The Four Occupations of Planet Earth: How the Occupied Became the Occupiers
On the streets of Moscow in the tens of thousands, the protesters
chanted:
“We exist!” Taking into account the comments of statesmen,
scientists, politicians, military officials, bankers, artists, all the
important and attended to figures on this planet, nothing caught the
year more strikingly than those two words shouted by massed Russian
demonstrators.
“We exist!” Think of it as a simple statement of fact, an implicit
demand to be taken seriously (or else), and undoubtedly an expression of
wonder, verging on a question: “We exist?”
And who could blame them for shouting it? Or for the wonder? How
miraculous it was.
Tomgram: Engelhardt, Restless Planet
[Note to TomDispatch Readers: As the
holiday season approaches, remember that TomDispatch has championed a
number of wonderful books in the last months. In fact, I think it says
something about this site that it’s associated with such a set of
books. Among them: Adam Hochschild’s bestselling history of World War I, To End All Wars: A Story of Loyalty and Rebellion, 1914-1918 (front page rave by the late Christopher Hitchens in the New York Times Book Review and one book I’m definitely buying as a gift this year); State Department official Peter Van Buren’s widely praised, devastating account of the Iraq War up close and personal, We Meant Well: How I Helped Lose the Battle for the Hearts and Minds of the Iraqi People, a book far too honest for the government for which he works; the 10th anniversary reissue of Barbara Ehrenreich’s classic and all-too-up-to-date Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America; Ariel Dorfman’s moving memoir Feeding on Dreams: Confessions of an Unrepentant Exile; Glenn Greenwald’s latest, With Liberty and Justice for Some: How the Law Is Used to Destroy Equality and Protect the Powerful, the book for our Occupy Wall Street American world (and speaking of Wall Street, don't miss Steve Fraser's now classic history of The Street, Every Man a Speculator); anything by Rebecca Solnit, but why not start with A Paradise Built in Hell: The Extraordinary Communities That Arise in Disaster; Andrew Bacevich’s all-too-on-target Washington Rules: America’s Path to Permanent War; the latest from Frances Fox Piven -- the woman Glenn Beck loves to hate -- Who’s Afraid of Frances Fox Piven?; the incomparable Noam Chomsky’s updated 9-11: Was There an Alternative?; and one prophetic older book whose time -- with our new age of protest -- has finally come, Jonathan Schell’s must-read volume, The Unconquerable World: Power, Nonviolence, and the Will of the People.
And that’s just to scratch the surface of TD-associated books this year. Finally, of course, there’s my new book, The United States of Fear (a signed copy of which can be had for a contribution to this site
of $75 or more). If you are an Amazon buyer, click on any of the above
book links, let it take you to Amazon.com, and pick up some of these
books (or anything else, book or otherwise) and not only will you have a
wonderful holiday gift to give, but you’ll have given a gift to
TomDispatch. We get a small cut of your purchase at no cost to you. Tom]
The Four Occupations of Planet Earth:
How the Occupied Became the Occupiers
Yet another country long immersed in a kind of
popular silence suddenly finds voice, and the demonstrators promptly
declare themselves
not about to leave the
stage when the day -- and the demonstration -- ends. Who guessed
beforehand that perhaps 50,000 Muscovites would turn out to protest a
rigged electoral process in a suddenly restive country, along with
crowds in St. Petersburg, Tomsk, and elsewhere from the south to
Siberia?
In Tahrir Square in Cairo, they swore:
“This time we’re here to stay!” Everywhere this year, it seemed that
they -- “we” -- were here to stay. In New York City, when forced out
of Zuccotti Park by the police, protesters returned carrying signs that
said, “You cannot evict an idea whose time has come.”
And so it seems, globally speaking. Tunis, Cairo, Madrid, Madison,
New York, Santiago, Homs. So many cities, towns, places. London,
Sana’a, Athens, Oakland, Berlin, Rabat, Boston, Vancouver... it could
take your breath away. And as for the places that aren’t yet bubbling
-- Japan, China, and elsewhere -- watch out in 2012 because, let’s face
it, “we exist.”
Everywhere, the “we” couldn’t be broader, often remarkably, even strategically, ill defined: 99% of
humanity containing so many potentially conflicting strains of thought
and being: liberals and fundamentalists, left-wing radicals and
right-wing nationalists, the middle class and the dismally poor,
pensioners and high-school students. But the “we” couldn’t be more
real.
