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by Stephen Lendman
Naomi Klein is an award-winning Canadian journalist, author, documentary filmmaker and activist. She writes a regular column for The Nation magazine and London Guardian that's syndicated internationally by the New York Times Syndicate that gives people worldwide access to her work but not its own readers at home.
In 2004, she and her husband and co-producer Avi Lewis released their first feature documentary - "The Take." It covered the explosion of activism in the wake of Argentina's 2001 economic crisis. People responded with neighborhood assemblies, barter clubs, mass movements of the unemployed and workers taking over bankrupt companies and reopening them under their own management.
Klein is also the author of three books. Her first was "No Logo - Taking Aim at the Brand Bullies" (2000) that analyzes the destructive forces of globalization. Next came "Fences and Windows - Dispatches from the Front Lines of the Globalization Debate" (2002) covering the global revolt against corporate power.
Her newest book just out is "The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism" that explodes the myth of "free market" democracy. It shows how neoliberal Washington Consensus fundamentalism dominates the world with America its lead exponent exploiting security threats, terror attacks, economic meltdowns, competing ideologies, tectonic political or economic shifts, and natural disasters to impose its will everywhere. Wars are waged, social services cut, and freedom sacrificed when people are too distracted, cowed or bludgeoned to object. Klein describes a worldwide process of social and economic engineering she calls "disaster capitalism" with torture along for the ride to reinforce the message - no "New World Order" alternatives are tolerated.
"Free market" triumphalism is everywhere - from Canada to Brazil, China to Bulgaria, Russia to South Africa, Vietnam to Iraq. In all cases, the results are the same. People are sacrificed for profits and Margaret Thatcher's dictum applies - "there is no alternative."
"The Shock Doctrine" is a powerful tour de force, four years of on-the-ground research in the making and well worth the wait. In an age of corporatism partnered with corrupted political elites, it's must reading by an author now firmly established as a major intellectual figure on the left and champion of social justice. Naomi Klein is all that and more. Even for those familiar with her topics, the book is stunning, revealing, unforgetable and essential to know. This review will cover a healthy sample of what's in store for readers in the full equisitely written text. It's in seven parts with a concluding section. Each will be discussed below starting with a brief introduction.
Naomi Klein: Disaster Capitalism
Introduction - Blank Is Beautiful: Three Decades of Erasing and Remaking the World (into Hell)
New Orleans, post-Katrina, is a metaphor for an American-style "New World Order" with unfettered capitalism unleashed in its most savage form. Klein quotes Republican congressman Richard Baker telling lobbyists: "We finally cleaned up public housing in New Orleans. We couldn't do it but God did." And New Orleans developer Joseph Canizaro added: "I think we have a clean sheet to start again (and take advantage of) big opportunities." Their scheme is erasing communities and replacing them with upscale condos and other high-profit projects on choice city real estate at the expense of the poor mother nature forced out and government won't allow back.
Enter the "grand guru" of free-wheeling capitalism, then age 93 and in failing health. This was conservative/libertarian economist Milton Friedman's moment that he first articulated in his 1962 book "Capitalism and Freedom." His thesis: "only a crisis - actual or perceived - produces real change. When a crisis occurs, the actions that are taken depend on the ideas that are lying around....our basic function (is) to develop alternatives to existing policies (ones Friedman rejects, and have them ready to roll out when the) the impossible becomes politically inevitable." Klein calls crises "democracy-free zones," and Friedman's thesis "the shock doctrine." For New Orleans it means "permanent reforms" like destroying public housing and issuing vouchers for privatized schools in lieu of rebuilding public ones with government reconstruction funds.
For Friedman, government's sole function is "to protect our
freedom both from (outside) enemies....and from our fellow-citizens."
It's to "preserve law and order (as well as) enforce private contracts,
(and) foster competitive markets." In his view, anything else in public
hands is socialism that for "free market" fundamentalists like Friedman
is blasphemy.
Until 1973, Friedman's radical doctrine stayed in
his classroom, but all that changed on an earlier September 11.
Following General Augusto Pinochet's bloody ascent to power, he had a
real life laboratory as advisor to the new Chilean dictator. His
prescription came to be known as the "Chicago School" revolution of
rapid-fire economic transformation he called "shock treatment," now
known as "shock therapy." It's an economic version of "destroy(ing) the
village (and country) to save it" from the Vietnam era and nearly as
harsh.
Millions know its lessons, but Friedman's not their
hero. It's central tenets are structurally adjusted
mass-privatizations, government deregulation, unrestricted free market
access for foreign corporations, and deep cuts in social spending with
repressive laws, harsh crackdowns and torture along for the ride to
reinforce the core tenet Reaganites call "trickle down" and Brits call
"Thatcherism."
Its recipients call it hell, and Klein explains
why - in Chile, Argentina, Uruguay, Bolivia, Brazil, China, Russia, the
Falklands, Poland, South Africa, Sri Lanka, New Orleans, Israel, and
coming to a neocon-occupied homeland neighborhood near you. It's
"disaster capitalism" unleashed, and business is booming. Klein cites
insiders saying opportunities are on a par with a thriving "emerging
market...."the deals are even better than the dot-com days, and the
'the security bubble' picked up the slack when those earlier bubbles
popped."
Reaganomics adherents are today's neoconservatives
with the "full force of the US military machine (serving their
unfettered) corporate agenda" of greed writ large. Its holy policy
trinity is: "elimination of the public sphere, total liberation for
corporations and skeletal social spending (if any at all)." But instead
of lifting all boats as promised, it's mirror opposite. It creates a
powerful ruling corporatist class partnered with corrupted political
elites - "with hazy and ever-shifting lines between the two groups."
Russia got billionaire "oligarchs," China "the princelings," Chile "the
piranhas," and America the Bush-Cheney "Pioneers."
Everywhere, the scheme is the same: huge public wealth transfers to
private hands, exploding public debt most often, "an ever-widening
chasm between the dazzling rich and disposable poor, and an aggressive
nationalism (like George Bush's permanent "war on terrorism" and the
world) that justifies bottomless spending on security." "Inside the
bubble" is paradise. Outside, however, is hell with "aggressive
surveillance, mass incarceration, shrinking civil liberties," a
declining standard of living, and repression and torture reinforcing
the message to non-believers.
Klein calls the harshness "a
metaphor of the shock doctrine's underlying logic." When applied, it
induces a state of "deep disorientation," and shock to force targets
"to make concessions against their will." The "shock doctrine" works
the same way on a mass scale, and the 9/11 experience proved it. It
exploded the "familiar world" and created a period of disorientation
and regression the Bush administration jumped on abroad and at home. As
Klein put it: "Suddenly we found ourselves living in a kind of Year
Zero (with) everything we knew of the world before (now) dismissed as
'pre-9/11' thinking." We became a "blank slate, a clean sheet of
paper," and the administration did what was impossible before. It's how
the "shock doctrine" works: "the original disaster (terror attack, war,
hurricane, market meltdown) puts the entire population into a state of
collective shock" enabling policy manipulators to move in for the kill
to remake the world in their image and get it done before the shock
wears off.
Part 1 - Two Doctor Shocks - Torture and Chicago School Fundamentalism
Following a crisis shock, another quickly follows. The corporate
piranhas exploit disorientation with economic "shock therapy" along
with "police, soldiers and prison interrogators" with torture their
method of choice "to build a model country (by) erasing people and then
trying to remake them from scratch."
Klein reviews the history
of CIA's interest in torture as a way to control the human mind. It
began with the Montreal doctor they funded to perform "bizarre
experiments on his psychiatric patients (by) keeping them asleep and in
isolation for weeks, then administering huge doses of electroshock
(plus) experimental (psychedelic LSD and hallucinogen PCP angel dust)
drug cocktails."
The experiments were performed at McGill
University's Allan Memorial Institute by Dr. Ewen Cameron even though
they clearly violated all standards of medical ethics using human
guinea pigs without their permission with permanent damage their
reward. Cameron believed by blasting the human brain with an array of
shocks, he could "unmake and erase faulty minds, then rebuild (on a
blank slate) new personalities" cleansed of their previous nature. It
was voodoo science, and it failed. His patients were his victims, but
CIA gained a wealth of knowledge it now employs with no pangs of
conscience or regard for ethics.
Klein traces CIA's interest in
mind manipulation to a 1951 trinational meeting of intelligence
agencies and academics in Montreal when concern was that Communists
could brainwash POWs to control them. That was when the spy agency
engaged Canadian researchers to learn how, and one of them was Dr.
Donald Hebb, director of psychology at McGill, who was working on the
problem. Intelligence agencies were impressed enough with his work to
fund classified sensory-deprivation experiments on volunteer McGill
students.
