Thursday, March 31, 2011

Libya's "Civil" War in Perspective

I cannot resist re-posting a Workers' World article I recently ran across on the subject of Libya that really helps put things in perspective by focusing on the bigger picture within which this U.S.-led bombing and now apparently rebel-backing campaign is taking place. It's well worth reading. The reader may, however, disregard the final section under the heading "Working class enters anti-war movement" because it is nothing but a pack of First Worldist lies.

Libya and the era of imperialist reconquest

Published Mar 24, 2011 10:05 PM

However the rebellion in Libya began, it was both inevitable and entirely predictable that it would quickly become an opening for imperialist intervention and counterrevolution in the oil-rich North African country.

The fact that the “rebellion” received sympathetic, screaming headlines, ferociously hostile to the government of Moammar Gadhafi from the very beginning, should have been sufficient to put the entire anti-imperialist movement on guard. The boiler-plate propaganda about “massacres,” without the slightest evidence, was repeated as if it were the gospel truth. That should have been further evidence of the plans for “great power” intervention (“great” in their oppression, as Vladimir Lenin pointed out long ago).

The condemnations were particularly hypocritical coming from the mouths of the same imperialist powers that have been massacring oppressed people on every continent since the dawn of colonialism — from the slave trade in Africa to the cruelty of conquistadors in South America, the genocide of Indigenous peoples in the U.S., the colonization of India, up to the present-day campaigns against the Palestinians in Gaza, Predator drone massacres of civilians in Afghanistan and Pakistan, to say nothing of the wholesale destruction of Iraqi society and the attendant mass killing of civilians.

There have been numerous rebellions and many documented massacres of unarmed civilians in recent months that have not spurred military action by the imperialist powers. Is it even conceivable that Washington would lobby or arm-twist the Arab League to provide a figleaf for U.S. intervention in support of protesters in Yemen, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia or Jordan? No, because these have been genuine rebellions against autocratic regimes backed by the White House and the Pentagon.

There have been no campaigns to get U.N. Security Council resolutions authorizing military action in any of these countries. No aircraft carriers, nuclear submarines, missile ships, AWACS planes, spy satellites, etc., moved into position to support these genuine popular uprisings against moth-eaten reactionary monarchies that guard the interests of the U.S. and Western oil companies, as well as the strategic position of the Pentagon in the Persian Gulf region.

Bush, Obama & ‘regime change’

The fact is that the Obama administration, the British and the French have de facto put Libya on the “axis of evil” list started by George W. Bush in his infamous 2002 State of the Union speech, where he singled out Iraq, Iran and the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea as targets for “regime change.” That is what “Gadhafi must go” means.

What these three countries have in common is that they all threw imperialism out of their countries during the rise of the socialist camp and the national liberation movements after World War II. They were part of a global movement that fought to establish economic and political independence from transnational banks, corporations and the Pentagon.

Libya falls directly into that category, having overthrown puppet King Idris and ousted imperialism in 1969 under the leadership of Col. Moammar Gadhafi. The Libyan revolution, like the revolutions in Iraq in 1958 and Iran in 1979, also nationalized Western-owned oil companies and shut down imperialist military bases. The fact that Gadhafi shifted toward the West later, opening up to oil companies and imposing International Monetary Fund-dictated austerity programs, is not enough to satisfy the voracious appetite of the corporations for profit. They want to take the whole country — lock, stock and barrel.

Libya & the era of reconquest

The invasion of Libya is part of a long-term trend on the part of the imperialist countries that began with the collapse of the USSR and Eastern Europe from 1989 to 1991. That trend is to reconquer territories and riches lost during the 20th-century rise of the socialist camp and the national liberation movements.

That is what the intervention in Libya is about. That is what the two wars in Iraq were about. And that is what the permanent threats to Iran and North Korea are about, not to mention the permanent blockade of Cuba, the military encirclement of China and the attempt to destroy the government of Robert Mugabe in Zimbabwe.

In other words, the right to national sovereignty, self-determination and self-defense of formerly oppressed countries is obsolete, according to the doctrine of the New World Order.

The mad adventure in Libya, led by Washington and supported by Britain and France, shows once again that war and militarism are an integral feature of imperialism and of the monopoly-capitalist system upon which it rests.

During the first half of the 20th century, imperialist war was driven by inter-imperialist rivalry and struggles over which country would be able to loot the colonial peoples. During the latter part of the 20th century, war and the threat of war were driven by the struggle of imperialism against the socialist camp and the national liberation movements — the Cold War.

Now the permanent tendency of imperialism toward war and militarism is driven by the drive for reconquest of the territories lost in that period.

