatorship of the proletariat” that most of those countries were supposed to be promoting and the dominant, “new-class” bureaucracy that they were really promoting instead. But in a more geopolitical sense, that implosion would never have been so devastating but for the betrayal of the Soviet empire by the so-called “People’s” Republic of China. Which was a regional empire all by itself, whose refusal to kowtow to Russian imperialism led directly to its subsequent alliance instead with its previous arch-enemy, the US empire. Following the enormous trauma caused by the simultaneous disappearance of the Eastern bloc and the Soviet Union, the Russian Federation that was left over embarked on an orgy of alcoholic self-destruction during the 1990s, losing two-thirds of its industrial strength in the process.

Meanwhile, the USA and its allies triumphantly proclaimed their world-wide victory over “totalitarian communism” by welcoming the turncoat Chinese imperial nation into the “international community” (the World Trade Organization) dominated by the American empire. China, however, soon turned the tables on the USA and its private-capitalist allies in Europe, Japan, Canada, Australia and New Zealand, profiting from the excessive greed and extremely feeble patriotism of their “multinational” corporations, by turning itself into the newest “workshop of the world”. Although several other, formerly Third-World countries (such as India and Mexico) also participated in this process, it was mostly government-sponsored Chinese firms that drained millions of industrial jobs away from the previously “developed world”, severely undermining the industrial strength of several Western countries, especially the USA. Abandoning official communism completely in 1979 (the same year that neoliberalism officially began), China emerged several decades later having successfully “defeated” both the defunct USSR and the still-existing USA on the industrial front, becoming the world’s most dynamic industrial economy by far.

Under neoliberalism, private-capitalist countries and firms no longer have to pretend in the old paternalist fashion that they are providing jobs for workers and welfare for the destitute (through ordinary taxation), while simultaneously trying to take even more profit out of the economic system than their predecessors ever managed to do. As depicted even in popular  film comedies like “Pretty Woman”, corporate raiders armed with “lean” slogans like “shareholder rights” have turned profit maximization into a much more direct, much more efficient process. Namely by treating the entire, globalized world economy in the same way that multinational corporations have always extracted natural resources from the environment, by leaving nothing but dirt and destruction in their wake.

Which means that we have now entered into the era of totalitarian capitalism, in which mostly private-capitalist countries (“market economies”) like the USA, and mostly state-capitalist countries (“non-market economies”) like China, dominate the world together. The latter group includes not only a few previously-communist countries like China and Vietnam, but also quite a few more orthodox right-wing governments, such as military dictatorships (Egypt) and religious autocracies (Iran, Saudi Arabia). According to Joshua Kurlantzick, author of State Capitalism: How the Return of Statism is Transforming the World (2016), only one (Norway) of those very numerous state-capitalist (non-market) economies has adopted electoral democracy as a political system. Donald Trump’s USA, currently involved in a trade war with “non-market” China, keeps trying to ignore the fact that several of its closest allies, such as Saudi Arabia, are “non-market economies” also.

In the real world, however, both of those two competing “kinds” of countries, market and non-market, are merely situated more or less at different ends of the same private-public spectrum, with those countries favouring private investment more than public investment on one end, and those doing just the opposite on the other end. Since capitalism began at the close of the European “Middle Ages”, none of the world’s capitalist countries have ever relied solely on private investment, nor entirely on public investment (also known as government “intervention” into the economy), but have always combined private “enterprise” with state “enterprise” in various differing degrees. Canada for example, which is normally classified among the market economies, nevertheless contains within its official borders a large number of government-owned enterprises (such as Hydro-Québec), some of which are quite important in that nation’s economy. In spite of those realities, in today’s world neoliberalism has still become the official title of the ideology associated with those countries favouring private investment over public investment.

The ideology associated with countries favouring public investment instead, or highly-government-controlled private investment (as in China), is usually called economic nationalism. Some ultra-right-wing politicians, even in such otherwise neoliberal countries as Donald Trump’s USA, also use small dollops of economic nationalism from time to time, in an attempt to appear more patriotic than their “internationalist” adversaries (those still favouring multilateral economic treaties). In spite of the fact that many of those same ultra-right-wing politicians also continue to lean much more heavily toward neoliberalism in most of their policy statements. Even theoretically “non-market” countries like China also use neoliberalism extensively in their own policies, in spite of their tendency to favour government control instead. With the result that most of the world’s state-sponsored corporations have aligned most of their investment on copying the private-capitalist model, single-mindedly pursuing the maximization of quarterly profit just like the folks from the “opposing” model.

What both ends of the spectrum have in common is their shared desire to ignore the needs of the common people in every country as much as possible, so that they can concentrate all their available resources on fighting a turf war with rival countries, each joint private/public concentration of political and economic power in the world trying to dominate the planet at the expense of all the others, allies and enemies alike. In other words, “make America (or China, or any other rival empire) great again”, which also translates into ”the war of each against all”, as Thomas Hobbes might have put it. Whenever any of those rival administrations, the ones using more economic liberalism than economic nationalism, as well as the ones using more economic nationalism than economic liberalism, support ultra-right-wing populist policies in the pursuit of their goals, they can also quite rightly be accused of promoting neofascism as well, at the same time.

As a result, openly racist, sexist and ultra-elitist forms of neofascism now exist in every part of the world, dovetailing quite nicely with ultra-individualist neoliberalism by stripping away the paper-thin, “human rights” veneer of professional politicians like Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, Emmanuel Macron and Justin Trudeau. Only to replace that veneer with something even worse, namely the enthusiastically reactionary, more ape-like behaviour of populist politicians like Donald Trump, Xi Jinping, Vladimir Putin, Viktor Orban, Recep Erdogan, Narendra Modi, Rodrigo Duterte, Jair Bolsonaro and a host of other “anti-democratic (neofascist) revolutionaries”. (Homo sapiens being after all, as someone once pointed out, “the greatest of the great apes”.)

All over the world, the rich and the powerful people composing each country’s national-imperial, private/public oligarchy have succeeded in forcing their poorer and less powerful citizens into paying for every one of their stupid decisions, such as refusing to do anything real about the enormously deleterious effects of all the different kinds of industrial pollution. Or by deliberately impoverishing certain selected regions of the world (central America, southeastern Europe, northern Africa, western Asia, etc.), more than most of the other regions in the world, to the extent that a large percentage of the people in those particular places are forced into attempting mass migration out of those exceptionally blighted areas. Or by conspiring in a thousand different ways to enormously enlarge the already huge income gap between all the world’s richest people, on the one hand, and all the world’s poorest people, on the other extreme.

At the same time, the world’s most important private enterprises, and public enterprises, also “cross the line” constantly from legal into illegal operations, conspiring with full-time organized crime on a grand scale in millions of diabolical schemes designed to increase the rate of profit even higher than those achievable under (partly) legal conditions. Governments, and state-sponsored corporations, become corrupt, and therefore “inefficient” at running modern economies properly, whenever they help huge private corporations take part of their ill-gotten wealth from ordinary taxpayers, rather than trying to regulate the peculiar financial activities of the world’s richest investors.

Joint private/public corruption ends up creating thousands of enormous illegal zones inside dozens of different countries, that are “off-limits” to all those police forces and regular armies that have not yet transformed all their own operations into totally criminal activities. Particularly inside the world’s increasingly numerous “failed states”, completely divided up between rival warlords running their own private armies. Many of the organized-crime warlords all over the world run their operations strictly for profit, while many others also promote some kind of political ideology as well, often acting “on behalf” of some particular religious denomination, or some particular ethnic group, sometimes using “indigenous autonomy” as a cover for trafficking in illegal drugs, weapons, precious metals and/or immigrant slaves.

Over the past few years, also in dozens of different countries, such as the USA, Italy, Brazil, Nigeria and Pakistan, ultra-right-wing expressions like “drain the swamp” have been invented, which in most cases means ridding each country of all those officially considered to be “sinners”, like people on welfare, female adulterers, village “witches”, homosexuals and drug addicts, the same kind of “useless eaters” that were severely punished for their “sins” during the Nazi period in Germany. The general idea being to eventually kill off everyone in the world who is not doing whatever the particular ultra-right-wing movement in each case wants them to do, either because they are not acting like “good Christians”, or “good Muslims”, or because they are acting in some “un-American”, or “un-European, “un-Russian” or “un-Chinese” way, like the communists and their fellow travellers in the USA were accused of doing during the Cold War. In today’s USA, however, it would be much more appropriate to accuse most of the billionaire executives of that country’s major manufacturing industries with such diabolical “un-American” behaviour.