They proved intensive isolation interferes with
clear thinking enough to make people more receptive to suggestion. They
were also "formidable interrogation techniques" amounting to torture
that Hebb knew violated medical ethics. He later characterized
Cameron's work as "criminally stupid," but CIA got what it wanted - a
way to interrogate "resistant sources" in a "new age of precise,
refined torture, not the gory, inexact" kind from the Spanish
Inquisition or what Nazis and other tyrants often practiced. Cameron's
experiments with human guinea pigs built on Hebb's earlier work laying
the foundation for CIA's "two-stage psychological torture method" of
sensory deprivation followed by sensory overload. University of
Wisconsin historian Alfred McCoy in his book, "A Question of Torture"
on CIA interrogation, called it "the first real revolution in the cruel
science of pain in more than three centuries."
Pre-9/11, these
techniques were freely used covertly as any form of abuse or torture
violates the Geneva, UN and other statutes prohibiting these practices
as well as the US Army's own Uniform Code of Military Justice barring
"cruelty" and "oppression" of prisoners. No longer, as "On September
11, 2001, that longtime insistence on plausible deniability went out
the window" as well as any claim this nation respects the law and
rights of free people everywhere. What once was done sub rosa or by
proxy is now condoned and authorized at the highest levels of
government on the fraudulent claim of national security to hide the
real aim of social control.
Klein notes torture is still
technically banned in the US, but only when pain is the "equivalent in
intensity to (what accompanies) serious physical injury, such as organ
failure." Simply put, anything goes, but it's not put that way. In
Iraq, it was thought "shock and awe" would be so stunning, Iraqis
"would go into a kind of suspended animation." A second makeover
Chicago School fundamentalism shock could then be imposed on a blank
post-invasion slate, and bingo, mission accomplished. Klein notes
"there was no blank slate, only rubble and shattered, angry people" who
were blasted with more shocks when they resisted. Like Cameron and his
experiments, "Iraq's shock doctors can destroy, but they can't seem to
rebuild," and the same is true wherever these shock doctors show up.
Milton Friedman and the Search for a Laissez-Faire Factory
The epicenter of shock ideology is the University of Chicago Economics
Department. It came out of the 1950s "in the thrall" (of a) man on a
mission to fundamentally revolutionize his profession," and on that
score Milton Friedman succeeded mightily. Friedman, now gone, believed,
markets work efficiently and best unfettered of rules, regulations,
onerous taxes, trade barriers, entrenched interests, and human
interference. Whereas Cameron believed electroshocks could restore
natural health, Friedman favored economic shock as extreme and
destructive to nations as Cameron and CIA's methods are to human minds.
Friedman taught this voodoo science and believed to the end, all
contrary evidence aside, it was perfect and worked. Chicago School
fundamentalism developed at a post-war time in the 1950s when leftist
ideas supporting worker rights were gaining ground. Where they
"promised (workers) freedom from bosses, citizens from dictatorship
(and) countries from colonialism," Friedman promised "individual
freedom" to choose that appealed to owners of capital who embraced him
and his thinking.
It stood in stark contrast to what became
known as "developmentalism" or "Third World nationalism" in the
post-war developing world. Economists in it favored an "inward-oriented
industrialization" strategy to break the cycle of poverty and grow.
Like Keynesians and social democrats, they showed it worked in Latin
America's Southern Cone with leaders like Juan Peron "put(ting) their
ideas into practice with a vengeance (by) pouring public money into
infrastructure projects, (providing) local businesses generous
subsidies, and keeping out foreign imports with....high tariffs." It
brought prosperity to the South and "dark days" for Friedman, his
acolytes, and free-wheeling capitalists losing out to social progress.
It sprung corporate America to action by funding a legion of think tank
and Chicago School foot soldiers to change the message and fortunes of
their businesses. Friedman was their ideological leader preaching
public wealth should be in private hands, rules and regulations out the
window, accumulation of profits unrestrained, and social welfare
programs curtailed or abolished. In short - deregulate, privatize and
get government out of the business of everything besides providing
security and enforcing contracts. He also believed taxes were onerous
and once said he was "in favor of cutting (them) under any
circumstances and for any excuse, for any reason, whenever it's
possible...."
He also said corporations should be exempt from
federal taxes claiming what they pay ends up in consumer prices that,
in fact, is pure nonsense as every marketing MBA (like this writer)
learns straightaway. The fundamental law of pricing is to charge what
the market will bear, no more or less. In other words, get all you can
but no more than buyers will pay. Soon enough they'd pay plenty in the
developing world.
In 1953, the US declared war against
"developmentalism" with CIA's first ever coup against Mohammed
Mossadegh in Iran. Another followed the next year in Guatemala, and in
both instances democratically elected leaders were ousted because
corporate interests opposed them. It was only the beginning, and
Friedman and his "Chicago Boys" soon had a real time laboratory to
prove their "capitalist utopia" worked.
Salvador Allende's
Popular Unity government electoral victory in 1970 was the opportunity.
Three years later he was out giving Friedman the chance he wanted.
Klein related the results in what she called "the first Chicago School
state" with others to follow. They're all the same with "an unstoppable
hurricane of mutually reinforcing destruction and reconstruction,
erasure and creation" following the crisis. Next is unfettered economic
shock therapy with torture and disappearances awaiting resisters and
anyone guilty of bad thinking. Friedman's brave new world was beginning
to roll. It's devastation is everywhere including at home.
Part 2 - The First Test - The Bloody Birth of the Counterrevolution
Counterrevolution began 34 years ago in Chile on another September 11
that should have been unimaginable and had to seem surreal. There were
tanks in the streets and fighter jets attacking government buildings in
a scene all too real and deadly. It played out in Santiago and around
Chile and was just the beginning of a long nightmare. It brought
General Augusto Pinochet to power (with plenty of CIA help) who called
his action "a war," not a coup, and to reinforce his message he made it
seem like one. Blood in the streets, the presidential palace in flames,
and President Salvador Allende dead ended the most vibrant democracy in
the Americas. It was a cakewalk with "the junta's grand battle over by
mid-afternoon."
A state of siege was imposed followed by mass
arrests, killings and torture in a climate of fear that enveloped the
country. Allende supporters were targeted in Chile's "Caravan of
Death." Chileans paid dearly, but the Chicago Boys had their moment of
triumph, and they were ready. Rolling off the press was their detailed
economic manual for the new government called "The Brick." It was a 500
page Chicago School shock therapy wish list. It was "the first Chicago
School state," its first "global counterrevolution" victory, and "a
genesis of terror" in a brave new world for Chileans.
The
economic playbook was right from Milton Friedman's "Capitalism and
Freedom" that's long on free market triumphalism and void on its
effects on real people. It was pure Friedman featuring mass
privatizations, deregulation and deep social spending cuts flavored
generously with corporate-friendly tax cuts, trade unionist crackdowns,
savage repression for non-believers, and an end to Chile's social
democratic state Friedman condemned.
Pinochet bought it along
with a team of Chicago School alumni called "technos." They embarked on
a free market binge with disastrous results. In the first year,
inflation hit 375%, thousands of Chileans lost jobs, the country was
flooded with cheap imports, local businesses closed and hunger grew
along with public and small business discontent in this free market
"paradise." In desperation, "it was time to call in the big guns" with
Milton Friedman coming to Santiago to reinforce his message that for
things to improve they first had to get worse. It was classic shock
treatment and Chicago School baloney with Friedman preaching patience
and promising an "economic miracle" if his prescription was followed.
Pinochet agreed, and slash and burn followed with visions of paradise
at the end of the rainbow. It was pure untested fantasy, and the
results showed it. After one year of hardened shock therapy, Chile's
economy contracted 15%, unemployment rocketed to 20%, and contrary to
Friedman's rosy scenario it lasted for years with no social safety net
help for desperate Chileans.
Klein notes Chile today is still
cited as a model that free market "Friedmanism" works in spite of the
clear evidence it doesn't. Growth did resume a decade later, but only
after conditions worsened. It forced Pinochet to reinstate Allende
policies like renationalizing privatized companies but not his social
democratic agenda. Chileans were left with the shambles. When the
economy stabilized and rapid growth resumed in the late 80s, poverty
was 45%, but the richest 10% saw their incomes rise by 83%. Even today,
Klein notes, Chile remains one of the most unequal societies in the
world. It's shock therapy miracle shifted "wealth to the top and
shock(ed) much of the middle class out of existence."
It's
the way it works everywhere and a glimpse of the future: "an urban
bubble of frenetic speculation and dubious accounting fueling
superprofits and frantic consumerism, ringed by ghostly factories and
rotting infrastructure of a development past; roughly half the
population (excluded); out-of-control corruption and cronyism;
(decimated) nationally owned small and medium-sized businesses; (mass)
transfer of (public) wealth (and resources) to private hands
(accompanied by) a huge (shift) of private debts into public hands."
