Techno-Financial Capital and Genocide of the Poorest of the
Poor
By James Petras
The war and its results have turned Yemen back a
hundred years, due to the destruction of infrastructure … especially in the
provinces of Oden, Dhalea, and Taiz.
— Izzedine al-Asbali, Yemeni Human Rights Minister
Yemen is devastated. There are no roads, water, or
electricity. Nobody’s left but thieves.
— a resident of Sanaa, Yemen
May 02, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - The Euro-American and Japanese
ruling classes, as well as their collaborators in the Afro-Asian and Latin
American countries, have accumulated vast profit. This has occurred through a
complex stratified system re-concentrating the world’s wealth through: 1. The
exploitation of labor in the First World (North America and Western Europe); 2.
super-exploitation of labor in the Second World (China, ex-USSR); 3.
dispossession of peasants, native communities and urban dwellers to grab
resources, land and real estate in the Third World; and 4. wars of genocide
against the poorest of the poor in the ‘Fourth World’. Besides all the forms of
brutal exploitation and dispossession, which enrich the Euro-US ruling classes,
by far the most sinister and threatening to humanity is the concerted worldwide
effort to literally exterminate the poorest-of-the poor, the hundreds of
millions of people no longer essential for the accumulation and concentration of
imperial capital today.
This essay will begin by mapping the genocidal wars against
‘the wretched of the earth’, identifying the geography of genocide, the
countries and subjects under attack, and the trajectory, which has been chosen
and executed by the leaders of the Euro-American regimes.
Then we will examine the reason for genocide within the
dynamics and forms of contemporary capitalism. In particular, we will develop
the genocide hypothesis: that imperial genocide of the poorest of the poor is a
deliberate policy to reduce the growing surplus labor, which is no longer needed
or wanted for wealth accumulation but is increasingly feared as a potential
political threat.
In the last section, we will discuss how the ‘wretched of the
earth’ are responding to this policy of imperial genocide and what is to be
done.
Mapping Genocide Against the Poorest of the Poor
It is no coincidence that the most violent assaults and
invasions by the Euro-American powers have taken place against the poorest
countries in each region of the world. In the Western hemisphere, the Euro-US
regimes have repeatedly invaded the absolutely poorest country, Haiti,
overthrowing the popularly elected Aristide government, decimating the
population via a cholera epidemic spread by UN mercenary ‘peace-keepers’,
killing tens of thousands of poor Haitians and rounding up thousands of
protestors. The occupation continues. Honduras, the second poorest country in
the region, experienced a US-backed coup d’état deposed their recently elected
president and imposed a terrorist puppet regime, which regularly assassinates
dissidents and landless rural workers. Peasants are dispossessed; the economy
and society are in shambles with tens of thousands of Hondurans (especially
children) fleeing the violence.
Today, the Euro-American powers actively support the
absolutist regime of Saudi Arabia as it bombs and slaughters thousands of Yemeni
civilians and resistance fighters. Yemen is the poorest country in the Gulf
region.
In South Asia, the US invaded and occupied Afghanistan; its
coalition of puppets and NATO allies have massacred and displaced millions of
poor farmers and civilians. Afghanistan is the poorest of the poor countries in
the region.
In Africa, the Euro-American powers and their local
collaborators have invaded, bombed and occupied Somalia, Chad and Mali – among
the poorest of sub-Sahara countries.
After the US-NATO campaign of destruction against Libya, 1.5
million sub-Saharan Africans and black citizens of Libya lost their stable
employment and became the victims of ethnic slaughter. Their attempts to escape
the violence and starvation by fleeing to Europe are blocked by the leading
powers (the same powers that destroyed the Libyan economy and society). Those,
who do not drown in their flight, are detained and returned to their devastated
countries and early deaths.
In Western Europe, millions of Greeks, Spaniards, and
Portuguese, inhabiting the poorest countries in the region, have faced massive
job losses, widespread impoverishment and spiraling suicides – all induced by
austerity programs designed to pillage their economies and enrich their Euro-US
creditors.