Be that as it may, in each one of the above cases, the ultra-right-wing populists threatening to drain their respective swamps are seeking what they consider to be “perfection” in a world inhabited by mostly imperfect people. They all want to rid their countries of the “enemies of the people”, like those in the anti-establishment wing of the Democratic Party in the USA, welfare recipients all over the world (particularly if they do not have the right skin colour), all those who do not seem to be able to “fend for themselves”, as well as all the unbelievers, those who are not good, evangelical Christians, or ultra-Islamist Muslims, or any other kind of religious fanatics. Or even those people who do not go far enough in the pursuit of the extremist cause (like liberal Republicans in the USA).

In situations such as these, in every different region and culture, once things get really out of hand, the whole situation can degenerate into civil war, with people as crazy as those supporting the Islamic State in different parts of Asia and Africa even killing off members in good standing of Al Qaeda for being “imperfectly radicalized”. In other words, kill everybody who is not perfect and since nobody is perfect, that means everybody. More or less in the same way that the “deviants” in Stalinist Russia, or Maoist China, or Pol Pot’s Cambodia, were also killed way back when, in search of what was supposed to have been a radically different kind of “perfection”.

One of the best books that I have consulted recently, to further develop my own interpretation of such things, was Alain Deneault’s contribution, Faire l’économie de la haine: Essais sur la censure, published in Quebec in 2018. Deneault is a prolific writer on contemporary capitalism, who has become the program director of the International College of Philosophy, in Paris (France). He became quite well-known following the publication of a previous book (2008) that he wrote, along with Delphine Abadie and William Sacher, called Noir Canada, about the horrible depredations caused by Canadian mining companies in Africa, particularly Barrick Gold in Tanzania. That multinational corporation took him to court for libel and defamation, succeeding in getting his book totally censored and removed from circulation, an enormously costly process for Deneault, the two other authors and their editor. So much for freedom of expression, “even” in Canada, which seems to enjoy a largely undeserved reputation for being relatively open to criticism of predatory capitalism.

Deneault’s 2018 book is in fact a re-editing of several of his previously published articles over the past several years, denouncing not only the various ways in which multinational corporations and tax-evading investors control large sections of the world economy and most of the world’s governments. But also analyzing just how thoroughly the so-called “justice” system, the highly elitist academic establishment and even the dangerous world of professional sport (including the falsely-amateur Olympic Games), have all intimately incorporated private-capitalist exploitation, performance-based physical deprivation and much-intensified forms of censorship into their own collaborating systems of all-inclusive social control.

The ultimate goal of which has been to put into place a comprehensive ideological environment covering all aspects of human society by which the very numerous victims of private (or public) capitalist exploitation, all over the world, have been rendered so completely alienated from reality by official obfuscation that they can no longer identify, let alone consciously blame, the real perpetrators for their crimes. All of which helps a great deal to explain the rise of the world-wide, ultra-right-wing populist (neofascist) movements that I identified in the preceding paragraphs, run by a gang of demagogic dictators (or would-be dictators) who belong to the self-same “liberal swamp” (in fact, the neoliberal swamp) that they are constantly attacking in their extremely misleading propaganda.

I agree completely with Deneault that censorship of inhuman industrial exploitation is certainly one of the main goals for setting up that all-encompassing, world-wide, environment of deliberate ignorance. Unfortunately, the same kind of totally unjustified censorship also shows up in extremely well-known cases as well, in which the censorship involved is often “hidden in plain sight” (as in the Edgar Allan Poe story, “The Purloined Letter”), rather than buried under a ton of legal machinations. One outstanding recent case being the Islamic-terrorist movement’s murderous campaign to silence all those involved in “blaspheming” the prophet Mohamed, like the Christian woman in Pakistan condemned to death (at one point) for blasphemy, who was in fact set up by her neighbours in a personal dispute that had nothing to do with the “crime” for which she was charged.

Or the equally well-known example of the by-no-means-hidden censorship involved in the very recent decision of the European Court of Human Rights to condemn another woman in Austria for the fake crime of “inciting hatred and violence” against the Muslim religion by implying that the prophet Mohamed must have been a pedophile because of his marriage with his wife, Aïcha, when she was only six years old, a marriage that was then consummated when she was only nine. As pointed out by journalist Pierre Trudel in an editorial (“L’Europe n’est plus Charlie”) published in Le Devoir (October 30, 2018), that legal decision effectively put an end to any official European attempts to uphold freedom of speech against the Islamic terrorists who murdered the Charlie Hebdo cartoonists in Paris back in 2015.

Does that also mean that, in Europe and anywhere else, anyone who condemns the hundreds of thousands of Catholic priests who raped millions of innocent boys and girls, all over the world, since they were denied the right to marry during the Middle Ages, will also be condemned for blasphemy? Or are we supposed to understand instead that it is only religious fanatics who threaten to riot over such things that can convince a court to condemn someone who criticizes their religion in public? At least in Europe, it seems that today’s Christian extremists are not as eager to riot against “blasphemous”, but nevertheless well-founded, criticism of their religion, at least not as often these days, as do the Islamist ones living in that same continent.

All of which has also been accompanied by yet another kind of hypocritical, open censorship, that of professional do-gooders in the West, those of Christian as well as those of Muslim origin, inveigling against Islamophobia all the time, while deliberately ignoring the fact that the percentage of Muslims hating all Christians and Jews is as great as the percentage of Christians and Jews hating all Muslims. Not only in Muslim-majority countries but also in places where Muslims are only a small minority of the total population. Which, once again, also applies to all the similar campaigns of open censorship and hatred, in every possible direction, involving extremists belonging to all the other religions on this planet, such as Buddhism, Hinduism, Sikhism, Confucianism, Shintoism, shamanism and so on. All the religious fanatics in the world seem to want to get in on this particular act.

Open censorship is also becoming much more frequent these days even in cases having nothing to do with extractive industries or with religions, because of the rulers of so many different countries excessive reliance on political correctness. In Québec, for example, the electoral commission recently condemned a trade union for publishing a table comparing the platforms of various different political parties on environmental questions, prior to an election campaign. The fact that all the information published was taken from each party’s official platform, and did not involve any editorial extrapolation whatsoever, had no impact on the commissioners’ love affair with censorship, in this case apparently for its own sake.

Censorship of history is also one of the world’s favourite pastimes these days. The ultra-right-wing government in Poland has become well-known recently for attempting to stifle any professional historians suggestion, according to which a majority, rather than a small minority, of Catholic Poles collaborated with the Nazis, against the Jews, during the Second World War. French president Emmanuel Macron also tried to turn history on its head (once again) during the centennial ceremonies relating to the First World War by claiming that general Philippe Pétain was a good patriotic soldier during that conflict, even if he also became an official Nazi collaborator later on, during the Second World War.

Meanwhile, in Québec, people close to the centres of power are even suggesting that the sections of the high school course on Quebec history, pertaining to different “cultural communities”, should be written by militant representatives of those groups themselves, rather than by professional historians. Private enterprise has also contributed in its own populist fashion to historical obfuscation, as in the case of the popular US television program on the “Historia” network, claiming in a strangely backward-racist way that all the great ancient civilizations must have been founded by extra-terrestrial aliens, since none of them could have ever have built such amazing buildings as the Egyptian pyramids without outside help.

One of Denault’s best chapters was about how the world of economic statistics has also been completely reorganized so as to provide extensively manipulated, quantitative “proof” (back-stopping) for the recent benchmarking trends in corporate development. The idea behind benchmarking being for any particular corporate executive to troll through the investment practices of the “best” companies in whatever business for which that person happens to be working, in order to figure out how to plan for the future of said executive’s own company. 

Based on the fact that benchmarking (a term borrowed from the gun industry) always defines the “best” practices as being those that are the most profitable to major investors, its real goal is to make sure that any successful company’s quarter-year rate of profit will always exceed its previously established rate of profit by a considerable margin. Otherwise, “the market” (i.e., the other major investors) will severely punish any large corporations whose results do not live up to its expectations, as has happened dozens of times recently even to extremely well-performing private corporations like Apple, and also even to extremely well-performing, entire countries like China.