Imperialism & permanent war

U.S. imperialism now has two wars and a major post-war occupation going on simultaneously — in Afghanistan, Libya and Iraq. It has made northeastern Pakistan a free-fire zone for predator drones. Since the collapse of the USSR and Eastern Europe in 1989-1991, it has launched five wars of conquest — in Iraq twice, in Yugoslavia in 1999. in Afghanistan in 2001, and now in Libya.

It has threatened two other wars — one against Iran and the other against People’s Korea. U.S. troops have been at war continuously for the last decade.

Washington has five aircraft carriers, each accompanied by a flotilla of 10 destroyers, frigates and other warships in the Mediterranean and the Red Sea surrounding Libya. The French and the Italian imperialists each have a carrier in the area as well.

The entire imperialist world, with a combined gross domestic product of more than $20 trillion, a combined population of close to a billion people, and a combined military machine worth at least $2 trillion is bearing down on Libya — an underdeveloped, formerly colonized country of 6 million people with an economy of some $40 billion that is without the capability to defend itself militarily against the juggernaut facing it.

The French and the British capitalist governments were clamoring for a no-fly zone as a pretext for intervention and to guard their oil interests. But it was not until Washington got behind the effort, forcing the Arab League and the U.N. Security Council to go along and moving its military flotilla and air force into position, that the attack could begin.

Working class enters anti-war movement

These wars have cost trillions of dollars. They are eroding the economic foundation of U.S. capitalist society and imposing a huge cost upon the workers, the poor and the oppressed who pay for the wars, both with their tax money and with the loss of vital social services.

This plunge into a new war comes in the midst of a profound economic crisis, a jobless recovery, growing mass unemployment and a budding rebellion of the working class, which has shown itself in the Wisconsin struggle against union busting and austerity budgets.

On March 19 a mass anti-war march took place in Madison, Wis., that was attended by thousands of unionists and their supporters in a joint effort with the anti-war movement. This is a step forward in the U.S. in the direction of giving the anti-war movement a working-class character.

As the wars multiply and the attacks on the workers grow more severe, a genuine working-class rebellion against imperialist war will come onto the agenda. The working class is the only class that can put an end to imperialist war.


Articles copyright 1995-2011 Workers World. Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted in any medium without royalty provided this notice is preserved.

(Source: http://www.workers.org/2011/world/imperialist_reconquest_0331/)

See what I mean?

Well anyhow, let's briefly look at the the final section I advised the reader to disregard, such as to examine its basic flaws. The author rambles on about how the reconquest of Libya hurts Americans economically by way of tax drainage and "loss of vital social services". (Even Workers' World does not dare claim that there will be a substantial loss of American life.) Yes, I once believed the myth that imperialist war really hurts First world "workers" as well. It is forwarded by seemingly every revisionist organization in America. The purpose is to blur class distinctions between the general populations of the exploiter countries (like the United States) on the one hand and those of the exploited countries (like Libya) on the other and make the case that there is some sort of common interest between the exploited and oppressed on the one hand and their exploiters and oppressors on the other. What I have come to more thoroughly realize in recent months, however, is that this argument quite literally abolishes the labor aristocracy component of the law of uneven development. It separates imperialist conquest in the reader's mind from the logical consequences for Americans. Imperialist conquests occur for a reason. Everyone on the so-called radical left in America recognizes that the interests of the likes of the United States, Britain, France, Italy, Spain, and Canada in Libya have everything to do with increasing the profit margins of their respective oil giants. What they generally neglect to analyze, however, is how this increase in profit margins is realized on the domestic scene. It is realized through the suppression of price rises, and thus through increased consumption. Increased supply of oil lowers, or at least suppresses, the price thereof for its recipients in the First World.

When in the 1970s OPEC imposed an embargo on the sale of oil to countries supporting Israel (like the United States), oil prices soared in the First World as supplies diminished and, in some places, actually ran out. People had less money to spare as a result. Less money for governments to take in as tax revenue with which to fund lavish social services. There was general economic strain. Once supplication was resumed and oil production increased in the exporting countries, things stabilized again and the First World breathed a sigh of relief. This demonstrates how the theft of oil from the Third World is a key factor in Americans being able to drive around in their own private cars, for instance. It is just one small example of what I mean by how the First World populations benefit from the exploitation of the Third World. Imperialism is the method by which the loyalties of the First World population to the capitalist system are bought; the method by which relative social peace is achieved in the imperialist countries.

I believe this picture should adequately do the math for the reader.

