Clear DayPeople vs Empire
by Arundhati Roy
In These Times magazine, January 2005


In India, the word public is now a Hindi Word. It means people. In Hindi, we 
have sarkar and public, the government and the people. Inherent in this use is 
the underlying assumption that the government is quite separate from "the 
people:' However, as you make your way up India's complex social ladder, the 
distinction between sarkar and public gets blurred. The Indian elite, like the 
elite anywhere in the world, finds it hard to separate itself from the state.
In the United States, on the other hand, the blurring of this distinction 
between sarkar and public has penetrated far deeper into society. This could be 
a sign of robust democracy, but unfortunately it's a little more complicated 
and less pretty than that. Among other things, it has to do with the elaborate 
web of paranoia generated by the US. sarkar and spun out by the corporate media 
and Hollywood. Ordinary people in the United States have been manipulated into 
imagining they are a people under siege whose sole refuge and protector is 
their government. If it isn't the Communists, it's al Qaeda. If it isn't Cuba, 
it's Nicaragua. As a result, the most powerful nation in the world is peopled 
by a terrified citizenry jumping at shadows. A people bonded to the state not 
by social services, or public health care, or employment guarantees, but by 
fear.
This synthetically manufactured fear is used to gain public sanction for 
further acts of aggression. And so it goes, building into a spiral of 
self-fulfilling hysteria, now formally calibrated by the US government's 
Amazing Technicolored Terror Alerts: fuchsia, turquoise, salmon pink.
To outside observers, this merging of sarkar and public in the United States 
sometimes makes it hard to separate the actions of the government from the 
people. Such confusion fuels anti-Americanism in the world-anti-Americanism 
that is seized upon and amplified by the U.S. government and its faithful media 
outlets. You know the routine: "Why do they hate us? They hate our freedoms:' 
et cetera. This enhances the U.S. people's sense of isolation, making the 
embrace between sarkar and public even more intimate.
Over the last few years, the "war on terrorism" has mutated into the more 
generic "war on terror:' Using the threat of an external enemy to rally people 
behind you is a tired old horse that politicians have ridden into power for 
centuries. But could it be that ordinary people, fed up with that poor old 
horse, are looking for something different? Before Washington's illegal 
invasion of Iraq, a Gallup International poll showed that in no European 
country was support for a unilateral war higher than ii percent. On February 
15, 2003, weeks before the invasion, more than 10 million people marched 
against the war on different continents, including North America. And yet the 
governments of many supposedly democratic countries still went to war.
We must question then: Is "democracy" still democratic? Are democratic 
governments accountable to the people who elected them? And, critically, is the 
public in democratic countries responsible for the actions of its sarkar?
If you think about it, the logic that underlies the war on terror and the logic 
that underlies terrorism are exactly the same. Both make ordinary citizens pay 
for the actions of their government. Al Qaeda made the people of the United 
States pay with their lives for the actions of their government in Palestine, 
Saudi Arabia, Iraq and Afghanistan. The U.S. government has made the people of 
Afghanistan pay in the thousands for the actions of the Taliban and the people 
of Iraq pay in the hundreds of thousands for the actions of Saddam Hussein. 
Whose God decides which is a "just war" and which isn't? George Bush senior 
once said: "I will never apologize for the United States. I don't care what the 
facts are:' When the president of the most powerful country in the world 
doesn't need to care what the facts are, then we can be sure we have entered 
the Age of Empire.
Real choices
So what does public power mean in the Age of Empire? Does it mean anything at 
all? Does it actually exist? In these allegedly democratic times, conventional 
political thought holds that public power is exercised through the ballot. 
People in scores of countries around the world will go to the polls this year. 
Most (not all) of them will get the governments they vote for. But will they 
get the governments they want?
In India this year, we voted the Hindu nationalists of the BJP out of office. 
But even as we celebrated, we knew that on nuclear bombs, neoliberalism, 
privatization, censorship, big dams-on every major issue other than overt Hindu 
nationalism-the Congress and the BJP have no major ideological differences. We 
know that it is the 50-year legacy of the Congress Party that prepared the 
ground culturally and politically for the far right.
