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24 March 2012 By Reason Wafawarova The whole concept of democracy and civil
libertarianism largely emanates from the celebrated
works of Enlightenment thinkers of the eighteenth
century. Through the colonial legacy, Africa has been
converted to a lapdog imitator of Western civilisation,
pathetically feeding Western industrialisation with
raw materials and natural resources, while celebrating
the sucking of the blood of the continent by the
vampires after whose civilisation we all strive, less
for its benefits to us and more for our lost sense of
direction and creativity. Whenever Western civilisation is in crisis, which
is most of the time, we in Africa are also in crisis,
not because we have a meaningful part in the decisions
that cause crisis, but because we are passive victims
of our immense dependency on a system we will never
own. John Ralston Saul claimed in his book "Voltaire's
Bastards" that Western civilisation is in crisis
because it is based on the concept of reason — itself
the cornerstone of the Enlightenment era. While
Enlightenment thinkers successfully rescued the masses
from the arbitrariness of royalty and religion, the
rule of reason has not been without its own
arbitrariness and tyranny. Saul defines reason as "an obsession with truth and
falsity — an obsession with efficiency." He argues
that reason expresses itself through "control of
structures," being employed as the strategy to find
"simple and absolute" solutions to problems. Reason is
the centrepiece of technocratic endeavour, some of the
time lacking both morality and ethics. Some authors like AC Grayling argue that reason is
"merely an instrument which, correctly employed, helps
people draw inferences from a given starting point
without inconsistency." Reason as measured by the imperialistic logic of
democracy and civilisation has not liberated humanity,
especially outside the populations of the
industrialised democracies. Rather, the kind of reason preached by imperial
powers today has enslaved humanity to bureaucratic
corporatism which bleeds weaker nations unconstrained
by any sense of moral purpose. Imperialism is the
"unnu old vampire sucking the blood of the nations,"
as Peter Tosh would sing. The concept of civil-economic libertarianism is
based on reason, and as such it is hard for anyone to
disagree with anything related to this concept without
being labelled unreasonable or unprogressive. When one
attacks the imperialist exploits of Britain and the
United States in Zimbabwe, they are portrayed in
Western media as attacking reason — attacking the very
concept of Enlightenment. Anti-imperialism is seen as
a stance of defeatism and negativity by those who hail
the values seen as attributable only to Enlightenment
and Western civilisation. It is hard for a writer to be taken seriously when
they attack Western civilisation using freedom of
speech, education, and access to information,
technology, the English language, and other perceived
advantages seen as stemming from Western civilisation
itself. One is easily dismissed as a hypocrite, and
this writer has been labelled as such on numerous
occasions. Criticism acceptable to those who subscribe to the
notion of the supremacy of Western civilisation is
criticism against those nation states that fail the
conformism test — nation states that are independent
minded like China, North Korea, Iran, and little but
stubborn Zimbabwe, among many states labelled "rogue"
by Western politicians. Western civilisation liberated the Western world,
and by extension its former colonies; from the
arbitrary rule of monarchies and priests, only to
replace such rule with the rule of minority tyrannies
made up of technical elites — the powerful few that
have converted today's world into a fiefdom of
imperialist dons. We have come to a point where even owners of
capital no longer have control of their own capital,
relying on market forces that are manipulated by a few
powerful corporate elites. Voters the world over do
not control politics, and the political fate of the
voter is controlled not even by the cupid and
dishonest politicians contesting for the vote, but by
powerful corporate elites only interested in electoral
outcomes that will secure chances of profiteering. In the West the prevailing reality is that of
governments made up of lapdog politicians being pulled
on the leash by powerful corporations, and voters in
places like the United States have absolutely no say
in who becomes their country's president. All that
happens is staged ratification of political choices
made by powerful elites in the corporate sector. President Obama did not come from the black people
of America as we are told often, or from the Middle
Class. He was elected first by powerful corporate
elites like George Soros before he was presented to
the people for ratification through a manipulated
ballot system, a system that excludes anyone
unendorsed by corporate power. In developing countries we have a similar
prevailing reality, only that the puppet politicians
are often stooges of Western politicians — themselves
poodles of corporate power. In other words places like
Africa are now largely ruled by poodles of poodles —
the likes of Zimbabwe's Prime Minister, who has able
allies in Botswana's Ian Khama, Kenya's Raila Odinga,
Cote d' Ivoire's Alassane Ouattara, and a whole large
chunk of other likeminded puppet politicians, commonly
elevated to the political rank of democrats, not by
their people but by the Western media speaking on
behalf of imperialist politicians. For the poor voter, the sad reality is that
election victories are not shaped by morality or
humane intention. The African politician in particular
comes across without moral obligations, except when
soliciting for votes. Like their puppet partners in Africa, Western
politicians are also amoral con artists surviving on
the fictitious doctrinal distinctions which help
sustain the Age of Reason, imaginary distinctions like
the vainglorious principle of extremism, or the
sensationalised threat of terrorism, or the media
favourite topic of dictatorship and despotism in the
West's enemy states. We have a US charity styling itself as Invisible