Just wanted to clarify that point. And no, the Workers' World Party has by no means been consistently opposed to the imperialist campaign against Libya by the way. They have continually extended support to the various peace offerings...or, in other words, terms of partial surrender...that have been proposed for the government of Libya. Make no mistake: you cannot honestly claim to oppose this U.S.-led campaign of reconquest if you support the American/Western stooge regime in Benghazi that fully supports it and literally depends on it. (They depend on support from foreigners because they cannot find adequate support for their rebellion at home; because they are unpopular.) And you cannot honestly claim to oppose this imperialist reconquest of Libya if you refuse to support the actually existing resistance to it. Supporting the broad united front against imperialism in this context means advocating the complete defeat of the reactionary stooge regime in Benghazi and opposing acquiescence to any surrender terms, either complete or partial, on the part of the legitimate government of Libya: that of Muammar Gaddafi, who has recently claimed that he will no longer allow Western investment in Libya as a result of this direct attack on his country's sovereignty. The battle lines in Libya are clearly drawn. No one should still be under illusions about the desirability of the reactionary, pro-imperialist Libyan rebellion or about the desirability of peace with that clearly pro-imperialist side. As authentic communists, it is our duty to unequivocally support complete victory for the Libyan people and nothing less, not the policies of the U.S.-dominated UN or the comprador alliances around the world that support Western business interests, like the Arab League and the African Union.

And yes, complete victory for the Libyan people is possible, contrary to the claims of Workers' World, which measures military possibilities one-sidedly in terms of tanks and planes, not in terms of people power, of the spiritual atom bomb which the masses possess. The people of China historically rose up against and defeated a far "militarily superior" enemy in their popular war that established a socialist state. They did so by relying on the spirit of the people; on their hatred for being oppressed. Such is the key to victory here as well. However, this spirit can only be fully and consistently unleashed and directed along a socialist and communist path if it gains communist, that is Maoist-Third Worldist, leadership.

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

A Great Basic Introduction to the Chinese Cultural Revolution!

There is just too much good stuff here to not link all my readers to it. What you'll find at the link is a superb article outlining the very most basic and crucial features of the Chinese Cultural Revolution. It well worth reading, for those who are new to the communist science.

Friday, March 25, 2011

The Chance and Need to Boycott the Election Process

Note to Readers: The bulk of what follows is not my writing, but rather is that of my friend Dustin Slagle, who runs a blog called The Hong Se Sun. I have made substantial edits, removing contents I disagree with and adding some general thoughts in place of them, to more closely reflect my own perspective. This is part of a collaborative project we are doing. The original piece can be found here. Okay, here goes:

This blog post and general idea [in Dustin's case -- MQ] was pulled/inspired from a blog posted by a supporter of the RCP-PCR here.

If someone really wants to know why there is no (progressive) revolutionary consciousness in the US to speak of, one factor they might consider, in addition to decisive objective factors like the virtual non-existence of an American proletariat, is the political nature of the majority of the "socialist" groups in the US. How are even the few more progressive-minded Americans suppose to develop a revolutionary mindset when all these groups who claim to be revolutionary support nothing but reformist tactics and attack any groups directly calling for revolution as ultra-leftist? How is directly advocating revolution ultra-leftist? How is calling for revolution while denouncing revolution and participating in imperialist elections anything but reformist and social-democrat-esque?

Nearly all "left wing" groups in the America are fakes and paper tigers. They use the call "revolution" for opportunist reasons only. In reality they support this capitalist-imperialist system by organizing people around the demands of exploiters and on the terms of the imperialist enemy. One of the ways these groups help this system is by legitimizing it in people's minds; by trying to reform it from within rather than destroy it from without. I would argue that even just by participating in bourgeois elections, they accomplish this feat. Their participation legitimizes the bourgeois electoral process in people's minds. This obviously sends the wrong message to an important group coming into progressive circles, and that is the young people. The number of young people who say things like "we are real revolutionary socialists" followed directly by "wanna buy our paper or a book or some stickers or pins, how about a donation, vote for this person" makes me so sick to my stomach. That's especially true when you see these hypocrites wearing Mao shirts and hear them quoting the likes of Marx, Lenin, and Mao, yet then tell you how narrow and dogmatic you are for directly advocating proletarian revolution. Here's a good and relevant quote by Marx such people seem to have missed: "The communists disdain to conceal their views and aims. They openly declare that their ends can be attained only by the forcible overthrow of all existing social conditions. Let the ruling classes tremble at a communist revolution." (That's from The Communist Manifesto.)

I think it obvious that communists should not be participating in elections in which the only possible outcome is more of the same: more imperialism, more plundering, more exploitation, more oppression, more misery for the world's vast majority. We need to be providing an alternative ideology to this fake democracy that is bourgeois democracy: democracy for the world's oppressing and exploiting minority, not for its oppressed and exploited majority. There is no good reason to give the illusion that these elections give those who would work on behalf of the international proletariat any real chance at creating positive change. Boycotting an election may not be in itself revolutionary, but it is, I believe, a correct tactic for any group claiming the world needs a new and much better system.