Inside the Chilean bubble was paradise. Outside was "The Great
Depression." Bubble-benefitters reacted with "junkie logic: Where is
the next fix?"
It was first across the border in other Latin
American Southern Cone countries where the "counterrevolution spread
(and) people vanish(ed)." Argentina, Brazil and Uruguay were targeted
with similar results as in Chile under juntas replacing democrats.
Chicago School fundamentalism was on a roll, and woe to the
non-believers. Nations that were developmentalism models became
wastelands with decades of worker gains lost almost overnight.
Factories closed, wages fell, unemployment soared, poverty grew severe,
dissenters disappeared, and ordinary people suffered to prove what
pin-stripped academics knew after Chile went sour. Instead, it was on
to the next target.
In them all, the slate was cleansed and
terror unleashed, unrestrained by national borders. Former Allende
economist and diplomat turned activist Marcos Orlando Letelier became a
victim in September, 1976. While living in Washington, he condemned
Chile's "economic freedom" for the privileged and paid with his life.
Pinochet's DINA secret police killed him and his American colleague,
Ronni Moffit, by remote-detonating a bomb planted under his driver's
seat. An FBI investigation learned the assassins entered the country
under false passports with full CIA knowledge and complicity.
The purging included cleansing wrong ideas and thinkers like legendary
left wing Chilean folk singer, Victor Jara. He was seized and taken to
Chile's notorious National (killing and torture) Stadium to be
reeducated. Soldiers broke his hands so he couldn't play the guitar.
Then they shot him 44 times "to make sure he couldn't inspire
from....the grave." One culture was being erased and replaced by
another. As in Nazi Germany, books were burned, newspapers and
magazines shuttered, universities occupied and strikes and political
meetings banned. Trade unionists were specially targeted as threats to
the new economic order. It's leaders were rounded up, movement members
viciously attacked, and "battalions" targeted workers in factories.
They were arrested, imprisoned, tortured, and disappeared in a sweeping
reign of terror designed to crush opposition and wrong-thinking.
In Argentina, Ford Motor Company's local subsidiary was complicit. It
helped soldiers and secret police rid unionists from its factories and
supplied vehicles as well. Green Ford Falcon sedans became the feared
symbol of terror an Argentine playwright called "death-mobiles." Many
thousands kidnapped and disappeared rode off in these cars, never to
return.
Farmers involved in land reform struggles also were
targeted along with anyone with "a vision of society built on values
other than pure profit." It affected community worker activists, many
church-connected, who wanted social services like health care, public
housing and education the state was erasing through shock therapy and
mass repression. Klein noted while "policies attempted to excise
collectivism from the culture, inside....prisons (the practice was to)
excise it from the mind and spirit." The sickness was democratic
socialism, the cure pain and suffering. Wrong-thinkers were taught the
hard way, and many paid with their lives. Chicago School fundamentalism
is harsh medicine. Its grand guru, Milton Friedman, was unrepentant. He
called it "freedom" and took his mathematical model miracle to the
grave amidst a hail of undeserved eulogies.
In his memoirs
before he died, his "blatant revisionism" on Chile was shameful and
disturbing. He falsely claimed Pinochet only asked for help in 1975
when, in fact, the Chicago Boys worked with the military before the
1973 coup, and their policies were implemented on Pinochet's first day
in power. Friedman also claimed the junta's repressive years didn't
undo Chilean democracy. In his view, it opened up "more room for
individual initiative and for a private sphere of life (offering a
greater) chance of a return to a democratic society." It was classic
convoluted Chicago School thinking. It made him famous courtesy of
corporate triumphalism, generous funding and an utter disdain for human
rights and dignity.
Friedman also used his 1976 Nobel lecture
to argue economics was as scientifically accurate and objective as
other sciences. He failed to mention its dark side - devastating
poverty, unemployment, shuttered factories and mass human misery and
deaths in the first nation adopting his ideology on its victimized
people. Now it's everywhere and savagely enforced in an age of
corporate dominance, wars for profit and neglect of human needs to fund
them. That's Friedman's real legacy from the barrel of a gun and called
"freedom."
Part 3 - Surviving Democracy
Chicago School
dogma became known as Thatcherism in Britain, but its prime minister
wasn't an early adherent. Margaret Thatcher thought Chilean shock
therapy wasn't possible in a democracy like the UK because voters
wouldn't buy it. Three years into her first term, her approval rating
was lower than George Bush's. She was in danger of not being reelected
and didn't dare risk imposing bitter economic medicine that would sink
her chances. That is, until destiny intervened on April 2, 1982 when
Argentina invaded the British-held Falkland Islands off its coast that
was unimportant to either country except for the political hay to gain
from war.
Thatcher jumped at the chance to regain her footing
and "went into Churchillian battle mode," even though Argentina's
president, General Leopoldo Galtieri, wasn't Adolph Hitler. But
defending the British empire was almost as good, and it paid off.
Thatcher's political future was at stake. She revived it, more than
doubled her approval rating and henceforth was known as the "Iron Lady"
that for her was high praise, and she made the most of it.
She
launched a "corporatist revolution" based on Chicago School economics
she thought impossible earlier. She parlayed her new popularity to a
victory against striking coal miners in 1984 with tactics like
unleashing 8000 "truncheon-wielding" riot police in a single
confrontation. Before the strike ended, thousands of workers were
injured, but Thatcher stood firm with a clear message to other
unionists. Take what you're offered or get the same medicine.
She didn't stop there, and what followed was a radical economic agenda
in a wave of state enterprise privatizations including British Telecom,
British Gas, British Airways, British Steel and others in what Klein
called "the first mass privatization auction in a Western democracy."
It proved Chicago School fundamentalism didn't need repressive
dictatorships to advance as long as "Iron Ladies" like Thatcher were
around to match the best of them, short of all out tanks in the streets
shock therapy, that is. Her eleven and a half years in power proved it,
and Britain hasn't been the same since with Labor as committed now as
the Tories.
Bolivia was soon targeted as well, but in 1985 was
part a democratic wave sweeping the world. It was an election year with
two familiar figures facing off for the presidency - former dictator
Hugo Banzar and former elected president, Victor Paz Estenssoro. It was
close and Banzar thought he won so before final returns were in he
named 30 year old Harvard economist Jeffrey Sachs to help develop an
anti-inflation economic plan for the country.
Sachs was part
Keynsian but larger part Chicago School adherent that made for a bad
combination. He bought its orthodoxy in softer form by supporting debt
relief and generous aid along with the shock therapy he advised Banzar
to adopt as the only solution to hyperinflation.
As it turned
out, Banzar lost and Paz won, and while no socialist, he was no Chicago
School adherent either, or so voters thought. Four days into his term,
he charged his emergency economic team to radically restructure the
economy using shock therapy with a twist. It was much harsher than
Sachs proposed with the entire state-centered structure Paz erected
decades earlier dismantled in the first 100 days before the public
could react. In its place, food subsidies were ended, price controls
lifted, wages frozen, oil prices hiked 300%, deep government spending
cuts imposed, unrestricted imports allowed, and state-owned companies
downsized as a first step to privatizing them. It cost hundreds of
thousands of full-time jobs, pensions and safety net protections.
Friedman continued to roll.
The results were predictable. The
minimum wage never regained its value, and two years later real wages
were down 40% and average per capita income dropped from $845 in 1985
to $789 in 1987. As in other shock therapy countries, a small elite got
richer while the great majority of Bolivians lost out with campesinos
faring worst. In 1987, they earned on average $140 a year, or less than
one-fifth the nation's declining average income.
Bolivian
misery gave Sachs star status for the country's "Miracle." It launched
his new career and brought him to Argentina, Peru, Brazil, Ecuador,
Venezuela and Russia later on plus a best-selling book and three-part
PBS "success story" series. The only problem was it wasn't true.
President Paz had no mandate for shock therapy, and many workers were
predictably furious at his betrayal. They went on strike and Paz's
response made Margaret Thatcher's earlier action against striking coal
miners seem tame by comparison. Tanks rolled in the streets, and riot
police raided union halls, a university and factories. Hundreds of
arrests followed, including the top 200 union leaders, and oppositional
politics was banned. The siege lasted three months during the decisive
shock therapy period with more repression and Chicago School medicine
later.
It showed shock therapy needs harsh authoritarian rule
backing with Bolivia's pin-stripped politicians, economists and
bureaucrats administering it, not uniformed soldiers as in Chile. Paz's
democratic victory was illusory like others when leaders renege on
promises and sacrifice them on the alter of Chicago School orthodoxy.
