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Created on Saturday, 09 August 2008 12:32
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Written by The Real News
Naomi Klein on China and the Olympics: "Security, central planning, surveillance state is an ideal cocoon for global capitalism"
by The Real News
Naomi Klein: "I think this is an incredibly efficient, actually, a scarily efficient way of organizing society that's actually being celebrated here, which is a hybrid of some of the worst elements of authoritarian communism—mass surveillance of the population, total lack of civil liberties, lack of a free press, lack of democratic rights, authoritarian central planning, all harnessed not to advance the goals of social justice, even in name, although there may be some lip service still paid to that, but to advance the goals of global capitalism.
So it is Stalinism meets global capitalism.... There are 100,000 security officers just on Olympic duty. And to put that into perspective, the stadium itself, the Bird's Nest Stadium holds 90,000. So there's 90,000 spectators and 100,000 secret police keeping control of things in Beijing. So this is an incredible operation. But when you hear people like Lou Dobbs and other commentators talking about the problems in China, it's always red China, communist China, or the Chi-coms. And it's really this blast from the past of—you know, it's almost as if the Cold War never ended."
PAUL JAY: Welcome to our first in a series of interviews with Naomi Klein. Welcome, Naomi.
KLEIN: Thanks, Paul.
JAY: The fireworks have been bursting at the most expensive opening to
an Olympic ceremonies in history. Just what is being celebrated? You've
called what's happening in China the communism. What do you mean?
KLEIN: The communism, Stalinism, market Stalinism, authoritarian
capitalism, I think this is an incredibly efficient, actually, a
scarily efficient way of organizing society that's actually being
celebrated here, which is a hybrid of some of the worst elements of
authoritarian communism—mass surveillance of the population, total lack
of civil liberties, lack of a free press, lack of democratic rights,
authoritarian central planning, all harnessed not to advance the goals
of social justice, even in name, although there may be some lip service
still paid to that, but to advance the goals of global capitalism. So
it is Stalinism meets global capitalism. And it works. China is the
most successful capitalist economy in the world: 11 percent growth,
year after year after year. It is the most successful economy in the
world. And that efficiency, that success, is intimately tied, I would
argue, to the suppression of democratic rights. It's not successful
despite the fact that it's not a democracy, despite the fact that you
don't have independent trade unions; it is successful in large part
because of that, because workers can't organize independent unions,
[coughing] because Beijing, if they want to build a new export
processing zone or a new shopping mall or a new Olympic stadium, can
just raise whatever they want to raise and build whatever they want to
build and displace as many people as they want to displace.
JAY: Now, the counterargument would be that if you compare the
development of China and India over a somewhat similar time period,
especially since the reforms of Deng Xiaoping, that this methodology of
this authoritarianism with market capitalism has actually alleviated
poverty in a faster rate than India has, that maybe people are willing
to give up free speech and various things for a better standard of
living. So the argument is is that it's been effective. The alleviation
of poverty is progressing at a faster rate in China than in India. So
what if people don't have some of these rights? They're kind of phony
anyway in many of the countries that claim to have them.
KLEIN: Well, that's true. They are phony in many of the countries where
we claim to have them. But, you know, in China, people haven't agreed
to this. It's an authoritarian system—it's imposed on people. And there
is a great deal of dissent in China; there's an incredible level of
protest, actually, in China.
JAY: So, if these rights are relatively artificial or not as meaningful
in some of these other countries, then maybe people are happy with the
development in China.
KLEIN: Look, there is absolutely no doubt that many people have been
lifted out of poverty in China. But the biggest challenge facing the
Chinese government is the incredible levels of inequality in that
country. And this is really the obsession of the central government,
how to deal with the gap between the winners and losers of this
economic model, which is, you know, not incidental. It isn't a question
of just lifting everyone up; it is built into the model that when you
raze a village, you create an army. When you raze village after village
and displace community after community to build yet another export
zone, yet another shopping mall, yet another highway, you create this
massive population of internal migrants who are essentially—. It's
really a system of two-tiered citizenship. The people who have
residency in these booming cities, and the people who are part of the
army of, really, the landless, the homeless, who come to cities like
Shanghai, like Shenzhen, Guangzhou, looking for work. And in a sense
they're almost like the Mexicans of China, the migrant workers, in the
sense that the government has said, "We can't afford to give you the
same rights as we give to people with urban residency.
JAY: I mean, I guess one indication that perhaps things aren't so
harmonious as we're told is the extent of surveillance and the kind of
money that's being spent on surveillance. And you make an interesting
argument about this in a recent piece you wrote. Can you talk about the
kind of collaboration, investment, of American intelligence apparatus
companies and what's happening in China?
JAY: So one of the arguments will be that the splendor of the opening
ceremonies of the Olympic Games is really a symbol that this system
works, and perhaps works even better than the kinds of democracies that
we have, in that what they have is a wise, benign leadership, which in
some ways, they would argue, is more responsive to the population,
partly because they don't have elections to let off steam and they are
worried about unrest. So what are we seeing in terms of the balance
between political rights, democracy, and capitalism?
KLEIN: Well, it's definitely a tug-of-war, and there's definitely more
freedom, more access to information, a level of access to information
that would have been unheard of for an earlier generation. I mean,
you're talking about young people now who've grown up online, who have
their own blogs, their own websites, who are texting constantly,
incredibly techno savvy, and there are some websites that they simply
can't go to. So it is restricted, but they're still swimming in a sea
of information that their parents never had access to. And they push,
and then they get pushed back, and it's not clear who's going to win
this war. But if we think of—but what's really struck me about the
corporate media coverage of what's going on in China is that all the
negatives of the system—the crackdown on activists, the lack of freedom
of speech, the fact that journalists can't access the Internet in the
ways that they're used to. There's the fact that there are 100,000
security officers just on Olympic duty. And to put that into
perspective, the stadium itself, the Bird's Nest Stadium holds 90,000.
So there's 90,000 spectators and 100,000 secret police keeping control
of things in Beijing. So this is an incredible operation. But when you
hear people like Lou Dobbs and other commentators talking about the
problems in China, it's always red China, communist China, or the
Chi-coms. And it's really this blast from the past of—you know, it's
almost as if the Cold War never ended. And there's this amazing
unwillingness to talk about what this is actually serving, because this
isn't North Korea. It isn't about showing the strength of the
benevolent leadership and the benefits of a communist system over a
capitalist system; this whole infrastructure, this whole security,
central planning, surveillance state that we're seeing now in China is
in the interests of creating the ultimate consumerist, capitalist
cocoon. And you see that so clearly in the context of the apex of our
consumer culture, which is the Olympics. So it's the ultimate consumer
cocoon for Coca-Cola, Mastercard, all of the Olympic sponsors.
JAY: In our next segment, let's talk about whether in fact the Chinese
people want this corporate paradise, and if so, just why is there so
much security? Please join us for the next segment of our interview
with Naomi Klein.
Bio
Naomi Klein is an award-winning journalist, syndicated columnist and
author of the international and New York Times bestseller The Shock
Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism. Klein's previous book No
Logo: Taking Aim at the Brand Bullies was also an international
bestseller. Klein is a former Miliband Fellow at the London School of
Economics and holds an honorary Doctor of Civil Laws from the
University of King’s College, Nova Scotia.