December 03, 2019 "Information
Clearing House"
- The state rests its power on a monopoly of
violence. Indeed, in the final analysis a state
is nothing but a monopoly of violence. Even when
a state does good things, like tax to provide
healthcare, it ultimately depends on its ability
to employ violence to enforce the collection of
the tax. Arrest and imprisonment is, absolutely,
violence. We may not recognise it as violence,
but if you try to resist arrest and imprisonment
you will quickly see that it is violence.
Whether or not blows are struck or arms twisted
to get someone there, or they go quietly under
threat, confining somebody behind concrete and
steel is violence.
I use
the case of tax evasion and healthcare to show
that I am merely analysing that the state rests
on violence deliberately. I am not claiming that
the violence of the state is a bad thing in
itself. I just want you to recognise that the
state rests on violence. Try not paying your
taxes for a few years, and try refusing to be
arrested and go to court. You will, ultimately,
encounter real violence on your person.
John
Pilger gave a harrowing account of the everyday
application of state violence at the Free the
Truth meeting at which I spoke last week. Here
is an extract from his speech describing his
visit to Julian Assange:
I
joined a queue of sad, anxious people,
mostly poor women and children, and
grandmothers. At the first desk, I was
fingerprinted, if that is still the word for
biometric testing.
“Both hands, press down!” I was told. A file
on me appeared on the screen.
I
could now cross to the main gate, which is
set in the walls of the prison. The last
time I was at Belmarsh to see Julian, it was
raining hard. My umbrella wasn’t allowed
beyond the visitors centre. I had the choice
of getting drenched, or running like hell.
Grandmothers have the same choice.
At
the second desk, an official behind the
wire, said, “What’s that?”
“My
watch,” I replied guiltily.
“Take it back,” she said.
So
I ran back through the rain, returning just
in time to be biometrically tested again.
This was followed by a full body scan and a
full body search. Soles of feet; mouth open.
At
each stop, our silent, obedient group
shuffled into what is known as a sealed
space, squeezed behind a yellow line. Pity
the claustrophobic; one woman squeezed her
eyes shut.
We
were then ordered into another holding area,
again with iron doors shutting loudly in
front of us and behind us.
“Stand behind the yellow line!” said a
disembodied voice.
Another electronic door slid partly open; we
hesitated wisely. It shuddered and shut and
opened again. Another holding area, another
desk, another chorus of, “Show your finger!”
Then we were in a long room with squares on
the floor where we were told to stand, one
at a time. Two men with sniffer dogs arrived
and worked us, front and back.
The
dogs sniffed our arses and slobbered on my
hand. Then more doors opened, with a new
order to “hold out your wrist!”
A
laser branding was our ticket into a large
room, where the prisoners sat waiting in
silence, opposite empty chairs. On the far
side of the room was Julian, wearing a
yellow arm band over his prison clothes.
As
a remand prisoner he is entitled to wear his
own clothes, but when the thugs dragged him
out of the Ecuadorean embassy last April,
they prevented him bringing a small bag of
belongings. His clothes would follow, they
said, but like his reading glasses, they
were mysteriously lost.
For
22 hours a day, Julian is confined in
“healthcare”. It’s not really a prison
hospital, but a place where he can be
isolated, medicated and spied on. They spy
on him every 30 minutes: eyes through the
door. They would call this “suicide watch”.
In
the adjoining cells are convicted murderers,
and further along is a mentally ill man who
screams through the night. “This is my One
Flew over the Cuckoo’s Nest,” he said.
When we greet each other, I can feel his
ribs. His arm has no muscle. He has lost
perhaps 10 to 15 kilos since April. When I
first saw him here in May, what was most
shocking was how much older he looked.
We
chat with his hand over his mouth so as not
to be overheard. There are cameras above us.
In the Ecuadorean embassy, we used to chat
by writing notes to each other and shielding
them from the cameras above us. Wherever Big
Brother is, he is clearly frightened.
On
the walls are happy-clappy slogans exhorting
the prisoners to “keep on keeping on” and
“be happy, be hopeful and laugh often”.
The
only exercise he has is on a small bitumen
patch, overlooked by high walls with more
happy-clappy advice to enjoy ‘the blades of
grass beneath your feet’. There is no grass.
He
is still denied a laptop and software with
which to prepare his case against
extradition. He still cannot call his
American lawyer, or his family in Australia.
The
incessant pettiness of Belmarsh sticks to
you like sweat.
You can
see John give the speech here:
Assange’s “crime”, of course, is to reveal the
illegal use of force by the state in Iraq and
Afghanistan. That the state feels the need to
employ such violence against somebody who has
never practised violence, is a striking
illustration that violence constitutes the very
fabric of the state.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
Just as
we are not conditioned to recognise the violence
of the state as violence, we do not always
recognise resistance to the state as violence.
If you bodily blockade a road, a tube station or
a building with the intention to prevent
somebody else from physically passing through
that space, that is an act of physical force, of
violence. It may be a low level of violence, but
violence it is. Extinction Rebellion represents
a challenge to the state’s claim to monopolise
violence, which is why the Metropolitan Police –
a major instrument of state domestic violence –
were so anxious to declare the activity illegal
on a wide scale.