And what of the US. elections? Did US. voters have a real choice? The US. 
political system has been carefully crafted to ensure that no one who questions 
the natural goodness of the military-industrial corporate structure will be 
allowed through the portals of power. Given this, it's no surprise that in this 
election you had two Yale University graduates, both members of Skull and 
Bones, the same secret society, both millionaires, both playing at 
soldier-solider, both talking up war, and arguing almost childishly about who 
would lead the war on terror more effectively. It's not a real choice. It's an 
apparent choice. Like choosing a brand of detergent. Whether you buy Ivory Snow 
or Tide, they're both owned by Procter & Gamble. The fact is that electoral 
democracy has become a process of cynical manipulation. It offers us a very 
reduced political space today. To believe that this space constitutes real 
choice would be naive. The crisis of modern democracy is a profound one. Free 
elections, a free press and an independent judiciary mean little when the free 
market has reduced them to commodities available on sale to the highest bidder.
On the global stage, beyond the jurisdiction of sovereign governments, 
international instruments of trade and finance oversee a complex web of 
multilateral laws and agreements that have entrenched a system of appropriation 
that puts colonialism to shame. This system allows the unrestricted entry and 
exit of massive amounts of speculative capital into and out of Third World 
countries, which then effectively dictates their economic policy. Using the 
threat of capital flight as a lever, international capital insinuates itself 
deeper and deeper into these economies. Giant transnational corporations are 
taking control of their essential infrastructure and natural resources, their 
minerals, their water, their electricity. The World Trade Organization, the 
World Bank, the International Monetary Fund and other financial institutions, 
like the Asian Development Bank, virtually write economic policy and 
parliamentary legislation. With a deadly combination of arrogance and 
ruthlessness, they take their sledgehammers to fragile, interdependent, 
historically complex societies, and devastate them, all under the fluttering 
banner of "reform" As a consequence of such reform, thousands of small 
enterprises and industries have closed; millions of workers and farmers have 
lost their jobs and land.
Once the free market controls the economies of the Third World they become 
enmeshed in an elaborate, carefully calibrated system of economic inequality. 
Western countries flood the markets of poorer nations with their subsidized 
agricultural goods and other products with which local producers cannot 
possibly compete. Countries that have been plundered by colonizing regimes are 
steeped in debt to these same powers, and have to repay them at the rate of 
about $382 billion a year. The rich get richer and the poor get poorer-not 
accidentally, but by design.
To put a vulgar point on all of this, the combined wealth of the world's 
billionaires in 2004 (587 "individuals and family units"), according to Forbes 
magazine, is $1.9 trillion-more than the gross domestic product of the world's 
135 poorest countries combined. The good news is that there are in more 
billionaires this year than there were in 2003.
Modern democracy is safely premised on almost religious acceptance of the 
nation state. But corporate globalization is not. Liquid capital is not. So 
even though capital needs the coercive powers of the nation state to put down 
revolts in the servants' quarters, this setup ensures that no individual nation 
can oppose corporate globalization on its own.
Public power
Radical change cannot and will not be negotiated by governments; it can only be 
enforced by people. By the public. A public that can link hands across national 
borders. A public that disagrees with the very concept of empire. A public that 
has set itself against the governments and institutions that support and 
service Empire.
Empire has a range of calling cards. It uses different weapons to break open 
different markets. There's no country on God's earth that isn't caught in the 
crosshairs of the US. cruise missile and the IMF checkbook. For
poor people in many countries, Empire does not always appear in the form of 
cruise missiles and tanks, as it has in Iraq or Afghanistan or Vietnam. It 
appears in their lives in very local avatars-losing their jobs, being sent 
unpayable electricity bills, having their water supply cut, being evicted from 
their homes and uprooted from their land. It is a process of relentless 
impoverishment with which the poor are historically familiar. What Empire does 
is further entrench and exacerbate already existing inequalities.
Until quite recently, it was sometimes difficult for people to see themselves 
as victims of Empire. But now, local struggles have begun to see their role 
with increasing clarity. However grand it might sound, the fact is, they are 
confronting Empire in their own, very different ways. Differently in Iraq, in 
South Africa, in India, in Argentina, and differently, for that matter, on the 
streets of Europe and the United States. This is the beginning of real 
globalization. The globalization of dissent.