Just think for a moment about the whole history of all those communist parties and groups that went astray and strove to lead a proletarian transformation of society through electoral avenues. It is nothing but the history of failure, revisionism, betrayal, right wing coups, and horrific bloodbaths. Indonesia. Chile. Columbia. Nicaragua. Nepal. I don't even have to explain. You know to what I refer when I bring up those countries in connection to "communist" reliance on electoral avenues. And these are but a few of the examples that could be cited in this connection. Joining capitalist elections leads to nothing but betrayal at best (either on our own part or on the part of our enemy) and unfathomable disaster at worst. Never has this strategy succeeded. Never has it even gotten anywhere as a tactic that I can think of. The more you try to change the system from within, the more instead it changes you. Or finds an opening to destroy you.

Written by: Dustin Slagle
Edited by: Monkey Queen

(1) http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0781453.html (their source is the turnout for elections sided with population of people 18 and older)

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Knowing Your Left From Your Right

Most American "leftists" don't know their left from their right when it comes to political orientations and objectives. Let's get clearer on this matter. There seem to be three basic ideas in circulation as to what "left wing" means in America, only one of which is correct. Let's briefly dissect these three views.

1. The "Old Left" Perspective: Economist Right-Left Polarity. This perspective sees the political left and right as divided fundamentally by their respective approaches to building the U.S. economy. In this view, the basic division between left and right is that between the approaches of economic interventionism (left wing) and laissez-faire capitalism (right wing) toward affecting this commonly-desired outcome of economic growth. "Radical leftists" who hold this view tend to see the Democratic Party as "more progressive than the Republican Party, but just not progressive enough" because the Democratic Party supports policies of state intervention in the economy that seek to proactively defend or to underwrite improvements in the living standards of Americans generally. This outlook has been associated with the "Old Left" in America and the First World generally because it was the most common view of what the left-right polarity was up to the 1960s.

2. The "New Left" Perspective: Social Issues Right-Left Polarity. This perspective sees left and right as divided fundamentally according to degrees of civil libertarianism and civil authoritarianism. In this view, the basic division between left and right is that between support for the maximum range of democratic rights and life-style options (left wing) and support for the minimum range of democratic rights and life-style options (right wing). "Radical leftists"/radical libertarians who hold this view tend to see the Democratic Party as "more progressive than the Republican Party, but just not progressive enough" because the Democratic Party supports policies of liberalizing access to political power and of increasing the range of life-style options open to Americans. This outlook has been associated with the "New Left" because it became the most common view of what left-right polarity was during the 1960s and '70s in the U.S. and throughout the First World generally. Some groups, like America's Libertarian Party for example, have argued that social liberalism is not necessarily left wing because it can theoretically be combined with the laissez-faire economics...although this is almost never done in practice.

Note: These two views of left-right polarity were largely merged in America when Jesse Jackson formed the Rainbow Coalition to promote his election campaign in 1984, thus marrying the "Old Left" and the "New Left" both to each other and to the Democratic Party. The resultant combination remains what our media today typically refers to once again as simply "the left". In each of the above definitions, American politics tend toward the center of whatever range of debate is socially acceptable overall at any given moment, but the said center of gravity tends to gradually move leftward in concert with the ever-expanding wealth of the nation, thus endowing the typical American with a certain sense that their country, while perhaps flawed, is surely among the most progressive on Earth and in world history. The common factor here is an evaluation of "left" and "right" based strictly on the idea of advancing the socio-economic welfare of Americans (or First Worlders broadly, at most), with "leftists" favoring said advancements to be more generalized within this territorial grouping and "rightists" favoring said advancements to be distributed more disproportionately to certain favored demographic groups (i.e. trickle-down economics). There is no room here for a seriously internationalist perspective.

3. The Third Worldist Perspective: Imperialist/Anti-Imperialist Right-Left Polarity. Maoist-Third Worldists, by contrast, recognize that the principal contradiction, the contradiction between the exploiter countries and the exploited countries, the First World and the Third World, is of central importance to understanding the actual polarity of politics in the world. In this view, left wing means opposing imperialism, while right wing means supporting imperialism. To be an authentic and consistent leftist means to pursue the destruction of the imperialist American economy, as well as of all the exploitation-based First World economies, and the complete elimination of the political power of the exploiter First World populations as a whole. Although the principal contradiction is not the only contradiction, and while Maoist-Third Worldists do support the collectivization of life in general, as well as maximizing of democratic rights for the presently oppressed and exploited masses in the Third World, the principal contradiction is the single most essential measure of "progressive" and "reactionary" degrees. "Progressive" and "reactionary" can and should be understood as largely being relative to the principal contradiction. In other words, one is essentially a progressive to the degree that they oppose imperialism and a reactionary to the degree that they support imperialism. By this standard of measure, both the major parties in the U.S. are clearly far to the right. By this standard of measure, it becomes easy to see that neither is qualitatively more progressive or "less evil" than the other.

