Naomi Klein: From Think Tanks
to Battle Tanks
"The Quest to Impose a Single World Market
interviewed by Amy Goodman
Democracy Now, August 15, 2007
The State Department is coming
under criticism this week for refusing to allow a prominent South
African social scientist to enter the country. Adam Habib was
scheduled to speak at the annual meeting of the American Sociological
Association in New York this past weekend, but the government
has refused to give him a visa.
Ironically, the theme of this
year's ASA conference was "Is Another World Possible?"
At the conference, the ASA planned a series of sessions to assess
the potential for progressive social change both in the United
States and the world and to invite a serious discussion of "economic
globalization" and its consequences.
One of the most highly anticipated
sessions was to feature Jeffrey Sachs, an internationally known
economist and a former special advisor to UN Secretary General
Kofi Annan, versus Naomi Klein, the Canadian journalist and author.
But shortly before the ASA conference opened, Sachs pulled out.
Unclear if it was related to the fact that Naomi Klein takes him
on in her forthcoming book, "The Shock Doctrine: The Rise
of Disaster Capitalism." The theme of her talk was "Lost
Worlds.
0. Naomi Klein, journalist and author.
Her forthcoming book is "The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of
Disaster Capitalism." More information at NaomiKlein.org.
0.
AMY GOODMAN: The State Department is coming
under criticism this week for refusing to allow a prominent South
African social scientist to enter the country. Adam Habib was
scheduled to speak at the annual meeting of the American Sociological
Association in New York this past weekend, but the government
refused to give him a visa.
Ironically, the theme of this year's sociology
conference was "Is Another World Possible?" At the conference,
the ASA planned a series of sessions to assess the potential for
progressive social change both in the US and in the world and
to invite a serious discussion of "economic globalization"
and its consequences.
One of the most highly anticipated sessions
was to feature Jeffrey Sachs, an internationally known economist
and a former special advisor to UN Secretary General Kofi Annan,
versus Naomi Klein, the Canadian journalist and author. But shortly
before the ASA conference opened, Sachs pulled out. Unclear if
it was related to the fact that Naomi Klein takes him on in her
forthcoming book, The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism.
The theme of her talk was "Lost Worlds." This is Naomi
Klein.
0. NAOMI KLEIN: As we think about reaching
this other possible world, I want to be very clear that I don't
believe the problem is a lack of ideas. I think we're swimming
in ideas: universal healthcare; living wages; cooperatives; participatory
democracy; public services that are accountable to the people
who use them; food, medicine and shelter as a human right. These
aren't new ideas. They're enshrined in the UN Charter. And I think
most of us still believe in them.
0.
0. I don't think our problem is money, lack of resources to act
on these basic ideas. Now, at the risk of being accused of economic
populism, I would just point out that in this city, the employees
of Goldman Sachs received more than $16 billion in Christmas bonuses
last year, and ExxonMobil earned $40 billion in annual profits,
a world record. It seems to me that there's clearly enough money
sloshing around to pay for our modest dreams. We can tax the polluters
and the casino capitalists to pay for alternative energy development
and a global social safety net. We don't lack ideas. Neither are
we short on cash.
0.
0. And unlike Jeffrey Sachs, I actually don't believe that what
is lacking is political will at the highest levels, cooperation
between world leaders. I don't think that if we could just present
our elites with the right graphs and PowerPoint presentations
-- no offense -- that we would finally convince them to make poverty
history. I don't believe that. I don't believe we could do it,
even if that PowerPoint presentation was being delivered Angelina
Jolie wearing a (Product) Red TM Gap tank top and carrying a (Product)
Red cell phone. Even if she had a (Product) Red iPhone, I still
don't think they would listen. That's because elites don't make
justice because we ask them to nicely and appealingly. They do
it when the alternative to justice is worse. And that is what
happened all those years ago when the income gap began to close.
That was the motivation behind the New Deal and the Marshall Plan.
Communism spreading around the world, that was the fear. Capitalism
needed to embellish itself. It needed to soften its edges. It
was in a competition. So ideas aren't the problem, and money is
not the problem, and I don't think political will is ever the
problem.
0.