Ultimately civil resistance represents a denial
of the state’s right to enforce its monopoly of
violence. The Hong Kong protests represent a
striking demonstration of the fact that
rejecting the state’s monopoly of violence can
entail marching without permission, occupying a
space, blockading and ultimately replying to
bullets with firebombs, and that these actions
are a continuum. It is the initial rejection of
the state’s power over your body which is the
decision point.
Just as
I used the example of tax evasion and healthcare
to demonstrate that the state’s use of violence
is not always bad, I use the example of
Extinction Rebellion to demonstrate that the
assertion of physical force, against the state’s
claim to monopoly of it, is not always bad
either.
We are
moving into an era of politics where the
foundations of consent which underpin western
states are becoming less stable. The massive
growth in wealth inequality has led to an
alienation of large sections of the population
from the political system. The political economy
works within a framework which is entirely an
artificial construct of states, and ultimately
is imposed by the states’ monopoly of force. For
the last four decades, that framework has been
deliberately fine-tuned to enable the massive
accumulation of wealth by a very small minority
and to reduce the access to share of economic
resource by the broad mass of the people.
The
inevitable consequence is widespread economic
discontent and a resultant loss of respect for
the political class. The political class are
tasked with the management of the state
apparatus, and popular discontent is easily
personalised – it concentrates on the visible
people rather than the institutions. But if the
extraordinary wealth imbalance of society
continues to worsen, it is only a matter of time
before that discontent undermines respect for
political institutions. In the UK, once it
becomes plain that leaving the EU has not
improved the lot of those whose socio-economic
standing has been radically undercut, the
discontent will switch to other institutions of
government.
In
Scotland, we shall have an early test of the
state’s right to the monopoly of force if the
Westminster government insists on attempting to
block a new referendum on Independence, against
the will of the Scottish people. In Catalonia,
the use of violence against those simply trying
to vote in a referendum was truly shocking.
This
has been followed up by the extreme state
violence of vicious jail sentences against the
leaders of the entirely nonviolent Catalan
independence movement. As I stated we do not
always recognise state violence. But locking you
up in a small cell for years is a worse act of
violence on your body even than the shocking but
comparatively brief treatment of the woman voter
in the photo. It is a case of chronic or acute
state violence.
Where
the use of violence by a state is fundamentally
unjust, there is every moral right to employ
violence against the state. Whether or not to do
so becomes a tactical, not a moral, question.
There is a great deal of evidence that
non-violent protest, or protest using the real
but low levels of physical force employed by
Extinction Rebellion, can be in the long term
the most effective. But opinions differ
legitimately. Gandhi took one view, and Nelson
Mandela another. The media has sanitised the
image of Mandela, but it is worth remembering
that he was jailed not for non-violent protest,
but for taking up violent resistance to white
rule, in which I would say he was entirely
justified at the time.
To
date, the Catalan people and their leaders
appear firmly wedded to the tactic of
non-violence. That is their choice and their
right, and I support them in that choice. But
having suffered so much violence, and with no
democratic route available for their right of
self-determination, the Catalans have the moral
right, should they so choose, to resist, by
violence, the violence of the Spanish state. I
should however clarify that does not extend to
indiscriminate attack on entirely innocent
people, which in my view is not a moral choice.
All of
which of course has obvious implications should
a Westminster government seek to block the
Scottish people from expressing their
inalienable right of self-determination
following the election. Which fascinating
subject I shall return to once again in January.
Be assured meantime I am not presently close to
advocating a tactic of violence in Scotland. But
nor will I ever say the Scottish people do not
ultimately have that right if denied democratic
self-expression. To say otherwise would be to
renounce the Declaration of Arbroath, a founding
document of European political thought.
As
western states face popular discontent and are
losing consent of the governed, one of the
state’s reactions is to free up its use of
force. Conservative election promises to give
members of the UK armed forces effective
immunity from prosecution for war crimes or for
illegal use of force, should be seen in this
light. So also, of course, should the use of
agents not primarily employed by the state to
impose extreme violence on behalf of the state.
The enforcers of the vicious system John Pilger
encountered were employed by Serco, G4S or a
similar group, to remove the state one step from
any control upon their actions (and of course to
allow yet more private profit to the wealthy).
Similar contractors regularly visit strong
violence on immigrants selected for deportation.
The ultimate expression of this was the
disgusting employment by the British and
American governments of mercenary forces,
particularly in Iraq and Afghanistan, to deploy
brutal and uncontrolled violence on the local
population.
The
pettiness of the election campaign, its failure
to address fundamental issues due to the ability
of the mainstream media to determine and
manipulate the political agenda, has led me to
think about the nature of the state at a much
more basic level. I do not claim we are beyond
the early stages of a breakdown in social
consent to be ruled; and I expect the immediate
response of the system will be a lurch towards
right wing authoritarianism, which ultimately
will make the system still less stable.
Craig Murray is an author, broadcaster and human
rights activist. He was British Ambassador to
Uzbekistan from August 2002 to October 2004 and
Rector of the University of Dundee from 2007 to
2010.
https://www.craigmurray.org.uk
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