Minorities are disenfranchised in the name of democracy; violence is let loose in the name of the feelings of the majority. Citizenship is narrowed around the definitions of the majority; people are told to accept the culture of the majority. This is what the BJP government has done in India with the Citizenship (Amendment) Act of 2019. It is what the people reject.
By the swindle of majoritarianism, the Far Right can appear to be democratic when it operates to protect the membrane between politics (merely in the electoral sense) and society, as well as the economy. The protection of this membrane is essential, the abolishment of any potential expansion of democracy into society and the economy forbidden. The fiction of democracy is maintained as the promise of democracy is set aside.
It is this promise that provokes the people onto the streets in India, Chile, Ecuador, Haiti, and elsewhere.
Vijay Prashad, an Indian historian, journalist and commentator, is the executive director of Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research and the chief editor of Left Word Books.
This article is from Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research.
The views expressed are solely those of the author and may or may not reflect those of Consortium News.
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I hear in this article Mr. Pollock’s voice, stripping me of any illusions. He was my 10th grade social studies teacher, and it was the most profound and lifechanging class I ever took.
Tenth grade is a good time to learn this stuff; one is still resilient enough to recover rather than become embittered, to act rather than suffer silently and alone.
Fifty years have passed since that classroom and now I am afraid I am becoming embittered. Fifty years of action attempted, successes overturned, failures magnified.
I hope that comments on this article will restore some measure of hope to my spirit.
Neoliberalism is the system where capital can move freely across all borders while labor cannot mix and reach a common level. Adam Smith defined capital, in part, as the labor it was worth. When you have cheap labor markets where money can move, instantaneously gaining huge value in the cheap labor market, then return by way of valuable goods and huge profits relative to the same goods produced in a fair labor market, the system is broken. The simple solution is to not allow the goods to return; profits can still be made if the product is valuable to the cheap labor market that produces it. Taxes, rather than tariffs, on the goods or the profits thereof is another straightforward solution. In the US both Republicans and Democrats have been exploiting this broken Neoliberal system on the behalf of political donors to the detriment of the fair labor market and inevitably the economy.
I have read Prashad’s jibberish twice. The problem has nothing to do with “right wing”, which is a non-specific reaction to the forced austerity of neoliberalism. The problem is the exploited loophole that needs closing, regardless of which ideological group closes it.
Thank you Mr Prashad for this summation of our so-called “democratic” reality.
Clearly, what you have written about India could as easily apply to the facts of “democracy” as they exist in, and have existed throughout the history of, the USA (and the UK and almost certainly throughout the world wherever the national claim is that it is a “democracy”).
Regarding the USA – the so-called FFs made abundantly apparent, via the written words of Madison, that the “bewildered herd,” i.e. us, the vox populi, the working classes, the poor, were most definitely *not* to have any *real* say, any true power, in how American society was to be structured, ruled, governed. After all, Madison mused, were the clodpoles to be able to wield total democratic power which, given their greater number by comparison with the bourgeois-elites, the property of those elites would be endangered, taken from their “rightful” owners. Divvied up more equally among the whole population; capitalism would be damaged if not destroyed. And *that* cannot be allowed to happen.
So construct a fake democracy, one that gives the appearance of a true expression of the “people’s governance” by representation (thereby preventing a potential uprising against those very ruling elites), but really ensures the continued rule by the financially, property-owning, political elites.
And it has worked, withstanding several potential breakage points, remarkably well. An electoral circus every two and four years and those representatives (including the Prez) go to DC and from then on do what the plutocrats, the Lobbying groups (who represent, one way or another, only those with obscene levels of financial clout) demand. As an additional safeguard, ensure that many of those “representing” the vox populi are themselves numbered in the top 10% of the wealthy; and (as at present) a number of them are from the world of the MIC and intelligence agencies.
Also ensure that, aside from a handful of issues, like the “diversity” one (which is used to much effect by the “Dems” as a tool to divide and conquer), the “two” parties are in fact as one on *all* issues that really, truly affect the working classes and poor: social welfare, housing, medical care, wage levels, employment.
Austerity on behalf of the plutocrats, the corporate-capitalist-imperialist real rulers. Keep the bewildered herd bewildered via social media, Hollywood, exhaustion, despair, homelessness or its nightmare possibility, indebtedness and the pretend democratic circuses and make certain that they likely won’t or can’t vote anyway.
The elites are unable to see the trend. We are moving from the Age of Falsehood to the Age of Righteousness.
These millions out on the streets protesting, are the ‘meek who shall inherit the Earth. ‘
As someone who grew up in a Jain household here in the USA, I support the protests against the CAA. We all must unite against the “strongmen” Trump and Modi, whose anti-worker, anti-Indigenous, anti-working class policies are antithetical to freedom, democracy and justice. Thank you, Vijay. Solidarity!
There is a problem with the Western left, no matter what the problem or circumstances the answer is some kind of democracy which will never exist. Problem of war, starvation mor democracy will fix it, just one more election, hope and change over and over without results.
A few things about the great French Revolution we didn’t learn in school. The revolutionaries were financed by the same bankers who financed the royals. The bankers and elites profited from both sides throughout and never had a loosing year. Additionally the great revolutionaries clearly had no concerns for the citizens of their imperial holdings, nor with the idea of empire. The great French Republic was from day one a brutal empire slaughtering people across Africa. The French Democratic Empire and the people loved it and voted for empire time after time.
Western liberal democracy has slaughtered over 100 million innocent people in the last 75 years and the people voted for it every two years over and over and they will again next year democrats vote for slaughter and empire. That is the record of every single European, Scandinavian or North American “democracy” empires all before and after the “revolutions”
Democracy is the springboard to slaughter.
I grew up thinking the people like Madison and Hamilton and all the rest were pretty smart people. Creating a constitution that could be amended and a bill of rights seemed a very sound framework for governance. And over time the constitution has been amended for the better and you have to wonder if the problems we are facing with powerful interests hijacking the process were ever any different. What is different, perhaps is the honing of the skills of those powerful interests to hijack the idea of a democratic republic and the capture of the means by which we get our information. Yes, Hearst could create a war, but I think what we sense all around us is far more menacing. George Orwell saw it happening but the way it has happened is more devious and less obvious.
But all in all, I think it is wise to go back to what the founders had in mind and find a way that it can operate in the national interest and the interests of each and everyone of us. Maybe a national conversation about the Ten Commandments and the Beatitudes might be a start, I don’t know. A mass of people of goodwill working together could do wonders.