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OutRage!:Why has the Left gone soft on human rights?

pirate | 23.03.2007 18:35 | Analysis | Gender | Social Struggles | World

Two articles by gay rights campaigner Peter Tatchell published this week:
The Independent. March 22nd_ Why has the Left gone soft on human rights?
Democratiya Journal_Spring 2007 Their Multiculuralism and ours.

I WONDER IF THIS POSTING WILL STAY UP..?

1) OutRage! News March 23.
Why has the left gone soft on human rights?

There are no worldwide protests to support the Zimbabwean struggle

By Peter Tatchell

The Independent - London - 22 March 2007

 http://comment.independent.co.uk/commentators/article2381043.ece


Large sections of liberal and left opinion have gone soft on their
commitment to universal human rights. They rightly condemn the
excesses of UK and US government policy, but rarely speak out against
oppressors who are non-white or adherents of minority faiths. There
are no mass protests against female genital mutilation, forced
marriages, the stoning of women and gender apartheid in the Middle
East.

A perverse interpretation of multiculturalism has resulted in race and
religion ruling the roost in a tainted hierarchy of oppression. In the
name of "unity" against Islamophobia and racism, much of the left
tolerates misogyny and homophobia in minority communities. It rejects
common standards of rights and responsibilities; demanding that we
"make allowances" and show "sensitivity" with regard to the prejudices
of ethnic and faith communities. This attitude is patronising, even
racist. It judges minority peoples by different standards.

A moral hierarchy has shaped public policy on discrimination.
Legislation against racism is much tougher than legislation against
homophobia. Racial slurs provoke far stronger public condemnation than
sexist ones. Some liberals and left-wingers mute their condemnation of
intolerance when it emanates from non-white people; whereas they would
strenuously denounce similar prejudice if it was being vented by
whites against blacks or by Christians against Muslims. They argue
that we have to "understand" bigots from racial and religious
minorities; yet few of them ever urge the same "understanding" of
white working class bigots.

Some argue that western Christianisation and colonialism are
responsible for prejudice in minority communities. The hate-mongers in
these communities are deemed more or less blameless. They are victims,
not perpetrators, according to this guilt-ridden "anti-racism". Such
nonsense infantilises non-white people; treating them as inferiors who
are incapable of taking responsibility for their actions and of moral
behaviour.

Double standards on human rights influence law enforcement.
Fundamentalist Muslim clerics are permitted to endorse the so-called
"honour" killing of unchaste women; whereas any woman who dared
advocate violent retribution against Islamist misogynists would soon
find herself in court.

We have long experienced the hypocrisy of the political right. In the
name of defending "freedom", many conservatives defended the very
unfree regimes of Franco's Spain and Pinochet's Chile. Alarmingly,
this selective approach to human rights is now echoed by sections of
the left, with their lack of protests against the murderous regimes in
Iran, Zimbabwe and Sudan. President Mugabe has massacred more black
Africans than PW Botha in South Africa. In contrast to the global
anti-apartheid movement, there are no worldwide protests to support
the Zimbabwean struggle for democracy. Why does a black tyrant
murdering black people merit less outrage than a white tyrant
murdering black people?

These double standards have many downsides. Respect for diversity has
sometimes degenerated into the toleration of abuses; as when the
anti-fascist left embraced the Muslim leader Iqbal Sacranie after he
denounced gays as immoral, harmful and diseased. Sadly, the right to
be different has often become a trojan horse for the subversion of
human rights.

It would be a mistake to dump multiculturalism because of its
sometimes oppressive interpretation. But we also need to recognise
that by celebrating difference, multiculturalism can divide people,
especially on racial and religious lines. This has resulted in
conflict - such as the riots between Afro-Caribbean and Asian youths,
and tensions between sections of the Muslim and Jewish communities.

Too much focus on difference can spill over into separateness, which
subverts an appreciation of our common humanity and undermines notions
of universal rights and equal citizenship. It can produce a new form
of tribalism, where societies are fragmented into myriad communities,
each loyal primarily to itself and with little interest in the common
good of society as a whole.

