INSURGENT ANTHROPOLOGIES: AMERICAN CAPITALIST TRIUMPHALISM AND THE
LIBERAL HUMAN RIGHTS
PARADIGM<http://ccarrico.wordpress.com/2010/09/12/insurgent-anthropologies-american-capitalist-triumphalism-and-the-liberal-human-rights-paradigm/>By
Christopher 
Carricohttp://asitoughttobe.wordpress.com<http://asitoughttobe.wordpress.com/2010/09/12/insurgent-anthropologies-american-capitalist-triumphalism-and-the-liberal-human-rights-paradigm/>
http://ccarrico.wordpress.com

Before the toppling of Saddam Hussein’s statue in Firdos Square,
Baghdad, the iconic moments of American capitalist triumphalism were
the fall of the Soviet Union and Eastern European socialism, and the
spread of the neo-liberal paradigm in the West, the post-socialist
countries, and much of the developing world. The same years, from the
coming to power of Deng Xiaoping in 1978 to the present, have been
years of capitalist restoration in China, and remarkable capitalist
growth during a time when the economies of the West and its adjuncts
have been stagnating.

The rise of the Washington Consensus had to do with the defeat of
other possibilities of internationalism. However flawed, existing
socialisms and existing Third World nationalisms did provide the idea
of an alternative to capitalism, and to the liberal democratic
paradigm that is an outgrowth of its hegemony. Around the world,
people looked to Moscow, Beijing, and the Non-Aligned Movement as
inspirations for non-capitalist paths of development.

Like the defeat of the Soviet Union and its satellite states, the
fates of China and the Third World in recent decades can be summarized
in terms that are in keeping with the models of the proponents of the
Washington Consensus. China has adopted the Washington Consensus with
Chinese characteristics. Since 1978, China has taken a clear path of
capitalist restoration, and socialism with so-called “Chinese
characteristics” means, in spite of decades of militant communist
struggle, that Chinese elites have very successfully adopted the
American market model. Rapid capital accumulation in China has been
possible (as American and European “primitive accumulation” were in
previous eras) through the cold, brutal, and violent exploitation of
labor and resources.

With the fall of the Soviet Union, capitalist restoration in China,
and the widespread capitulation of Third World elites to the interests
of big capital, the only “International” that seems to remain is the
*Capitalist International*. This leaves emancipatory politics with two
seemingly dead-end paths: (1) appeal to the liberal democratic – human
rights paradigm of the United States, the United Nations, etc., make
alliances through the international institutions that are maintained
by and support the major capitalist states; or (2) retreat into
localism, parochialism, communalism and particularism that does not
make effective and progressive linkages with international movements.

This blog will explore the first of these two dead-end paths, with the
intention of returning to the question of how to move past these
impasses in subsequent writings.

* *

*The liberal human rights paradigm and the road to Kandahar and Baghdad.*

Actually existing liberal democratic – human rights institutions are
themselves full of overlapping contradictions. First of all, nothing
can happen under existing arrangements unless powerful nation-states
decide to move forward with an intervention or action of some kind.
The steps of intervention after a vague “pressure” that rhetorically
denounces rights violations, are economic trade sanctions, and
finally, military intervention. The usefulness of either for any
organization or group of organizations seeking equality and freedom is
questionable or at least highly compromised from the start.

Let’s take the question of economic sanctions first. In Palestine the
imposition of sanctions seems to hurt the most poor and vulnerable,
while strengthening the radical Islamist party, Hamas, as the sole
organization that is capable of delivering basic goods and services
that the state is otherwise unable to provide.

In Iraq, a stringent financial and trade embargo was in place from
1990 until the U.S. invasion of 2003. Whether these sanctions, by
themselves, significantly weakened Saddam Hussein’s hold on power is a
matter of debate, but what is clear is the lives of millions of
ordinary Iraqi citizens were affected. Estimates of excess deaths from
this period of blockade range from very cautions estimates issued by
U.N. and American-allied sources, to larger claims made by the Iraqi
state and by anti-sanctions activists. UNICEF reported in 1999 that
500,000 children had died as a direct result of sanctions. This
estimate seems to be within the range of what was discovered by
evidence-based studies conducted by Colombia University, by the
Lancet, and other studies conducted in a scientific peer-reviewed
manner. Saddam Hussein’s Baath government claimed that the total
number of excess deaths was much higher: 1.7 million died from
sanctions, bombings, and poisoning from depleted Uranium. Former U.S.
Attorney General Ramsey Clark also argued that these numbers generated
by the Iraqi government were roughly accurate.