Argentina was another "textbook case." In the post-Falklands War
period, it was burdened with billions in odious debt Washington
insisted be serviced and paid. It was far more onerous after the (Paul)
"Volker Shock" when the US Federal Reserve Chairman hiked interest
rates up to 21% in the early-mid 1980s to fight inflation, so he said.
It was painful in the US and disastrous for developing countries
turning their debt burdens into crises. New loans were needed to pay
off old ones, and the debt spiral was born afflicting nations then and
still today. That was the whole idea, or at least one of them.
Argentina, Brazil and other countries had another option they didn't
take - defaulting on debt so great it was unrepayable. As Klein put it:
"Understandably (new democracies were) unwilling to go to war with
Washington (and the international lending agencies it controls so they)
had little choice but to play by Washington's rules (and) in the early
eighties (they) got a great deal stricter....It was the dawn of the era
of 'structural adjustment' - otherwise known as the dictatorship of
debt."
In the 1980s, Chicago School economists colonized the
IMF and World Bank to advance their corporatist crusade. Economist John
Williamson named it "the Washington Consensus" that stuck ever since.
It consisted of core economic policies both institutions consider
essential for economic health according to their orthodoxy. We know
them well: all "state enterprises ....privatized (and) barriers
impeding entry of foreign firms....abolished." There was more that
together was classic Friedman dogma: privatization, deregulation,
unrestricted free trade (never called fair), and deep cuts in
government spending except for security.
Indebted developing
countries learned shock doctrine 101 the hard way. Getting aid meant
accepting Washington Consensus rules - the whole package. So to save
their countries, they had to "sell (them) off." Klein calls Argentina
the "model student" in the 1990s under leaders like Carlos Menem.
Appointing Domingo Cavallo economy minister signaled he bought the
corporatist package. But as Klein points out: "Argentina was not unique
(and by 1999) Chicago School alumni included more than twenty-five
government ministers and more than a dozen central bank presidents from
Israel to Costa Rica."
Shock therapy was on a role that in
Argentina turned into a textbook case of therapeutically induced
disaster. What Time magazine in 1992 called "Menem's Miracle" became
Menem's Mirage when the economy collapsed in 2001, and Argentina did
the unthinkable with Menem gone and a new president in power. It
defaulted on an $805 million debt to the World Bank. It should have
ended the neoliberal experiment, but instead it spread. Economic crises
fueled it, and when old ones ebbed "even more cataclysmic ones
appear(ed): tsunamis, hurricanes, wars and terrorist attacks. Disaster
capitalism was taking shape" with shock therapy its tool of choice.
Part 4 - Lost in Transition: Slamming the Door on History
Before the Berlin Wall fell, Lech Walesa became a labor hero in Poland
and the West by defying the Moscow-controlled government and getting
away with it. Solidarnosc (Solidarity) spread from its Gdansk roots to
the country's mines, shipyards and factories and within a year had 10
million members. They won the right to bargain but wanted more. They
aspired to take over the state and institute their own alternative
economic and political program. It's radical centerpiece was to
transform huge state-run companies into worker-run cooperatives so
Solidarity members could be empowered in their own "socialized
enterprise."
Walesa objected, lost the debate, and he feared
what then happened. The Jaruzelski government declared martial law,
sent tanks to the streets and rounded up thousands of Solidarity
members. By the late 80s, the crackdown subsided, the economy was in
free fall, workers again struck and Mikhail Gorbachev's reformist
government was in power in Moscow. Solidarity was legalized, a
Citizens' Committee Solidarity wing was formed, its members stood in
snap elections and won effective control of the government capturing
260 parliamentary seats.
It should have been the best of times,
but with the economy in trouble, Poland needed aid including debt
relief. With Chicago School alumni running IMF, none was offered except
under Washington Consensus rules, take it or leave it. Enter Jeffrey
Sach, the shock doc, with an even harsher plan than imposed on Bolivia.
It included an immediate end to price controls, slashing subsidies, and
privatizing mines, shipyards and factories. It short, it ran directly
counter to Solidarity's aim for worker-run industry.
Sachs
promised Solidarity Poland could become like France or Germany under
his plan. By swallowing shock therapy medicine first, taking the pain,
the patient would end up cured and healthy - if he was right. After
debate, the verdict was in and the treatment bought with predictable
results. Sachs promised "momentary dislocations" but delivered a
full-blown depression. Industrial production plummeted 30% after two
years of "reforms." Unemployment skyrocketed, and in 1993 hit 25% in
some areas. It's still chronic today with recent World Bank figures
pegging it at around 20%, the highest in the European Union. For young
people, it's even worse with 40% of workers under 24 unemployed.
Most alarming is the number of people in poverty. From a 15% level in
1989, it rose to a startling 59% in 2003. Incredibly, the country, like
Chile, is still cited as a free market reform model. It's pure myth,
angry Poles know it, but reports in the West ignore them as they do
shocked victims everywhere.
They didn't ignore "the shock of
Tiananmen Square," but didn't report it accurately either. In the early
1980s, Deng Xiaoping was transforming his country economically while
keeping rigid political control including iron-fisted repression when
needed. Democracy was nowhere in sight nor is it now. While many of
Deng's reforms were successful and popular, others in the late 80s
weren't, and it provoked deep anger in the cities by people most
affected. Price controls were lifted, corruption and nepotism was
rampant, freedom minimal, job security eliminated, unemployment soared,
and deep inequalities grew between "winners and losers in the new
China."
It came to a head with mass protests in 1989 in
Tiananmen Square that Western reports characterized as a clash between
old-guard Communist authoritarians and idealistic students wanting
western-style democracy. It was pure propaganda. The protests were
massive and threatened the government, but democracy wasn't the issue.
It was popular discontent from wrenching economic change raising
prices, lowering wages, and causing "a crisis of layoffs and
unemployment." Protesters weren't against economic reform. They were
against the Chicago School version of it, but their efforts were costly.
Deng declared martial law May 20, tanks rolled in the square,
indiscriminate shooting took place, and when it ended thousands were
dead, many more thousands injured, and still more thousands hunted
down, arrested, jailed, some tortured, and hundreds likely executed.
Shock therapy rolled in China as in Chile - through the barrel of a gun
and raw state terror. Following the crackdown, China opened to foreign
investment, joined the WTO, and turned the country into the world's
largest low wage sweatshop for Wal-Mart's "Always Low Prices."
For foreign investors and party apparatchiks, it was a win-win
arrangement with Klein citing a 2006 study showing 90% of China's
billionaires to be Communist Party officials. About 2900 "party scions"
(called "the princelings") control $260 billion, and Klein notes the
"stark similarity between (China's authoritarian rule) and Chicago
School capitalism - a shared willingness to disappear opponents, blank
the slate of all resistance and begin anew" using shock and fear to
transform countries into free market paradises for the privileged.
The Tragedy of South Africa's "Democracy Born in Chains"
Klein quotes Nelson Mandela in January, 1990 (two weeks before he was
freed) in a note to his supporters from prison saying: "The
nationalisation of the mines, banks and monopoly industries is the
policy of the ANC (and changing) our views....is inconceivable. Black
economic empowerment is a goal we fully support and encourage, but in
our situation state control of certain sectors of the economy is
unavoidable." That belief became ANC policy in 1955 in its Freedom
Charter. The liberation struggle wasn't just about a political system
but an economic one as well. White workers in mines earned 10 times
more than blacks, and large industrialists worked with the military to
enforce order and disappear dissenters.
Once apartheid ended, a
new way was possible, and Mandela seemed poised to lead it. The ANC had
"a unique opportunity to reject the free market orthodoxy of the day"
and choose a "third path between Communism and capitalism." ANC
candidates swept the 1994 elections and Mandela became president at a
time South Africa surpassed Brazil as the most unequal society in the
world. Negotiations were held with the ruling National Party, and a
peaceful handover was achieved but not without "prevent(ing) South
Africa's apartheid-era rulers from wreaking havoc on their way out the
door."
Negotiations took place on two parallel tracks -
political and economic. Mandela and his chief negotiator, Cyril
Ramaphosa, "won on almost every count" politically. But along side it,
economic negotiations were held with the country's current president,
Thabo Mbeki, in charge with the outcome in the end far different. With
ANC leaders preoccupied with controlling Parliament, the former white
supremacist government and industrialists were determined to safeguard
their wealth, and they succeeded by assuring Washington Consensus
policies would be instituted when political power changed hands.
ANC economists and lawyers were outfoxed or outgunned by the
opposition, IMF, World Bank, GATT and power of big capital against
inexperienced politicians and technocrats who ended up losers. Black
officials controlled the government, but discovered the real power was
elsewhere. As Klein put it: "The bottom line was that South Africa was
free but simultaneously captured." The leadership mistakenly thought
once firmly in power they could undo earlier made transition
compromises.