The anti-racist struggle has been weakened by the excesses of the
"diversity agenda". In the 1960s and 1970s, all non-whites united
together as "black people" to fight their common oppression: racism.
Then black divided into Afro-Caribbean, African and Asian. More
recently, part of the Asian community has split off to identify
primarily as Muslim, distancing themselves from other Asians - Hindus,
Sikhs, Buddhists and atheists. This fragmentation has been endorsed by
some on the left, who have colluded with communalism and the division
of the Asian community on religious lines. These left-wingers have a
great deal to say about the oppression of Muslims but little or
nothing to say about the racism and disadvantage experienced by Asians
of other faiths or of no faith at all.

Multiculturalism can thus foster a "Balkanisation" of the humanitarian
agenda, fracturing communities according to their different cultural
identities, values and traditions. When these differences are
prioritised, our common interests get sidelined.

Progressive multiculturalism is about respecting and celebrating
difference, but within a framework of equality and human rights. It is
premised on embracing cultural diversity, providing it does not
involve the oppression of other people. Human rights are universal and
indivisible.

www.petertatchell.net

Ends
----------------------
2) Their Multiculturalism and Ours

By Peter Tatchell

Democratiya 8 - Spring 2007
The journal of radical democratic left debate
 http://www.democratiya.com


Paralysed by the fear of being branded racist, imperialist or
Islamophobic, large sections of liberal and left opinion have, in
effect, gone soft on their commitment to universal human rights. They
readily, and rightly, condemn the excesses of US and UK government
policy, but rarely speak out against oppressors who are non-white or
adherents of minority faiths. Why the double standard? The answer
lies, in part, in a perverse interpretation of multiculturalism that
has sundered the celebration of difference from universal human
rights.

The new hierarchy of oppression
Race and religion now rule the roost in a tainted hierarchy of
oppression. The rights of women and gay people are often deemed
expendable for the sake of ‘the greater good.’ Misogyny and homophobia
are increasingly tolerated in the name of ‘maintaining harmonious
community relations.’ Indeed, the trend among many supposedly
progressive people is to reject common standards of rights and
responsibilities. They demand that we ‘make allowances’ and show
‘cultural sensitivity’ with regard to the prejudices of people within
certain ethnic and faith communities. Isn’t it patronising, even
racist, to judge minority peoples by different standards?

This hierarchy of moral values has shaped public policy on
discrimination. Legislation against racism is much tougher than
legislation against homophobia. Racial slurs provoke far stronger
public condemnation than sexist ones. Some liberals and left-wingers
mute their condemnation of intolerance when it emanates from non-white
people; whereas they would strenuously denounce similar prejudice if
it was being vented by whites against blacks or by Christians against
Muslims. The new vogue for sections of the left is the idea that we
have to ‘understand’ bigots from racial and religious minorities; yet
few of them ever urge the same ‘understanding’ of white working class
bigots.

Some argue that our western history of Christianisation and
colonialism is responsible for ethnic, religious and patriarchal
prejudice in certain quarters of some minority communities. The
hate-mongers in these communities are, allegedly, more or less
blameless. In this guilt-ridden ‘anti-racist’ narrative, we made the
bigots the intolerants they are. We? How can today’s generation of
English people be held responsible for what their forebears did 200
years ago in the days of Empire? Such infantilising nonsense is
increasingly a feature of left-wing discourse.

These double standards on human rights influence even law enforcement.
In Britain and Jamaica, several dancehall singers are free to incite
the murder of ‘b*tty boys’ (queers) without fear of prosecution. As we
all know, no gay person could get away with urging the killing of
‘n*ggers.’ Likewise, certain fundamentalist Muslim clerics are
permitted to endorse the so-called ‘honour’ killing of unchaste women;
whereas any woman who dared advocate violent retribution against
Islamist misogynists would soon find herself in court.

