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	<title>Left Eye On Books &#187; Steven Colatrella</title>
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		<title>From Tiananmen Square to Tahrir Square</title>
		<link>http://www.lefteyeonbooks.com/2011/02/from-tiananmen-square-to-tahrir-square/</link>
		<comments>http://www.lefteyeonbooks.com/2011/02/from-tiananmen-square-to-tahrir-square/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 08 Feb 2011 23:52:44 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Steven Colatrella</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[News Blog]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ayatollah]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[China]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Egypt]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hosni Mubarak]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[IMF]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Iran]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jeffrey Sachs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Naomi Klein]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Neoliberalism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Poland]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social movements]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[strikes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[structural adjustment]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tiananmen Square]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tunsian]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[United States]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[working class]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[World Bank]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The uprising in Egypt, a crucial ally of the U.S., marks the undoing of four of the five pillars&#8211;built on past defeats of revolutions and movements&#8211;  that have maintained the current economic order. As I write this hundreds of thousands have again filled Tahrir Square in Cairo, and hundreds of thousands more march in Alexandria [...]<div class="crp_related"><h3>Related Articles:</h3><ul><li><a href="http://www.lefteyeonbooks.com/2011/02/around-the-web-3/"     class="crp_title">Around the Web</a></li><li><a href="http://www.lefteyeonbooks.com/2011/01/the-mideast-and-us-power/"     class="crp_title">The Mideast and U.S. power</a></li><li><a href="http://www.lefteyeonbooks.com/2011/02/why-social-media-even-twitter-and-facebook-matter/"     class="crp_title">Why Social Media &#8211; Even Twitter and Facebook &#8211;&hellip;</a></li><li><a href="http://www.lefteyeonbooks.com/2013/04/totalitarianism-liberal-democracy-and-the-new-deal/"     class="crp_title">Totalitarianism, Liberal Democracy and the New Deal</a></li><li><a href="http://www.lefteyeonbooks.com/2011/06/on-late-capitalism-and-neoliberalism/"     class="crp_title">On Late Capitalism and Neoliberalism</a></li></ul></div>]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.lefteyeonbooks.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/egypt-protest.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-thumbnail wp-image-1058" title="egypt protest" src="http://www.lefteyeonbooks.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/egypt-protest-150x150.jpg" alt="" width="150" height="150" /></a>The uprising in Egypt, a crucial ally of the U.S., marks the undoing of four of the five pillars&#8211;built on past defeats of revolutions and movements&#8211;  that have maintained the current economic order.</p>
<p>As I write this hundreds of thousands  have again filled Tahrir Square in Cairo, and hundreds of thousands  more march in Alexandria on the Mediterranean coast , demanding an end  to the authoritarian, pro-US government , pro-neoliberal  regime that  has caused the Egyptian people such suffering under the 30 year rule of  Hosni Mubarak. Along with their revolutionary fellow Arabs in Tunisia,  Egyptians fighting for democracy and for a better life, and against  injustice and inequality are on the front line in the battle for global  civilization today. For it is civilization itself, global society as a  whole that is at stake in the struggle taking place in the streets and  squares of Egypt and across the Arab world. To understand this however,  we need to understand the full, global context of these struggles and  revolutions.</p>
<p>Our entire global civilization, or to be more  precise, the domination over and exploitation of global  civilization, has, for over 30 years rested on five pillars. These five  are: the defeat of U.S. labor movement and working class during the Reagan  years; imposition of Structural Adjustment Programs by the IMF and  World  Bank in most of the world under the excuse of the Debt Crisis;  the defeat of the Iranian and Polish revolutions in 1980-81; the  crushing of the revolt of workers and students in Tiananmen Square in  China in May 1989; and the cordon wrapped around the oil fields of the  Persian Gulf, making sure that the production and distribution of oil  would take place under conditions that enhanced and maintained  capitalist profits and rule. This may seem like a strange list, and  indeed it may be difficult at first to see what they have to do with  each other.</p>
