Chris
Hedges hits a long ball on this one. We're close to the same page.
There isn't going to be any "get better" here. Nothing, no
ideology, no structural framework, attitude, reorganization...
nothing can improve a "going down the toilet" standard of
living everywhere. The resources, the energy, the water and the
stable climate to do it are not there.
---Mike
Ruppert
The
Massacres in Egypt Are a Precursor to a Wider Global Conflict Between
the Elites and the World’s Poor
Chris
Hedges
15
August, 2013
Radical
Islam is the last refuge of the Muslim poor. The mandated five
prayers a day give the only real structure to the lives of
impoverished believers. The careful rituals of washing before prayers
in the mosque, the strict moral code that prohibits alcohol, along
with the understanding that life has an ultimate purpose and meaning,
keep hundreds of millions of destitute Muslims from despair. The
fundamentalist ideology that rises from oppression is rigid and
unforgiving. It radically splits the world into black and white, good
and evil, apostates and believers. It is bigoted and cruel to women,
Jews, Christians and secularists along with gays and lesbians. But at
the same time it offers to those on the very bottom of society a
final refuge and hope. The massacres of hundreds of believers in the
streets of Cairo signal not only an assault against a religious
ideology, not only a return to the brutal police state of Hosni
Mubarak, but the start of a holy war that will turn Egypt and other
poor regions of the globe into a cauldron of blood and suffering.
The
only way to break the hold of radical Islam is to give followers of
the movement a stake in the wider economy, the possibility of a life
where the future is not dominated by grinding poverty, repression and
hopelessness. If you live in the sprawling slums of Cairo or the
refugee camps in Gaza or the concrete hovels in New Delhi, every
avenue of escape is closed. You cannot get an education. You cannot
get a job. You cannot get married. You cannot challenge the
domination of the economy by the oligarchs and the generals. The only
way left for you to affirm yourself is to become a martyr or shahid.
Then you will get what you cannot get in life—a brief moment of
fame and glory. And while what will take place in Egypt will be
defined as a religious war, and the acts of violence by the
insurgents who will rise from the bloodied squares of Cairo will be
defined as terrorism, the engine for this chaos is not religion but
the collapsing global economy, a world where the wretched of the
Earth are to be subjugated and starved or shot. The lines of battle
are being drawn in Egypt and across the globe. Adli Mansour, the
titular president appointed by the military dictator of Egypt, Gen.
Abdul-Fattah el-Sisi, has imposed a military-led government, a curfew
and a state of emergency. It will not be lifted soon.
The
lifeblood of radical movements is martyrdom. The Egyptian military
has provided an ample supply. The faces and the names of the
sanctified dead will be used by enraged clerics to call for holy
vengeance. And as violence grows and the lists of martyrs expand it
will ignite a war that will tear Egypt apart. Police, Coptic
Christians, secularists, westerners, businesses, banks, the tourism
industry and the military will become targets. Those radical
Islamists who were convinced by the Muslim Brotherhood that electoral
politics could work and brought into the system will go back
underground, and many of the rank-and-file of the Muslim Brotherhood
will join them. Crude bombs and explosive devices will be set off.
Random attacks and assassinations by gunmen will puncture daily life
in Egypt as it did in the 1990s when I was in Cairo for the New York
Times, although this time the scale of the attacks will become
fiercer and wider, far harder to control or ultimately crush.
What
is happening in Egypt is a precursor to a wider global war between
the world’s elites and the world’s poor, a war caused by
diminishing resources, chronic unemployment and underemployment,
declining crop yields caused by climate change, overpopulation and
rising food prices. Nearly half of Egypt’s 80 million people—33
percent—are 14 or younger and live under or just above the poverty
line, which the World Bank sets at $2.00 a day. The poor in Egypt
spend more than half their income on food, and often food that has
little nutritional value. An estimated 13.7 million Egyptians or 17
percent of the population suffered from food insecurity in 2011,
compared to 14 percent in 2009, according to the report by U.N. World
Food Program (WFP) and the Egyptian Central Agency for Public
Mobilization and Statistics (CAPMAS). Malnutrition is endemic among
poor children with 31 percent of children under 5 being stunted in
growth. Illiteracy runs at over 70 percent.
Victor
Hugo described this war with the poor in Les Misérables as one
between the “egoists” and the “outcasts.” The egoists, Hugo
wrote, had “the bemusement of prosperity, which blunts the sense,
the fear of suffering which is some cases goes so far as to hate all
sufferers, and unshakable complacency, the ego so inflated that is
stifles the soul.” The outcasts, whose persecution and deprivation
was ignored until it morphed into violence, had “greed and envy,
resentment at the happiness of others, the turmoil of the human
element in search of personal fulfillment, hearts filled with fog,
misery, needs, and fatalism, and simple, impure ignorance.”
The
belief systems the oppressed embrace can be intolerant, but these
belief systems are a response to the injustice, state violence and
cruelty inflicted on them by the global elites. Our enemy is not
radical Islam. It is global capitalism. It is a world where the
wretched of the Earth are forced to bow before the dictates of the
marketplace, where children go hungry so global corporate elites
siphon away the world’s wealth and natural resources and where our
troops and U.S.-backed militaries carry out massacres on city
streets. Egypt offers a window into the coming dystopia. The wars of
survival will mark the final stage of human habitation of the planet.
And if you want to know what they will look like visit any city
morgue in Cairo.
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