The consistent historical meaning of "left" and "right" is that "left wing" refers to those who support a new and historically more advanced mode of production, whereas "right wing" refers to those who uphold the old order, whatever it may be in the given situation (feudalism, capitalism, or whatever). We've all heard about the parliamentary seating arrangements during the French Revolution and how that was the origin of the terms "left wing" and "right wing" in association with a political meaning. In that time, it was progressive to support the advent of capitalist democracy and its replacement of the old feudal system and reactionary to, by contrast, defend the old feudal system. In the modern context, the era of imperialism, it is progressive to oppose capitalism (especially in favor of socialism and communism), and in particular its main expression, imperialism, and it is reactionary to instead support capitalism and especially its main expression, imperialism. Those who resist the imperialist system are progressives to the degree that they do so. Those who support it are reactionaries to the degree that they do so.

So what about the various "communist organizations" in America? Where do they lie in this spectrum? It depends on which ones we're talking about. The Leading Light Communist Organization is the only legitimately communist organization in this country and indeed in the world today. All others are fakes. In America, in fact, most of these others are downright reactionary, albeit perhaps to marginally varying degrees. Just about the entire non-MTWist "communist" movement in America is First Worldist and in the Democratic Party camp on one level or another. "In the Democratic Party camp?", you ask? Yes. "In the case of the Communist Party USA, as much is transparent, but what about these other cases where the revisionist parties/organizations don't declare their support for the Democrats up front?", you further inquire? Well I think this is best demonstrated through an example:

I have in the past attended two rallies called by the ANSWER Coalition: one in 2007 and another in 2010. Both of these claimed to be against imperialist war and aggression generally. The one in 2007 had an attendance of about 50,000, while the one in 2010 had an attendance of somewhere in the range of 5,000 to 10,000. So what explains the drop-off? What was the basic difference between the situation in the U.S. in 2007 versus 2010? It wasn't the number of U.S. troops stationed abroad, that's for sure! That figure actually increased between 2007 and 2010, as did the number of U.S. military bases set up around the globe. The difference was which one of the main U.S. parties held the presidency. If your organization loses four-fifths of its active participation as a result of a Democrat winning the presidency, then who is it that really controls this said organization? Formally, the PSL controls ANSWER. They control ANSWER in much the same way though that Hamid Karzai controls Afghanistan. In the latter case, the important thing is who controls Hamid Karzai. Likewise, in the former case, the important thing is who controls the PSL. My experience made the answer to this question obvious to me. For example: in the 2007 rally, the speakers were capable of calling out the president by name. In 2010, this had become an unspoken taboo. This was just one of many interesting inconsistencies I observed between these two events. The nature of the 2010 rally overall was such that Cindy Sheehan, in delivering her speech, felt compelled to inquire of the crowd: “Why are we giving him [Obama] a free pass? We can’t make any more excuses. The Democrats and Republicans are the war party.” I remember that quote quite well, and it was repeated in some of the news coverage of the event in various pseudo-socialist quarters. This was the most poignant and correct assessment that any speaker there made. You'll notice her standard of measure substantially invokes the principal contradiction.

This is just one example of how bogus the general "Marxist" movement in America is. All those pseudo-Marxist elements that fail to recognize the principal contradiction are objectively headed in the same direction: full rapprochement with the Democrats...assuming they have not already arrived at that destination (as the Communist Party has). That is their only alternative. Otherwise, they will die out with their aging constituents. The International Communist Current, one of the most rigidly dogmatic and "classical Marxist" organizations that exists in America, provides us with an example of what I mean. Their American branch has roughly five members, according to one of these members. Yet they speak of how the American system of capitalism is "decomposing". With five or so members, they are practically declaring victory over American capitalism, in other words! How delusional, how far divorced from reality, can you possibly get? It is painfully, painfully obvious which element in question is decomposing.

The Leading Light communist movement is the one with the youth, with the ideas, and with the scientific perspective. It is the future of authentic communism. It is the only legitimate communist movement in today's world.

Americans Support the Bombing of Libya

Whereas these posts on American public opinion seem to be popular in some quarters, I figured I'd continue to provide more.