In the United States, 1.5 million black (mostly male)
Americans, are ‘missing’ – products of early death, industrial-scale
incarceration and police assassinations. American Indian communities are subject
to depredations and early death from the policies of the Federal and State
governments. Their lands have been handed over to mining (and now fracking) to
serve the interests of the mining and agro-business elite. Throughout the US
Latino agricultural workers are increasingly viewed as ‘expendable’ with
technology and the effects of global climate change (such as the severe drought
in California) depriving them of livelihood.
In the Levant, Palestinians, now the poorest of the poor and
the most disenfranchised, face continued Israeli land grabs, pillage and
violence in the West Bank and genocidal attacks in Gaza. Iraq and Syria have
experienced millions of deaths and displacements, reducing previously
prosperous, educated and sophisticated multi-ethnic populations into
impoverished, uprooted and desperate people deliberately driven backwards to
tribal loyalties.
Why Imperialism ‘Genocides the Poorest of the Poor’
With the exception of Iraq and Syria, all of the violated
countries have been poor in resources and markets, and possess large unskilled
labor. The people are targeted and savaged because they no longer serve as
‘labor reserves’ – they are now excess-surplus labor – in Nazi racial hygiene
terminology, they have become ‘useless mouths to feed’. This has intensified as
crisis engulfs the West and the least productive sectors of capitalism, finance,
real estate and insurance (FIRE), have become the leading sectors of capital.
‘Cheap labor’ is less needed, least of all overseas labor from conflictual
regions.
The ‘poorest of the poor’ countries under attack lack rich
resources ripe for plunder; their populations do not exist among the priorities
of the multi-national bankers – except when seen as ‘obstacles’. In the colonial
past, sectors of these populations would have been recruited by imperial
countries to submit, obey and serve as imperial mercenaries or coolie labor.
They would have been transported and employed by empire for ‘dirty’, dangerous
and poorly paid jobs in other colonized countries – like the millions of Indians
scattered throughout the former British Empire. Today, such coolies have no
value.
The genocidal nature of the wars against the ‘poorest of the
poor’ is best demonstrated by the actual targets and primary victims of these
wars: Millions of civilians, families, women, children and heads of households
have suffered the worst. These ‘targets’ represent the most stable and essential
elements responsible for family reproduction and security. The ‘poorest of the
poor’ communities are being destroyed. Genocidal bombing has overwhelmingly
targeted the essential factors for survival: cohesive households, communal
settings, subsistence food growing regions and access to clean water. Therefore,
it should come as no surprise that marriage ceremonies and traditional social
gatherings have been ‘mistaken targets’ of missiles and drone strikes. Despite
the denials from the White House, the geographic extent and nauseating number of
such attacks demonstrate that according to the ‘genocide hypothesis’ there is
‘nowhere to hide’: The targeted populations will have no marriage celebrations,
no social life, no increase in children among the poorest of the poor, no
protection for the elders, no social fabric and no communal organizations –
there will be no survival networks left for the superfluous of empire.
The ‘genocide hypothesis’ underlies the practice of ‘total
war’. The practice includes massive attacks on non-military targets (‘Shock and
Awe’) and the use of high tech weaponry to target collectives of the poorest of
the poor – repeatedly, over long periods of time and wide geographic regions.
If, as the apologists of genocidal wars claim, the bombings of
weddings and slaughter of school children are ‘collateral’ in the ‘Global War on
Terror’ why are they happening everywhere in the fourth world and virtually
everyday?
The genocide hypothesis best explains the data. Even the
terminology and claims made by imperialist experts regarding their weapons
systems support the genocide hypothesis. These weapons, we are told, are
‘intelligent, precise and highly accurate’ in targeting and destroying ‘the
enemy’. By their own admission, then, the poorest of the poor have become ‘the
enemy’, as imperial weapons makers support ‘intelligent’ genocide with
‘precision’.
When liberals and leftists criticize how imperial drone
strikes kill civilians, instead of ‘armed terrorists’, they are missing the
essential point of the policy. The prime purpose of the wars and the imperial
weapons of mass destruction is to kill the largest number of the very poorest in
the shortest time.