0. The real problem, I want to argue today, is confidence, our
confidence, the confidence of people who gather at events like
this under the banner of building another world, a kinder more
sustainable world. I think we lack the strength of our convictions,
the guts to back up our ideas with enough muscle to scare our
elites. We are missing movement power. That's what we're missing.
"The best lacked all convictions," Yeats wrote, "while
the worst are full of passionate intensity." Think about
it. Do you want to tackle climate change as much as Dick Cheney
wants Kazakhstan's oil? Do you? Do you want universal healthcare
as much as Paris Hilton wants to be the next new face of Estee
Lauder? If not, why not? What is wrong with us? Where is our passionate
intensity?
0.
0. What is at the root of our crisis of confidence? What drains
us of our conviction at crucial moments when we are tested? At
the root, I think it's the notion that we have accepted, which
is that our ideas have already been tried and found wanting. Part
of what keeps us from building the alternatives that we deserve
and long for and that the world needs so desperately, like a healthcare
system that doesn't sicken us when we see it portrayed on film,
like the ability to rebuild New Orleans without treating a massive
human tragedy like an opportunity for rapid profit-making for
politically connected contractors, the right to have bridges that
don't collapse and subways that don't flood when it rains. I think
that what lies at the root of that lack of confidence is that
we're told over and over again that progressive ideas have already
been tried and failed. We hear it so much that we accepted it.
So our alternatives are posed tentatively, almost apologetically.
"Is another world possible?" we ask.
0.
0. This idea of our intellectual and ideological failure is the
dominant narrative of our time. It's embedded in all the catchphrases
that we've been referring to. "There is no alternative,"
said Thatcher. "History has ended," said Fukuyama. The
Washington Consensus: the thinking has already been done, the
consensus is there. Now, the premise of all these proclamations
was that capitalism, extreme capitalism, was conquering every
corner of the globe because all other ideas had proven themselves
disastrous. The only thing worse than capitalism, we were told,
was the alternative.
0.
0. Now, it's worth remembering when these pronouncements were
being made that what was failing was not Scandinavian social democracy,
which was thriving, or a Canadian-style welfare state, which has
produced the highest standard of living by UN measures in the
world, or at least it did before my government started embracing
some of these ideas. It wasn't the so-called Asian miracle that
had been discredited, which in the '80s and '90s built the Asian
"tiger" economies in South Korea and Malaysia using
a combination of trade protections to nurture and develop national
industry, even when that meant keeping American products out and
preventing foreign ownership, as well as maintaining government
control over key assets, like water and electricity. These policies
did not create explosive growth concentrated at the very top,
as we see today. But record levels of profit and a rapidly expanding
middle class, that is what has been attacked in these past thirty
years.
0.
0. What was failing and collapsing when history was declared over
was something very specific in 1989, when Francis Fukyama made
that famous declaration, and when the Washington Consensus was
declared, also in 1989. What was collapsing was centralized state
communism, authoritarian, anti-democratic, repressive. Something
very specific was collapsing, and it was a moment of tremendous
flux.
0.
0. And it was in that moment of flux and disorientation that several
very savvy people, many of them in this country, seized on that
moment to declare victory not only against communism, but against
all ideas but their own. Now, this was the Fukuyama chutzpah,
when he actually said -- and it seems so strange to read it now
-- in his famous 1989 speech, that the significance of that moment
was not that we were reaching an end of ideology, as some were
suggesting, or a convergence between capitalism and socialism,
as Gorbachev was suggesting, it was not that ideology had ended,
but that history as such had ended. He argued that deregulated
markets in the economic sphere combined with liberal democracy
in the political sphere represented the endpoint of mankind's
ideological evolution and the final form of human government.
0.
0. Now, what was interesting and never quite stated in this formulation
was that you basically had two streams: you had democracy, which
you can use to vote for your leaders, and then you had a single
economic model. Now, the catch was that you couldn't use your
vote, you couldn't use your democracy to reshape your economy,
because all of the economic decisions had already been decided.
There was only -- it was the final endpoint of ideological evolution.
So you could have democracy, but you couldn't use it to change
the basics of life, you couldn't use it to change the economy.