Meanwhile, the rift between rich and poor is being driven deeper and the battle 
to control the world's resources intensifies. Economic colonialism through 
formal military aggression is staging a comeback.
Iraq today is a tragic illustration of this process. The illegal invasion. The 
brutal occupation in the name of liberation. The rewriting of laws to allow the 
shameless appropriation of the country's wealth and resources by corporations 
allied to the occupation. And now the charade of a sovereign "Iraqi government."
The Iraqi resistance is fighting on the frontlines of the battle against 
Empire. And therefore that battle is our battle. Before we prescribe how a 
pristine Iraqi resistance must conduct a secular, feminist, democratic, 
nonviolent battle, we should shore up our end of the resistance by forcing the 
US. government and its allies to withdraw from Iraq.
Resistance across borders
The first militant confrontation in the United States between the global 
justice movement and the neoliberal junta took place at the WTO conference in 
Seattle in December 1999. To many mass movements in developing countries that 
had long been fighting lonely, isolated battles, Seattle was the first 
delightful sign that people in imperialist countries shared their anger and 
their vision of another kind of world. As resistance movements have begun to 
reach out across national borders and pose a real threat, governments have 
developed their own strategies for dealing with them, ranging from co-optation 
to repression.
Three contemporary dangers confront resistance movements: the difficult meeting 
point between mass movements and the mass media, the hazards of the NGOization 
of resistance, and the confrontation between resistance movements and 
increasingly repressive states.
The place in which the mass media meets mass movements is a complicated one. 
Governments have learned that a crisis-driven media cannot afford to hang about 
in the same place for too long. Just as a business needs cash turnover, the 
media need crisis turnover. Whole countries become old news, and cease to 
exist, and the darkness becomes deeper than before the light was briefly shone 
on them.
While governments hone the art of waiting out crises, resistance movements are 
increasingly ensnared in a vortex of crisis production that seeks to find ways 
of manufacturing them in easily consumable, spectator-friendly formats. For 
this reason, starvation deaths are more effective at publicizing impoverishment 
than malnourished people in the millions.
The disturbing thing nowadays is that resistance as spectacle has cut loose 
from its origins in genuine civil disobedience and is becoming more symbolic 
than real. Colorful demonstrations and weekend marches are fun and vital, but 
alone they are not powerful enough to stop wars. Wars will be stopped only when 
soldiers refuse to fight, when workers refuse to load weapons onto ships and 
aircraft, when people boycott the economic outposts of Empire that are strung 
across the globe.
If we want to reclaim the space for civil disobedience, we must liberate 
ourselves from the tyranny of crisis reportage and its fear of the mundane. We 
must use our experience, our imagination and our art to interrogate those 
instruments of state that ensure "normality" remains what it is: cruel, unjust, 
unacceptable. We must expose the policies and processes that make ordinary 
things food, water, shelter and dignity-such a distant dream for ordinary 
people. The real preemptive strike is to understand that wars are the end 
result of a flawed and unjust peace.
For mass resistance movements, no amount of media coverage can make up for 
strength on the ground. There is no alternative, really, to old-fashioned, 
back-breaking political mobilization.
NGO-ization
A second hazard facing mass movements is the NGO-ization of resistance. Some 
nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) of course do valuable work, but it's 
important to consider the NGO phenomenon in a broader political context.
Most large, well-funded NGOs are financed and patronized by aid and development 
agencies, which are in turn funded by Western governments, the World Bank, the 
United Nations and some multinational corporations. Though they may not be the 
very same agencies, they are certainly part of the same loose political 
formation that oversees the neoliberal project and demands the slash in 
government spending in the first place.
Why should these agencies fund NGOs? Could it be just old-fashioned missionary 
zeal? NGOs give the impression that they are filling the vacuum created by a 
retreating state. And they are, but in a materially inconsequential way. Their 
real contribution is that they defuse political anger and dole out as aid or 
benevolence what people ought to have by right. They alter the public psyche, 
they turn people into dependent victims and they blunt the edges of political 
resistance. NGOs form a sort of buffer between the sarkar and public. Between 
Empire and its subjects. They have become the arbitrators, the interpreters, 
the facilitators of the discourse-the secular missionaries of the modern world.