They couldn't or didn't for the same reasons
other developing countries accept free market rules. Adopt them or be
punished by the market as Mandela learned when he was freed. The South
African stock market collapsed in panic, and the country's currency
(the rand) dropped by 10%. He acknowledged the problem later on saying
it's "impossible for countries....to decide economic policy without
regard to the likely response of these markets." It's too bad he didn't
know how Hugo Chavez managed after 1999 (oil aside). He achieved what
Mandela reneged on, and Venezuela's economy is booming. Had he and ANC
officials stood their ground early on, South Africa (with its mineral
riches) might have done the same thing - had a growth economy in a
socially democratic state and a model for its neighbors.
They
didn't, black South Africans lost out, Mandela's legacy is tainted, and
a key factor was current president Thabo Mbeki. He spent spent years
studying in exile in England during the apartheid years during which
time "he was breathing in the fumes of Thatcherism." He became the
ANC's free market tutor, believed in market fundamentalism, and its
prescription was "growth and more growth." It meant neoliberal shock
therapy with the full Friedman package Mbeki supported. He later
professed: "Just call me a Thatcherite," and Mandela told journalist
John Pilger the same thing in retirement saying: "....you can call it
Thatcherite but, for this country, privatization is the fundamental
policy."
After over a decade of that agenda (1994 - 06),
Klein highlighted the toll showing conditions today much worse than
under apartheid, and ANC's leadership responsible:
— the number of people living on less than $1 a day doubled from two to four million;
— the unemployment rate more than doubled to 48% from 1991 - 2002;
— only 5000 of 35 million black South Africans earn over $60,000 a year;
— the ANC government build 1.8 million homes while two million South Africans lost theirs;
— nearly one million South Africans were evicted from farms in the
first decade of democracy; as a result, the shack dweller population
grew by 50%, and in 2006, 25% of South Africans lived in them with no
running water or electricity. And there's more:
— the HIV/AIDS
infection rate is about 20%, and the Mbeki government shamefully denied
the severity of the crisis and did little to alleviate it; it's been a
major reason why average life expectancy in the country declined by 13
years since 1990;
— 40% of schools have no electricity;
— 25% of people have no access to clean water and most who do can't afford the cost; and
— 60% of people have inadequate sanitation, and 40% no telephones.
"Freedom" for these people and all black South Africans came at a high
price, and no efforts are being made to ameliorate it. Political
empowerment was traded for economic apartheid under Chicago School
fundamentalist rules. Klein observed: "Never before had a
government-in-waiting been so seduced by the international community."
If China, Vietnam and even Russia saw "the neoliberal light," Mandela
was told, how could South Africa resist it. The ANC leadership might
have (and Mandela had the credentials to lead them) had they examined
the wreckage around the world in Friedman-seduced countries. Instead,
they took the easy way out and surrendered.
Russia Chooses "the Pinochet Option"
The man who ignited political and social change in Russia wasn't around
long enough to lead it. Mikhail Gorbachev became head of the Soviet
Union's Communist Party in March, 1985, believing the economy stalled
and needed change. His solution became glasnost (liberalizing opening
up) and perestroika (reconstruction), and Soviet Russia would never be
the same again. By the early 1990s the press was freed, the
constitutional court was independent, and elections were held for
Russia's parliament, local councils, president and vice-president. In
addition, Gorbachev favored a Scandinavian-style social democracy
combining free market capitalism with strong social safety net
protections. He hoped to build "a socialist beacon for all mankind." He
never got the chance.
While still in office at the 1991 G7
meeting in London, his fellow heads of state delivered a free market
message Chicago School-style. Later, the IMF, World Bank and other
international lending agencies reinforced it - Soviet-era debts must be
honored and aid depended on adopting strict shock therapy rules. The
Soviet Union soon dissolved, Gorbachev was out, Boris Yeltsin became
Russia's president, and Chicago School fundamentalism was adopted as
needed "reform." Klein calls what happened next "one of the greatest
crimes committed against a democracy (in peacetime) in modern history."
Yeltsin assembled a team of Chicago School ideologues to remake the
economy. Jeffrey Sachs showed up, too, with other US-funded transition
experts to help write privatization decrees, launch a New York-style
stock exchange, and craft a total radical economic makeover for a
country long used to central planning. Only one thing stood in the way
- democracy, and a parliament able to vote down what Yeltsin's team
designed. A clash of wills drew closer in the spring of 1993 when
parliament's budget diverged from IMF demands for strict austerity.
Yeltsin reacted with the "Pinochet option." He issued decree 1400
dissolving parliament and abolishing the constitution. Two days later,
parliament voted 636 - 2 to impeach him, and battle lines were drawn.
Yeltsin sent troops to surround parliament and cut off power, heat and
phone lines. The army backed him and he pressed on. He then proceeded
to dissolve all city and regional councils in the country. Then, on
October 4, 1993, he ordered the army to storm the parliament, set it
ablaze and "defend Russia's new capitalist economy from the grave
threat of democracy." The assault took about 500 lives, wounded nearly
1000 others with the enthusiastic support from the West in headlines
like the Washington Post proclaiming "Victory Seen for Democracy" in
Russia. Some democracy.
Yeltsin now had unchecked dictatorial
power, the West had its man in Moscow, and shock therapy had an open
field to inflict wreckage on Russia's people who didn't know what him
them as it unfolded. A corporatist state replaced a communist one, and
its apparatchiks were winners along with a handful of western mutual
fund managers who made "dizzying returns investing in newly privatized
Russian companies." In addition, "a clique of nouveaux billionaires"
(17 in all called "the oligarchs") were empowered to strip mine the
country of its wealth and ship profits offshore at the rate of $2
billion a month.
As a result, Yeltsin's popularity plunged so
he did what all desperate leaders do to hold power with the next
election to worry about. He began a war in 1994 in the breakaway
Chechen republic killing 100,000 civilians by the late 90s. Elections
were held in 1996, and Yeltsin won by overcoming his low approval
ratings with huge oligarch-funding and near-total control of television
coverage. He then quietly handed power to Vladimir Putin on December
31, 1999 without an election but with the stipulation he was exempt
from criminal prosecution. His legacy was devastating with Klein noting
"never have so many lost so much in so short a time." When Russia's
1998 financial crisis hit:
— 80% of Russia's farmers were bankrupt;
— around 70,000 states factories had closed;
— an "epidemic" of unemployment raged;
— before shock therapy in 1989, two million Russians lived in poverty
on less than $4 a day; by the mid-90s, the World Bank estimated 74
million were impoverished and by 1996 conditions for 25% (almost 37
million) Russians were "desperate" and the country's underclass
remained permanent;
— Russians drink twice as much now as
before; painkilling and hard drug use increased 900%, and HIV/AIDS
threatens to become epidemic with a 20-fold jump in infections since
1995; suicides are also rising, and violent crime increased more than
fourfold; and
— Russia's population is declining by 700,000 a
year with capitalism having already having killed off 10% of it as one
more example of free market-inflicted disaster. That's the brave new
world disease spreading everywhere with another scorched-earth stop
below. Friedman called it "freedom."
The Looting of Asia
In the summer of 1997, economic crisis hit Asia from no apparent cause
beyond rumors the Thai bhat was in trouble, and Thailand didn't have
enough dollars to back it. Hot money in became an electronic stampede
out with "Asian Contagion" unleashed and heading for Indonesia, South
Korea and other so-called Asian Tiger countries that were fast-growth
miracles until they crashed together with the plight of one affecting
the others. It then got worse and spread to Latin America and Russia
with US markets also affected briefly in 1997 and then again with a
severe jolt in the summer of 1998.
The 1997 Asian panic was
crippling with $600 billion in stock market wealth taking decades to
build wiped out in a year. Klein notes "a classic fear cycle" ignited
the crisis that might have been contained by the same type "quick,
decisive loan" rescue package offered Mexico in 1994 in their so-called
Tequila Crisis. It would have been a strong signal to markets the US
Treasury and international lending agencies wouldn't let the Asian
Tigers fail. No help came, and the message instead was: "Don't help
Asia." Why? Because "Asia's catastrophe was an opportunity (for
predatory western corporations and vulture investors) in disguise."
Asian Tigers grew by protecting their markets and barring foreign
companies from ownership of land or national firms. They also
restricted imports from the West and Japan and instead built up their
own domestic markets. Western predators wanted unfettered entry to the
region with the right to scoop up the best Asian companies but needed a
way to do it. Now they had it from an event Klein calls "the fall of a
second Berlin Wall," as important to western capital as the first one.
