| According to Franz Hinkelammert, the West has
repeatedly been under the illusion that it should try to save humanity
by destroying part of it. This is a salvific and sacrificial destruction,
committed in the name of the need to radically materialize all the
possibilities opened up by a given social and political reality
over which it is supposed to have total power. This is how it was
in colonialism, with the genocide of indigenous peoples, and the
African slaves. This is how it was in the period of imperialist
struggles, which caused millions of deaths in two world wars and
many other colonial wars. This is how it was in Stalinism, with
the Gulag and in Nazism, with the holocaust. And now today, this
is how it is in neoliberalism, with the collective sacrifice of
the periphery and even the semiperiphery of the world system. With
the war against Iraq, it is fitting to ask whether what is in progress
is a new genocidal and sacrificial illusion, and what its scope
might be. It is above all appropriate to ask if the new illusion
will not herald the radicalization and the ultimate perversion of
the western illusion: destroying all of humanity in the illusion
of saving it.
Sacrificial genocide arises from a totalitarian illusion that is
manifested in the belief that there are no alternatives to the present-day
reality and that the problems and difficulties confronting it arise
from failing to take its logic of development to its ultimate consequences.
If there is unemployment, hunger and death in the Third World, this
is not the result of market failures; instead, it is the outcome
of the market laws not having been fully applied. If there is terrorism,
this is not due to the violence of the conditions that generate
it; it is due, rather, to the fact that total violence has not been
employed to physically eradicate all terrorists and potential terrorists.
This political logic is based on the supposition of total power
and knowledge, and on the radical rejection of alternatives; it
is ultra-conservative in that it aims to infinitely reproduce the
status quo. Inherent to it is the notion of the end of history.
During the last hundred years, the West has experienced three versions
of this logic, and, therefore, seen three versions of the end of
history: Stalinism, with its logic of insuperable efficiency of
the plan; Nazism, with its logic of racial superiority; and neoliberalism,
with its logic of insuperable efficiency of the market. The first
two periods involved the destruction of democracy. The last one
trivializes democracy, disarming it in the face of social actors
sufficiently powerful to be able to privatize the State and international
institutions in their favour. I have described this situation as
a combination of political democracy and social fascism. One current
manifestation of this combination resides in the fact that intensely
strong public opinion, worldwide, against the war is found to be
incapable of halting the war machine set in motion by supposedly
democratic rulers.
At all these moments, a death drive, a catastrophic heroism, predominates,
the idea of a looming collective suicide, only preventable by the
massive destruction of the other. Paradoxically, the broader the
definition of the other and the efficacy of its destruction, the
more likely collective suicide becomes. In its sacrificial genocide
version, neoliberalism is a mixture of market radicalization, neoconservatism
and Christian fundamentalism. Its death drive takes a number of
forms, from the idea of "discardable populations", referring
to citizens of the Third World not capable of being exploited as
workers and consumers, to the concept of "collateral damage",
to refer to the deaths, as a result of war, of thousands of innocent
civilians. The last, catastrophic heroism, is quite clear on two
facts: according to reliable calculations by the Non-Governmental
Organization MEDACT, in London, between 48 and 260 thousand civilians
will die during the war and in the three months after (this is without
there being civil war or a nuclear attack); the war will cost 100
billion dollars, enough to pay the health costs of the world's poorest
countries for four years.
Is it possible to fight this death drive? We must bear in mind that,
historically, sacrificial destruction has always been linked to
the economic pillage of natural resources and the labor force, to
the imperial design of radically changing the terms of economic,
social, political and cultural exchanges in the face of falling
efficiency rates postulated by the maximalist logic of the totalitarian
illusion in operation. It is as though hegemonic powers, both when
they are on the rise and when they are in decline, repeatedly go
through times of primitive accumulation, legitimizing the most shameful
violence in the name of futures where, by definition, there is no
room for what must be destroyed. In today's version, the period
of primitive accumulation consists of combining neoliberal economic
globalization with the globalization of war. The machine of democracy
and liberty turns into a machine of horror and destruction.
In opposition to this, there is the ongoing movement of globalization
from below, the global struggle for social justice, led by social
movements and NGOs, of which the World Social Forum (WSF) has been
an eloquent manifestation. The WSF has been a remarkable affirmation
of life, in its widest and most inclusive sense, embracing human
beings and nature. What challenges does it face before the increasingly
intimate interpenetration of the globalization of the economy and
that of war?
I am convinced that this new situation forces the globalization
from below to re-think itself, and to reshape its priorities. It
is well-known that the WSF, at its second meeting, in 2002, identified
the relationship between economic neoliberalism and imperial warmongering,
which is why it organized the World Peace Forum, the second edition
of which took place in 2003. But this is not enough. I believe that
a strategic shift is required. Social movements, no matter what
their spheres of struggle, must give priority to the fight for peace,
as a necessary condition for the success of all the other struggles.
This means that they must be in the frontline of the fight for peace,
and not simply leave this space to be occupied solely by peace movements.
All the movements against neoliberal globalization are, from now
on, peace movements. We are now in the midst of the fourth world
war (the third being the Cold War) and the spiral of war will go
on and on. The principle of non-violence that is contained in the
WSF Charter of Principles must no longer be a demand made on the
movements; now it must be a global demand made by the movements.
This emphasis is necessary so that, in current circumstances, the
celebration of life can be set against this vertiginous collective
suicide. The peace to be fought for is not a mere absence of war
or of terrorism. It is rather a peace based upon the elimination
of the conditions that foster war and terrorism: global injustice,
social exclusion, cultural and political discrimination and oppression
and imperialist greed.
A new, cosmopolitan humanism can be built above and beyond western
illuminist abstractions, a humanism of real people based on the
concrete resistance to the actual human suffering imposed by the
real axis of evil: neoliberalism plus war.
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