This moment was held up as a celebration of victory for democracy,
but that idea, that democracy cannot affect the economy, is and
remains the single most anti-democratic idea of our time.
0.
0. Now, I was drawn to the slogan that was chosen for this year's
ASA gathering, because I think, as many of you know and have read
in the program, it comes from the World Social Forum. And I was
at the first World Social Forum six-and-a-half years ago -- more
than six-and-a-half years ago in January 2001 in Porto Alegre,
Brazil. I was one of only a handful of North Americans who attended.
And we gathered under that same slogan, but I think it's significant
and interesting that it wasn't posed as a question back then.
There was a proud exclamation mark at the end of the sentence:
"Another world is possible!"
0.
0. I wrote a feature article for The Nation when I came back from
Brazil, trying to explain to readers in the US -- the event wasn't
covered at all in this country, although it was covered very heavily
in the international press -- what it felt like to be there with
10,000 other people. And a lot of people were saying that they
felt like we were making history. And what I wrote was that what
it really felt like was the end of the end of history. That's
what it felt like to be in that room. It was this powerful gust
of wind that you could suddenly breathe more deeply. You were
free to imagine. Our minds were unleashed.
0.
0. And it wasn't just Porto Alegre, because Porto Alegre was the
culmination of these types of spontaneous -- often spontaneous
uprisings that were happening around the world whenever world
leaders were gathering to advance the so-called Washington Consensus,
whether it was in Seattle at the WTO meeting in 1999, whether
it was the IMF/World Bank meetings a few years later in Washington,
then in Genoa during the G8. And, of course, the Zapatistas and
the MST in Brazil were at the forefront.
0.
0. And the theme in Porto Alegre was democracy. That was the --
it was about redefining democracy to include the economy: deep
democracy, participatory democracy. And it was a challenge to
this idea that these two streams could not intersect. The right
to land as a form of democracy, the right to biodiversity, to
independent media. But what was most extraordinary about Porto
Alegre was that -- you know, certainly there were some politicians
there, there were some big NGOs there, but the people who were
at the podiums, who were shaping the discussion, were the people
who were the casualties of this economic model, who were themselves
discarded, made landless, forced to occupy pieces of land, chop
down fences and plant food and make decisions democratically.
0.
0. So, you know, Jeffery Sachs talks about these model villages
that he's building in Africa. And many of them, you know, are
making tremendous progress. But I can't help thinking back to
these field trips that we made in Porto Alegre to MST villages,
where it was the people themselves, the landless people themselves,
who were showing us their own model villages and were asking for
our solidarity. And I think as sociologists, you understand this
key distinction, that it was the actors who were the protagonists
of their history, and that was what was historic. It was breaking
the charity model in a very real way.
0.
0. Now, I look at where we are now, six-and-a-half years later,
and it does feel that we have moved backwards in many areas. Talk
of fixing the world has become an astonishingly elite affair.
Davos -- now, Porto Alegre was in rebellion against the Davos
Summit every year in January. This was the anti-Davos. Davos has
been re-legitimized, and now solving the world's problems appears
to be a matter between CEOs and super-celebrities. And the idea
that we don't need to challenge these mass disparities, what we
need is sort of noblesse oblige on a mass scale, that is very
different than what we were talking about in Porto Alegre those
years ago.
0.
0. Now, we know what closed that window of possibility, that freedom
that opened up in 2001, and it was September 11th in this country.
And the window didn't close everywhere, but it did close, at least
temporarily, in North America, that sense of possibility, that
putting these issues and the people affected by these policies
at the center of the political debate. Now, the shock of those
attacks, I think we can see with some hindsight, was harnessed
by leaders in this country and their allies around the world to
abruptly end the discussion of global justice that was exploding
around the world. There was a door that had opened, and it was
suddenly slammed shut. We heard that phrase again and again: 9/11
changes everything. And one of the first things we were told that
it had changed was that trade, privatization, labor rates, all
the things we were fighting for just so recently no longer mattered.
It was Year Zero. Wipe the slate clean. And it was another one
of these rebooting history moments. History was apparently starting
all over again from scratch, and nothing we knew before mattered.
It was all relegated to pre-9/11 thinking.