This “we” is something that hasn’t been seen on this planet for
a long time, and perhaps never quite so globally. And here’s what
should take your breath away, and that of the other 1%, too: “we” were
never supposed to exist. Everyone, even we, counted us out.
Until last December, when a young Tunisian vegetable vendor
set himself alight to protest his own humiliation, that “we” seemed to
consist of the non-actors of the twenty-first century and much of the
previous one as well. We’re talking about all those shunted aside,
whose lives only weeks, months or, at most, a year ago, simply didn’t
matter; all those the powerful absolutely knew they could ride roughshod
over as they solidified their control of the planet’s wealth,
resources, property, as, in fact, they drove this planet down.
For them, “we” was just a mass of subprime humanity that hardly
existed. So of all the statements of 2011, the simplest of them -- “We
exist!” -- has been by far the most powerful.
Name of the Year: Occupy Wall Street
Every year since 1927, when it chose Charles Lindbergh for his famed flight across the Atlantic, Time magazine has picked
a “man” (even when, on rare occasions, it was a woman like Queen
Elizabeth II) or, after 1999, a “person” of the year (though sometimes
it’s been an inanimate object like “the computer” or a group or an
idea). If you want a gauge of how “we” have changed the global
conversation in just months, those in the running
this year included “Arab Youth Protestors,” “Anonymous,” “the 99%,”
and “the 1%.” Admittedly, so were Kim Kardashian, Casey Anthony,
Michele Bachman, Kate Middleton, and Rupert Murdoch. In the end, the
magazine’s winner of 2011 was “the protester.”
How could it have been otherwise? We exist -- and even Time
knows it. From Tunis in January to Moscow in December this has been,
day by day, week by week, month by month, the year of the protester.
Those looking back may see clues to what was to come in isolated
eruptions like the suppressed Green Movement in Iran or under-the-radar civic activism
emerging in Russia. Nonetheless, protest, when it arrived, seemed to
come out of the blue. Unpredicted and unprepared for, the young
(followed by the middle aged and the old) took to the streets of cities
around the globe and simply refused to go home, even when the police
arrived, even when the thugs arrived, even when the army arrived, even when the pepper spraying, the arrests, the wounds, the deaths began and didn’t stop.
And by the way, if “we exist” is the signature statement of 2011, the
name of the year would have to be “Occupy Wall Street.” Forget the
fact that the place occupied, Zuccotti Park, wasn’t on Wall Street but
two blocks away, and that, compared to Tahrir Square or Moscow’s
thoroughfares, it was one of the smallest plots of protest land on the
planet. It didn’t matter.
The phrase was blowback of the first order. It was payback, too.
Those three words instantly turned the history of the last two decades
upside down and helped establish the protesters of 2011 as the third of
the four great planetary occupations of our era.
Previously, “occupations” had been relatively local affairs. You
occupied a country (“the occupation of Japan”), usually a defeated or
conquered one. But in our own time, if it were left to me, I’d tell the
history of humanity, American-style, as the story of four occupations,
each global in nature:
The First Occupation: In the 1990s, the financial
types of our world set out to “occupy the wealth,” planetarily
speaking. These were, of course, the globalists, now better known as
the neoliberals, and they were determined to “open” markets everywhere.
They were out, as Thomas Friedman put it (though he hardly meant it
quite this way), to flatten the Earth, which turned out to be a violent
proposition.
The neoliberals were let loose to do their damnedest in the good
times of the post-Cold-War Clinton years. They wanted to apply a kind
of American economic clout that they thought would never end to the
organization of the planet. They believed the U.S. to be the economic
superpower of the ages and they had their own dreamy version of what an
economic Pax Americana would be like. Privatization was the
name of the game and their version of shock-and-awe tactics involved
calling in institutions like the International Monetary Fund to
“discipline” developing countries into a profitable kind of poverty and
misery.
In the end, gleefully slicing and dicing subprime mortgages, they
financialized the world and so drove a hole through it. They were our
economic jihadis and, in the great meltdown of 2008, they
deep-sixed the world economy they had helped “unify.” In the process,
by increasing the gap between the super-rich and everyone else, they
helped create the 1% and the 99% in the U.S. and globally, preparing the ground for the protests to follow.