Enter the IMF with crisis-struck Asian countries too sick to resist it.
They needed help, and the lending agency had plenty to offer on similar
terms as to previous crisis recipients. With economies in trouble and
empty treasuries, the Tigers got no choice. First, they had to remove
all "trade and investment protectionism and activist state intervention
that were the key ingredients of the Asian miracle." IMF also demanded
big spending cuts, "flexible" workforces (meaning mass layoffs and
constrained wages and benefits), privatized basic services, and the
rest of the package they demand for loans.
The regional toll
was devastating with the International Labor Organization estimating 24
million lost jobs along with "what was so remarkable about the region's
'miracle' in the first place: its large and growing middle class." In
addition, 20 million people fell into the "planned misery" of poverty,
reversing an earlier trend reducing it. Women and children suffered
most with families selling daughters to human sex traffickers to
survive as child prostitution had a new growth market.
So did
Wall Street as IMF structural adjustments put "pretty much everything
in Asia....up for sale" in the affected countries. The more markets
panicked, the lower asking prices became, and the more pressured
hurting companies were to sell out for what they could get or face
bankruptcy. It was a bonanza for buyers, and major deals went through
in a great fire sale at bargain prices. Asia became hugely transformed
with hundreds of local brands replaced by western transnational ones.
The New York Times called it "the world's biggest going-out-of-business
sale." It also became an early glimpse of post-9/11 disaster capitalism
- a way for corporate predators to exploit crises in what's become
common practice in the age of "terror" creating opportunities galore
and big profits for well-connected firms.
Klein notes the Asian
crisis never ended as desparation took root after 24 million people
lost jobs in two years. No nation handles that, and the fallout can be
unpredictable. It led to a rise in religious extremism in Indonesia and
Thailand and "the explosive growth in the child sex trade."
Unemployment is still high and layoffs continue with new foreign owners
demanding higher profits with jobs disappearing to provide them.
Eventually things settle down but never to where they once were.
Throwing people overboard, displacing small farmers and business owners
and crushing unions means those affected stay that way. "They end up in
slums, now home to one billion people (and rising); they end up in
brothels or in cargo ship containers. They are the disinherited (or
what) German poet Rainer Maria Rilke (called) 'ones to whom neither the
past nor the future belongs.' " They're the human wreckage left behind
by countries swallowing Chicago School economic medicine. Its promised
miracle is people-poison but not for vulture investors thriving on it.
Disaster capitalism is on a roll, and its growth market potential is
unlimited and guaranteed to continue unless mass public outrage stops
it as one day it will.
Part 5 - The Rise of the Disaster Capitalism Complex -
Shock Therapy in the USA
Richard Nixon knew before the rest of us that Donald Rumsfeld is "a
ruthless little bastard." He also has a knack for making enemies even
inside the Pentagon he ran as Defense Secretary. He planned to
"reinvent warfare for the twenty-first century (making it) more
psychological than physical, more spectacle than struggle, and far more
profitable" than ever before. Talk aside, he wanted to revolutionize
the military by running it like the corporate world, and that meant
using methods like outsourcing and branding. His idea was for fewer
full-time troops, more as-needed ones from the Reserves and National
Guard, and a lot of backup help from private contractors like
Blackwater USA for security and Halliburton for a range of functions
unrelated to soldiering. He wanted less staff and more tax dollars
diverted to private companies. The Pentagon brass wasn't pleased, but
Rumsfeld was boss and Dick Cheney backed him.
Klein calls them
both "proto-disaster capitalists" who practice "the central tenet of
the Bush regime (that) the job of government is not to govern but to
subcontract." The privatization mania was kick-started in the Reagan
era, but Bill Clinton bought it as well. Now the feeling is anything
government can do, private business can do better so let them. That
means fire departments, prisons, public schools, public health, data
management, border control and even parts of the military. As Klein
explained: "crisis-exploiting methods....honed over the previous three
decades would be used to (privatize) the infrastructure of disaster
creation and....response. Friedman's crisis theory was going postmodern
(to create a) privatized police state" by auctioning it off.
"Then came 9/11, and the idea of hollowing out government seemed
opposite of what a frightened public wanted - a strong central
government to protect them. Bush promised it in speeches, but "his
inner circle had no intention of converting to Keynesianism." September
11 security failures only reinforced their belief that private firms
could handle the challenge better than government, and that meant
transferring hundreds of billions of public dollars to corporate
pockets. The Bush administration exploited shock and fear "to push
through its radical vision of a hollow government in which everything
from war fighting to disaster response was a for-profit venture."
Mass disorientation post-9/11 provided the opportunity, and the "war on
terror" became a "bold evolution of shock therapy....built to be
private from the start" to capitalize on it. It came in two stages.
First, policing, surveillance, detention and war-making powers of the
executive were dramatically increased though nothing in the
Constitution permits it. Then, the whole package, including occupation
and "reconstruction," was outsourced to well-connected private firms
that responded with generous campaign funds to keep the mutually
reinforcing daisy chain humming. Using the ploy of fighting
"terrorism," the homeland disaster capitalism complex emerged as a
full-blown new economy and what Klein calls "a virtual fourth branch of
government."
The Bush administration's idea of government, with
security as one function, wasn't to provide it but to buy it at
cost-plus market prices with lots of latitude for the plus. Just as the
internet launched the dot-com bubble, from 9/11 emerged the disaster
capitalism one, and it was off to the races "in an ad hoc....chaotic
fashion."
Fighting "terrorism" is big business, and one of
the first opportunities was the market for surveillance cameras with 30
million of them installed in the US, billions of hours of footage,
analytic software to scan it, digital image enhancement to help it, and
information management and data mining technology to handle all data
government collects on everyone and everything. September 11 unlocked
the potential, a huge new growth market was created, and protection
from terror became more important than big brother watching. In six
short years, an industry that barely existed is now much larger than
Hollywood or the music business, and its potential looks limitless.
Klein calls it "an unprecedented convergence of unchecked police powers
and unchecked capitalism, a merger of the shopping mall and the secret
prison" in a frightening brave new world most people barely understand
or know exists. It generates enormous wealth that creates a powerful
incentive for its winners to sell fear for more of it and partnering
with government makes it easy, especially the kind in power now.
Capitalism Becomes Corporatism in a Corporatist State
Proto-disaster capitalism defines the Bush administration as crises,
wars and other disasters "conflate with what's good for Lockheed,
Halliburton, Carlyle and (Rumsfeld's old company) Gilead" Sciences.
Cataclysm is a growth business that in the current climate involved
"some of the seediest and most blatant corruption scandals in recent
history," war-profiteering in the hundreds of billions, and a "whirling
revolving door between government and business" taken to a new level.
The limitless homeland security and war-profiteering markets are so
alluring, hundreds of administration officials can't wait to cash in
like earlier ones did. Klein names some noted ones like Richard Pearle,
James Baker, Henry Kissinger, Paul Bremer, George Shultz, John
Ashcroft, Tom Ridge, Rudi Giuliani, Richard Clarke, James Woolsey, Joe
Allbaugh, and Michael Brown who wrote an infamous memo to a fellow FEMA
staffer asking: "Can I quit now?"
That's the whole idea in a
get rich quick environment - get an impressive government title, stay
in office long enough in a department handing out big contracts,
collect insider information with market value, then quit and cash in.
Klein calls public service now "little more than a reconnaissance
mission for future work in the disaster capitalism complex." She also
quotes Danielle Brian, executive director of the Project on Government
Oversight (a nonprofit watchdog group) saying: "It's impossible to tell
where the government ends and Lockeed begins." She also believes that
corporatist economic goals and right to limitless profit seeking lie at
the heart of the most committed neocons who talk a good game but value
great wealth their top priority. They partnered permanent war and
homeland security with the disaster capitalism complex to get it, and
it's hard indeed telling where one ends and the other begins. But it's
centerpiece project is Iraq, and its headquarters is in Baghdad's
heavily fortified Green Zone.
Part 6 - Iraq, Full Circle - Overshock - Erasing A Country
Perhaps no country provides a greater untapped opportunity for
unfettered capitalism than Iraq. It represents the planet's last
remaining low-hanging oil resources fruit with potentially more of it
than Saudi Arabia according to some oil analysts. It's also
strategically located in the heart of the oil-rich Middle East (with
two-thirds of proved reserves) Klein calls the "crusade's....final
frontier." Iraq's potential alone is so enormous it made war the way to
crack open its market potential because peaceful methods hadn't worked.
Its conquest would then serve as "a different model in the heart of the
Arab-Muslim world" that could become a catalyst to opening the whole
region.
