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Title: Let Empire collapse Author: Mohamed Abdou Date: November 2, 2020 Language: en Topics: Empire, decolonization, revolution, liberation, land struggles, USA Source: Retrieved on 4th November 2020 from https://roarmag.org/essays/let-empire-collapse-why-we-need-a-decolonial-revolution/
I am part of a We that says: âLet Empire collapse.â A We that says to
build alternatives to Empire, we must expose the illegitimacy of the
dreadful dream we are in. Instead of trying to shore or salvage the
world as it is, we need to recognize with Audre Lorde that âthe masterâs
tools will never dismantle the masterâs house.â
I am part of a We that says: âWe love and respect you, Angela Davis and
your behemoth ongoing legacy of indispensable teachings that are
fundamental to the centuries-old struggle we confront,â but we will not
be castigated into voting or fall into the trap of âlesser of two evilâ
arguments that have been critiqued time and time again.
We do not buy the story that we are at a crossroads and have the
opportunity to finally fulfill Americaâs promise by ushering in a new
era of Dwight D. Eisenhower-inspired eco-friendly dominance. We are not
fooled by the repackaged, false, liberal-progressive hope of a Joe
Biden-Kamala Harris-Bernie Sanders coalition that normalizes â rather
than contends with â Americaâs imperialist settler-colonial existence.
And which by design cannot allow life-saving reforms such as universal
healthcare, student debt cancellations, housing and immigrant rights,
racial and environmental justice, abolitionist defunding and
dismantlement initiatives and worker protections.
We anticipated Donald J. Trumpâs ascendance and expected Bernie Sandersâ
demise when few did. We tell you, here, now, as a cautionary tale that
it will be no surprise if Trump wins a second term. In fact, the seeds
for his potential victory were laid the day of his inauguration because
of how resistance and liberation came to be defined â as resistance to
Trump rather than liberation from settler-colonial oppression.
Who is this âWeâ? We are Black, brown, Indigenous, Muslim and Jewish
people who are radical ânewest social movementâ organizers and knowledge
keepers. We are not just anti-fascist writers and movement participants,
but also, outrightly anti-statist and anti-capitalist and have
contributed to, and argued for, self-determination and mutual aid
networks for decades.
The ethos of our principles, offered in a 2016 reading list, is guided
by the premise that we reject competitions between intersecting
struggles. We believe that âprogressiveâ alliances exemplified in âGreen
New Dealâ and âdemocratic socialistâ trajectories â as opposed to
radical Red Deal actions â obscure more revolutionary trajectories and
strategically undermine the mission of BIPOC liberation. We warned then,
as we do now, of the dire consequences of band-aid (in)actions ingrained
in the flawed logic and ploy that âvoting reduces harm.â
We are among those who belong to, and take inspiration from Indigenous
land defenders of the Wetâsuwetâen nation and NoDAPL, who never caught,
as Lower Brule Sioux Tribe historian Nick Estes puts it, âas much
attention and support as the blond-haired Swedish teenager did just
months earlier, when she made near-identical arguments about climate
justice as her Indigenous counterparts.â
We are founders of intentional communities and queer-feminist abolition
groups. We have been active in anti-globalization movements since
Seattle 1999 and are inspired by movements such as La VĂa Campesina and
the Zapatistas that center a horizontalist â non-electoral â politics
anchored in what scholar-activists like Richard JF Day refer to as
ânon-universalizing, non-hierarchical, non-coercive relationshipsâ as
well as âmutual aid and shared ethical commitments.â
We hold the radical teachings of anti-Americans like Malcolm X,
anti-colonial and anti-imperialists like Martin Luther King, as well as
Red and Black Power movements close to our hearts. We understand
full-well that in fighting for global social justice, these
revolutionaries never hungered, thirsted or coveted becoming
professional career politicians. Instead, they chose to serve their
people without reifying pre-existing hierarchies, being sensitively
aware of how the hallways of state and institutional prestige, celebrity
and material power risk corrupting even the best intentions for social
change.
