http://sacsis.org.za/site/article/1706

Obama's Trip to South Africa and Chomsky on American Power
By Fazila Farouk <http://sacsis.org.za/s/stories.php?iUser=43> · 26 Jun 2013
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[image: Picture credit: Noam Chomsky moments before delivering a keynote
address at the Deutsche Welle] <http://sacsis.org.za/s/story.php?s=1706>
Picture credit: Noam Chomsky moments before delivering a keynote address at
the Deutsche Welle's Global Media Forum in Bonn, Germany on 17 June 2013,
courtesy Fazila Farouk.
United States (US) President, Barack Obama’s trip to South Africa is a
contentious issue that has animated media reporting and provided the
necessary ammunition to fire up a debate that pits left against right.

On the one hand, we have the South African Communist Party, Cosatu and some
of its affiliates, as well as student and Muslim organisations demanding
answers from the US president for a foreign policy agenda that keeps the
world trapped in a state of paranoid fear, while on the other, we have
people applauding the American president, even wanting to bestow academic
honours on him for excellence in his field of qualification: law.

Upholding the law or adhering to principles of the American Constitution is
not something one can easily associate with Barack Obama today. The NSA
spying scandal exposed by Edward
Snowden<http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/edward-snowden> is
just the latest in a growing list of state transgressions that this
American president has presided over.

Nothing could be worse than Obama’s “kill list”. He is the first president
in modern history with a list of so-called terror suspects, any one of whom
can be killed on his command. There is no due process followed when people
on this list are selected for termination. There is no requirement to
produce evidence against those accused of wrongdoing. This is how
16-year-old Abdulrahman Awlaki (an American citizen), was killed by drone
strike in 
Yemen<http://www.democracynow.org/2013/6/7/inside_the_us_dirty_war_in>.
There is as yet not a shred of evidence linking the teenager, a child, to
any act of terror.

For any other president in any other country, the world would be united in
denouncing this as murder. But here in South Africa, a better understanding
of who the American president is and what he represents is sacrificed on
the altar of media sensationalism.

We are regaled with stories of the cost of Obama’s African adventure,
staggered by the substantial size of his entourage, intrigued by details of
bullet proof windows being installed at the hotels he will stay in, and
gobsmacked by the news that American fighter planes will criss-cross South
African skies while he is in town. It’s a lot of random information, which
more than anything else, exposes this trip for the pageant of imperial
power that it really is.

Meanwhile world-famous American linguist, Professor Noam Chomsky, pointed
out at an international conference in Bonn, Germany last week that there
are many important issues about American power and influence that do not
make it onto the front pages of newspapers.

Chomsky was addressing the Deutsche Welle’s annual Global Media Forum. The
forum, a 3-day conference, was titled,“The Future of Growth: Economic
Values and the Media” <http://www.dw.de/global-media-forum/home/s-30956>.
It examined major issues related to “sustainable economic development” -- a
topic the GDP growth obsessed mainstream media tends to shy away from.

I attended the conference thanks to the generosity of Germany’s Federal
Foreign Office and was privileged to be part of an audience that received
the wisdom of two iconic headline speakers, Noam Chomsky and Indian
activist, Vandana Shiva.

Shiva closed the conference with stirring words about the Bill & Melinda
Gates Foundation’s dangerously misguided agricultural development
programme, which is forcing genetically modified seeds onto unsuspecting
farmers in poor countries. This is going to lead to lots of problems for
farmers here in Africa not unlike those faced by Indian farmers, who, as a
consequence, have been committing suicide by the hundreds of thousands.

But the speech delivered by Chomsky is extremely relevant for South Africa
this week, as we anticipate the arrival of America’s first black president.
It was titled, “Roadmap to a Just World: People Re-animating Democracy”.
It’s possible to listen to a podcast <https://soundcloud.com/dwgmf> on the
Deutsche Welle Global Media Forum’s website.

Not one to mince his words, the world-famous linguist, opened his speech
with the following remark:

“I’d like to comment on topics that I think should regularly be on the
front pages but are not; and in many crucial cases, are scarcely mentioned
at all, or are presented in ways that seem to me deceptive because they are
framed almost reflexively in terms of doctrines of the powerful.”