The potential is a giant free-trade zone, the
illusion of newly created democracies, and the freedom for unfettered
capitalism "to feed off freshly privatized states." Klein explained
this as "the model theory," Iraq as the model, with the idea not being
nation-building but nation-creating. But what of the nation already
there that's known as the "cradle of civilization." It would have to be
erased, and Chicago School fundamentalism would create a new one in its
place in its own image with a blank slate to work from.
Bush
administration war planners considered the full array of possible
shocks and went with them all - blitzkrieg "shock and awe," elaborate
PsyOps, use of fear as a weapon, repressive occupation, mass detention
and torture, and "the fastest and most sweeping political and economic
shock therapy program attempted anywhere....From the start, the
invasion was (Washington's message) to the world....in the language of
fireballs, deafening explosions and city-shattering quakes." It said
dare challenge US authority, and you're next. Shock and awe planners
designed its strategy to deter "the public will of the adversary to
resist (to render) the adversary completely impotent" from the effects
of sensory deprivation and overload inducing disorientation and
regression.
In March, 2003, Baghdad got it on a massive
scale. The ministry of communication and four telephone exchanges was
blitzed and set ablaze cutting off millions of phones and preventing
people from learning if their family and friends were alive. Television
and radio transmitters were also destroyed along with the electrical
grid plunging the city into "an awful, endless night." Residents were
trapped in their homes unable to speak or hear each other or see
outside at night. "LIke a prisoner destined for a CIA black site, the
entire city was shackled and hooded. Next it was stripped."
Unchecked looting did the most to erase the "country that was....Gone
are 80% of the museum's 170,000 priceless objects....the national
library is a blackened ruin....the Ministry of Religious Affairs....was
left a burned-out shell (and the) national heritage was lost." Paul
Bremer's senior economic advisor, Peter McPherson, wasn't bothered. It
made his job of radically downsizing the state and selling it off
easier. Cleaning the slate and erasing the nation was proceeding fast.
It "all unfolded in a matter of weeks." Baghdad was "open for
business," and the fire sale for its assets began with US firms having
first dibs on everything, except oil, and that would come later as it
has now but is stalled.
While he was there, Paul Bremer was
Washington's man in Baghdad charged with readying the launch of Iraq,
Inc. He saw to it laws were passed smoothing the way for Chicago School
shock therapy. Two hundred firms were to be privatized immediately to
get "inefficient state enterprises into private (predatory) hands...."
New economic laws followed that comprised a "wish list....foreign
investors and donor agencies dream of," according to The Economist. The
corporate tax was cut from 45% to a flat 15%; another allowed foreign
companies to own 100% of Iraqi assets and take all profits out of the
country; all restrictions on imports were removed; and investors could
sign deals and leases lasting 40 years so no future government could
change them.
Iraq became a bold new experiment with invasion,
occupation and reconstruction transforming the country into a fully
privatized new market "with a huge pot of public money" doing it. Klein
called the adventure an "anti-Marshall plan," mirror opposite the
post-WW II plan, and guaranteed "to further undermine Iraq's badly
weakened industrial sector and send Iraqi unemployment soaring." No
funds went to Iraqis or their industries nor was anything done to build
a sustainable economy, or rebuild local infrastructure like electrical
grids, schools, and hospitals. Iraqis played no role in planning, local
firms weren't even given "subsubsubcontracts," jobs were destroyed not
created while thousands of serf-type foreign workers were brought in
and abused, and critically needed social services were ignored.
Another goal was for a fully outsourced, hollow government with no
function so "core" a contractor couldn't handle it for profit. It was
pure pillage, but nothing went as planned. "Each miscalculation
provoked escalating levels of resistance" with occupying forces
responding with counterrepression "sending the country into an inferno
of (unending) violence." Everything "tearing Iraq apart today - rampant
corruption (and unfettered plundering), ferocious sectarianism, the
surge in religious fundamentalism and the tyranny of death squads
(including US 'Salvador option' ones) - escalated in lockstep
with....Bush's anti-Marshall Plan." In that environment, the country
became "a cutthroat capitalist laboratory" for shameless pillage. Iraq
today is a model, a metaphor for everything wrong with Chicago School
dogma showing it to be savage, ruthless, heartless and bankrupt.
Its implementation is the core reason for resistance that continues and
grows, but it caught war planners off guard when it began. They thought
the shock and awe of attack, invasion, occupation and rapid
transformation on the ground would be disorienting. Instead, Iraqis
demanded a say from the start in how their country would be rebuilt and
transformed. "And it was the Bush administration's response to this
unexpected turn of events that generated the most blowback of all" that
became even worse by crushing democracy and effectively installing a
puppet government in the fortified Green Zone masquerading as a real
one.
The result was predictable and so was the harsh response -
mass detentions, aggressive interrogations, administration-sanctioned
gloves off torture, and US unleashed "Salvador option" death squads
making it hard to know who's doing the killing and blasting away at
selected targets. What is clear are the consequences - "millions of
psychologically and physically (traumatized, angry and) shattered
people, first by Saddam, (then) by war, (then) by one another (and the
occupation). Bush's in-house disaster capitalists didn't wipe Iraq
clean, they just stirred it up....Countries, like people, don't reboot
to zero with a good shock; they just break and keep
breaking....Which....requires more blasting - upping the dosage...."
Slowly, it's disappearing, disintegrating, erasing an entire country -
women behind veils and doors, children from schools, four million
displaced, Iraqi industry collapsed, a new growth industry in
kidnapping for ransom, a country so unstable investment is high-risk,
and even the heavily fortified Green Zone is too unsafe for George Bush
to visit on one of his "surprise trips" to the country. Bremer's charge
was to build a "corporate utopia" but instead unleashed a "ghoulish
dystopia," and, on an April, 2004 visit to the country, Klein thought
she was witnessing a mass contractor exodus with 1500 of them leaving
in one week.
Now she's not sure. Big investors like Wal-Mart,
HSBC and Procter and Gamble never showed up, and in December, 2006, the
Pentagon announced a new project to get state-owned factories operating
with plans to buy cement and machinery from them instead of the usual
corporate suppliers. Does it signal a change of disaster capitalism
tactics? Not at all, and it's likely this amounts to no more than
tinkering and tokenism that in the end will do little for the local
economy and even less to reduce hardened anger.
The Big Oil
drafted Hydrocarbon Law is still a work in progress but already
inflamed things further, and well it should. It's an anti-Marshall Plan
project at its worst, and in whatever final form is a shameless act of
theft on the grandest scale. It's a privatization blueprint for plunder
giving Big Oil a bonanza and Iraqis a mere sliver of their own
resources. In one draft, Iraq's National Oil Company got exclusive
control of just 17 of the country's 80 known oil fields with all
yet-to-be-discovered deposits set aside for foreign investors. Even
worse, Big Oil is free to expropriate all earnings with no obligation
to invest anything in Iraq's economy, partner with Iraqi companies,
hire local workers, respect union rights, or share new technologies. In
addition, foreign investors are guaranteed long-term contracts up to 30
or more years, dispossessing Iraq and its people of their own resources
in a naked scheme to steal them and deny them the one source of revenue
able to rebuild their shattered country and lives.
The battle
for Iraq continues that involves clinging to if not winning the hearts
and minds on the home front as well. The country is a wasteland, the
nation creation project bankrupt, and the prospect for success bad and
worsening. Iraq has been a graveyard for past imperial powers, and it
may just be a matter of time until history again repeats. The Brits in
the South know it, and after four and a half futile years are tiptoeing
out to the dismay of their "coalition" partners. One day, Washington
may join them, and for shocked Iraqis it can't come too soon. For now,
though, the shock continues, and Iraq more closely resembles hell than
"the cradle of civilization."
Part 7 - The Movable Green Zone: Blanking the Beach - "The Second Tsunami"
For coastal Sri Lankans, like those in Arugam Bay, December 26, 2004
felt more like 1945 Hiroshima than life before that fateful day
changing everything for them. A devastating tsunami took 250,000 lives
and left 2.5 million homeless throughout the region. It affected Arugam
Bay, "a fishing and faded resort village" on the island's east coast
that government was showcasing in its plans to "build back better."
Indeed, but not for the villagers hoteliers, developers and the
government wanted removed but weren't sure how until nature did what
they couldn't. Everything was gone, and a blank slate remained for what
the tourist industry long wanted - "a pristine beach (in a prime area),
scrubbed clean of all the messy signs of people working, a vacation
Eden. It was the same up and down the coast once rubble was
cleared....paradise."
"New rules" forbade homes on the beach
and a "buffer zone" imposed insured it. Beaches were off-limits,
displaced Sri Lankans were shoved into temporary grim barracks camps
inland, and "menacing, machine-gun-wielding soldiers" patrolled to keep
them there.