<p>Briefly, the defeat of the U.S. working class, which  was <a href="http://www.versobooks.com/books/282-rebel-rank-and-file" target="_blank">very combative throughout the late 1960s and 1970s</a>, with waves of  wildcat strikes, widespread refusal of work discipline and wage and work  control demands that threatened capitalist power at the workplace gave a  free hand to U.S. multinationals and what became the neoliberal model of  capitalist rule.  This form of rule was based on few or no rights for workers, low wages,  competition for labor but not for capital, a fragmentation or even  demolition of old fortresses of union power and, with Reagan’s <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Professional_Air_Traffic_Controllers_Organization_%281968%29" target="_blank">defeat of  the Air Traffic Controller’s Strike</a>, any model of government neutral or  even favorable to workers in the struggles between labor and capital.</p>
<p>Defeating  the working class in part required <a href="ttp://critiqueofcrisistheory.wordpress.com/the-five-industrial-cycles-since-1945/from-the-1974-75-recession-to-the-volcker-shock/" target="_blank">the massive increase of interest  rates by Fed Chairman Paul Volcker</a>, which not only demolished the US auto  and construction industries (thus strangling unions), but also raising the  interest payments owed by countries throughout the Third World and  Eastern Europe that had borrowed money recycled by banks at initially  low interest from the proceeds of the petrodollars earned by oil  producers during the previous Oil Crises. The debt now became unpayable,  creating a de facto state of indentured servitude for the working  populations of most countries in the world ever since. That condition  was imposed by the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Structural_adjustment" target="_blank">structural adjustment programs</a> of the IMF and World Bank, which, in only  superficially altered form continue to this day, extending neoliberal  rule, with its inequality between the rich and the rest in every  country and its free hand to corporations and concentration of wealth  and power, everywhere. Up to a few days ago, one of the countries   celebrated by the IMF for its economic policies was Egypt.  There, half the population of over 80 million live on $2 US dollars a  day or less, the World Bank’s definition of absolute poverty.</p>
<p>Were it not for the remittances sent home by immigrant Egyptian workers in  the Gulf States, Europe and the U.S., many  families would starve.  The rule of Hosni Mubarak is inseparable from the inequality and poverty  that characterizes the lives of Egyptian working class people, and the  global governance organizations who initiate neoliberal policies. The  revolt against Mubarak’s regime is therefore a revolt also against  neoliberal policies, inequality and the capitalist power of  global  governance, which backs up and disciplines national governments  worldwide. As Naomi Klein showed in  <a title="More info about this book at powells.com" rel="powells-9780676978001" href="http://www.powells.com/partner/35362/biblio/9780676978001?p_ti">The Shock Doctrine</a>, authoritarian  government has been necessary to impose policies that increase  inequality and reduce the income of working people in favor of a small  elite of the rich. The Egyptian and Tunisian revolutions are the most  advanced points, along with the revolutions in some of Latin America  against neoliberalism, against capitalist global governance, and with  this against US hegemony.</p>
<p>But neoliberalism might never have  come about. Along with the struggles in the U.S. factories, workers  struggles intensified in many places in the mid-to-late 1970s.  Two of the high points were in Iran in 1979-80 and in Poland in 1980-81.  In Iran, where the dictatorship of the Shah had integrated Iran more  closely into capitalist markets with its attendant inequality, the largest demonstrations in human history up to that time were followed  by the decisive blow: the general strike of the oil workers. Workers  councils were set up in workplaces around the country. But the Islamic  right defeated the divided left and crushed the effort at  workers’ self-management. In Poland, the largest working class movement  ever shattered Communist Party rule, and for a year and half, the  Solidarity movement, a self-organized movement of nearly the entire  working population was governing Poland through the power of workers to  strike. A proposal by the left of Solidarity at their convention in  Summer 1981 called for workers’ control of all workplaces, and at that  point plans began for the coup d’etat that crushed Solidarity in  December 1981. The Solidarity that won elections in 1988 and ended  Communist Party rule was a pale imitation of its old self, as  intellectuals in the meantime won over by neoliberals and Margaret  Thatcher gained power and, once in power, imposed Jeffrey Sachs’ shock  therapy which further fragmented workers power in Poland. By the  mid-1990s Poland had the highest unemployment rates in Eastern Europe.</p>