Children doing a campaign to make Joseph Kony of
Uganda "famous," ostensibly to stop Kony from "turning
children into soldiers," and from committing "heinous
atrocities". African children are of course always the
white man's burden. Except that Invisible Children is using them to
make top selling films, making as much as US$8,6
million in 2011 — only using 32 percent of that amount
for charity, while pocketing the difference. While Joseph Kony's idea of fighting for freedom is
primitive and unacceptable, it must be noted that
exaggerations and manipulating facts to create a
monster out of him is unprofessional and plainly
dishonest, especially when it is done only to whip up
emotions from the public. The whole escapade smacks of
the "white hero" syndrome, itself a key strategy of
imperial hegemony. Put the timing of the STOPKONY campaign in the
context of the recent discovery of oil in Uganda, plus
the ever-failing US efforts to establish Africom on
some central place in Africa, and you are forgiven for
thinking that Kony is being "made famous" so the
imperialist powers can create yet another Osama bin
Laden. Politicians all over the world can now get away
with speaking absolute nonsense because what counts is
the manner they make their utterances, and not the
content of what they say. That is why Morgan
Tsvangirai has lasted twelve years in politics without
saying anything coherent. The man stands on the
platform of the Age of Reason — thoroughly being
sustained by a rather utopian sense of "change" and
some frenzy idea of "a new Zimbabwe." Zanu-PF's
misdoings, not Tsvangirai's merit, are the cornerstone
of the man's political survival. It does not matter much that Morgan Tsvangirai
openly tells a journalist that his idea of a
transitional Prime Minister is designer suits and
luxury cars. Reason will say he is standing for
democratic values and as such his utterances must be
democratic, however nonsensical, they may sound.
Western civilisation has created for us all
governments that can brazenly continue despite their
unabated failures — all because there is no more sense
of responsibility, for as long people can be thumped
down by fear-instilling propaganda or by the bludgeon. In the West almost everyone is blinded by the
culture of artificial heroes from Hollywood so much
that hardly anyone cares about the world's
predicament. In lesser sophisticated countries the
people are either blatantly denied the vote, or
bludgeoned to vote a certain way, when they are not
kept away from politics by the pre-occupying force of
abject poverty. Vote manipulation is not a preserve of election
riggers and oppressive regimes. The vote is always
manipulated in Western democracies, and that is by
presenting people only with politicians that are
pliant to the amoral goals of corporatism. Those who run arms industries piously make emphatic
pronouncements about peace and freedom, preaching
peace while fighting alongside peace-destroying rebels
in Libya — providing sophisticated weapons that
flourished an unwanted war that destroyed the enviable
livelihood of the Libyan people. Now the juggernaut is in Uganda where we are told
the mighty Americans are bringing rebellious Joseph
Kony to a deserved tragic end. In the name of bringing
peace to Uganda war is going to flourish, and more
people than Kony could ever imagine of killing could
end up dead, as what happened with the intervention in
Libya, killing huge numbers of Libyan civilians — by
far larger than Gaddafi could ever kill in all his
life time. Reason in itself will retain forever its nobility
in the advancement of humanity. It is the greed,
racism, supremacy and selfishness of those wielding
imperial power that will torment us. It is reason that
governs our spirit as a people. It is reason that
regulates our appetite, it is reason that legitimises
our faith; it is reason that governs our emotions, our
will, our intuition and our experience. But it is the same reason that has produced
technocratic corporatism and its obsessions with
selfish profiteering. It is reason that brings about
the idea of civil and economic libertarianism —
telling us that only the West can define the path of
democracy, the way of growing economies, and even the
culture of the world. Imagine Jacob Zuma calling for Western countries to
allow polygamy in their constitutions on the basis
that it is no one's business what a group of
consenting adults do with their sexual lives.
Certainly there would be an outrageous outcry in the
West. Such an approach only makes sense when it is the
West telling African countries to embrace
homosexuality in their legislation. Then we are told
of the logic of not interfering with what consenting
adults do with their sexual lives. It was the greed
for oil and the selfish interests of the West, not the
logic or reason the US, France and Britain applied to
put their greed into effect, that caused the murderous
bombing of Libyan cities — killing 50 000 innocent
civilians in the process. Equally it was the racism of the Nazis that
resulted in the killing of six million Jews, not the
logic applied to put that hatred into effect. This
shows clearly that reason as a centrepiece of
Enlightenment cannot in itself guarantee humanity
peace and freedom, let alone advancement and
prosperity. It is the racist desire to preserve colonial
hegemony over land ownership in Zimbabwe that led
Britain to mobilise ruinous and illegal economic
sanctions against the indigenous people of Zimbabwe,
not the contrived logic applied by Western powers to
put into effect the murderous sanctions regime. It is the selfish quest for power that makes
politicians from Zimbabwe's senior generation use
historical achievements to thwart political
competition from political aspirants coming from the
younger generation, not at all the logic applied in
justifying the older generation's quest for power. The power of reason has indisputable nobility, but
unfortunately reason is not invincible. Politicians
have thwarted reason and will continue doing so for as
long as we pursue the models of Enlightenment as
passed on to us by Western civilisation. Africa we are one and together we will overcome. It
is homeland or death! Reason Wafawarova is a political writer based in
SYDNEY, Australia. |