We are influenced by Indigenous and Black studies historians, like Nick
Estes as well as Palestinian political scientists like Joseph Massad and
Steven Salaita who have exposed the myth that Bernie is a âfighterâ for
Palestine despite being both pro-Zionist and pro-Imperialist.
Sun Tzu wrote, if you fail to recognize the scope and nature of the
enemy, âyou will succumb in every battle.â
From its origins, the trajectory of voting and liberal, progressive, and
even some leftist movements are based on several deeply flawed
assumptions in this war on Black, Indigenous and People of color
communities (BIPOC).
Need history remind us, the US was founded on the violent Euro-Christian
crusading doctrine of Manifest Destiny and the Doctrine of Discovery. As
Patrick Wolfe notes, 1492 is ânot an event.â Rather, it established a
structure with a religious character known as âconquistador
settler-colonialismâ as Tiffany Lethabo-King argues and many other
Indigenous scholar-activists like Eve Tuck and Sandy Grande have noted.
What is conquistador settler-colonialism? First, it is premised on the
âOriginal Sin,â on the ongoing genocide of Indigenous nations and
peoples and on the theft of their lands, which form the wealth that
Empire uses for plunder, pillaging and exploitation.
Once the assumed âTerra Nullius,â or empty land, was cleared of its
purported âheathen savageâ original inhabitants, conquistador
settler-colonialism relied on plantation â slave â economies.
Irrespective of 13^(th) and Right to Vote amendments, this enslavement
is enshrined to this day through what Saidiya Hartman refers to as
âafterlife slavery.â Slavery is constantly (re)birthed through
stand-your-ground laws, police brutality and premeditated extrajudicial
killings, routine âstop and friskâ policies, âBroken Window Policing,â
voter disenfranchisement, school-to-prison pipelines, impoverishment and
premature deaths, as well as 1994 crime bills which Hillary Clinton and
Bernie Sanders voted for and that superfluously target and incarcerate
Black youth who are referred to as âsuper-predatorsâ and âthugsâ within
a shattered criminal justice system.
Indigenous and Black feminist scholars like Tiffany Lethabo King, Zainab
Amadahy, Bonita Lawrence, Eve Tuck, K. Wayne Yang, and numerous others
have addressed how white conquistador settler-colonialismâs divide and
conquer strategies pit Native against Native and Black against Black.
They note how Black Cherokees in Oklahoma and Black Miâkmaq peoples in
Nova Scotia are a living embodiment of the intertwining of Indigenous
and Black peoplesâ fates and futurities.
Nowadays, much like the way KimberlĂ© Crenshawâs intersectionality is
toothlessly deployed by âwokeâ activists as an âadd-on,â progressives
ritually conduct empty land acknowledgments. They pay lip service to the
fact that they are on stolen land, without addressing the implications
of this given their complicity in land theft and Indigenous demands for
landâs rematriation. Why? Because it is easier for settlers to trade on
the questionable myth of a âsecular American Dreamâ and its
hyphenated-melting pot of identities â that are indignantly detached
from land-based histories and practices and an immeasurable, continuing,
violence against Indigenous and Black peoples defining its landscape.
An example of this is Ilhan Omar and Rashida Talibâs hypocrisy when they
acknowledge that America is founded on Indigenous genocide and yet,
simultaneously hail themselves as products of the American Dream,
erasing their complicity, despite being women of color, in the
reification of settler-colonialism. Omar went so far as proclaiming the
mother of neoliberalism, Margret Thatcher, as an âinspirationâ and war
monger Madeleine Albright as an exemplary model refugee who made
âenormous contributionsâ to America.