It seems to me that the whole benchmarking process is exactly the kind of robotic monstrosity that I have been denouncing over the past several years, in other words a system in which the world’s most important private firms, and their state-capitalist imitators, go about their business without giving a damn about anyone, or anything, else. Not the millions of permanently laid-off workers, and their families, all over the world, nor the severely underpaid employees left behind to do all the work by themselves after restructuring has taken place, nor the abandoned suppliers or customers, nor the equally abandoned local governments and public or private infrastructure (schools, hospitals, restaurants, etc.) in all the affected communities. Nor the millions of people all over the world forced to work compulsory overtime and on unpaid internships. Nor the other millions of temporary, foreign workers treated like slaves in many of the richer countries, who are sent back to wherever they came from just as soon as they get upset about anything.

Nor the ever-increasing numbers of victims of on-the-job “accidents” and highly predictable crashes, derailments, explosions and other “incidents” breaking out all over the world, especially since neoliberalism was put into place. Including examples like the Union Carbide explosion in Bhopal, India, back in 1984, or the Canadian Pacific/Irving Oil explosion in Lac-Mégantic, Québec, in 2013, along with several thousand other such examples along the way. Nor, least of all, completely ignoring the God-forsaken (from an ironic, pro-capitalist point of view) natural environment wherever it may raise its “ugly” (anti-capitalist) head.

Needless to say, none of all this programmed dystopia fazes in the least those professional prostitutes from the financial media, who are always droning on and on about how such anti-capitalist inventions as “corporate social responsibility” seem to be killing off such patriotic endeavours as the much-beleaguered tar sands in the Canadian province of Alberta. Thereby also reducing Canada’s (or any other country’s) competitiveness vis-à-vis any other private-capitalist jurisdictions all over the world, not to mention having to put up with so-called “government-related trade distortions” coming from state-capitalist countries.

After all, the economic sycophants add, every private firm only makes money by creating wealth (wealth being in their view a synonym for profit), meaning that any firm that loses money is also destroying wealth, and that therefore any government subsidy for such non-performing firms simply worsens the overall situation. Tie-ing themselves up in ideological knots as poorly constructed as these ones effectively prevents such deliberately myopic commentators from noticing just how much real wealth in fact is constantly being destroyed by financial investors whose only “benchmark” is the enormously bloated size of their own entirely speculative portfolios. None of the neoliberal bench-markers could give a fig about any “externalities”, such as the “socialized wealth” to be found in local community infrastructure, that does not immediately service the ravenous needs of their own companies’ short-term, quarterly reports. Not to mention the fact that all the government tax “incentives” designed to encourage investment in any particular region or industry, are simply added on the profit side to investors’ overall balance-sheets, without ever resulting in any increased investment on a world scale.

As time goes on, the entire system of profit accumulation is acting more and more like a machine, or a robot, in which opposition to the prevailing point of view becomes more and more difficult. The whole situation is starting to resemble a bad television drama in which the male hero realizes all of a sudden that he cannot just drive his car down a steep mountain slope in the middle of a rainstorm to recover some object that has fallen over the side of the cliff, and that he is going to have to get out of his car and climb down that dangerous, slippery slope on foot to recover whatever he wants. The common (“ordinary”) people in this world are like that driver, who have to do all the heavy lifting by themselves, all the time, because under the neoliberal system of austerity and limited government, or state-capitalist society imitating private enterprise, the entire system everywhere in the world is working for the exclusive benefit of a tiny minority of benchmark people at the very tip-top of the social pyramid (in the same position as the car in the above soap-opera drama), who have permanently lost all interest in any “social partners” except themselves.

Politicians making speeches all over the world, as well as ordinary scribblers writing columns in the media, or the authors of most letters to the editor, or of most social media pages, are constantly attacking each other back and forth, forgetting that their fake “democracy”, or their phoney “make-my-nation-great-again” project, all have to line up behind the lion’s share taken by the benchmark people, in order to search for any scraps that may have fallen off the leading investors’ table. Ordinary white men (“poor white trash”) supporting authoritarian “Big Daddies” like Trump and Putin, or ordinary supporters of similar dictatorships in any of the mostly non-white portions of the planet, have to realize that in order to “share the wealth” with the benchmark guys from the world’s “best” firms, they are going to have to help their own local Big Daddy take that wealth away from their very own "women-folk", or from the “inferior races” that surround them, or from the homeless “useless eaters”, or from anyone at all who is not already a billionaire tycoon.

In the current context, it does not seem any longer possible to hope that victims of both kinds of capitalism (public and private), such as the people in the working class, who have become much more numerous in today’s world than they ever were before, will suddenly wake up from their centuries-old slumber and adopt a genuinely pro-communist or a pro-socialist point of view. Although it might seem normal that people of humble origins would naturally gravitate toward such an anti-capitalist and anti-fascist attitude, it does not seem very realistic to think that such a thing could happen any more nowadays. The enormous barrage of neoliberal and neofascist propaganda over the past forty years, coupled with the abject failure of all the communist and democratic-socialist parties, certainly seem to have rendered that kind of solution to the world’s most important problems completely out of reach.

Government-sponsored corporations in dozens of different countries have even decided to take over the sale of often-harmful products of popular consumption, such as alcohol, gambling (lottery tickets), marijuana and similar “lower-class” vices, playing the same anti-social role that used to be played by organized crime. In order to stay “close to the people”, left-wing populist politicians like former British-Columbia premier Mike Harcourt have ended up becoming (“BC-bud”) marijuana executives after retiring from active politics. The same Mike Harcourt who once signed an official party document praising one of my closest relatives for his “50 years of service” to the cause of democratic socialism in that Canadian province. Left-wing populists all over the world are also capable of (quite correctly) denouncing Big Business for massive (legal and illegal) tax evasion, but still simultaneously supporting government tax breaks aimed at encouraging private investment (without much success) in various different industries.

In most parts of the world, the powers-that-be have generally succeeded over the past forty years in greatly diminishing any militant, anti-capitalist activities, resulting in an enormous decline in union membership, many fewer successful, large-scale, strike movements, and even a dearth of any widespread student agitation. When exceptional confrontations do break out, they are often like the current “yellow-vest” agitation in France, which is one of the best recent examples demonstrating just how dysfunctional human society has become these days.

Millions of ordinary French citizens outside the most important cities in that country have been forced in recent decades to rely almost exclusively on using their private cars to get around from place to place in order to do their individual, day-to-day sales or professional work (as in most parts of North America). Simply because their government has refused to maintain the once-extensive public rail system that used to exist all over the country, in order to focus on providing very expensive, high-speed rail for major cities only. Which means that when the ultra-elitist Macron government recently decided, ostensibly for ecological reasons, to significantly increase already high taxes on diesel fuel and gasoline (for cars), the people required by law to keep yellow vests inside their cars (in case of accidents) used those same vests as a symbol of what soon became a nation-wide protest against the new taxes, that have since been withdrawn.

As in many other such cases, the extreme violence often used during those protests may have sometimes been organized by security-force provocateurs, as well as quite often by some of  the well-prepared protesters themselves. In any case, as I have been pointing out over and over again in my blogposts, elitist governments do not seem to have the faintest idea nowadays how to handle two major crises at the same time, such as the ecology crisis and increasingly extreme divisions between the social classes.

Governments all over the world seem to have given up altogether on reducing social inequality, in order to avoid rioting, as well as having given up completely on promoting peaceful coexistence, or international controls on the use of nuclear weapons, in order to avoid future wars, especially the much-projected, totally-annihilating “Third World War”. Most government programs to help the homeless have also been abandoned, in favour of a return to private charity, asking the public and small businesses to help them instead. As a result, ordinary people have taken to relying on help from the world’s largest foundations run by private philanthropists, completely forgetting that all those foundations also profit enormously from hiding their money in the world’s most popular tax havens.

Having given all their tax money away to the banks, the multinational corporations and the phoney “philanthropists”, governments no longer have the wherewithal to sustain ordinary public expenditure on such things as public transit, or environmental protection. In any case, as was pointed out recently by Pierre Cloutier de Repentigny, from the University of Ottawa’s Faculty of Law, “the way laws are constructed around a market economy approach makes them fundamentally incompatible with environmental protection” (The Montreal Gazette, November 17, 2018).

My own personal “theory of everything human”, that I use to help explain these increasingly complex problems, is what I have been reluctantly forced to call “the gang-rape theory” of human relations. In other words, trying to analyze how human society works nowadays by comparing it metaphorically to the horrific situation that everyone has heard about, involving any particular gang of Catholic priests in any particular boarding school raping a group of boys as they have so often done, all over the world, in the past. Then taking those same boys to the confessional afterwards in order to get them to pray to God to spare them from being punished for their sins, the boys themselves getting blamed for the sins committed by the priests! In my theory, this falsely pious gang-rape can be compared to Deneault’s description of all the increasingly sophisticated, neoliberal ways by which most large private firms nowadays, in every field of investment, dissimulate their own increasingly inhuman social evils.