<p>The  defeat of the Iranian revolution by its own leaders, the Ayatollahs,  eliminated the alternative to today’s order in the Middle East –  capitalist rule and exploitation of labor and oil resources maintained  by Israeli occupation (over Palestinians once a major source of labor  power for oil fields, now seen as a dangerous example for people  elsewhere in the region), and by dictatorships across the Arab  countries. Workers&#8217; power and democracy would mean a region that overcame  the nominal division into nation-states where a major resource and the  skilled labor that goes into producing and moving it would be used to  develop society and enhance the lives of the populations there. The  defeat of the Polish revolution by its own leaders in compliance with  the IMF meant that today’s European Union became inevitable – one where  the 1989 revolutions did not demand democracy while maintaining a fairer  distribution of wealth, did not create workers control of production,  but instead imposed neoliberal policies under the auspices of global  governance organizations. Thus the wave of  national democratization around the world has been neutralized so that  democratic governments have little option but to please investors,  markets, currency traders, and ratings agencies, with the results being  greater injustice and inequality. Eastern Europe’s democratization,  which might have led to a different, democratic and socialist Europe,  instead led to the East being the source of cheap labor power for  German, Italian and French businesses, who no longer create many jobs  for their own national workforces.  The bankers’ E.U. was born with the  neoliberal turn of Polish Solidarity.</p>
<p>Is it really possible that  the seeming victory of the Revolutions of 1989 in Eastern Europe and the  defeat of the Revolution of 1989 in China led to the same outcome? The  Chinese New Left has now made clear to us that the Tiananmen Square  revolt was not just about students, who demanded liberalization and  democracy but were often sympathetic to free market policies. <a href="http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Asia-Pacific/2009/0604/p06s14-woap.html" target="_blank">The  majority in the Square were workers</a>, and along with the general strike  in Shanghai and strikes throughout much of China these were the real  threat to Communist Party rule in May 1989. This working class revolt  was directed against the neoliberal policies already being implemented,  with great inequality, mass unemployment and declining wages and reduced  welfare policies by Deng Xiao Ping’s government. With the crushing of  this opposition, Deng was free to carry out his Southern Tour which  signaled the full turn toward privatization, market policies and  neoliberal globalization. The defeat of workers at Tiananmen is the  basis of today’s global market with production increasingly centralized  in China, enabling capital to defeat workers elsewhere by undercutting  their demands with Chinese price competition. <a href="http://chinastudygroup.net/2010/10/auto-industry-strikes-in-china/" target="_blank"> The recent strike wave in  China</a>, the rising wages and subsequent inflation of prices of  Chinese-made goods has already undermined this,  with effects ranging from the changed and more aggressive bargaining  demeanor of the U.S. government toward China on a number of issues  (compared with its obsequiousness two years ago when Secretary of State  Clinton went to China), the beginning of rethinking investment in China  by many global companies  (a major source of the  economic uncertainty  today), to the weakened profits of Wal-Mart.</p>
<p>But the spectre of  Tiananmen hangs over popular revolt ever since 1989, and its horror was  recently reinforced in Thailand, where a mass occupation by the Red  Shirts movement for democracy against the monarchy and military rule on  behalf of the rich was <a href="http://www.indymedia.org.au/2010/05/19/western-governments-silent-in-face-of-thai-massacre" target="_blank">crushed with a massacre in the streets of  Bangkok</a>. This massacre, which came at a moment nearly analogous to that  of today in Egypt’s revolution, led to barely a squeak of protest from  the world. Yet when Burma (Myanmar) next door massacred its citizens and  when Iran did the same last year, the world screamed. The difference is  that Thailand is highly integrated into the world economy, and before  the Asian Financial Crisis of 1997 it was Thailand, not China, that for  the previous decade had had the highest growth rates in the world.  