“Refugees, Terror and Other Troubles with the Neighbors,” by Slavoj Žižek, 2016
Žižek aims his arrows at liberals, Left-liberals and the
petit-bourgeois ‘left’ in this slim polemic, dealing with the issue of refugees
in Europe and the racist liberal idea of ‘cultural relativism.’ I’ll leave you
with quotes for the most part. He deals
with growing femicides, Islamic terror groups like ISIS, ‘nihilist’ violence,
Europe’s libratory side, imperialism and invasions, fascism’s two aspects in religion
and nationalism, then delves into some questionable psychology. He seems to take somewhat of a ‘culture of
civilization’ tack at first, but then clearly promotes universal
liberation. It was written in the
aftermath of gang attacks on women in Cologne, Germany carried out mostly by
Arab youth, ISIS attacks against civilians in Paris and the kidnapping of girls
in Rotherham, UK by Pakistani gangs.
Žižek’s overall solution – a left solution by the way – to
the dilemma of either completely open borders or unscalable walled borders,
promoted by humanitarian liberals and rightist nationalists in that order, is
not new. Liberals do not deal with the
causes of immigration; the Rightists don’t either, nor do they care. The solution is to stop wars, invasions, bombings,
unequal trade, export substitutes and debt, ‘pragmatic’ support for dictators
and imperialist economic competition over minerals, oil, gas, diamonds, food,
land and rare metals. Add to that global
warming. Refugees do not want to leave
their families, countries and societies unless they are in dire need. And they are. To follow this route would mean an overturn of the capitalist system world-wide.
Žižek knows that immigration is only going to increase due
to ‘failed states’ and national borders are going to become more and more
useless. His scalable solution is to
highly organize the inclusion of immigrants into Europe. Many stations in countries interviewing,
classifying and organizing immigrants as to what work they can do, where they
can live, their rationale, their ties to fundamentalism, but still with limits. After all, capital is actually looking for
workers and consumers, though he doesn’t mention that key economic fact except
once, commenting on a “cheap precarious
workforce.” Nor does he mention the
concept of ‘blowback’ for the crimes of capital. Europeans, like many societies, are having
less babies as well.
What does Žižek have to say? His use of the term “Left” is a muddy idea
mixing liberals, left-liberals and Stalinists together. By the way, he is not a Marxist, he is just
secretly inspired by Marxism.
QUOTES:
·
“Every
four minutes in South Africa a woman or a girl – often a teenager, sometimes a
child – is reported raped and every eight hours a woman is killed by her
partner.”
·
“Western
leftists ... make some kind of ‘strategic compromise’ in which the humiliation
and persecution of women and gays are silently tolerated on behalf of the
greater ‘anti-imperialist’ struggle.”
·
“Their
remedies (charity in this case)
do not cure the disease, they merely prolong it.” (Oscar Wilde)
·
“Anglo-Saxon
neoliberalism and ‘Asian values’-infused authoritarian capitalism” are
the two, twin poles of capital, both of which need to be opposed. He thinks the latter is now being preferred
by most capitalists as more effective.
·
“Investor-State
Dispute Settlement” … allows companies to sue governments if those government’s
policies result in loss of profits.”
·
“…
culture is no longer just an exception, a kind of fragile superstructure rising
above the ‘real’ economic infrastructure, but more and more a central
ingredient of our mainstream ‘real’ economy.”
·
He opposes the liberal-leftist mantra that “our main task is the critique of
Eurocentrism.”
·
“…another
Leftist taboo that needs to be abandoned is that of prohibiting any critique of
Islam.”
·
“The
silent premise of some critics of Islamophobia is that Islam somehow resists
global capitalism.” It
does not, as for instance ISIS was a profit-making machine, as is Saudi Arabia, Iran and the Gulf States.
·
“The
Old Testament describes this gift (of Israel) in the terms of ethnic cleansing.”
·
“Netanyahu
suggested that Hitler had wanted only to expel Jews from Germany, not to
exterminate them” – instead blaming that on the Palestinian mufti
Haj Amin al-Husseini - thus giving comfort to holocaust deniers.
·
“…the
good thing about the intolerance of religious fundamentalisms: that they cannot
tolerate each other.”
·
“…some
apparent anti-racism is effectively a barely covert racism, condescendingly
treating Pakistanis as morally inferior beings who should not be held to our
standards…” regarding women.
·
Rapes in India, Ciudad Juarez, of aboriginal
women in western Canada, and Catholic pedophilia he calls “learned, externally imposed, ritualized: part of the collective,
secret, symbolic substance of a community.”
·
“…violence
against women resonates with the subordination of women and their exclusion
from public life.”
· Some riots and violence are “means without ends.” (Walter Benjamin.) See the destruction of two post offices and damage to one library in Minneapolis during the Floyd rebellion.
·
“The
dynamics of world capitalism” and “western military intervention” constitute “the political economy of refugees.” This is based on export
substitution and exploitation of oil, diamonds, food and land in ‘failed states.’
·
“What
if the obstacle to integration is not only Western racism?” Some
communities have no interest in integration.
·
“…the
culture war is a class war in a displaced mode.”
·
“The
wager of Marxism is that there is one antagonism (class struggle) which overdetermines all others…which is …
the concrete universal…”
·
“…yet
another taboo to be left behind is the dismissal of the worries and cares of
so-called ‘ordinary people’…”
·
“… the
multiculturalist anti-colonialist defense of the multiplicity of ‘ways of life’
is also false; it covers up the antagonisms within each of these particular
ways of life…”
·
“We
are not gays!” (Robert Mugabe); “The struggle against gays appears as an aspect of the anti-colonial
struggle.” He opposes this idea.
·
“The
principal threat to Europe does not come in the shape of Muslim immigrants but
in its anti-immigrant populist defenders.”
·
“…Freud
and Lacan insist on the problematic nature of the basic Judeo-Christian
injunction to love one’s neighbor…”
·
“…there
is no emancipatory potential in fundamentalist violence, however
anti-capitalist it claims to be…”
·
“…all
the imagined, democratic-multitude-grassroots changes ‘from below’ are
ultimately doomed to fail…”
·
“Should
we tolerate it if refugees settling in Europe prevent their children going to
school; if they force their women to dress and behave in a certain way; if they
arrange the marriage of their children; if they maltreat – and worse – gays
among their ranks?”
·
In this situation: “Our
axiom should be the struggle against Western neo-colonialism as well as the
struggle against fundamentalism…”
·
“…
humankind should get ready to live in a more plastic and nomadic way…”
·
“…national
sovereignty will have to be radically redefined and new levels of global
cooperation invented.”
At the end Žižek endorses a reinvented Communism as the
only progressive solution to the capitalist melt-down of the entire world by
climate change, refugees, dictatorship, poverty and apartheid.
Prior reviews on this subject, use blog search box, upper
left, to investigate our 16 year archive, using these terms: “Living
in the End Times,” “Did Someone Say Totalitarianism?” “Violence,” “First as
Tragedy, Then as Farce,” “Pandemic – Covid 19 Shakes the World,” “Heaven in
Disorder,” “Like a Thief in Broad Daylight,” (All by Zizek); “Tropic of Chaos” (Parenti); “Illegals, Migrants and Refugees,”
“Central America’s Forgotten History” (A. Chomsky); “The Great Escape.”
Red Frog
And I bought it at May Day Books! / July 10, 2023
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