The victims, in this case everyone not belonging to the benchmark class, always have to submit to the equivalent of a “gang-rape”, in dozens of delightfully sophisticated ways, in order to preserve the system of domination set up all over the world by humanity’s alpha males. But they also have to be persuaded, before, during and after their ordeals, that the fact that they are being treated in all  those painful, humiliating ways is in reality their own fault, because they had the temerity (hubris) to want the dominant males (as well as a few dominant females like Margaret Thatcher) to share the available wealth with them equitably, in the first place. Which is more or less the equivalent, I suppose, in Greek mythology, of what happened to the titan, Prometheus, after he stole fire from the supreme god, Zeus. Or, much more recently, what has happened to the Greek nation itself, over the past few years, as the price of its  membership in the European Union.

In my opinion, the whole of human society nowadays also resembles the very familiar pattern of sexually mistreated girls (who in fact get victimized a lot more often than boys) getting blamed by the perpetrators, and by the perpetrators’ lawyers, for having “caused” the rapes they are suffering from by having dared to wear short skirts in public, or some other similar, invented excuse. In other words, whatever the metaphor being used, human society is always a system of multiple victimization, starting with the initial rape (or other similar crime) itself, which gets repeated first in the ultra-expensive courts of law, then in ultra-elitist academic discourse about the subject, as well as in the extremely horrific, social media. Leaving behind all the metaphors, wherever human beings gather and discuss, people designated as “inferiors” must always be assaulted by their social “superiors”, over and over again, in every possible way, forever and whenever, in order to preserve a “properly functioning society”, that in every case is always unfortunately based on some kind of sadomasochistic domination scenario.

As a general theory of everything human, the concept of sadomasochistic domination should be seen as a metaphor of human interaction that can be applied to any particular predicate of the same essential subject (social intercourse). There may be an infinite number of potential variations on this theme, as long as they are always about violence and aggression. Like the French word “viol”, meaning rape, which has the same root as the word “violence”, this particular word having the same meaning in both English and French.

This is in fact quite a “bipartisan” (or multi-partisan) sort of theory. It can be used in all sorts of different social situations and public debates, such as the current debate between  neoliberalism and neofascism (ultra-right-wing populism) all over the world, in which various ruling elites succeed in disagreeing violently with each other over which is the best way of mistreating all the “inferior” people in the world nowadays. The tiny minority of people running liberal-democratic countries, for example, are not the least bit interested in doing away with the popular illusion, that millions of ordinary people apparently still possess in such countries, that they are in fact participating in the election of genuinely “democratic” governments.

In such countries, the rich and the powerful benchmark people who run them are convinced that such elections have served them well over the years by maintaining the illusion of “popular participation in power”. Much better than in military dictatorships (such as in Egypt) in which the people have to be ruled by military might, supplemented only with the fear of “terrorism”, such as that which ensued in that country immediately after the elected  government of the Muslim Brotherhood was overthrown by the Sissi dictatorship. Electoral democracy is also preferable, at least to rulers of self-proclaimed “democracies”, because it turns out to be quite a bit more stable (or rather because it used to be more stable) than the even more violent dictatorship of terrorist groups like the Islamic State, that temporarily ruled much larger portions of Syria and Iraq than those ultra-reactionary people currently run. A self-defined “caliphate” that the same organization may soon be setting up in Afghanistan instead.

The across-the-board conclusion being that whether or not the people in power still support the democratic illusion, or opt instead for some more neofascist method of government, does not change the underlying reality. All the common people in every place, whether that place is falsely democratic or violently anti-undemocratic, are still victims of those in power, although not always to the same extent. Whether they realize it or not.

Whatever method of “governance” is currently being chosen by dominant people all over the world, in order to extract the greatest possible wealth from the greatest possible number of people, does not seem to have much of an influence on containing the dominant ones’ greed, which seems boundless. In the last resort, they can always take even more wealth away from nature itself, before realizing that nature can only take so much filth (pollution) before it pushes back, killing off several million people per year (so far) through premature death and what is euphemistically called climate change (wildfires, floods and other assorted Biblical disasters). That for some “unfathomable” reason seem to kill a lot more people nowadays than they did back when human beings were considerably less numerous than they are now.

Which reminds me for all the world about a book published over forty years ago by a Parti-Québécois-government energy minister (since deceased) called Guy Joron, Minimum annual salary 1 million $, or The race toward madness. For which I promptly wrote an article back then in a left-liberal Canadian magazine (The Last Post) lambasting Joron for suggesting, without differentiating between the social classes, that modern society cannot just continue expanding ordinary economic growth into the stratosphere without somehow protecting the natural environment from total disaster. My idea was that though there was nothing whatever wrong with protecting nature, that should not simply be done by getting everyone to contribute “equally” to setting up a system of what is now called “negative growth” instead. Otherwise, the rich would just go on forever getting richer at the expense of the poor, who would have to end up paying the entire price of any resulting negative growth.

As it turns out, both of us were right. Joron’s book, originally published in French in 1976, was quite a prescient achievement after all, rightly anticipating exactly the kind of discussions about that subject currently dominating conversations all over the world. According to 99% of the world’s environmental scientists, we are now living in “the last decade” during which something could still be done to prevent enormously expanding fossil-fuel consumption from completely ruining the air, the water and the soil, thereby shortening everyone’s life expectancy by a long-lasting margin (which is to say, forever).

Back in the 1970s, some of us still thought that humanity was on the verge of discovering some kind of non-polluting alternative, such as fusion energy, which had already been “harnessed” in a destructive sort of way (the hydrogen bomb), but had not yet led to any kind of peaceful use. Nowadays, we have come to realize that no peace-loving fusion-power plants seem to be on the verge of starting up any time soon, nor is it likely that we will soon discover any other viable, alternative, “technological fixes” capable of providing for the needs of almost eight billion people (twice as many as back then). It seems instead that we finally have our collective backs up against the wall. Unless, of course, as many different people have been positing recently (even in popular films like “Elysium”), the minuscule elite of the entire world’s most important people can somehow overcome their own personal differences, and live together in some totally disconnected bunker (or space station), letting 99.99% of the world’s largely “superfluous” population just die out in the open air, soon to become completely toxic.

In the meantime, outside the (future) bunker walls, an increasingly large number of people are now claiming that we need something like a world-wide ecological revolution, in other words the adoption of “voluntary simplicity” on a gigantic scale, to do away with economic growth forever. Whatever the impact of doing that may turn out to be on billions of poorer, less powerful people, as well as on dozens of poorer, less powerful nations. But the people making such revolutionary proclamations are not being very realistic, to say the least.

Anyone seriously attempting to bring about such a total revolution would have to go a lot farther than just getting ordinary people to sign pledges to reduce their own personal “carbon footprints”, as well as putting pressure on today’s increasingly weak governments to pass merely theoretical anti-pollution laws, that can never really be enforced. Any attempt at a total revolution against everything that the world’s real rulers (major investors) have been doing to the rest of us for the past 500 years, would soon "oblige" the ultra-rich and the ultra-powerful people, in both the neoliberal and the neofascist “sectors”, to throw a financial temper tantrum the like of which no one has ever seen before. Thoroughly terrified governments and central banks would then undoubtedly turn that unprecedented crisis into a total rout, a Great Depression if you will, and no one anywhere would then be able to pay for education, or health, or transportation, or housing, or food for that matter, whether or not they lived in a more international, or in a more nationalist, economy. (Except for the “Elysium” group, if they ever succeed in pulling that off.)


Back on the planet Earth, any attempts on anyone’s part to finally do anything real about the natural environment would also inevitably disappear in the ensuing panic. Nature, of course, would then strike back a thousand times harder than before, much worse than in any of the very numerous “natural disasters”, that people all over the world are already having to put up with nowadays. Which means that in this not-very-far-in-the-future dystopia, military confrontation between states armed to the teeth would most likely all of a sudden become very popular everywhere, and not just located as it is nowadays in certain delimited parts of the world. Massive famines, massive epidemics and megadeath on an unprecedented scale would probably soon follow, putting the survival of the human race itself back on the agenda, just like it was back in the Cold War, the same historical period that I was writing about at the beginning of this blogpost. (Once again, except for the “Elysium” gang, if we let them get away with it.)