No member of the financial-high tech capitalist class has ever
complained about the mass killing of the ‘poorest of the poor’ anywhere or at
any time because the victims are, for the purpose of accumulating imperial
profit and concentrating wealth superfluous. The poorest don’t figure into the
formulae of profit and productivity; they don’t ‘make or take’ markets. On the
other hand, their continued existence is a potential liability. They are
aesthetically unappealing on the outskirts of luxury resorts. To the rich, they
represent a desperate criminal element and they may pose a real or imagined
‘terrorist’ threat. For these reasons, the rich would ‘prefer’ that they would
quietly cease to exist, or if the warlords have to dispose of them, the world
will be a safer and more attractive place to accumulate wealth. ‘Let them kill
each other, as they have done for millennia’, the empire piously opines and the
bankers and their high tech allies can use their military and mercenaries
without soiling their own hands. The elite ignore the mass immiseration while
the militarists bomb ‘the problem’ out of existence.
Today genocide occurs in once vibrant living and working
communities, not hidden in ‘concentration camps’. The secret ovens and gas
chambers have been replaced by an ‘open range’ of incendiary weapons that end
lives, burn neighborhoods and workshops, devastate livestock and crops. Those
who survive the bombing are starved, enclosed, malnourished and inflicted with
disease. Eminent doctors tell us that the misery is ‘self-inflicted’ and that
the poorest of the poor are ignorant and lack healthy habits. Recurrent
epidemics from HIV to cholera to Ebola are quintessential ‘4th world diseases’.
Even though the Caribbean had not seen cholera for over a century, its
introduction into Haiti via the bowels of imperial mercenary troops (UN
peacekeepers from Nepal) was blamed on the Haitians’ lack of access to clean
water! Not since the small pox blankets passed out by the US Army to freezing
Native Americans in their concentration camps of the 19th century have we heard
such apologists for genocide!
The truth about genocide is that all this is known, repeatedly
documented and forgotten. White workers in the First World cannot even register
these ‘facts’ under their own noses, let alone express any form of solidarity.
Imperial genocide, committed by proactive militarists and ‘passive’ rich elites,
are no secret even if they deny their complicity. The key word here is
‘mission’. ‘Mission Accomplished’ was the celebratory banner over the total
destruction of Iraq. The warlords claim rewards for successfully completing ‘the
mission’. Yemenis are dying under US-supplied Saudi bombs; Somalis are scattered
in tens of thousands of tents to the four corners of the earth; Haitians
continue to enjoy the ‘gift of cholera’ from UN ‘peacekeepers’ and rot in
massive open air prison-slums – their leaders imprisoned or assassinated.
The Poorest of the Poor Respond
In the face of genocide and their irrelevance to the profit
motive of modern high tech and finance capital, the poorest of the poor have
chosen multiple responses: (1) Mass out-migration, preferable to the First
World, where they won’t be bombed, raped or starved as they had been at ‘home’;
(2) Internal migration to the cities, under the illusion of an ‘urban safe
haven’ when in fact their concentration in slums makes it easier for the
bombers; (3) return to the countryside and subsistence farming or the mountains
and subsistence herding, but the missiles and drones relentlessly follow them;
(4) mass flight to a neighboring country where the local gendarmes will ‘herd’
them into camps to rot and (5) finally resistance. Resistance takes various
forms: There are spontaneous upheavals when the scope of abuse exceeds all
endurance. This form involves attacking the local collaborators and gendarmes
and authorities and sacking food warehouses. Such action burns briefly and dies
(many times literally). Some choose to join armed resistance bands, including
gangs of brigands, political ethno-religious rivals and terrorists who retaliate
against authors of their genocide and its collaborators with their own version
of justice and material and celestial rewards.
Total war from above and the outside breeds total war from the
inside and below. The rebellion of the ‘wretched of the earth’ in the 21st
century is far different from that portrayed by Franz Fanon in the middle of the
last century. Fanon described a revolt against colonialism and neo-colonialism.
Today the revolt is against deracination and genocide. During colonialism, the
‘wretched’ needed to be subdued to better exploit their labor and resources.
Today, the ‘poorest of the poor’ are superfluous to empire and thus the policy
of genocide. The current world war between the classes has become a war between
exterminators and those who would fight to survive!
James Petras is a Bartle Professor (Emeritus) of Sociology
at Binghamton University, New York.