Eventually-on a smaller scale, but more insidiously-the capital available to 
NGOs plays the same role in alternative politics as the speculative capital 
that flows in and out of the economies of poor countries. It begins to dictate 
the agenda, turning confrontation into negotiation and depoliticizing 
resistance.
The cost of violence
This brings us to a third danger: the deadly nature of the actual confrontation 
between resistance movements and increasingly repressive states. Between public 
power and the agents of Empire.
'Whenever civil resistance has shown the slightest signs of evolving from 
symbolic action into anything remotely threatening, the crackdown is merciless. 
We've seen what happened to the demonstrators in Seattle, in Miami, in 
Gothenburg, in Genoa.
In the United States, you have the USA PATRIOT Act, which has become a 
blueprint for antiterrorism laws passed by governments around the world. 
Freedoms are being curbed in the name of protecting freedom. And once we 
surrender our freedoms, to win them back will take a revolution.
One does not endorse the violence of militant groups. Neither morally nor 
strategically. But to condemn it without first denouncing the much greater 
violence perpetrated by the state would be to deny the people of these regions 
not just their basic human rights, but even the right to a fair hearing. People 
who have lived in situations of conflict know that militancy and armed struggle 
provokes a massive escalation of violence from the state. But living as they 
do, in situations of unbearable injustice, can they remain silent forever?
No discussion taking place in the world today is more crucial than the debate 
about strategies of resistance. And the choice of strategy is not entirely in 
the hands of the public. It is also in the hands of sarkar.
In this restive, despairing time, if governments do not do all they can to 
honor nonviolent resistance, then by default they privilege those who turn to 
violence. No government's condemnation of terrorism is credible if it cannot 
show itself to be open to change by nonviolent dissent. Instead, today, 
nonviolent resistance movements are being crushed, bought off or simply ignored.
Meanwhile, governments and the corporate media (and let's not forget the film 
industry) lavish their time, attention, funds, technology and research on war 
and terrorism. Violence has been deified. The message this sends is disturbing 
and dangerous: If you seek to air a public grievance, violence is more 
effective than nonviolence.
The U.S. soldiers fighting in Iraq-mostly volunteers in a poverty draft from 
small towns and poor urban neighborhoods-are victims, just as much as the 
Iraqis, of the same horrendous process that asks them to die for a victory that 
will never be theirs.
The mandarins of the corporate world, the CEOs, the bankers, the politicians, 
the judges and generals look down on us from on high and shake their heads 
sternly. "There's no alternative:' they say, and let slip the dogs of war.
Then, from the ruins of Afghanistan, from the rubble of Iraq and Chechnya, from 
the streets of occupied Palestine and the mountains of Kashmir, from the hills 
and plains of Colombia, and the forests of Andhra Pradesh and Assam, comes the 
chilling reply: "There's no alternative but terrorism:' Terrorism. Armed 
struggle. Insurgency. Call it what you want.
Terrorism is vicious, ugly and dehumanizing for its perpetrators as well as its 
victims. But so is war. You could say that terrorism is the privatization of 
war. Terrorists are the free marketers of war. They are people who don't 
believe that the state has a monopoly on the legitimate use of violence.
Of course, there is an alternative to terrorism. Its called justice. It's time 
to recognize that no amount of nuclear weapons, or full-spectrum dominance, or 
"daisy cutters" or spurious governing councils and loya girgas can buy peace at 
the cost of justice.
The urge for hegemony and preponderance by some will be matched with greater 
intensity by the longing for dignity and justice by others. Exactly what form 
that battle takes, whether it's beautiful or bloodthirsty, depends on us.

ARUNDHATI ROY is the author of The God of Small Things, a novel for which she 
won the Booker Prize in 1997 This article is adapted from Public Power in the 
Age of Empire (Seven Stories, 2004) which is based on a speech Roy gave to the 
American Sociological Association in August 2004.



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