Thursday, October 25, 2018

The popularity of denial

Not a month goes by that the difference between what we should be doing about everything that is going wrong with the world, and what most people actually end up doing instead, becomes greater and greater. Most world leaders, as well as most of their followers, have turned denial of reality into one of this planet’s most popular pastimes. As a result, deliberate, ideologically-based, ignorance of what is really going on has become at least as important as either of the two other sources of ignorance that also unfortunately exist. (Leaving aside any strictly biological considerations.)

In the first place, deliberate ignorance has become as popular as the increasingly absurd situation of billions of poverty-stricken people, all over the world, who even in those countries that are now much richer than they ever used to be, still do not have the time to find out about most things, because they are forced to spend every hour of every day simply trying to stay alive. And in the second place, it has also become as popular as the ridiculous situation of the hundreds of millions of other people who have become so doped into the endless consumption of electronic and/or psychotropic forms of “entertainment”, that they could not care less about anything else that may be happening beyond their immediate line of sight.

The most obvious example of the deliberate, ideological form of denial, is the totally perverse reaction of most leaders and followers to the always-more-dangerous-than-the-last-time-we-looked poisoning of the air we breath, the water we drink and the soil we depend on for most of our food. During the 1970s, just in the transportation sector, millions of people already rich enough back then to own cars reacted to the first energy crisis by opting for smaller, more compact, less gas-guzzling, vehicles. With the onslaught of ultra-individualistic neoliberalism in the 1980s, however, those same people began switching over en masse to much larger SUVs, and even bigger pick-up trucks, more often than not to accomplish the same job of driving one person at a time, mostly to work and back, every day.

With the result that even though the fuel efficiency of most motor vehicles has increased considerably in recent decades, that has not come anywhere close to offsetting the overall polluting effect of the addition of tens of millions of much bigger individual transportation machines, not only in the richer countries that were already consuming the smaller machines way back when, but also in every one of the newly-emerging economies. Similar upside-down reactions occurred with equal perversity vis-à-vis all the other forms of pollution, like the billions of tons of plastic garbage being deliberately dumped into the oceans (for “economic” reasons), especially in Asia. Or the fact that every time some government decides to apply some sort of carbon tax on fossil fuels, it is inevitably replaced (during the next elections or the next coup d’état) by a new government that rescinds that order.

Not to mention the equally incredible spectacle of what could be called personal or voluntary pollution, such as in the ever-increasing consumption of cannabis, whether legalized in some places (such as in Canada), or remaining illegal in other places. A product that is mostly smoked in cigarettes, in spite of the enormous, and only partly successful, barrage of publicity in dozens of countries aimed at eliminating the very dangerous consumption of nicotine smoking. Cannabis being just as dangerous, not only because of the smoke inhalation, but also because it contributes to the potential onset of schizophrenia, especially among young people, and significantly increases incidents of driving-while-stoned. Just what we needed, another “fun”product, like alcohol, becoming more and more popular even though it makes driving motor vehicles even more potentially deadly than it already was.

It turns out that 70% of all the different kinds of pollution in the world can be attributed to the negative product “contributions” of only 100 major (private-capitalist and state-capitalist) corporations. In spite of the enormous quantity of information about pollution being disseminated these days, all over the world, most people’s reaction to the ecology crisis nowadays remains that of trying really hard to avoid noticing that it still exists, while also pretending not to notice that it is, nevertheless, getting worse all the time.

Solving this problem in the usual way suggested by most politically-correct pundits, in the case of mass transportation, by convincing everyone to use public transit instead of privately-owned vehicles, does not meet with a great deal of enthusiasm in most circles. Even getting all the appropriate infrastructure in place in all the world’s poorest countries, medium-income countries and richest countries, at the same time, so that everyone needing to get from one place to another could do so in the most ecologically efficient way possible, using today’s technologies and existing political-economic systems, would require an enormous, unprecedented, industrial effort that would inevitably create (at least for a time) a huge amount of new pollution.

Whereas sufficiently changing all the world’s existing technologies, as well as its political and economic systems, almost overnight, so that ecological efficiency of this kind could be attained before it is too late, not just in passenger transportation but in every other necessary part of modern life, is definitely not getting much support either. Denial has become almost universally popular because most people much prefer just to sit back and to feel good for no particular reason, rather than having to take on such a gigantic task. Especially since the ecology crisis is not the only life-threatening situation facing humanity these days.

Another ultra-important issue that gets ignored just as much by most people, most of the time, is the world’s increasingly dangerous geopolitical situation. For one thing, the number of countries possessing nuclear weapons is getting bigger all the time, with most of the nuclear powers hating each other as much as, or more than, they ever did in the past. Not only the USA, Britain and France against Russia, China and North Korea, but also ever more Hindu-nationalist India versus ever more ultra-Islamic Pakistan.

The USA’s big bad Donald Trump runs around crowing about his “upcoming” nuclear deal with North Korea (the DPRK), while in reality he is being played for a sucker by “the little rocket man” himself, Kim Jong-Un. Meanwhile, Trump’s country remains by far the world’s most important spender on weapons of all kinds, as well as on hundreds of military bases and personnel, scattered all over every continent and ocean. Not to mention spending huge sums of money trying to interfere non-militarily in whatever is going on in every other country in the world, while getting justifiably upset whenever some other country (such as Russia) tries to interfere in whatever is going on in the USA. Moreover, Russia’s decision to continue producing as many intermediate nuclear weapons as before, in spite of a treaty signed by Reagan and Gorbachev in 1987, has also given the USA a convenient excuse to repudiate that same treaty, thereby setting off a new, all-nuclear, arms race. What a wonderful world we live in.

At the same time, the Trump-skull, both intellectually and ideologically ignorant, has also decided to do away with the international agreement that was supposed to prevent Iran from going nuclear as well. While simultaneously supporting most of Saudi Arabia’s apparent attempts to turn Syria’s very uncivil war into a regional conflagration. It turns out that even godfathering the Saudi regime’s barbaric sponsorship of the uber-reactionary Islamic State movement, as all the US presidents and their Western allies have done for the past several years, was not enough.

Now the USA also seems to be encouraging both Iran (backed by Russia) and Saudi Arabia (backed by Egypt and the United Arab Emirates) to exacerbate the regional division between Sunni and Shiite Islam, so as to ignite the entire Middle Eastern theatre. The ghoulish Saudi murder of the journalist, Jamal Khashoggi, is probably not sufficient either to change any world leader’s mind about “more important issues”, such as the sale of billions of dollars of conventional weapons to the Saudis, in spite of some half-hearted bleating about that particularly disgusting murder. Not to mention the “perceived need” to save too-big-to-fail Saudi Arabia from collapse by creating even greater mayhem in the entire region.

In addition, the USA and its Western allies appear to be trying to make sure that such a horrible thing really does take place after all, by brainlessly continuing to back nuclear-power Israel’s equally dangerous attempts to “protect” itself from destruction by also fanning the flames of an even wider war. To top it all off, the Sunnis themselves have long been a house divided, the Saudis and their allies being totally opposed to the attempted revival of the Ottoman (pan-Turkish) Empire and its new-found allies in the Muslim Brotherhood. Turkey’s authoritarian leader, Recep Erdogan, having recently abandoned Ataturk’s longstanding policy of separation between the state and religion, has put that country in a good position to take a few, “moderately radical” Muslim allies away from its long-time Saudi foe.

In other words, every country in that  region, and well as every one of its international backers, wants to triumph over every other country, thereby maintaining the traditional role of the Middle East as the world’s standard-bearer of violent, multilateral confrontation. Each one of those belligerent nations, Iran, Israel, Turkey and Saudi Arabia, are being propelled toward total war not only for expansionist reasons, nor just because of pressure from their mentor empires, but also by the incredibly motivating power of their already fundamentalist, or increasingly fundamentalist, religious ideologies.

All the people involved in this multinational escalation sequence simultaneously pretend to ignore the fact that a regional war could very easily become a world-wide, nuclear conflagration. Whose only “beneficial” effect would be to free us all, forever, from having to worry about the ecology crisis any more, by turning relatively “slow-moving” climate change into a much more rapid, much more “efficient”, destruction of the entire human race. Along with millions of other multi-cellular species, and most of the rest of the natural environment. A distinct possibility that makes the recent invention of the new geological epoch, the “anthropocene”, seem like a really bad joke on the part of today’s scientists.

Which puts the emphasis on another outstanding example of most people’s deliberate ignorance of how things really work in this world, when they refuse to understand as well that each separate crisis situation, such as the ecological crisis and the geopolitical crisis, are not separate “files” to be dealt with independently of each other, but tend to intersect at every possible juncture. If human beings are going to survive at all, for more than just the next few years, we are going to have to free ourselves not only from each different kind of voluntary blindness, but also from the combined effect of all these multiple varieties of deliberate ignorance, coming together all the time as they inevitably must.