Several bogus left wing groups, in the run-up to the U.S.-led bombing of Libya, proudly proclaimed that the overwhelming majority of Americans were opposed to such things and that there would be no popular mandate in the U.S. for direct, open military actions on America's part against Libya. Bullshit. There have been many opinion polls over the last couple weeks, both in the run-up to the start of the bombing and since it's actual beginning, that could be cited to make this point, but the following one by CNN is the one I'll focus on simply because it asks the most questions, thus going into the greatest detail on American public opinion on the subject. I will highlight the questions out of their original order to emphasize the main point, but if you wish to see the full survey and all questions placed in sequence, it can be found here at PollingReport.com. So anyhow, here's my rundown of the highlights:

CNN/Opinion Research Corporation Poll. March 18-20, 2011. N=1,012 adults nationwide. Margin of error ± 3.

"Some people have suggested establishing a 'no-fly' zone in Libya which would be an area patrolled by military planes from the U.S. and other countries to prevent Gadhafi from using his air force. No U.S. ground troops would be involved but U.S. airplanes or missiles might be used to shoot down Libyan airplanes or attack ground bases used by the Libyan air force. Would you favor or oppose the U.S. and other countries attempting to establish a no-fly zone in Libya?"

Favor: 70%
Oppose: 27%
Unsure: 3%

COMMENTS: This is the most basic thing. The No-Fly Zone is the formal justification for the current U.S.-led military actions against Libya. Continuing...

"The military actions to create a 'no-fly zone' might not be directly targeted at Gadhafi's troops who are fighting the opposition forces in Libya. Would you favor or oppose the U.S. and other countries using planes and missiles to directly attack Gadhafi's troops in Libya?"

Favor: 54%
Oppose: 43%
Unsure: 3%


COMMENTS: This goes beyond the No-Fly Zone mandate. It goes beyond targeting the Libyan air forces. Moving on:

"As far as you are concerned, should protecting civilians and civilian populated areas under threat of attack from Gadhafi's military forces be a very important foreign policy goal of the U.S., a somewhat important goal, not too important, or not an important goal at all?"

Very important: 44%
Somewhat important: 39%
Not too important: 10%
Not important at all: 7%

COMMENTS: In other words, 93% of the U.S. population does not oppose the general idea of the United States actively "protecting [so-called] civilians and civilian-populated areas [they have captured] under threat of attack from Gadhafi's military forces", and 83% believes it should be a national priority. So even fewer Americans are opposed to the principle than are opposed to the particular conduct that is being undertaken. In fact, almost no Americans are opposed in principle. Let's investigate further:

"As far as you are concerned, should the removal of Moammar Gadhafi from power in Libya be a very important foreign policy goal of the U.S., a somewhat important goal, not too important, or not an important goal at all?"

Very important: 34%
Somewhat important: 43%
Not too important: 13%
Not important at all: 10%

COMMENTS: This highlights the percentage of Americans who believe it is our national responsibility to either assassinate Gadhafi or take him into custody. As you can see, 77% believe it should be a national priority, and fully 90% are not opposed to the idea.

"And would you favor or oppose the U.S. and other countries using ground troops to directly attack Gadhafi's troops in Libya?"

Favor: 28%
Oppose: 70%
Unsure: 1%



COMMENTS: While I'm sure this type of statistic can be unfortunately changed with another press conference by the president, it demonstrates the underlying cowardice of the U.S. population in a certain way. They're willing to ravage a foreign country so long as it doesn't sully their boots. Minimal effort for maximum effect is the key to American popular support for the rape of the Third World.

"Do you approve or disapprove of the way Barack Obama is handling the situation in Libya?"

Approve: 50%
Disapprove: 41%
Unsure: 9%

COMMENTS: This is the most commonly asked survey question, but, as you can see by the rest of the above responses to other questions, Americans are able to separate "the way Barack Obama is handling the situation in Libya" on the one hand and the actual bombing, assassination, etc. campaign on the other, and are specifically more committed to the latter. It would seem that, if anything, a good percentage of Americans believe their president acted too slowly in response to developments in Libya. At any rate, 3 out of 5 do not in any way oppose the exact policies being pursued on the ground at present.

I have skipped some of the more secondary questions that just deal with predictions of the outcome since they're not really relevant to my point.

For my last highlight, I'll look at one question from a CBS poll of Americans dated from the same time frame, since in my next post I'll be seeking to highlight how both of the main U.S. parties are equally reactionary relative to the principal contradiction. This question highlights that by breaking down opinions on the No-Fly Zone along party lines:

"As you may know, the U.S. military and other countries have begun cruise missile and air strikes in Libya in order to protect civilians from attacks by Qaddafi's forces. Do you approve or disapprove of the U.S. and other countries taking this military action in Libya?" March 20-21, 2011. N=622.