In this regard, he chose to focus his comments on the US because it is the
most important country in the world, particularly, because of its power and
influence. Chomsky went on to talk about “tendencies in American society
and what they portend for the world.”

A recurring theme in many of the sessions at this international conference
was the rising power of Eastern countries, such as India and China. Indeed,
the ascent of the BRICS group of countries, in general, seemed to trigger
waves of anxiety amongst Western speakers and delegates alike.

But Chomsky’s remarks about the power of the US were sobering. He argued
that while America’s power is diminishing, “it is still incomparable…and it
is dangerous.” The threat America poses to the world stems from “Obama’s
remarkable global terror campaign,” Chomsky continued. He described it as
the “most extreme campaign of international terrorism” to which there is a
“pathetic” reaction in the West.

In vintage Chomsky style, he then went on to describe in precise terms what
America’s democracy has evolved to become.

Many people around the world would describe America as a capitalist
democracy, but Chomsky chose to deconstruct this towering edifice that many
people associate with real freedoms and choice, to demonstrate how far from
reality that really is.

According to Chomsky, America is a not a capitalist democracy, but a
“really existing capitalist democracy (RECD)”. Any resemblance to the word
“wrecked” is accidental, he joked about the acronym.

The “soaring rhetoric of the Obama variety”, such as, “government of, for
and by the people”, is far from the reality of RECD, Chomsky argued.

Seventy percent of America’s population has no influence on policy. It is
just a tenth of the top one percent who actually determine what policy
should be. “The proper term for that is not democracy, it’s plutocracy,”
the linguist said.

So, for example, “For the public in America, the major issue is jobs…For
the very wealthy and the banks, the major issue is the deficit.” Policy in
America “is almost the opposite to pubic opinion, which is a typical
property of RECT,” he concluded.

Listening to Chomsky it was evident that America has exported this brand of
democracy to many parts of the world. A clear example of this is the South
African public versus the South African state on the e-tolling campaign in
Gauteng.

As for the not uncommon critique that America has become a one-party state
comprised of a business party with two factions called Democrats and
Republicans, Chomsky said that this was no longer true.

In his view America is still a one-party or business party state, but with
just one faction. He referred to this one faction as, “moderate Republicans
who are now called democrats. Even (former Republican president) Richard
Nixon would be left of the political spectrum today…Eisenhower would be out
of space,” he continued to the audience’s delight.

After labelling the Democrats “moderate Republicans”, Chomsky continued
with a robust critique of America’s liberal democracy.

The founders of American liberal democracy determined that power must be
kept in the hands of the wealthy and the standard doctrine of RECT is that
those who own the country must govern it. It’s about a handful of men
controlling the world, he argued.

Another important feature of RECD is that the public must be kept in the
dark about what is happening to them. “The herd must remain bewildered.”

Quoting Samuel P.
Huntington<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samuel_P._Huntington> he
said, “Power remains strong when it remains in the dark, exposed to the
sunlight, it begins to evaporate.”

“Bradley Manning is facing a life in prison for failing to comprehend this
scientific principle and now Edward Snowden, as well,” Chomsky said.

Chomsky’s grasp of power and influence and how it is used to control people
is unquestionable. He went on to discuss emerging solutions for key
challenges facing the world. In addition to addressing the nuclear power
question, he paid special attention to the need for protecting the
environment and the commons.

He paid tribute to the work of indigenous populations in Latin America who
are engaged in daily struggles to protect the environment and commons from
vested interests. Latin America, Chomsky argued, has freed itself from
Western hegemony.

How far away from that ideal is South Africa? Is our public armed with the
information and knowledge we need to steer our country towards an
independent destiny away from the influence of the world’s most powerful
nation?

At the end of Chomsky’s speech, he was asked just one question, “What would
you like the media to do?”

“I’d like the press to tell the truth about important things,” was his
brief response.
*Farouk* is founder and executive director of The South African Civil
Society Information Service.

Read more articles by Fazila Farouk<http://sacsis.org.za/s/stories.php?iUser=43>
.

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