This same argument applies, too, with a vengeance to yet another leading (and also very closely related) example of deliberate ignorance, namely the deleterious effect of the world-wide, communitarian-identity epidemic. In dozens of different countries, ultra-right-wing populist movements, and their falsely-democratic, state-capitalist governments, are reacting against the kind of international cooperation sponsored since the 1970s by ultra-individualist, private-capitalist neoliberalism, forming a de facto, alternative, anti-liberal coalition instead. Their goal being to promote several different kinds of ultra-conservatism at the same time, while still being divided into opposing clans separated by religion and “pure” ethnicity. People like Marine LePen, the leader of France’s “National Rally” movement, have succeeded in turning the concept of the old-fashioned nation-state, originally intended to embody the now-moribund ideal of “the common good” (or the commonwealth), into a neofascist weapon against the official, European Union variety of neoliberalism.

In the USA, the giant trash-can dumpster, or “Trump-ster”, is also moving more and more into neofascist territory, with the eternally loyal support of the Christian evangelical movement, that always brushes off every one of his evil, corrupt, increasingly mortal sins. His contribution to the neoconservative movement has been to turn old-fashioned commercial protectionism, originally designed to save burgeoning, “infant-industry” economies from the free-trade imperialism of Great Britain, into a weapon to “make America great again” by freeing it instead from the unfair competition of low-wage economies like China and Mexico.

His brand of “economic nationalism”, however, is completely useless in this context, since he has simultaneously decided to drastically cut taxes for already ultra-rich people even more than the previous, neoliberal governments of the USA have been doing since the days of that other false-nationalist from the entertainment industry, Ronald Reagan. US allies, like Japan, the European Union, Canada and Mexico, have lost as much, or even more, of their former sovereignty under Donald Trump than they had already lost under previous American regimes.

Trump’s enormous tax-cuts seem to be designed as a vain attempt to get the other American billionaires on board with his national-imperial ambitions, even though those same billionaires’ gargantuan greed was responsible for the deliberate export of so many American industrial jobs in the first place. But sending the US debt from the stratosphere, where it is now, into the even-further-out ionosphere, will only succeed in preventing the American government, including the Federal Reserve, from being able to do anything at all about the next major, world-wide financial crisis, like the one that almost bankrupted every variety of world capitalism ten years ago.

For the past forty years, neoliberalism has dominated the economic strategies of the imperial Western countries, as well as that of Japan, which have all been trying to build up a world-wide, “post-industrial”, service economy. Based on finance capitalism, freer trade than ever before and the reduction of government to a role exclusively dedicated to helping Big Business eliminate all its previously-important enemies, such as communist and social-democratic parties, trade unions,  publicly-owned industries and utilities, and liberation movements in their former colonies.

Not only were the USSR and its former allies politically defeated and removed from contention, the formerly-communist People’s Republic of China was also conscripted into taking over Britain’s old position as the “world’s workshop”, supplying the neoliberal empires and their satrapies (Canada, Australia, etc.) with cheap manufactured products. To top it all off the vast majority of the former, anti-colonial, liberation movements were successfully turned into ultra-authoritarian, caretaker, neocolonial regimes supplying raw materials and an ultra-poor, reserve labour force for every other part of the world, the same roles that they used to play when they were still formal colonies.

More than anything else, it was this neoliberal onslaught that provoked the coming-into-being of neofascism, all over the world. The neoliberal empires not only mistreated all the other countries in the world, but also helped ultra-conservative forces in all those places put every left-wing political organization out of order, as well as any genuinely progressive-nationalist movements that still existed. They also mistreated their own populations, as well as ordinary people everywhere else, by holding down wages and worsening working conditions wherever they could. Not to mention convincing governments to compete among themselves in order to lower taxes on ultra-rich people, using tax havens like Lichtenstein and the Caiman Islands to hide hundreds of billions more dollars, and forcing almost every government into enormous budget cuts in every possible program beneficial to mere “ordinary people”.

All of which touched off yet another sort of crisis, with the forced migration of millions of people, particularly from “failed states” in many parts of Africa, and also in many parts of Asia (especially the Middle East), as well as Latin America (especially Central America). Most of the people leaving those extremely devastated and extremely violent countries have been trying for the past several years, by any means possible, to move in large numbers to Western Europe, as well as to the USA and Canada, as mostly illegal immigrants. In other words, millions of people from countries destroyed largely by Western intervention, decided to immigrate into the very nations that destroyed their own countries. The deliberate ignorance in this particular case being the disastrous comments of leading politicians in the West, like Trump and LePen, about what “horrible people” these immigrants supposedly are, spreading fake news about how most of those immigrants are “really” criminals and terrorists. In other words, some of the worst kind of hypocrisy ever encountered.

During all those years, the only large populations in the world that succeeded in making any significant gains in overall income share of the world’s newly-created wealth were the hundreds of millions of former peasants in places like China and India, just by becoming industrial workers instead of remaining ultra-poor farmers. However, hundreds of millions of other people, in those two countries and dozens of others, nevertheless remain ultra-poor peasants even nowadays, with an average income of less than two dollars a day. Quite a bit less than the tens of millions of dollars a day that some of the world’s leading billionaires currently “earn” for their “labour”.

At the same time, the neoliberal empires have severely mismanaged the majority section of the world economy that they still largely control. Their particularly stupid strategy of making hundreds of billions of dollars off of selling millions of homes, in the USA and dozens of other countries, to poor people who never had the capacity to pay off their loans, and then reselling those bad debts to everyone else, touched off the Great Recession of 2008, that almost bankrupted world capitalism. Nothing having been done since then to keep private capitalism from doing that sort of thing all over again nowadays, the chances are really good that the next major financial crisis will throw the entire world into a much more catastrophic Great Depression instead. The potential regression that could be caused by such an entirely plausible event is equal to the deleterious effects of either the ecology crisis or the geopolitical crisis, or both of them together, because the chaos and ungovernability caused by a real, world-wide, depression could easily aggravate both environmental destruction and/or military confrontation beyond the point of no return.

By keeping the world’s new-found wealth almost exclusively for themselves, except for some of the people in those countries “fortunate enough” to fall under the (partial) control of ultra-right-wing state-capitalism instead, and by eliminating all left-wing and even centrist political activity in most countries, the neoliberal empires left no one any choice. If they wanted to leave the neoliberal spectrum, then they had to join the neofascist movement instead. Not to forget that both neoliberalism and neofascism were born together in Chile back in 1973, when the Pinochet dictatorship overthrew Allende’s social-democratic government and invited neoliberal economists from the USA, the “Chicago Boys”, to run their economy.

In every part of the world, all the neofascist regimes and movements-on-the-brink-of-becoming-governments, that have been established since the 1970s, are run by people every bit as deplorable as Trump and LePen. Their definitions of good citizens in each country always being confined, as in the more honestly-evil example of Nazi Germany, to “blood-and-soil” descendants of the founding tribes inside each national unit. In other words, an openly racist, blatantly sexist, anti-recent-immigrant, one-true-religion definition of the limited, extensive-family-based community.

This sort of thing is playing itself out these days in various European nations, especially strongly in the former totalitarian-communist Eastern bloc of countries like Hungary and Poland (as well as in the eastern part of Germany), but also in such former stalwarts of merely-electoral democracy as Italy (currently run by a populist coalition, more ultra-right than centrist), France (where the National Rally has not yet succeeded in taking power), and Britain (opposition to the EU largely based on imperial nostalgia). To say nothing of several formerly social-democratic countries in the north of Europe, where ultra-right-wing parties have recently begun to form part of governing coalitions or de facto parliamentary alliances.

Countries in every other part of the world are also fully participating in the same dominant, ultra-right-wing populist trend. Vladimir Putin’s Russian Federation, dominated by European Russia but including parts of northern and central Asia, has also become a world leader that has found its place on the same neoconservative/neofascist spectrum, greatly contributing to geopolitical anti-pacifism with its recently-replenished stockpile of nuclear weapons and its vigorous participation in the Syrian-based war. The Christian Orthodox Church is also very much involved in this imperialist revival, not to mention participating in Putin’s equally vigorous repression of every kind of opposition movement within the federation, whether in the “colonial” section of the de facto empire, or in the strictly Russian section. At the same time, neighbouring countries that used to be part of the USSR, in Eastern Europe as well as in central Asia, are finding it difficult to maintain any sovereign presence of their own.