The Second Occupation: If the first occupation drove
an economic stake through the heart of the planet, the second did a
similar thing militarily. In the wake of the 9/11 attacks, the
“unilateralists” of the Bush administration staked their own claim to a
global occupation at the point of a cruise missile. Romantics all when it came to the U.S. military and what it could do,
they invaded Iraq, determined to garrison the oil heartlands of the
planet. It was going to be “shock and awe” and “mission accomplished”
all the way. What they had in mind was a militarized version of an
“occupy the wealth” scheme. Their urge to privatize even extended to the military itself and, when they invaded, in their baggage train came crony corporations ready to feast.
Once upon a time, Americans knew that only the monstrous enemy -- most recently that "evil empire,”
the Soviet Union -- could dream of world conquest and occupation. That
was, by nature, what evil monsters did. Until 2001, when it turned out
to be quite okay for the good guys of planet Earth to think along
exactly the same lines.
The
invasion of Iraq, that “cakewalk,” was meant to establish a
multi-generational foothold in the Greater Middle East, including
permanent bases garrisoned with 30,000 to 40,000
American troops, and that was to be just the beginning of a chain
reaction. Soon enough Syria and Iran would bow down before U.S. power
or, if they refused, would go down anyway thanks to American
techno-might. In the end, the lands of the Greater Middle East would
fall into line (with the help of Washington’s proxy in the region,
Israel).
And since there was no other nation or bloc of nations with anything
like such military power, nor would any be allowed to arise, the result
-- and they weren’t shy about this -- would be a global Pax Americana and a domestic Pax Republicana more
or less till the end of time. As the “sole superpower” or even
“hyperpower,” Washington would, in other words, occupy the planet.
Of course, Iraq and Afghanistan were also more traditional
occupations. In Baghdad, for instance, American consul L. Paul Bremer
III issued “Order 17,” which essentially granted
to every foreigner connected with the occupation enterprise the full
freedom of the land, not to be interfered with in any way by Iraqis or
any Iraqi political or legal institutions. This included "freedom of
movement without delay throughout Iraq," and neither their vessels,
vehicles, nor aircraft were to be "subject to registration, licensing,
or inspection by the [Iraqi] Government." Nor in traveling would any
foreign diplomat, soldier, consultant, or security guard, or any of
their vehicles, vessels, or planes be subject to "dues, tolls, or
charges, including landing and parking fees." And that was only the
beginning.
Order 17, which read like an edict plucked directly from a nineteenth
century colonial setting, caught the local hubris of those privatizing
occupiers.
All of this proved to be fantasy bordering on delusion,
and it didn’t take long for that to become apparent. In fact, the
utter failure of the unilateralists came home to roost in the form of a SOFA agreement
with Iraqi authorities that promised to end the U.S. garrisoning of the
country not in 2030 or 2050, but in 2011. And the Bush administration
felt forced to agree to it in 2008, the same year that the economic
unilateralists were facing the endgame of their dreams of global
domination.
In that year, the neoliberal effort to privatize the planet went down
in flames, along with Lehman Brothers, all those subprime mortgages and
derivatives, and a whole host of banks and financial outfits rescued
from the trash bin of history by the U.S. Treasury. Talk about giving
the phrase “creative destruction” the darkest meaning possible: the two
waves of American unilateralists nearly took down the planet.
They let loose demons of every sort, even as they ensured that the
world’s first experience of a “sole superpower” would prove short
indeed. Heap onto the rubble they left behind the global disaster of
rising prices for the basics -- food and fuel -- and you have a situation so combustible that no one should have been surprised when a single Tunisian match set it aflame.
The first two failed occupations plunged the planet into chaos and misery, even as they paved the way, in a thoroughly unintended fashion, for an Arab Spring ready to take on the Middle East’s 1%.
Note as well that, as their policies went to hell in a hand basket,
the first and second set of occupiers walked off with their treasure and
their selves intact. Neither the bankers nor the militarists went to jail, not a one of them. They had made out like bandits and continue to do so. They took home their multi-million dollar bonuses. They kept their yachts, mansions, and (untaxed) private jets. They took with them the ability to sign million-dollar contracts for bestselling memoirs and to go on the lecture circuit at $100,000-$150,000 a pop. They had, in the case of the second occupation, quite literally, gotten away with murder (and torture, and kidnapping, etc.). In the process, the misery of the 99% had been immeasurably increased.
The Third Occupation: The most significant and
surprising thing the first two globalizing occupations did, however, was
to globalize protest. Together they created the basis, in pure iniquity
and inequity, in dead bodies and bruised lives, for Tahrir Square and
Occupy Wall Street. Their failures set the stage for something new in
the world.