The  message was clear: so long as a government is friendly to the U.S., so  long as it plays the game of global capitalism – be it China in 1989, or  Thailand in 2010, it is okay for it to massacre its own people even in  front of the whole world. This message was further underlined by events  in Honduras where the democratically elected government was overthrown  in a coup barely criticized by Obama and Clinton even when it began  <a href="http://www.wsws.org/articles/2009/aug2009/hond-a06.shtml" target="_blank">openly assassinating its opponents</a> and crushing huge democratic  demonstrations against the military regime. Only the unprecedented  phenomenon of hundreds of thousands who turned out in 2002 to stop a  coup against the democratic government of Hugo Chavez in Venezuela sent a  different message. Those demonstrations broke the fear that  had held Latin America in its grip ever since Pinochet’s overthrow of  Salvador Allende’s democratic socialist government in Chile in 1973 and  the rule of the military in Argentina (and fear of more military rule had been the insurance  policy underwriting neoliberal policies throughout the continent during  the 1990s). Revolutionary governments in Bolivia and Ecuador, leftist  government in Paraguay and other benefits have derived from those  demonstrations.</p>
<p>The impact of Tahrir Square is even greater than  that of the crowds that defended Chavez at the Presidential Palace  nearly a decade ago. For the eyes of the rest of the world outside Latin  America have been long focused by other events – wars, 9/11, the  Palestinian issue, oil prices – on the region that the Egyptian  revolution is taking place in. With <a href="http://english.aljazeera.net/" target="_blank">Al Jazeera</a> providing reasonably  friendly round the clock live coverage, and the world’s media there,  only Tiananmen Square can compare to this as a global moment of popular  revolution. But the Egyptian army, like that of Tunisia, has so far  refused to fire on the protesters  (in 1989 the Beijing garrison also  refused and it was an army from Szechwan led by a relative of Deng that  carried out the massacre) and  today seems openly on their side,  protecting them from the murdering gangs of pro-Mubarak security  forces and hired hands that have been attacking the people in the square  for the past three days. The example of Tunisia did not take long to  spread far and wide, despite the absurd attempt by all kinds of Western  commentators to <a href="http://walt.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2011/01/15/why_the_tunisian_revolution_wont_spread" target="_blank">claim that the revolt would not spread</a> because of the  specificity of Tunisian politics and society. Of course the outcome,  forms of struggle and political solutions will be different in each  country, based on their institutions, political culture and history, as  well as the events on the ground, but it is clear that the methodology  that has sought to separate Arab countries into hermetically sealed  cubby holes is flawed. Postmodernism taught for decades that  universalisms were sources of repression. Today we see that this wrong.  It is precisely the universalism of the Arab people, their unity first  with each other across their national boundaries and second with the  rest of the working people everywhere in the world, that is both the main  theme of the revolutions and  desperately needed. We were told that the Middle East is different: that it is part of something called “The Islamic World” and that only Islamist  politics existed aside from the dictators (the<em> New York Times</em> ran an  article mere months ago asserting this for the entire region).</p>
<p>Today  we see that people in Egypt want democracy. They want social justice.  They want their nation to govern its own fate. They oppose exploitation  and want to do something about the unbearable and unsustainable  inequality created by neoliberal capitalism.  Their revolution, directed  necessarily in the first place against Mubarak and his regime, just as  that of Tunisians was directed immediately against Ben Ali and his, is  also sparked by poverty, unemployment and inequality. It necessarily  opposes global governance organizations’ policies. It conflicts,  inevitably, with the increasingly global ruling class, the elite that  meets at Davos every year to come up with common polices for the problem  that Karl Marx identified in <a title="More info about this book at powells.com" rel="powells-9780140445701" href="http://www.powells.com/partner/35362/biblio/9780140445701?p_ti"> Capital: Volume 3</a>, a unitary, single  profit rate with shares in it decided on based on power and capital,  this time globally. Egypt has seen one of the world’s <a href="http://www.merip.org/mero/mero050907.html" target="_blank">greatest strike  waves</a> over the past few years, 3,000 strikes involving at least two  million workers since 2004, and this is part of a global strike wave  that has been building over the past three years, with epicenters also  in Bangladesh, Vietnam, China, Cambodia, South Africa, South Korea and  elsewhere. This strike wave, now intersecting with <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2010/sep/29/europe-austerity-protests" target="_blank">strikes and protests  in Europe against EU-initiated austerity programs</a>, is a worldwide  protest, a growing movement against global governance in its present  form, the neoliberal regime of inequality and injustice that it governs  and imposes, and the national governments that ally with this global  ruling class, integrate their personnel increasingly with it, and carry  out its polices against the interests of their own peoples.</p>