The People’s Republic of China is also run by a tiny ruling elite, very tightly-controlled by Xi Jinping, one of the few countries in today’s world still officially practising totalitarian “communism” inside the dominant Han nation, as well as inside its own internal colonies (minority regions). Officially billed as a strictly Chinese path toward “socialism”, it nevertheless depends to a large extent on promoting a revival of Confucianism instead. Countries bordering on China, or located nearby, are also feeling the heat of the imperial dragon’s breath. Moreover, China’s commercial domination of a significant portion of the world economy, that is second to none in many different categories, is based on a curious combination of economic nationalism and neoliberalism, the ultimate goal of both policies being to simultaneously maintain and expand China’s ever-increasing political and economic empire.

Meanwhile, the largest and most influential country in Latin America, Brazil, is currently in the process of electing a simultaneously neoliberal and neofascist, Christian-fundamentalist government, run by a former army officer (Jair Bolsonaro) openly nostalgic for the military dictatorship (in which he personally participated) that ruled the country from 1964 to 1985. His promise to eliminate political corruption in that exceptionally corrupt nation rings as hollow as Trump’s promise to “clean up the swamp” in the USA. No ultra-right wing government in any country has ever succeeded in controlling, let alone eliminating, corruption, which has always grown much stronger throughout the duration of every such regime. Several other countries currently governed by the right-wing in Latin America, such as Colombia and Honduras, form a significant part of the world-wide proof for this observation. Even theoretically left-wing, authoritarian governments in the same region, such as Venezuela and Nicaragua, are hotbeds of corruption as well, clumsily following in the footsteps of the totalitarian-communist dictatorships of days gone by.

Yet another major participant in this ultra-right-wing populist trend, affecting most of northern Africa as well as many different parts of Asia, not to mention many recent-immigrant communities in Europe and North America, is the often terrorist, Islamic fundamentalist movement. This particular ideological force, based as it is on trying to completely take over a huge religion with universalist pretensions, at first glance looks somewhat different from the more ethnic-based, neofascist movements in other parts of the world. However, the widespread tendency in every human population to turn religious divisions into “racial” divisions applies to every religion in the world as much as it does to Islam.

In Muslim-majority countries, people belonging to minority religions (Christianity, Judaism, Zoroastrianism, etc.) are officially turned into tightly-controlled, minority “races” every bit as much as Muslim minorities living within Christian (or post-Christian) countries are also considered to be minority “races” by millions of non-Muslims. This tendency to confound religion with ethnicity becomes particularly virulent whenever any particular religion, such as Islam, falls under the influence of a strong fundamentalist, political movement emphasizing a largely imagined “return” to the “golden age” of the founders of each religion, based on a strictly literal interpretation of sacred texts.

The same observation also applies to every other possible combination of religious majority/minority relations everywhere else, such as Hindu-majority/every-other-kind-of-minority relations in India, Confucius-majority/Muslim-minority relations in China, Buddhist majority/Hindu minority relations in SriLanka and Buddhist-majority/Muslim-minority relations in Burma (Myanmar). Sub-Saharan Africa, especially the more authoritarian countries, some of which also started out as left-wing states, like the “Democratic” Republic of the Congo, Eritrea,  Rwanda, South Sudan, Uganda and Zimbabwe, as well as not-so-far-mentioned parts of Asia (such as Japan, where homegrown Shintoism vies for power with imported Buddhism), are all affected as much as any of the afore-mentioned regions of the world by the same propensity for ultra-right-wing populist movements to combine ethnic fundamentalism with religious fundamentalism. Not only in the larger religions, but also in most of the “tribal” or “animist” religions that still exist among many of the world’s very numerous indigenous peoples, which are also vying for power locally with proselytizing or “evangelical” religions imported from abroad.

All over the world, confounding ethnicity with religion is often based on some kind of underlying reality, as in the historical Persian (Iranian) decision to switch to the Shiite form of Islam, rather than the Sunni form, for national-imperial reasons, or the Irish decision to remain Catholic rather than switch over to official British Protestantism during the European Reformation. But turning religious minorities into fake-racial minorities all over the world only complicates, without fundamentally changing, the main problem with this kind of cultural confrontation. Which is that every possible variety of such ethnic-religious, motivational amalgams are the common, underlying, necessary ingredient behind the enormous power of each one of these ultra-right-wing forms of populism. Without fundamentalist religion, and without ethnic parochialism, none of these movements could exist for five minutes, let along try to take over the whole world.

Which brings us to the next phase of this exposition, namely the coming-together of the world-wide debate over laicity (sometimes confounded with mere secularism) and the equally important debate over individual human rights versus collective human rights. In addition to using a kind of transmogrified nation-state as a weapon of neofascism, politicians like France’s Marine LePen have also latched onto a deliberate misinterpretation of laicity as another useful tool. Instead of accepting laicity in its usually understood sense, to separate religion from the state in a totally neutral, democratic fashion, as was the initial intent of the famous French “secularism” law of 1905, LePen and her neofascist allies in the Christian world are using this century-old French tradition as a sneaky, indirect way of fighting against the influence of Islam in their countries.

Every citizen belonging to the Muslim minority, not just the fundamentalist extremists but also the more moderate Muslims, including some who actually support laicity as an integral part of modern democracy, are deemed to be “non-citizens”. In other words, turning the entire Muslim minority population into a fake “race”, which was already a false, totally unscientific concept all by itself. In the same way as the neofascist fundamentalists in many Muslim-majority countries (such as Iran and Saudi Arabia) are also defining their own non-Muslim religious minorities as dominated “races”. Including designated minorities hailing from the “wrong” branch of each major religion, such as Sunnis versus Shiites in Islam, the Orthodox, Catholic and Protestant branches of Christianity, and similar divisions within every other religion.

Many countries, mostly among the liberal-capitalist, Western group of nations, are also affected by the equally-blinkered, multiculturalist ideology, that goes way beyond theoretically letting many different cultures live together peaceably, but insists instead on the perceived “need” for each culture to preserve “essential”, ultra-conservative traditions forever, with no possibility of any joint, ongoing, cultural evolution. These countries are thrown off the track of any possible common cause ever occurring between any of their majority and minority elements by one of the main, non-economic, aspects of modern neoliberalism, namely the idea that all human rights are individual rights, and that collective rights must therefore be stamped out forever.

Which is why in those countries, people still favouring laicity for strictly democratic reasons are roundly denounced by the neoliberal ultra-individualists as “racist” and “fascist”, thereby giving credence to the ultra-right-wing populist movements’ cynical misuse of the laicity concept. Since for the neoliberal ideologues no one is supposed to be allowed any more to promote collective rights, it follows that anyone at all still arguing in favour of the nation-state as embodying the common good (which also no longer exists according to the neoliberal point of view), or any other form of collectivism (such as democratic socialism, communism, feminism or trade-unionism), is necessarily evil.

This attitude is increasingly present whenever people belonging to minority religions in neoliberal countries do something, as they are constantly doing, that is dangerous not just for others, but quite often even for the true-believers themselves. As in the well-known example of the Christian sect, the Jehovah’s Witnesses, refusing blood transfusions even for their children. Or the considerably more dangerous, and much more widespread, practice among adepts of both majority and minority religions, all over the world, of refusing to vaccinate their children against infectious diseases, which puts the survival of the entire human population in danger because of the so-called “herd effect”.

When that sort of thing happens in neoliberal countries, a few of the more moderate liberals will nevertheless support a court intervention (representing collective society) to prevent that disease from developing further. In other cases, however, as whenever militant Sikhs insist on wearing their turbans even when riding motorcycles, as opposed to life-preserving helmets, the neoliberal prejudice in favour of a strictly individualistic definition of human rights, wins out every time. Another type of confrontation that is endlessly being discussed in neoliberal countries, is the issue of those ultra-conservative, Muslim-minority women who insist on wearing head-scarves, or other garments hiding most of their faces, or even their entire bodies, ostensibly for religious reasons. 

In this case, the danger to society is usually considered to be merely symbolic, because no one dies from wearing a head-scarf in public, although some women wearing burkas have been known to have fainted in extreme heat. The real problem in this case comes from the fact that cover-up clothing is clearly anti-feminist, though many victims of neoliberalism insist on denying that fact. This is because, once again, neoliberalism teaches that individual human rights are the only ones that count, whereas the argument that women have a collective right not to be assigned an inferior role in society, does not impress them at all. Even though the effect is “only” symbolic, the symbol being projected is nevertheless that of sexual inferiority.