0.
0. Now, the Bush administration justified this by saying that
all that mattered was security and the war on terror. And in Canada,
we were told that -- by the US ambassador -- that security trumps
trade. That became the new slogan, that before 9/11 it was economic
priorities that drove the US administration, but post-9/11 the
only thing that mattered was security. So talk of economic justice,
corporate greed, the loss of the public sphere, the talk of Porto
Alegre, was suddenly retro, so 2001.
0.
0. Now, the irony that we can now see is that, while denying the
importance of this economic project, the Bush administration used
the dislocation of 9/11 to pursue the very same pre-9/11 radical
capitalist project, now with a furious vengeance, under the cover
of war and natural disasters. So forget negotiating trade deals
at the World Trade Organization. When the US invaded Iraq, Bush
sent in Paul Bremer to seize new markets on the battlefields of
his preemptive war. He didn't have to negotiate with anyone. He
just rewrote the country's entire economic architecture in one
swoop. But, of course, if you said that the war had anything to
do with economics, you were dismissed as naïve. It was, of
course, about security, about liberating Iraqis from Saddam.
0.
AMY GOODMAN: Journalist Naomi Klein. We'll be back with her speech
in a minute.
[break]
AMY GOODMAN: We return to journalist Naomi
Klein.
0. NAOMI KLEIN: Meanwhile, at home the
administration quickly moved to exploit the shock that gripped
the nation to push through a radical vision of hollow government,
in which everything from waging wars to reconstructing from those
wars to disaster response became an entirely for-profit venture.
This was a bold evolution of market logic. Rather than the '90s
approach of selling off existing public companies, like water
and electricity, the Bush team was creating a whole new framework
for its actions. That framework was and is the war on terror,
which was built to be private, privately managed from the start.
The Bush administration played the role of a kind of a venture
capitalist for the startup security companies, and they created
an economic boom on par with the dotcom boom of the 1990s. But
we didn't talk about it, because we were too busy talking about
security.
0.
0. Now, this feat required a kind of two-stage process, which
was using 9/11, of course, to radically increase the surveillance
and security powers of the state, concentrated in the executive
branch, but at the same time to take those powers and outsource
them to a web of private companies, whether Blackwater, Boeing,
AT&T, Halliburton, Bechtel, the Carlyle Group. Now, in the
'80s, the goal of privatization -- and in the '90s -- was devouring
the appendages of the state. But what was happening now is it
was the core that was being devoured, because what is more central
to the very definition of a state of a government than security
and disaster response? Now, this is one of the great ironies of
the war on terror, is that it proved such an effective weapon
to furthering the corporate agenda precisely because it denied
that it has, and continues to deny that it has, a corporate agenda
at all.
0.
0. Now, it had another benefit, too, which was the ability to
pay anyone who opposed this system as aligned with potential terrorists
and so on. So our movement, which was already facing extreme repression
before 9/11, was put on notice as traitorous. Looking back, it's
clear that the shock, the disorientation caused by the attacks,
was used to reassert this economic agenda, to reassert that consensus
that never really was. The window that was opened at the end of
the '90s in the movement known as the anti-globalization movement,
but which was always a pro-democracy movement, was slammed shut,
at least in North America. And it was terror that slammed it shut.
The alternatives started to disappear.
0.
0. Now, I want to use the rest of my time just to say that this
was not the first time, that this -- if we look back at the past
thirty-five years, we see this slamming of the door on alternatives
just as they are emerging repeating again and again. Many of you
were here for the opening address from Ricardo Lagos, the former
president of Chile, who talked about another September 11th, which
was another one of those moments, a far more significant one,
when a very important democratic alternative, the real third way,
not Tony Blair's third way, but the real third way between totalitarian
communism and extreme capitalism was being forged in Chile. And
that was the great threat.
0.