REPUBLICANS:
Approve: 70%
Disapprove: 19%
Unsure: 11%

DEMOCRATS:
Approve: 70%
Disapprove: 25%
Unsure: 5%

INDEPENDENTS:
Approve: 65%
Disapprove: 30%
Unsure: 5%

OVERALL:
Approve: 68%
Disapprove: 26%
Unsure: 6%

Friday, March 11, 2011

The Impact of Western-Imposed, Rape-Positive Culture in South Asia

In view of the recent 100th anniversary of the first International Women's Day, I thought it appropriate to make some remarks on how the First World yes actually imposes gender oppression on the women of the Third World by highlighting an example.

Indian students riot against "Eve teasing" cops -- March 4, 2011

"Eve teasing" is a sexist euphemism for a sustained pattern of public sexual harassment or public sexual assault of women by men. It is very common in today's South Asia; especially in India, but also in Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Nepal. "Eve" refers to the biblical temptress (suggesting that women bear responsibility for their own victimization) and "teasing" (suggesting that the offense is trivial and perhaps a legitimate courtship ritual) refers to such acts as publicly stalking, brushing, and groping women, among other things. (Some of the 'other things' have come to include acid throwing and bride burning.) It was as a results of these sorts of activities that "From January to November 2010, 26 women and one father of a bullied girl committed suicide in Bangladesh, and 10 men and two women were murdered after protesting against sexual harassment, according to a local rights group." But this is not simply the result of the continuation of traditional South Asian cultures. No, it is largely a new development, emerging as a significant factor in the region only in the last half-century or so.

Though the problem received public and media attention in 1960s, it was in the following decades, when more and more women started going out to colleges and work independently, which means they are often no longer accompanied by a male escort as had been a norm in traditional society, that the problem grew from a relatively rare issue to one of epidemic proportions. Many activists correctly blame the rising incidents of sexual harassment against women on the influence of Western culture. While imperialism has always held down the global countryside by combining domination of its economies overall by foreigners with the maintaining of traditional feudal arrangements throughout the bulk of the countries in question. After the switch from traditional-style colonial domination to neo-colonial domination through imposed neo-liberalism though, the population of the global countryside began a far more rapid migration to urban areas, with a huge proportion winding up as what the imperialist system finds to be unusable "excess humanity", consigned to miserable slums. Part of the result of this has been a marked increase in the total proportion of Third World economies under the control of foreign capitalists. As the First World consolidates its economic grip on the Third World in this way, one inevitable result is the increasing intrusion of the cultures of these privileged foreigners into, and their coming to replace, the traditional, feudal cultures of the global countryside (now also increasingly the global slum, as just explained): eradication of cultural independence.

South Asia is going through this transition, much like the Third World more generally. It largely remains a rural, feudal country, but also has seen significant urbanization and the rapid eradication of its cultural independence in the last several decades. Thus, regarding the woman question, one finds a mixture of rotten, patriarchal feudal customs mixed in with the drastically rising influence of Western, pornographic media. The result is that, in India for example, 70% of married women aged 15 to 49 are victims of beatings or coerced sex and, in 1990, half the total crimes reported against women were related to sexual assault and harassment at the workplace. And no, contrary to the argument of the local conservatives, "covering up" does not make a notable difference in terms of a woman's likelihood of facing this harassment or assault.

Thus we see but one example of how, in pursuing its interests, the imperialist world winds up in effect heaping new oppressions like this on the exploited world, even while maintaining the old oppressions to a large degree as well.

Why Does the New York Times Suddenly Care About Muslim-Americans?

The World Socialist Web Site has provided an insightful article this morning on the subject of the now-well-known "investigation" of Muslim-Americans by the Homeland Security Committee of the U.S. House of Representatives. It is worth quoting this article in full, but I will also bold the key portion at the end that helps explain the underlying rationale for why suddenly now we find the liberal sections of the American press and political establishment condemning these highly-publicized hearings. After all, one doubtless wonders when and why the latest exercise in McCrusading will come to an end.

US government committee holds anti-Muslim hearing

By Patrick Martin
11 March 2011

The Homeland Security Committee in the US House of Representatives held a hearing Thursday on allegations by the committee’s chairman, Republican Congressman Peter King of Long Island, that American Muslims are refusing to collaborate fully with US government anti-terrorism investigations.

King has given the hearing the title, “The Extent of Radicalization in the American Muslim Community and That Community’s Response,” which suggests that its purpose was not to ask questions but provide answers of the congressman’s own devising.