Beyond sanctions, when the stakes are high enough for the material
interests of the capitalist powers, the UN Security Council, NATO, or
a “coalition of the willing” led by an American unilateralism, is
willing to go to war, using human rights as one of its justifications.
In a recent article in the September 2, 2010 issue of Guyanese
newspaper *Stabroek News*, I argued:

There is an element of the appeal to human rights in every American
imperial intervention of recent times. In the Iraq War, even after the
world learned that Iraqis did not have weapons of mass destruction,
the war was still justifiable on the grounds that Saddam Hussein was a
dictator, and a gross violator of human rights.

In Afghanistan, the war is said to not just be about the ‘hunt for al
Qaeda’ but also to be about the freedom of the people of Afghanistan.
In particular, in fighting a war in Afghanistan, the US claims to be
fighting against extreme forms of gender oppression, and other forms
of cultural tyranny, not just against the Taliban.

The case against Iran has being built for years. The high profile
sentencing of Sakine Mohammadi Ashtiana to be stoned to death for
adultery is used by imperialists as another reason why sanctions
against (and possibly even an invasion of) Iran is the right thing for
the ‘civilized’ world to do. The fact that in Iran, homosexuality is
punishable by the death penalty will also, no doubt, be invoked as a
justification.

Organizations such as the International Committee Against Stoning have
the difficult but necessary task before them of working to bring an
end to theocratic government of the Islamic Republic of Iran, and yet
also are trying to make clear to the international world that economic
sanctions or a military invasion are guaranteed to do a tremendous
amount of damage to the people of Iran, with little guarantee or
probability that causes of human rights will be advanced.

As Alain Badiou notes with typical precision, “A military, imported
type of ‘democracy’ does not exist and never will.”

The human right abuses of Islamic countries are also opportunistically
used by those who are opposed to immigration to Europe from North
Africa and the Middle East on the grounds that people from these
majority Islamic countries still practice a culture of “barbarism”,
and refuse to assimilate to the secular and enlightened ideas of
“civilized” Europe. The same justifications are used for the
systematic harassment of all who do not appear to be culturally
French, as reasons for the banning of the *burqa*, as well as reason
for the massive deportation of the Roma “gypsies” who many French seem
quite comfortable referring to as “a criminal race.”

While Iraq under Hussein was a draconian, authoritarian state, the
same might be said of today’s China, whom the United States enjoys
good economic relations with. And while the Taliban reign in
Afghanistan was a regime of state terror against its own population,
the same can be said for the ruling elite of Saudi Arabia, who have
remained close American allies until the present: in spite of extreme
forms of gender oppression, the death penalty for homosexuality and
adultery, and *in spite of the fact* that 15 of the 19 hijackers of
September 11th, 2001 were from Saudi Arabia. Two were from the United
Arab Emirates, one was from Egypt, and one was from Lebanon. *Not a
single hijacker was from Afghanistan or Iraq*.

In contrast to the situation in Saudi Arabia, there are governments
that are demonized by the United States and its allies, in spite of
the fact that they are not regimes of violent fundamentalism like the
Saudi state. In recent years, in Latin America and the Caribbean, we
have seen the return of a New Cold War that is purely rhetorical, with
no attempt to ground it rhetoric in either reason or in facts. In the
case of Venezuela under the government of Hugo Chavez, the first
Venezuelan government that has demonstrated that it has any sort of
concern for the majority of the Venezuelan people is portrayed in the
American media as the South American equivalent of Saddam Hussein.

An even more extreme case was that of Jean-Bertrand Aristide, a
Catholic priest of the liberation theology tradition, with the
overwhelming support of the Haitian people. President Aristide headed
the first Haitian government with some respect for human dignity,
after Haitians had experienced decades of state terror at the hands of
the Duvaliers. When Aristide’s policies began to become inconvenient
for Haitian elites, the French government and American capitalists,
his portrayal in the capitalist media quickly changed from that of
champion of democracy to an absurd caricature of a ‘brutal’ dictator.
He was removed from power by the American military, and a Haitian
government more willing to carry out the wishes of the island’s
wealthiest families and of capitalist investors from abroad was
installed.

I leave my blog this week with the open ended question: how do we
begin to rebuild a movement that is progressive, but is not beholden
to the hypocritical American definition of progress embedded in its
liberal democratic human rights paradigm?

<http://asitoughttobe.files.wordpress.com/2010/09/saddamstatue1.jpg>

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