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Empty Hell And The Devils Are Here -- I

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  • Empty Hell And The Devils Are Here -- I

    EMPTY HELL AND THE DEVILS ARE HERE -- I

    The Daily Times, Pakistan
    Oct 20 2014

    Who cares to remember the massacre of the Boer population, the fate of
    Chinese resettlement, the ordeal of Cyprus internment, the devastation
    of the Irish and Bengal famines?

    by Dr Saulat Nagi

    The decades are happening not in weeks but in moments. History,
    it seems, is revisiting itself. In this epoch its nostalgia for the
    past is at its most epic. For Marx, repetition of history is a sheer
    fallacy since it keeps moving ahead, though the movement itself is not
    linear but a spiral. While condemning some and sublimating others, it
    piggybacks all the burdens of the past. At a cursory glance it looks
    as if it is yearning to embrace its past yet a resolute reflective
    mind is not unaware of its natural course to the future.

    The clock is ticking back to the mid-20th century when capitalism in
    recession found Hitler in Germany though it did not fail to discover
    Roosevelt and Churchill simultaneously. Each of them strove to the hilt
    to bridge the imminent and immense cracks appearing in the bulwark of
    capitalism. The redemption from cyclic recession, an inherent malady
    of this system, was nowhere to be found. In the USSR, Stalin was
    the sole survivor of this mayhem. To realise that stagnant capital
    silently developed general consensus was to unleash a limited war,
    though everyone was suspicious and scary not only about its outcome
    but the extent of its flare. Once the inevitability of war became
    necessity, the initial, arrived agreement was finding a convenient
    scapegoat. Hence the victimisation of the 'chosen people', upon
    whom history always chose to pile its perdition, began. Fascism,
    the distorted form of capitalism, alone was not responsible for
    their plight.

    It is time to remove the mystifying veil of history. For hegemony and
    conformity its real face has always been masqueraded if not altogether
    mutilated. It needs to be "stripped off from its false neutrality",
    "from a dupe of a lying tongue", which have covered the crimes of the
    vanquisher while piling the heap upon the vanquished alone. Contrary
    to Athena, who sneaked her way out of the scalp of Zeus, the 'good
    guy' 'bad guy' theory was not a brainchild of any individual, such as
    George W Bush or his ghost-writer. Instead of finding fault in its own
    anarchy, this system for the few cleverly shifts every responsibility
    of sinking the boat to a single 'sinner' -- this tool is convenient
    and effective. While accruing the blame of World War II, A J P Taylor
    steadfastly reminds us: "This war had no heroes but many villains."

    Hence, if Hitler and Stalin were to be stigmatised as villains,
    Roosevelt and Churchill were no saints either. Since saints and Satan
    are necessary tools of capitalism, this system, apt at orchestrating
    such symbols of vice and virtue, not only utilises them at the
    moment of its need but for future reference keeps preserving them
    long after they leave the stage as actors. To add further drollness
    to this piquant enigma, saints and Satan keep changing their places.

    The 20th century had Hitler as Goethe's Faust. One rarely comes across
    his original words. For a change, let us listen to him for once. In
    1933, in an interview to New York Staats-Zeitung, he stated, "Why
    does the world shed crocodile tears over the richly merited fate of a
    small Jewish community...I ask Roosevelt, I ask the American people:
    are you prepared to receive in your midst these well-prisoners of
    German people and the universal spirit of Christianity? We would
    willingly give every one of them a free streamer and a thousand mark
    note for travelling expenses, if we could get rid of them." Certainly
    a diabolical statement, sufficient to unmask his real intentions.

    Greedy that he was of gains, and beyond doubt "his heart was set on
    pillage and rapine", which was lusting to snatch the pelf of the Jews,
    but is this not what capitalism is all about, commodity production
    and intensified exploitation in which "happiness of the one has
    to thrive upon the suffering" of the rest? Does it not indicate
    "that the consensus behind the principle which this system seeks to
    reaffirm", means keeping aside "its economical and political might. He
    who offends it is forewarned." The stubborn and nonconformist are
    exterminated. "Only the desperate laughter and the cynical defiance
    of the fool" are left as rare "means of demasking the deeds of the
    serious ones who govern."

    Another page from history is amiss here. The infamous decrees issued
    in this regard by the mighty Napoleon ordering the Jews "to take
    French names, privatise their faith and ensure that at least one
    in three marriages per family be with gentile" have all but been
    forgotten. But then bigger atrocities committed by Thomas Jefferson,
    the man of enlightenment in the US who ordered the massacre of
    "backward people of native Americans", too have been pushed into
    oblivion. Man without memory is a characteristic trait of capitalism.

    No wonder it excels in sweeping its heinous crimes under the carpet.

    Except for a few sane voices, who cares to remember the massacre of
    the Boer population, the fate of Chinese resettlement, the ordeal of
    Cyprus internment, the devastation of the Irish and Bengal famines?

    The latter, according to one version, was engineered by none other than
    the great apostle of human liberation, Winston Churchill. Another
    genocide was carried out by Mustafa Kemal. The blue-eyed boy of
    the west executed nearly one million Armenians, pronouncing them as
    "dangerous microbes" in "the bosom of the fatherland". The reason
    behind this systematic massacre and deportation was the same vulture,
    capital.

    Fast-forward to the 21st century. The same cyclic phase along with
    general crisis, has yet again struck 'almighty' capitalism. The refusal
    of the patient to respond to one after the other panacea indicates the
    extent and gravity of the malady. The affliction this time appears
    to be far more lethal in nature, hence the prognosis seems equally
    poor. Marx would be amused at this bemusing situation.

    In a desperate bid of revival the time old tactic has been reinvoked.

    The enemy chosen this time is an advanced version of the same specie,
    who, contrary to the previous one, is not meagre in number but greasy
    and drenched in the wealth of oil as well.

    The hysteria against a one time allied alley is boundless. "With us
    or against us" was imperialism's initial chime. "The axis of evil",
    "the coalition of the willing" are others. To impose domination
    upon lesser nations the whole language is being changed. With this
    attributive construction not only is the whole syntax altered but
    the semi-eclipsed memory of the past is being revived as well. The
    adjective 'evil' once implied the former Soviet Union and "axis"
    reminds one of the union of Germany and Italy. During the Second World
    War, the combined forces of the twins were with notoriety identified
    as the "forces of the axis". Hence, the term "axis of evil" not only
    has the striking resonance of the past but it carries and glorifies
    the impact and history of domination as well.

    The "coalition of the willing" is, in fact, a coalition of wheedling
    stooges who, for their personal survival, have little option but to
    cling to the sleeves of hegemonic power. While, around the world,
    fellow believers of the same faith are being hunted and brutally
    massacred, they, with their eyes shut, are resting snug in the wings
    of imperialism. Besmirching a caste, creed and/or a conviction is
    not something novel or perplexing.

    Even in advanced industrial societies, rational persuasion is not
    very common. Had that been the case, people from developed countries
    would have strongly retaliated against the continuous process of
    de-humanisation of thought. Partly, this democratic abolition of
    thought, which the 'common man' undergoes automatically or which he
    himself carries out takes place partly under the influence of strong
    media and partly due to the scourge of wage slavery that demands mere
    self-preservation. It coerces humankind to conform to the established
    reality.

    (To be continued)

    The writer is based in Australia and has authored books on socialism
    and history. He can be reached at [email protected]

    http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/opinion/20-Oct-2014/empty-hell-and-the-devils-are-here-i




    From: A. Papazian
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