The rigged character of the hearing is suggested by the lineup of witnesses. King did not invite a single one of the major Islamic-American or Arab-American organizations to participate. He summoned only one Muslim witness of any kind, an Arizona doctor and Republican Party activist who has branded the major Islamic-American groups as “extremist” for their opposition to government witch-hunting and to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Despite his claim that Muslim-American organizations and leaders have been a major obstacle to counterterrorism investigations, King was not able to find a single police or security official to testify to that effect.

The conservative Republican’s personal bigotry has found expression in such statements as the claim, made to Sean Hannity of Fox News, that “80 to 85 percent of mosques in this country are controlled by Islamic fundamentalists,” or, as he told the Associated Press last month, “There is a real threat to the country from the Muslim community, and the only way to get to the bottom of it is to investigate what is happening.”

Particularly pernicious is King’s effort to focus attention on the opposition of Muslim-American and Arab-American groups to government repression against their communities. He told Fox News Tuesday that he “will not back down whatsoever” to charges that he is demonizing all American Muslims.

Citing the findings of Bush and Obama administration security officials, he claimed, “The threat analysis is that the danger comes from this small segment within the Muslim American community. And, unfortunately, not enough leaders in the Muslim community are willing to face up to that.”

Democratic-controlled congressional committees have engaged in similar efforts to incite anti-Muslim sentiment, most notably by the Senate Homeland Security Committee, chaired by Independent Democrat Joseph Lieberman, which held 14 hearings on the subject, and the House Intelligence Committee, then chaired by Congresswoman Jane Harman, which held 6 hearings. Lieberman and Harman are retiring from Congress, and King has taken up the anti-Muslim banner following the Republican takeover of the House of Representatives.

The Republican congressman described the threat of Islamic fundamentalist terrorism as his main concern. “Al Qaeda has realized the difficulty it faces in launching attacks against our homeland from overseas,” he told an interviewer Tuesday. “Thus it has adjusted its tactics and is now attempting to radicalize from within our country.”

King has pointed to a supposedly growing threat from American-born Muslims or Muslim converts, citing the examples of Major Nidal Hasan, the Army psychiatrist of Palestinian descent who killed 13 soldiers in a rampage at Ft. Hood in November 2009, and Abdulhakim Mujahid Muhammad, born Carlos Bledsoe, an African-American convert to Islam who attacked an Arkansas military recruiting office, also in 2009, killing one soldier and wounding another.

The tendentious character of King’s campaign is demonstrated by the fact that these two cases are the only such incidents of the past decade. During that same period, there have been hundreds of violent attacks by Christian fundamentalists on abortion clinics and doctors, with at least half a dozen deaths. No House or Senate committee has held hearings on that subject.

King rejected suggestions from Muslim-American groups that he include witnesses about neo-Nazi and other right-wing extremists. He cited his communications with Obama administration officials such as Attorney General Eric Holder, who “is not saying he’s staying awake at night because of what’s coming from anti-abortion demonstrators or coming from environmental extremists or from Neo-Nazis. It’s the radicalization right now in the Muslim community.”

There was little initial media attention paid to King’s calling of the hearings, and a preliminary session in February, with Janet Napolitano, secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, received only perfunctory coverage. But in the last week, fueled in part by King’s own bigoted comments about Islam, there has been extensive media criticism.

On Tuesday alone, a New York Times editorial and two Times columns, as well as two columns in the Washington Post, assailed Thursday’s hearing as an exercise in scapegoating and religious intolerance.

A top Obama administration official, deputy national security adviser Denis McDonough, made a speech before a Muslim-American group in Falls Church, Virginia Tuesday in which he claimed, “In the United States of America, we don’t practice guilt by association.”

The Politico.com web site found a distinct lack of support for King’s hearing among House Republican leaders. A spokesman for Speaker John Boehner would say only that “Chairman King is chairman of the Homeland Security Committee,” and therefore entitled to call hearings, while Majority Whip Kevin McCarthy refused to comment.

The public concern expressed by security officials is that the well-publicized congressional witch-hunting will dry up sources of intelligence in the Muslim community. As McDonough put it in his speech Tuesday, “The bottom line is this: When it comes to preventing violent extremism and terrorism in the United States, Muslim Americans are not part of the problem, you’re part of the solution.”

There is undoubtedly a deeper concern, not publicly expressed, that King’s hearing is untimely given the upheavals in North Africa and the Middle East. The spectacle of prominent US government figures demonizing Muslims will not make US efforts to manipulate events in the region any easier, nor facilitate the recruitment of Arabic-speaking CIA and military intelligence agents that American imperialism requires to spearhead its intervention.