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Racism, capitalism's handmaiden
By M. S. Prabhakara
CAPE TOWN, AUG. 27. Though South Africa is hosting the
forthcoming World Conference Against Racism (WCAR), resourceful
sections of the white minority whose voices and words dominate
the media, are less than enthusiastic about the meet.
Arguments against the very idea of such a conference are mooted
from a variety of seemingly persuasive, indeed liberal,
perspectives. Thus, with institutionalised apartheid now only a
dim memory, if that, for the majority of the South Africans,
surely it is not necessary to keep on scratching and reopening
healed wounds of the body politic? Can South Africa, with all its
more urgent priorities relating to the basic needs of the
majority of the people - the `Previously Disadvantaged', as the
seamless euphemism has it, about which more below - afford to
spend millions of rands on a conference which will amount to
little more than a prolonged talk-shop? Would all that money be
better spent on ensuring the safety of the citizens, and
providing water, electricity, housing and health care to these
`Previously Disadvantaged'?
Indeed, since people throughout history have been free to like or
dislike others, free to choose their friends and neighbours, can
one force people to `love each other' which is what the ultimate
objective of the WCAR is, driven as it is by a bunch of idealist
busybodies, many of them foreigners at that?
The euphemism, Previously Disadvantaged, now in near- universal
use in the manner of the speakers of George Orwell's duckspeak,
encapsulates the hypocrisy of all such demurring. The reality is
that the majority of the population, now given the privileged
status of being only `Previously Disadvantaged', continue to be
currently disadvantaged; and are expected to remain even more
disadvantaged in the foreseeable future.
The euphemism is, however, soothing, and also has its uses. It
pleases the minority whose smooth, but venomous voice and words
on radio and TV talk shows and correspondence columns of
newspapers chortle with glee as the democratic Government, held
to ransom by its own surrender to the orthodoxy of the market,
fumbles from one crisis to another. Paradoxically, the euphemism
also seems to please the majority, the poor, to use the simple
and visceral word shorn of all ambiguity and sophistry, by
seeming to invest them with a measure of polysyllabic verbal
dignity.
How wonderful it is to be Previously Disadvantaged, with the
horrors of that status now only a faint memory, with the reality
of being ``presently advantaged'' and the prospect of being even
``more advantaged'' in the future. Blessed indeed are the
Previously Disadvantaged, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven in
the future.
The most interesting of such arguments is the one that assumes
that discussions of racism invariably end up with requiring all
the people of a community to love each other - a normative utopia
which is simply against the law of nature where preferences and
prejudices born of deep-rooted memories and conscious choices are
the natural order. Arguing against such `freedom of choice' is
just one step away from loss of civil liberties and totalitarian
control, the spectre of a universally invasive Big Brother.
The political philosophy underlining such concerns is that the
best of governments is one which governs the least, with the
state having no interventionary role, certainly not in areas
which are presumed to be entirely in the private domain.
The confusion, if it is that, arises from a wrong understanding
of the phenomenon of racism. Racism includes prejudices based on
derived ideas of race and skin colour and goes beyond these. The
victims of racism have never asked to be loved; they only want
their humanity to be acknowledged.
Segregation under the British colonialism and institutionalised
apartheid under the Boers denied this humanity to the majority of
the people, rationalising this under some Biblical principles.
The real rationale, as with slavery, was that these practices
were profitable, they simply added surplus value, to use an
expression now considered obsolete.
In other words, inasmuch as Atlantic slavery, colonialism,
segregation and institutionalised apartheid are causally related
to the emergence of capitalism and its consolidation as a world
system, of which South Africa was and continues to be an integral
part. Revisionist versions of South Africa's history, with their
own agenda, now argue that apartheid did not benefit South
African finance capital; that the admittedly amoral capitalists
with foresight clearly saw the untenability of the rigidities of
hard apartheid; and were always trying to reform the system from
within.
The current confrontation between organised labour and the
Government on the issue of privatisation of state assets, with a
two-day general strike on the eve of the formal opening of the
WCAR, dramatically juxtaposes the issues of capitalism and
racism.
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