The second mistake progressives commit because they learned little from
the Egyptian âArab Springâ Uprisings of 2011, is their assumption that
in the struggle for social justice nation-states can be disentangled
from capitalism. Historians like Fernand Braudel, Mayâ68 scholars like
Michel Foucault, Gilles Deleuze and FĂ©lix Guattari as well as radical
social movement activists have long argued that it is a historical fact
that the European paradigms of capitalism and the nation-state evolved
symbiotically. Although they can become disjointed over the short-term,
creating ruptures with local and even regional implications, the
relationship between capitalism and nation-states is rooted in their
long-term mutual interests.
Neoliberalism is deeply anchored in the idea that the relationship
between nation-states and (racial)capitalism is irreversible, and both
are dependent on the dissemination of repressive anti-intersectional
racializing, gendering, sexualizing, classist, debilitating and ableist
logics that we have all internalized and replicate at the horizontal
level. Capitalist states are not just administrative structures; they
shape our understanding of the world, including our own identities and
thoughts and fine-tune our behavioral patterns, feelings and emotions.
Nation-states are a central component of the problem because they are
assumed to be a neutral entity that can be instrumentally mobilized as a
tool to usher in revolutionary social-change. This ignores that they are
founded upon structural inequities and enable subjects that reproduce
the violent inequalities of institutions given that subjectivities are
also formed, defined and regulated by these structures.
When progressive movements claim that they fear Trump has ushered-in
fascism, they are naively mistaking fascism for totalitarianism.
Totalitarianism seeks to concentrate and crystallize power at the top of
the state-pyramid in the hands of a single individual or political party
to fully impose draconian order from above. This process takes places
through force, be it via police repression, legislative and judicial
power, or even national emergencies, imposed curfews and military
regimes.
Fascism goes a step further. As well as concentrating state power, it
promulgates itself at the horizontal levels of the family,
neighborhoods, schools, factories and hospitals among others. Its goal
is to transform us all into egoistic little Mussoliniâs and mini-gods in
our public and private behaviors. Fascism is facilitated through the
dissemination of cultural and spiritual stereotypes that we all reenact.
What makes fascism more dangerous than totalitarianism is its
insidiousness: fascism is mobilized on a molecular-mass and local scale
that operates in all vectors and directions. Fascism is a cancer encoded
within and reinforced by the capitalist-states. We express our
internalized micro-fascisms through the symbolic and structural
privileges that we each enjoy and reproduce in our social encounters.
As I have written elsewhere, struggling against fascism means struggling
against our egomaniacal authoritarian and materialist selves. We have
all been weaned on capitalist and state practices that have taught us
how to covet power, to categorize and discipline others and ourselves.
We have all been taught to commoditize, individualize, commercialize and
materialize not only space and time, but also love, friendships,
solidarity, allyship and land.
In order to reassert control over our own lives and achieve more
egalitarian horizons, we must acknowledge the reality of conquistador
settler-colonialism and the fact that we all participate in the
replication of micro-fascistic oppressions that colonial âcultures of
whitenessâ produce and relentlessly disseminate through capitalist-state
frameworks. We cannot eradicate power differentials in our daily
encounters, but we can delineate them by combating our micro-fascisms
and taking responsibility as individuals and communities to decolonize
our hearts, spirits and actions.
We must acknowledge that representative democracy is not much of a
democracy when its laden with racialized district remapping, voter
dis-enfranchisement and suppression; partisan gerrymandering; dark money
ads; electoral college systems that are often pegged against a popular
vote; 2010 Citizenâs United verdicts that give special interests groups
unlimited spending; as well as bills like 501 4C, that permit designated
âsocial welfareâ organizations to engage in electoral politics in
unregulated ways.
Instead, we ought vie for direct-lateral participatory democracy since
power is inherently decentralized and everywhere. This requires that
individuals and communities learn to live according to a self-determined
politics of collective responsibility relative to ourselves and all
(non)human life.
