http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/12/06/mandelas-socialist-failure/?_r=0

December 6, 2013, 2:15 pm
Mandela’s Socialist
Failure<http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/12/06/mandelas-socialist-failure/>
By SLAVOJ ZIZEK <http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/author/slavoj-zizek/>

In the last two decades of his life, Nelson Mandela was celebrated as a
model of how to liberate a country from the colonial yoke without
succumbing to the temptation of dictatorial power and anti-capitalist
posturing. In short, Mandela was not Mugabe, South Africa remained a
multi-party democracy with free press and a vibrant economy well-integrated
into the global market and immune to hasty Socialist experiments. Now, with
his death, his stature as a saintly wise man seems confirmed for eternity:
there are Hollywood movies about him — he was impersonated by Morgan
Freeman, who also, by the way, played the role of God in another film; rock
stars and religious leaders, sportsmen and politicians from Bill Clinton to
Fidel Castro are all united in his beatification.

It is all too simple to criticize Mandela for abandoning the socialist
perspective after the end of apartheid: did he really have a choice?

Is this, however, the whole story? Two key facts remain obliterated by this
celebratory vision. In South Africa, the miserable life of the poor
majority broadly remains the same as under apartheid, and the rise of
political and civil rights is counterbalanced by the growing insecurity,
violence, and crime. The main change is that the old white ruling class is
joined by the new black elite. Secondly, people remember the old African
National Congress which promised not only the end of apartheid, but also
more social justice, even a kind of socialism. This much more radical ANC
past is gradually obliterated from our memory. No wonder that anger is
growing among poor, black South Africans.

South Africa in this respect is just one version of the recurrent story of
the contemporary left. A leader or party is elected with universal
enthusiasm, promising a “new world” — but, then, sooner or later, they
stumble upon the key dilemma: does one dare to touch the capitalist
mechanisms, or does one decide to “play the game”? If one disturbs these
mechanisms, one is very swiftly “punished” by market perturbations,
economic chaos, and the rest. This is why it is all too simple to criticize
Mandela for abandoning the socialist perspective after the end of
apartheid: did he really have a choice? Was the move towards socialism a
real option?

It is easy to ridicule Ayn Rand, but there is a grain of truth in the
famous “hymn to money” from her novel Atlas Shrugged: “Until and unless you
discover that money is the root of all good, you ask for your own
destruction. When money ceases to become the means by which men deal with
one another, then men become the tools of other men. Blood, whips and guns
or dollars. Take your choice – there is no other.” Did Marx not say
something similar in his well-known formula of how, in the universe of
commodities, “relations between people assume the guise of relations among
things”?

In the market economy, relations between people can appear as relations of
mutually recognized freedom and equality: domination is no longer directly
enacted and visible as such. What is problematic is Rand’s underlying
premise: that the only choice is between direct and indirect relations of
domination and exploitation, with any alternative dismissed as utopian.
However, one should nonetheless bear in mind the moment of truth in Rand’s
otherwise ridiculously-ideological claim: the great lesson of state
socialism was effectively that a direct abolishment of private property and
market-regulated exchange, lacking concrete forms of social regulation of
the process of production, necessarily resuscitates direct relations of
servitude and domination. If we merely abolish market (inclusive of market
exploitation) without replacing it with a proper form of the Communist
organization of production and exchange, domination returns with a
vengeance, and with it direct exploitation.
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The general rule is that, when a revolt begins against an oppressive
half-democratic regime, as was the case in the Middle East in 2011, it is
easy to mobilize large crowds with slogans which one cannot but
characterize as crowd pleasers – for democracy, against corruption, for
instance. But then we gradually approach more difficult choices: when our
revolt succeeds in its direct goal, we come to realize that what really
bothered us (our un-freedom, humiliation, social corruption, lack of
prospect of a decent life) goes on in a new guise. The ruling ideology
mobilizes here its entire arsenal to prevent us from reaching this radical
conclusion. They start to tell us that democratic freedom brings its own
responsibility, that it comes at a price, that we are not yet mature if we
expect too much from democracy. In this way, they blame us for our failure:
in a free society, so we are told, we are all capitalist investing in our
lives, deciding to put more into our education than into having fun if we
want to succeed.

At a more directly political level, the United States foreign policy
elaborated a detailed strategy of how to exert damage control by way of
re-channeling a popular uprising into acceptable parliamentary-capitalist
constraints – as was done successfully in South Africa after the fall of
apartheid regime, in Philippines after the fall of Marcos, in Indonesia
after the fall of Suharto and elsewhere. At this precise conjuncture,
radical emancipatory politics faces its greatest challenge: how to push
things further after the first enthusiastic stage is over, how to make the
next step without succumbing to the catastrophe of the “totalitarian”
temptation – in short, how to move further from Mandela without becoming
Mugabe.

If we want to remain faithful to Mandela’s legacy, we should thus forget
about celebratory crocodile tears and focus on the unfulfilled promises his
leadership gave rise to. We can safely surmise that, on account of his
doubtless moral and political greatness, he was at the end of his life also
a bitter, old man, well aware how his very political triumph and his
elevation into a universal hero was the mask of a bitter defeat. His
universal glory is also a sign that he really didn’t disturb the global
order of power.


*Slavoj Zizek is a Slovenian philosopher, psychoanalyst and social theorist
at the Birkbeck School of Law, University of London. He is the author of
many books, including “Less Than Nothing
<http://www.versobooks.com/books/1523-less-than-nothing>, “The Year of
Dreaming Dangerously
<http://www.versobooks.com/books/1161-the-year-of-dreaming-dangerously>”
and “Demanding the Impossible
<http://www.polity.co.uk/book.asp?ref=9780745672281?>.*

*”*
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Peace Is Doable

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