The result was a Chalmers Johnson-style case of blowback, the spirit
of which was caught in the protesters’ appropriation of the very word
“occupy.” There was a sense out there that they had occupied us
long and disastrously enough. It was time for us to occupy them, and
so our own parks, squares, streets, towns, cities, and countries.
The urge to right things is, in fact, a powerful one. Gene Turitz, a friend of mine who took part in the demonstrations that briefly shut down
the port of Oakland, California, recently wrote me the following about
the experience. It catches something of the mood of this moment:
“The mayor of Oakland, a former progressive, blasted the economic
violence that was being perpetrated by the Occupy movement shutting down
the port. No word about the economic violence of banks stealing
people's homes through foreclosures, or the economic violence of
[sports] team owners demanding the city build new stadiums for their
teams or they will move to another city, or of corporations threatening
to move if this or that is not done for them. That’s just the way
things are done. You do not want the ‘violence’ of thousands of people
peacefully showing that things must change to make their lives better.”
Or in two words: we exist! And possibly in the nick of time.
The Fourth Occupation: This is both the newest and
oldest of occupations. I’m speaking about humanity’s occupation of
Earth. In recent centuries, can there be any question that we’ve been
hard on this planet, exploiting it for everything it’s worth? Our
excuse was that we genuinely didn’t know better, at least when it came
to climate change, that we just didn't understand what kind of long-term
harm the burning of fossil fuels could do. Now, of course, we know.
Those who don’t are either in denial or simply couldn’t care less.
And here’s just a taste of what we do know about how the fourth occupation is affecting the planet: thirteen of the warmest years since recordkeeping began have occurred in the last 15 years. In 2010, historically staggering amounts
of carbon dioxide were sent into the atmosphere (“the biggest jump ever
seen in global warming gases”); extreme weather was, well, remarkably extreme in 2011 -- torrid droughts, massive fires, vast floods -- and, in the Arctic, ice is now melting at unprecedented rates, which will mean future sea-level rises that will threaten low-lying areas of the planet. And as for that temperature, well, it’s going to keep going up, uncomfortably so.
Potentially, this is the monster blowback story of all time.
And here’s just a taste of what we know about business as usual on
this planet: if we rely on the previous occupiers and their ilk to save
us, then it’s going to be a long, dismal wait. Don’t count on energy giants
like Exxon or BP or their lobbyists and the politicians they influence
to stop climate change. After all, none of them are going to be alive
to see a far less habitable planet, so what do they care? Torrid zones
are so then, profit sheets and bonuses are so now, which means: don’t
count on the 1% to give a damn.
If it were up to them -- a few outliers among them excepted -- we
could probably simply write the Earth off as a future friendly place for
us. And the planet wouldn’t care. Give it 100,000, 10 million, 100
million years and it’ll get itself back in shape with plenty of life
forms to go around.
We’re such ephemeral creatures with such brief life spans. It’s hard
for us to think even in the sort of modestly long-range way that
climate change demands. So thank your lucky stars that the first and
second wave occupiers created a third payback occupation they never
imagined possible. And thank your lucky stars that movements to occupy our planet in a new way and turn back the global warmers are slowly rising as well.
Like the attempted occupations of the global economy and the Greater
Middle East, each spurred by a sense of greed that went beyond all
bounds, the occupation of our planet is guaranteed to create its own
oppositional forces, and not just in the natural world either. They are
perhaps already emerging along with the Arab spring, the European
summer, and the American fall, not to speak of the Russian winter. And
when they’re here -- as the fifth occupation of planet Earth -- when
they stand their ground and chant “We exist!” in anger, strength, and
wonder, maybe then we can really tackle climate change and hope it isn’t
too late.
Maybe the fifth occupation is the one we’re waiting for -- and don't
for a second doubt that it will come. It’s already on its way.
[Note for TomDispatch Readers: For those of you who haven’t yet read the TomDispatch piece by Barbara Ehrenreich and John Ehrenreich, “The Making of the American 99%,” I urge you to do so, and don't miss Juan Cole’s “Protest Planet”
as well, which offers a striking explanation for how the 1% was created
globally. The two of them together helped me understand our changing
world better. I would like to thank my wife for the phrase “occupy the
wealth.”]
Copyright 2011 Tom Engelhardt