Liberation struggles do not occur in a vacuum. They evolve in historical
(neo)colonial contexts in which nations and their constituents have
defined false and idealized myths of their pasts and themselves. While
white supremacist ideologies and assumptions inform conservative
right-wing parties and positions, the greater danger is how they
disguise themselves within (neo)liberal progressive and even leftist
positions. Some perceive Heineken and Johnnie Walker-sponsored pride
parades and Womenâs Marches as resistance, despite the fact that these
movements are often premised on bleached notions of non-violence, gay
marriage, coming-out narratives, pride and shame.
What decolonization is and what it entails is a fiery politics of
non-statist horizontalist action and responsibility, allyship and
solidarity, animated by a genuine radical ethics of care. It is a
subject complexly addressed by many elsewhere. It involves understanding
how states and capitalism percolate into our everyday relations, and
that, as Richard F. Day puts it in Gramsci is Dead, âwe are not governed
by âinstitutionsâ apart from ourselves, by a âstateâ set over against
âcivil societyâ [but] rather we all govern each other via a complex web
of capillary relations.â
The progressive hope of expanding the Squad by investing âpositive
energy [in]to existing structures and processes in the hope of their
ameliorationâ only serves to re-entrench conquistador
settler-colonialism and expands investments in settler-futurities.
Instead, the decolonial goal ought be to reduce the efficacy and reach
of state and capitalist structures âby withdrawing energy from them and
rendering them redundant,â as Day writes.
Decolonization is also transnational and migrational. Meaning, it
demands that we understand the entwined relationship between
conquistador settler-colonial â US and Canada â and franchise colonial
societies â like Egypt â that are symbolically, spiritually,
historically and materially interrelated. Settler-colonialism,
homonationalism, pinkwashing and cisheteropatriarchy in the US and
Canada fuel imperialism and the upholding of military and religious
dictatorships abroad.
This results in the subjugation of entire peoples in âpost-colonialâ
nations. Conquistador settler-colonialism can be, if not in fact is, the
circulatory agent of another colonialism. For example,
settler-colonialism in the US and Canada upholds Zionist
settler-colonialism in Palestine and Palestinian dispossession as Steven
Salaita, Dana Olwan and many scholar-activists have argued.
Decolonization means recognizing that struggles from âJerusalem to the
Grand River are one.â That there is no freeing Palestine without freeing
Indigenous and Black peoples in the heart of US Empire because all our
fires are interconnected.
As an antidote, decolonization necessitates building non-statist,
anti-authoritarian, land-based spiritual alternatives and being able to
defend them tactically, with arms if need be. Decolonization means
abolishing the punitive prison-judicial and imperialist-military
industrial complexes and replacing them with transformative and not just
restorative justice. Only the former addresses the underlying state
structure of settler-colonialism that frames abolition and Indigenous
sovereignty while the latter does not.
Decolonization demands a consistent spiritual and practice-based
relationship with land, as well as attunement to harvesting and
replenishment cycles, food-based sovereignty and security. It entails
relearning how to walk the land, radical eco-psychological permaculture,
bioregionalism, herb and horticultural techniques, towards cultivating
more homeostatic equilibriums and regenerative agricultures without
seeking a return to a romanticized bygone past.
Decolonization involves substituting multinational agrochemical and
agricultural bio-technologic companies like Monsanto with harvesting
practices that are mindful of land and replenishment cycles as an
alternative to colonial perspectives based on civilizational domination
and ecological devastation.
Decolonization is learning how to grow our own food, sharing and
expanding access to land, withdrawing our dependency and reliance on
capitalism, building sufficiency. Our medical and pharmaceutical
complexes must be replaced with modern and traditional holistic healing
practices.
Liberation means rematriating Indigenous land given hundreds of broken
treaties. It implies conceiving non-statist and non-capitalist
frameworks of Black reparations that neither denies Indigenous
dispossession or subscribes to a capitalist insurance tabulate of
dollar-cent figures in the devalued redressing of human misery,
shackling and death, which no price-tag can be assigned to. Nothing
short of freedom for all BIPOC who are born orchestrated to die,
suffices.