Tourist operators were treated differently. They
were encouraged to build and expand on prime vacated oceanfront land.
It was all in a document called the "Arugam Bay Resource Development
Plan" to transform the former fishing village into a "high-end
'boutique tourism destination' (with) five-star resorts,
luxury....chalets, (and even a) floatplane pier and helipad." Arugam
Bay was to be a model for transforming up to 30 similar "tourism zones"
into a "South Asian Riviera." When the plan leaked out, people in
Arugam Bay and around the country were outraged.
The grand
scheme to remake Sri Lanka was around two years earlier and began when
the civil war ended. It was to be the country's reentry into the world
economy as one of the last remaining uncolonized places globalization
hadn't touched, and a high-end tourism project was seen as the right
option. It would be a luxury destination for the "plutonomy set," once
a few changes were made. Government's 80% land ownership had to be
opened to private buyers, more "flexible" labor laws were needed, and
modernized infrastructure had to be developed with World Bank and IMF
providing funds on their usual shock therapy terms discussed above.
With mass public opposition to the ideas, it wouldn't be easy, and
before the tsunami hit, militant strikes and street protests held it
back.
Sri Lanka's president, Chandrika Kumaratunga, was elected
on an "overtly antiprivatization platform," but the tsunami changed
everything and helped her see "the free market light." Four days after
the disaster, her government passed a bill "pav(ing) the way for water
privatization." It also raised gasoline prices and began crafting
legislation to privatize the electricity company in pieces. It was like
a second tsunami, and the same scheme followed hurricane Mitch in
October, 1998 with Hondurus, Guatemala and Nicaragua hardest hit like
New Orleans discussed below.
Klein explained when the tsunami
struck in 2004, "Washington was ready to take the Mitch model (now
familiar) to the next level - aiming not just at individuals laws but
at direct corporate control over the construction." Sri Lanka's
president complied and created a new body called the Task Force to
Rebuild the Nation fully empowered to proceed. On it were the most
powerful business leaders from banking and industry including key
players from the beach tourism sector. Absent were villagers, farmers,
environmentalists or even a "disaster-reconstruction specialist." Klein
called the task force a new type corporate coup d'etat mother nature
made possible.
In ten days, then had a complete reconstruction
blueprint from "housing to highways" with aid money directed to
corporate development and nothing for disaster victims. They were
destined to become permanent shantytown dwellers similar to the kinds
ringing most Global South cities and populating Global North inner
ones. Similar stories of law changes and land grabs came out of other
affected Southeast Asian countries like Indonesia, Thailand, the
Maldives and India where around 150 Tamil Nadu displaced women had to
sell their kidneys for food.
A year after the tsunami, NGO
ActionAid surveyed the aftermath in five Asian countries and found the
same pattern everywhere - residents barred from rebuilding, living in
militarized temporary camps, hotels "showered with incentives," no
restoration of homes lost, and "entire ways of life" destroyed. In
July, 2006 in Sri Lanka, the Tamil Tigers ended their cease-fire and
war resumed. It's hard knowing if disaster capitalism had a role
because peace was always precarious, the government offered little, and
continued violence at least promised a chance for something better
before and more than ever now given the choice between disaster
capitalism and hope.
Disaster Apartheid - A World of Green and Red Zones
On August 29, 2005, Hurricane Katrina hit the Gulf Coast and flooded
New Orleans. The well-off left town, "checked into hotels, and called
their insurance companies." For 120,000 others without cars or means of
transportation, it was another story. They depended on the state,
waited for help and got none. FEMA is supposed to provide it, too, but
it was one of the many government functions Bush gutted advancing
savage capitalism at the expense of public service.
Katrina was
disastrous for those affected, but Milton Friedman saw "an opportunity"
in a Wall Street Journal op-ed. It was easy for him to say from his
luxury San Francisco digs as well as his like-minded ideologues who met
14 days later to plan how to pounce on the tragedy for profit. They
produced 32 Chicago School-type schemes packaged as "hurricane relief"
that was a wish list for developers and hell for the displaced. They
ranged from suspending Davis-Bacon prevailing wage laws in disaster
areas and making the whole area a flat tax free enterprise zone to
erasing public schools by giving parents vouchers for privately-run
charter ones. They also wanted environmental regulations suspended on
the Gulf Coast and permission to drill in the Arctic National Wildlife
Refuge that showed how far afield they'd go to capitalize on the shock
of a local tragedy.
Things moved fast, and within weeks "the
Gulf Coast became a domestic laboratory for the same kind of
(outsourcing schemes) pioneered in Iraq." The names were familiar with
Halliburton first in line along with Bechtel, Blackwater USA and a host
of others homing in for the kill. Billions were at stake, and no open
bidding was required, just good connections. As Klein put it: "within
days of the storm it was as if Baghdad's Green Zone....lifted
from....the Tigris and landed on the bayou....As in Iraq, government
once again played the role of a cash machine equipped for both
withdrawals and deposits." Corporations took one and repaid with the
other in sizable campaign contributions in a pattern now familiar.
They also ignored unemployed locals and relied instead on cheap
imported undocumented labor easily exploited. The Bush administration
showed its type compassion, too, with $40 billion in budget cuts for
essentials like Medicaid, food stamps, student loans and more so funds
could go to contractors and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Again, a
familiar pattern.
In visiting Iraq, Klein first thought the
"Green Zone phenomenon was unique to the war in Iraq." She then
discovered it emerges wherever disaster capitalism lands with the same
stark divisions between the included and excluded. It was evident in
New Orleans with "gated green zones and raging red" ones - not from
flood damage but from predatory free market solutions only for the
privileged.
The Bush administration refused emergency funds for
public sector salaries so 3000 city workers were fired. Charity
Hospital closed and still isn't open. Public transit was gutted losing
half its workers, and most public housing is still boarded up and empty
by design. Some sits on prime land close to the French Quarter,
developers want it for luxury properties, and New Orleans is being
erased for profit just like Iraq. It was all planned with the storm the
excuse to do it.
Earlier "creative destruction" opportunities
generated "rust belts," neglected neighborhoods, and underfunded inner
city public schools. Creative neglect is at work as well as the
American Society of Civil Engineers in 2007 said it will cost $1.5
trillion over five years to bring essential public infrastructure back
to standard. Instead it continues to deteriorate while the well-off
withdraw into gated communities and luxury condos with all their needs
met by private providers. Klein calls this trend a
"state-within-a-state that is muscular" and as able as the public one
is frail. It no longer can function without help from contractors as
government is hollowed so business can prosper.
New Orleans is
a window on the future in which survival depends on the ability to pay,
and those who can't are discarded like trash. It promises a world of
protected Green Zones with those outside it neglected, abandoned,
ignored and forgotten.
Losing the Peace Incentive - Israel As Warning
Conventional wisdom once thought economic growth and prosperity
required peace and stability. No longer. Post-9/11, the terror scare
was ignited, wars rage in Iraq and Afghanistan, more war is threatened
on Iran, oil prices touched $80 a barrel, the WTO Doha Round trade
talks collapsed, and "a golden period of broadly shared growth"
prevails (at least until the recent credit crunch). How come?
Conflict and global instability don't just benefit arms related
industries. They help the high-tech security sector, heavy
construction, private health care companies treating soldiers and oil
and gas. The business bonanza in Iraq alone is hugely profitable with
all sorts of companies cashing in. The same goes for New Orleans and
Gulf Coast overall. Terrorist attacks are good for business. The more
destruction, the more to rebuild - a great market for disaster
capitalism it pounces on with every incentive to assure the trend
continues unchallenged, and why not when government throws public tax
dollars at it.
Today, "instability is the new stability," and
Israel is its "Exhibit A." In the post-1993 Oslo years, the Jewish
state designed its economy to expand in response to escalating violence
at home at first and now everywhere. The nation's technology firms
pioneered the homeland security industry, and they still dominate it.
In addition, its economy overall is the most "tech-dependent in the
world," according to Business Week magazine, twice as dependent as the
US representing half its exports.
Following the 2000 dot-com
crash, Israel's leading tech companies needed a new global niche, and
the government encouraged expansion beyond information and
communications technologies into security and surveillance. It launched
a slew of start-ups "specializing in everything from 'search and nail,'
data mining, surveillance cameras, to terrorist profiling." It was
perfect timing for a market that exploded post-9/11, and Israel's
economy is thriving with one of the fastest growth rates in the world.
Klein calls the country "a kind of shopping mall for homeland security
technologies," and Forbes magazine says it's "the go-to country for
antiterrorism technologies." Today, the country's counterterrorism
industry is booming, and its defense-related exports make it the fourth
largest arms dealer in the world, larger than the UK.
Klein
notes: "With more and more countries turning themselves into fortresses
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