Canada's own Naomi...
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From: Portside Moderator [[email protected]]
Sent: Tuesday, August 16, 2011 8:44 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Daylight Robbery, Meet Nighttime Robbery

Daylight Robbery, Meet Nighttime Robbery

By Naomi Klein
The Nation
August 16, 2011

http://www.thenation.com/article/162809/daylight-robbery-meet-nighttime-robbery

I keep hearing comparisons between the London riots and riots
in other European cities - window smashing in Athens, or car
bonfires in Paris. And there are parallels, to be sure: a
spark set by police violence, a generation that feels
forgotten.

But those events were marked by mass destruction; the looting
was minor. There have, however, been other mass lootings in
recent years, and perhaps we should talk about them too.
There was Baghdad in the aftermath of the US invasion - a
frenzy of arson and looting that emptied libraries and
museums. The factories got hit too. In 2004 I visited one
that used to make refrigerators. Its workers had stripped it
of everything valuable, then torched it so thoroughly that
the warehouse was a sculpture of buckled sheet metal.

Back then the people on cable news thought looting was highly
political. They said this is what happens when a regime has
no legitimacy in the eyes of the people. After watching for
so long as Saddam and his sons helped themselves to whatever
and whomever they wanted, many regular Iraqis felt they had
earned the right to take a few things for themselves. But
London isn’t Baghdad, and British Prime Minister David
Cameron is hardly Saddam, so surely there is nothing to learn
there.

How about a democratic example then? Argentina, circa 2001.
The economy was in freefall and thousands of people living in
rough neighborhoods (which had been thriving manufacturing
zones before the neoliberal era) stormed foreign-owned
superstores. They came out pushing shopping carts overflowing
with the goods they could no longer afford -clothes,
electronics, meat. The government called a 'state of siege'
to restore order; the people didn’t like that and overthrew
the government.

Argentina’s mass looting was called El Saqueo- the sacking.
That was politically significant because it was the very same
word used to describe what that country’s elites had done by
selling off the country’s national assets in flagrantly
corrupt privatization deals, hiding their money offshore,
then passing on the bill to the people with a brutal
austerity package. Argentines understood that the saqueo of
the shopping centers would not have happened without the
bigger saqueo of the country, and that the real gangsters
were the ones in charge.

But England is not Latin America, and its riots are not
political, or so we keep hearing. They are just about lawless
kids taking advantage of a situation to take what isn’t
theirs. And British society, Cameron tells us, abhors that
kind of behavior.

This is said in all seriousness. As if the massive bank
bailouts never happened, followed by the defiant record
bonuses. Followed by the emergency G-8 and G-20 meetings,
when the leaders decided, collectively, not to do anything to
punish the bankers for any of this, nor to do anything
serious to prevent a similar crisis from happening again.
Instead they would all go home to their respective countries
and force sacrifices on the most vulnerable. They would do
this by firing public sector workers, scapegoating teachers,
closing libraries, upping tuitions, rolling back union
contracts, creating rush privatizations of public assets and
decreasing pensions - mix the cocktail for where you live.
And who is on television lecturing about the need to give up
these 'entitlements'? The bankers and hedge-fund managers, of
course.

This is the global Saqueo, a time of great taking. Fueled by
a pathological sense of entitlement, this looting has all
been done with the lights left on, as if there was nothing at
all to hide. There are some nagging fears, however. In early
July, the Wall Street Journal, citing a new poll, reported
that 94 percent of millionaires were afraid of "violence in
the streets." This, it turns out, was a reasonable fear.

Of course London’s riots weren’t a political protest. But the
people committing nighttime robbery sure as hell know that
their elites have been committing daytime robbery. Saqueos
are contagious.

The Tories are right when they say the rioting is not about
the cuts. But it has a great deal to do with what those cuts
represent: being cut off. Locked away in a ballooning
underclass with the few escape routes previously offered - a
union job, a good affordable education - being rapidly sealed
off. The cuts are a message. They are saying to whole sectors
of society: you are stuck where you are, much like the
migrants and refugees we turn away at our increasingly
fortressed borders.

David Cameron’s response to the riots is to make this
locking-out literal: evictions from public housing, threats
to cut off communication tools and outrageous jail terms
(five months to a woman for receiving a stolen pair of
shorts). The message is once again being sent: disappear, and
do it quietly.

At last year’s G-20 'austerity summit' in Toronto, the
protests turned into riots and multiple cop cars burned. It
was nothing by London 2011 standards, but it was still
shocking to us Canadians. The big controversy then was that
the government had spent $675 million on summit 'security'
(yet they still couldn’t seem to put out those fires). At the
time, many of us pointed out that the pricey new arsenal that
the police had acquired - water cannons, sound cannons, tear
gas and rubber bullets - wasn’t just meant for the protesters
in the streets. Its long-term use would be to discipline the
poor, who in the new era of austerity would have dangerously
little to lose.

This is what David Cameron got wrong: you can't cut police
budgets at the same time as you cut everything else. Because
when you rob people of what little they have, in order to
protect the interests of those who have more than anyone
deserves, you should expect resistance - whether organized
protests or spontaneous looting.

And that’s not politics. It’s physics.

Copyright © 2011 The Nation

[Naomi Klein is an award-winning journalist and syndicated
columnist and the author of the international and New York
Times bestseller The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster
Capitalism, now out in paperback. Her earlier books include
the international best-seller, No Logo: Taking Aim at the
Brand Bullies (which has just been re-published in a special
10th Anniversary Edition); and the collection Fences and
Windows: Dispatches from the Front Lines of the Globalization
Debate (2002). To read all her latest writing visit
www.naomiklein.org. You can follow her on Twitter:
@NaomiAKlein.]

. .

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