0. And we know that now through all of the declassified documents.
There's a really revealing one: a correspondence between Henry
Kissinger and Nixon, in which Kissinger says very bluntly that
the problem with Allende's election is not what they were saying
publicly, which was that he was aligned with the Soviets, that
he was only pretending to be democratic, but that he was really
going to impose a totalitarian system in Chile. That was the spin
at the time. What he actually wrote was, "The example of
a successful elected Marxist government in Chile would surely
have an impact on -- and even precedent value for -- other parts
of the worldThe imitative spread of similar phenomena elsewhere
would in turn significantly affect the world balance and our own
position in it." So that alternative, that other world, had
to be blasted out of the way, and extreme violence was used in
order to accomplish that.
0.
0. Now, this kind of preemptive attack on our democratic alternatives,
the persistent dream of a third way, of a real third way, has
come up again and again. And this is what I discuss at length
in the book, but I want to mention a couple of examples -- unless
I'm totally out of time? OK -- examples of moments where there
was a similar sense of effervescent possibility of being able
to breathe more and dream more fully.
0.
0. One of them was in Poland in 1989. June 4th was the day of
the historic elections in Poland that elected Solidarity as the
new government. They hadn't had elections there in decades. And
this was the event that really set off the domino -- what's now
referred to as the domino effect in Eastern Bloc countries --
and ultimately resulting in the breaking apart of the Soviet Union.
But it's worth remembering what it actually looked like in June
of 1989. In Poland, people didn't think that history was over,
because they had just elected Solidarity as their government.
They thought that history was just beginning and that they were
finally going to be able to implement what the movement, which
was a labor movement, had always seen as the third way, the third
way not taken. Now, Solidarity's vision was not a rejection of
socialism. They said that they were calling for "real socialism,"
as socialists often do, and it was a rejection of the Communist
party. They were everything that the party was not: dispersed
where it was centralized, democratic where it was authoritarian,
participatory where it was bureaucratic. And Solidarity had ten
million members, which gave them the power to completely shut
down the state.
0.
0. So when people went to the polls and elected a Solidarity government,
what were they voting for? What did they think they were voting
for? Did they think that they were voting to become a free market
economy on the model that Francis Fukuyama was talking about?
No, they didn't. They thought they were voting for the labor party
that they had helped to build.
0.
0. And I just want to read you a short passage from Solidarity's
economic program, which was passed democratically in 1981. They
said, "The socialized enterprise should be the basic organizational
unit in the economy. It should be controlled by the workers' council
representing the collective" and should be operated -- cooperatively
run by a director appointed through competition, recalled by the
council, workers' cooperatives. So the idea was to get the party
out of control of the economy, to decentralize it and have the
people who were doing the work actually control their workplaces.
And they believed that they could make them more sustainable.
0.
0. Now, did they get the chance to try that, to act on that vision
of a worker cooperative economy as the centerpiece of the economy,
to have democratic elections but still have socialism? Did they
get that chance when they voted for Solidarity? No, they didn't.
What they got was an inherited debt, and they were told that the
only way that they would get any relief from that debt and any
aid is if they followed a very radical shock therapy program.
Now, I would be remiss if I didn't point out that the person who
prescribed that shock therapy program was Jeffery Sachs. And I
-- no, I say that because I really had hoped that we could debate
these different worlds, because there are differences, there are
real differences that we must not smooth over.
0.
0. Now, in 2006, 40% of young workers in Poland were unemployed,
40%, last year. That's twice the EU average. And Poland is often
held up as a great success story of transition. In 1989, 15% of
the Poland's population was living below the poverty line. In
2003, 59% of Poles had fallen below the line. That's that opening
of that gap. That's what these economic policies do. And then,
we can say we're very, very worried about the people at the bottom,
let's bring them up, but let's be clear about what we're talking
about. These jarring levels of inequality and economic exclusion
are now feeding a resurgence of chauvinism, racism, anti-Semitism,
misogyny, rampant homophobia in Poland. And I think we can see,
actually, that it's inevitable that this would be the case, because
they tried communism, they tried capitalism, they tried democratic
socialism, but they got shock therapy instead. After you've tried
all that, there really isn't a whole lot left but fascism. It's
dangerous to suppress democratic alternatives when people invest
their dreams in them. It's risky business.
0.
0. Another one of these powerful dreams was Tiananmen Square,
and it's a sort of a very sad fluke of history that on the same
day that Solidarity won those historic elections and that dream
was betrayed, what they voted for was betrayed, tanks rolled in
Tiananmen Square, and that was the day of the massacre: June 4,
1989. It was another bloody end to a moment of effervescent possibility.
0.