<p>Such  a revolt in the Middle East inevitably, however, goes further in its  implications – for as it spreads from the Arab countries without oil  to  those with oil, it places much of the power of the current world order  into question. It challenges the regional power of the policeman Israel  that keeps an eye on the area’s population, which might otherwise  threaten to hold the world’s oil as an instrument of power to make its  own demands for access to the wealth produced globally. It challenges  the power of the United States since these dictatorships are all  U.S.-backed. It challenges, in other words, the whole world order. Just as  the Palestinian issue has never only been about Palestine, and peoples  of Arab countries always made that clear, the current revolutions are  also struggling against the parochialism that has been imposed on the  Arab peoples. The goal of the “peace process” has  been to  isolate the Palestinian struggle from its wider implications  and cut it off from  allies. Those allies are today  overthrowing their dictators and the tyranny of postmodern politics in a  global world. A political solution that attempts to improve the lives  of people region-wide will challenge the pillar of world order which has used control of oil to control capitalism and exploit the  world’s working class more effectively.</p>
<p>So, three of the pillars  are in danger at once – control of oil, global governance imposition of  austerity and neoliberalism in the Third World, and the horror of  Tiananmen Square for any working class ready to challenge its  fate as cheap labor in the global economy. That is the meaning of Tahrir  Square – it is the end of the era of Tiananmen Square that has already  begun with the strikes and labor organizing in China itself. It is a  threat to the world capitalist order. This has been recognized by important mouthpieces of the current order, including the BBC,  which has had openly pro-Mubarak and colonialist coverage of the  Egyptian events throughout the crisis, and the business press and  networks, which have discussed only the economic damage caused by the  revolution (although this has really been caused by Mubarak’s refusal to go and allow  democracy). The ratings agencies – Standard and Poor, Fitch and Moody’s  have all attacked the people of Egypt by <a href="http://marketplace.publicradio.org/display/web/2011/02/01/pm-egypt-downgraded-by-debtrating-agencies/" target="_blank">downgrading Egypt’s credit and  bonds </a>– making sure that any subsequent government there will have few  options and little room for maneuver. It is long past time that people  struggling for justice anywhere have a right to expect those of us in  countries where these &#8216;neutral  technicians&#8217; are based will organize  demonstrations to defend the people and  expose the anti-democratic role of the  unelected dictators at the ratings agencies.</p>
<p>The Tunisian and  Egyptian revolutions, aside from being near the Middle East and its oil  and being part of the Arab world, are also part of the Mediterranean. In  Greece, global governance in the form of the E.U. and IMF have imposed a  draconian anti-working class program against the ferocious resistance of  the Greek working class – resistance that came just up to the point  that Tunisians decided to go past. French workers desperately defended  their welfare state rights in mass general strikes last year. Spanish  and Portuguese workers have carried out the largest general strikes in  the histories of their respective nations. British , Irish and Italian  workers and students have likewise been struggling against austerity  policies and in the case of Italy against a leader whose similarity with  the Mubaraks of the world is striking for the head of a democratically  elected government. Indeed, democratic countries have recently seen a  wave of a soft version of what political science textbooks call  “delegated democracy” – an awful phrase that basically means, “I won the  election so I can do whatever I want”. The political aspects of the  revolutions of Tunisia and Egypt may not be entirely irrelevant to us  either. In Eastern Europe likewise, strikes and protests against EU  austerity policies have revealed the class nature of that organization,  once seen as a great democratic conquest by the peoples who freed  themselves from tyranny in 1989. The fourth pillar, the defeat of the Polish and Iranian revolutions, holds for now, but is  not without challenge. Sooner or later, perhaps on a European scale  this time, the original meaning of Polish Solidarity will arise again in  new form.  That will leave one pillar left, the defeat of the U.S. working class.</p>
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