In this context, we should not forget that symbols are extremely important in human societies. National flags and constitutions are also symbols. As are swastikas showing up on Nazi arm-bands, and lapel buttons carrying the likeness of Chairman Mao. Although as symbols of oppression, head-scarves are not quite as obnoxious as those totalitarian symbols, they do nevertheless adequately convey the message of female inferiority, and are correctly associated with that idea in the popular mind. Not only in neoliberal countries (most of which are located in Christian, or post-Christian nations), but also in distinctly illiberal, Muslim-majority countries that have adopted religious fundamentalism, and the neofascist political points of view that inevitably accompany such extreme bigotry. As such, they make a real contribution to the excessive polarization that characterizes most parts of the world nowadays.

Neoliberal sympathizers with deliberately desexualized Muslim women always argue as well that those women have the right to hide themselves from other people, not for anti-feminist reasons but because of their “sincere”, “deeply-held”, individual religious beliefs. These neoliberal ideologues are forever pretending that there is something sacred about individual religious beliefs, which must always triumph over the “much less important” rights of women to dress comfortably (like men), even when most Muslim women in any particular country (or period of history) do not (or did not) share such beliefs.

It seems obvious in this context that those ideologues also have something to hide, namely their secret, hypocritical, conviction that religious belief is in reality much more important in their truncated vision of a “perfectly-functioning” (non-) society than they have the honesty to admit. As was pointed out recently by a group of Quebec citizens militating against another ultra-right-wing practice, namely the disgusting use of poverty-stricken surrogate mothers to provide babies for rich individuals unable to have children by themselves, desires do not automatically become rights.

Endlessly repeating words like “deep” and “sincere” to describe religious belief does not in any way explain why this particular kind of belief is somehow more important than any other kind of belief. Why is neoliberalism itself less sincere than religion? Or ultra-right-wing populism (also known as neofascism)? Or nationalism, whether in its political form or in its economic form? What about communism? Or democratic socialism, or feminism, or trade-unionism, or whatever other political, economic, social or cultural stance someone may wish to hold? How should anyone decide which one of these points of view, all of which have been expressed by millions of people, often over hundreds of years, ought to prevail?

A person, or persons, with a socialist, or communist, frame of mind, for example, could easily argue that their belief should prevail because it is a basic, individual, human right that everyone should be working for a universally accepted world government, representing the common good, rather than working for some money-grubbing private-capitalist, or even for some merely-national-based, state-capitalist employer. On the grounds that no one, and no group of people, should be obliged to waste their entire lives enriching some other person, or group of people, rather than keeping all the value added by their labour for themselves or for their not-yet-adult children, minus taxes to pay for previously-agreed-upon public services. The fact that such an imagined world government does not currently exist, and may never exist given the current state of human affairs, changes nothing about the “deep” or “sincere” nature of that belief, any more than belief in other non-existent entities (like God, for example) automatically disqualifies religious belief at the outset, without any additional argument.

Continuing on the same general idea, what makes individual religious belief in female inferiority a deeper, or more fundamental belief than the promotion of gender equality? On what grounds are national governments considered to be less important than religious caliphates? Why do many states in the USA recognize an individual’s “right to work”, without belonging to a union, as being much more democratic than a group of individuals, working for the same employer, voting to belong to a union to represent them in collective bargaining? On what grounds are “scabs” (strikebreakers) considered in many such political constituencies to be more democratic than union members who voted to go on strike because their employer refused to bargain in good faith?

Should class-action suits also be banned because they function more as “collective agreements” rather than as individual-to-individual agreements? Do individuals cease being individuals when they do something, or believe in something, that someone else is also doing or believing, in the same time and the same place? Does extreme belief in “pure” neoliberalism mean that all human “aggregates” (or societies) are just sadomasochistic relationships between dominant individuals and their dominated brethren? Where does all this ultra-individualistic nonsense end?

A much more inclusive approach would be to base our analysis of all these different, but converging, crisis situations on a philosophical framework grounded in a kind of extended, democratic humanism, combing political, economic, social and cultural aspects, successfully avoiding racism, sexism, fascism and all the different kinds of imperialism. In other words, promoting genuine, ecologically sustainable, evolution and real (not fake) progress toward diminishing, rather than constantly increasing, the enormous income and (Amartya Sen’s) “capability” gaps between the world’s social classes, genders and cultures. Change for change’s sake is ridiculous, if it means constant, neoliberal and/or neofascist regression toward total anomie, or totally inaccurate interpretations of whatever some parochial reactionaries from whichever non-existent “golden age” from the distant past might want to impose on everyone else, as well as on their own lives.

This would also require dumping into the garbage can ideas like the ones promoted by what seems to be a majority of the ideologues involved in “postcolonial studies”, according to which every reference to universal values in human societies necessarily constitutes a form of Western imperialism. These people believe that even the Marxist concept of class struggle, or the very existence of social classes themselves, or universally-recognized genders, or any other form of collective existence, are simply notions invented by pro-Western ideologues to cover up their own (secret) adhesion to the corresponding empires’ conflicting strategies for world domination. But the postcolonial ideology merely substitutes visceral self-hatred of Western civilization on the part of those ideologues (most of whom are of Western origin), for neoliberal individualism’s refusal to recognize collective entities as being real phenomena.

Those so-called “postcolonial” theoreticians seem to have forgotten that all the countries or peoples conquered by the Western empires during the official, colonial period of history, also ruled their own, non-Western, empires for eons prior to modern, Western expansion, those non-Western empires continuing to exist in many cases alongside the Western empires for most of that period. Imperialism, after all, has existed in one form or another on this planet at least since the Akkadian empire’s absorption of the sedentary, Sumerian city-states about 5000 years ago. Not to forget the fact that even in pre-sedentary periods and regions, nomadic and semi-nomadic peoples have been warring on each other, dominating each other and enslaving each other for at least the past 200 000 years. Not only imperialism and slavery, but also racism, sexism and even fascism, were practised, or are in some cases still being practised, by non-Western societies just as much as by Western ones. The postcolonial conceit is just another example of deliberate ignorance.

At the same time, millions of people all over the world want to believe that the best way to do away with every one of these ideological deviations is by adopting science instead. Which is the only form of understanding that is deliberately based on trying to eliminate ideology forever, not only the ideology of one’s opponent but also one’s own ideological preference. Modern science has indeed come up with an immense body of real knowledge that people ignore at their peril, as in the example cited earlier about vaccination against infectious diseases. However, as an alternative to ideological prejudice, the use of science has been undermined by the extremely close relationship that many scientists have maintained over the years with rich and powerful people, not only in predominantly private-capitalist countries, but also in many of the state-capitalist ones as well.

This is definitely an opportunistic relationship, because the practice of science is often an extremely costly undertaking, particularly in the physical sciences. Even though neoliberalism is every bit as unscientific in its ideological underpinnings as neofascism, it is nevertheless especially among those attracted to ultra-right-wing populism (neofascism) that we find most of those other millions of people who have completely lost faith, so to speak, in science. This result has come about, however, mostly because of the lying propaganda of neoliberalism, which always equates development with the maximization of profits. Many people now think that progress, including scientific progress, has become a dirty word, associated with filthy lucre, rather than lighting up the future of humanity as it was originally supposed to do.

Voluntary stupidity, in all its different forms, seems to have become nothing less than another term for what is turning into a world-wide mental-health epidemic. Millions of people seem to be committing collective suicide, by refusing to do anything at all that could adequately deal with any of the extreme, life-threatening crises that have been briefly analyzed in the preceding paragraphs. Most certainly not at all with their cumulative effects either.

None of the different kinds of deliberate ignorance having been successfully repudiated by most of the world’s leaders, and most of their followers, it is entirely possible, in fact probable, that the onward march of human beings toward an ever more glorious future, will soon come to a completely inglorious finish. If current trends continue for very much longer, our world could quite easily be plunged into total chaos, resulting in the return of enormous famines and just as extensive loss of life due to the accompanying return of economic depression, “spasm or insensate warfare” and equally murderous epidemics. We could very well succeed in doing away with each other completely and forever.


In which case, sometime after our collective demise, the eventual arrival on our dead planet of extraterrestrial visitors from a much more advanced kind of civilization, may result in them mucking around in our ruins long enough to find out what really happened to us. In which case, we may end up on an extremely long list of semi-intelligent life-forms, more or less evenly distributed throughout the known universe, that were never capable of overcoming their unfortunate propensity toward different kinds of “primitive narcissism”.