0. Now, the way those protests were always reported on in the
West was that students in Beijing just wanted to live like in
the United States. And they, you know, put a goddess to democracy
that looked a lot like the Statue of Liberty. So it was reported
on CNN as just kind of pro-American-style democracy protests.
0.
0. But in recent years, an alternative analysis of those events
has emerged. And what we're starting to hear from what's being
called China's New Left, and people like Wang Hui, who's a wonderful
academic, is that this was a vast oversimplification of what was
driving the pro-democracy movement in 1989 in China. What was
driving it was that the government of Deng Xiaoping was radically
restructuring the economy along with the lines that had been prescribed
by Milton Friedman -- economic shock therapy -- and people were
seeing their quality of life devalued. Workers were losing their
rights. And they were taking to the streets and demanding democratic
control over the economic transition.
0.
0. So democracy wasn't an abstract idea. It wasn't just "We
want to vote." It was, "We want to control this transition.
We want to have a say in it." It was a direct challenge to
the Fukuyama formulation, which, by the way, was made that same
year: the idea that you would have these two streams and that
they wouldn't intersect.
0.
0. I just want to read one other thing, which is another one of
these paths not taken, because we know how that one ended in Tiananmen
Square: that dream was crushed. Another historic moment of possibility,
when we look back on our recent history, was 1994, when the ANC
government won landslide elections in South Africa. That was a
victory for people power. That was one of the most hopeful days
that I can remember.
0.
0. I think we should remember what South Africans thought they
were voting for in those historic elections. You know, it was
just portrayed as something very simple: it was an end to apartheid.
But what did an end to apartheid mean to South Africans? And we
can get an answer from that actually from Nelson Mandela, who
wrote a little note two weeks before he was released from prison.
And he wrote this note because there was a growing concern that
he had been in prison so long that he had forgotten the promise
of liberation, which was not just to have elections, but to change
the economy of the country and redistribute the wealth. And Mandela
was under so much pressure that he had to release this very short
statement just to clarify this point. And what he said was, "The
nationalization of the mines, banks and monopoly industry is the
policy of the ANC and a change or modification of our views in
this regard is inconceivable in our situation. State control of
certain sectors of the economy is unavoidable." And this
was a reiteration of South Africa's Freedom Charter, which is
the platform of the ANC, which calls for the national wealth of
South Africa, the heritage of the country, to be restored for
the people, the mineral wealth and so on.
0.
0. Now, I say this because this was one of those worlds that wasn't
chosen, one of those paths that wasn't chosen. And I spent the
past four years pulling these stolen and betrayed alternatives
out of the dustbin of our recent history, because I think it matters.
I think it matters that we had ideas all along, that there were
always alternatives to the free market. And we need to retell
our own history and understand that history, and we have to have
all the shocks and all the losses, the loss of lives, in that
story, because history didn't end. There were alternatives. They
were chosen, and then they were stolen. They were stolen by military
coups. They were stolen by massacres. They stolen by trickery,
by deception. They were stolen by terror.
0.
0. We who say we believe in this other world need to know that
we are not losers. We did not lose the battle of ideas. We were
not outsmarted, and we were not out-argued. We lost because we
were crushed. Sometimes we were crushed by army tanks, and sometimes
we were crushed by think tanks. And by think tanks, I mean the
people who are paid to think by the makers of tanks. Now, most
effective we have seen is when the army tanks and the think tanks
team up. The quest to impose a single world market has casualties
now in the millions, from Chile then to Iraq today. These blueprints
for another world were crushed and disappeared because they are
popular and because, when tried, they work. They're popular because
they have the power to give millions of people lives with dignity,
with the basics guaranteed. They are dangerous because they put
real limits on the rich, who respond accordingly. Understanding
this history, understanding that we never lost the battle of ideas,
that we only lost a series of dirty wars, is key to building the
confidence that we lack, to igniting the passionate intensity
that we need.
0.
AMY GOODMAN: Naomi Klein, author of the forthcoming book, The
Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism.
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