We have long been used to the hypocrisy of the political right. In the
name of defending ‘freedom’, many Conservatives defended the very
unfree regimes of Botha’s South Africa, Franco’s Spain, and Pinochet’s
Chile. What is new is that this selective approach to human rights is
now being echoed by sections of the left, with their inaction against,
and occasional open apologia for, the regimes in Iran, Zimbabwe and
Sudan.

Vive La Difference!
Some critics blame multiculturalism for this political and ethical
mess, arguing that respect for diversity has degenerated into a
free-for-all, where anything goes. The right to difference has become
a trojan horse, subverting human rights, they say. I agree with this
view, up to a point. But I also believe that plurality and diversity
are valid, providing they don’t diminish the rights and freedoms of
others. It would be a big mistake to dump multiculturalism on the
basis of its sometimes oppressive interpretation and application.

The multicultural ethos that has blossomed since the 1960s is an
important advance in social evolution. It is good to recognise,
celebrate and respect diverse cultures and people of different
nations, races, languages, religions, abilities and sexualities. The
embrace of diversity is a welcome respite from the narrow-minded
monocultural uniformity of the 1950s, which was dominated by the
straight, the white and the male. (There is, of course, nothing wrong
per se with straight white maleness. The problem was that straight
white males dominated to the exclusion of everyone else. Their agenda
was the agenda.)

In the bad old days of the monocultural 1950s, prejudice was
tolerated. The voices and interests of minorities were either ignored
or actively suppressed. There was racial segregation and the denial of
voting rights to black people in the Deep South of the United States.
In the UK, male homosexuality was totally illegal and punishable by a
maximum sentence of life imprisonment. Throughout the West, women’s
pay was barely half that of men, while women were excluded from a wide
range of job opportunities. As an antidote to this exclusivist
cultural hegemony, inclusive multicultural diversity was liberating
and uplifting for millions of hitherto marginalised people; especially
women, as well as disabled, black, lesbian, gay, bisexual and
transgender people. The right-to-be-different ethos of
multiculturalism allowed them to claim not just human rights, but also
a dignity, a value and a place in the public sphere.

In contrast to the stifling homogeneity, blandness and conformism of
monocultural societies, multicultural diversity is enriching, creative
and empowering. Out of difference come new insights, which are the
motor of innovation. In these senses, the acceptance of diversity can
be seen as a positive benefit to individuals, communities and society
as a whole........

To read the rest of this article, click here:
 http://www.democratiya.com/review.asp?reviews_id=70


To read, Homophobia and Human Rights in Iraq, a speech by Ali Hili of
OutRage! and Iraqi LGBT, on the murder of gay Iraqis by Islamist death
squads, click here:
 http://www.democratiya.com/review.asp?reviews_id=69

For more information about Democratiya and a full list of articles,
click here:
 http://www.democratiya.com

ENDS
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

pirate

Comments

Hide the following 7 comments

gay-friendly

23.03.2007 21:13

Dear Pirate,

Your post is provocatively insulting. So permit me to reciprocate. You accuse me/us of being soft on human rights. I think that is unfair. I /we aren't homophobic. You expect the rights that British gays have gained in the past few years suddenly to be applied world-wide. That is unrealistic, imperialist and would be quite laudible if fewer innocents would have to die in the crossfire.

When your beloved leader Tatchell was a 'Labour Friend of Iraq', alongside such useful fools as Ann Clywdd, his arguments were used to help justify the invasion of Iraq even though he argued against that in the small print. And Outrage seems peculiarly bent towards similar destruction in Zimbabwe and Iran which just happen to be enemies of Tony Blair, and peculiarly silent when it comes to even more homophobic states which happen to be politically untouchable to Blair.

In retrospect, say you were an Iraqi gay living under Saddam who was liberated by Tony. Wouldn't you prefer the faux oppression you were living under before ? I don't know, I only have the word of the few gay Iraqi bloggers who all decry the occupation. Haven't you read Salam Pax at least ?

Given your constant warmongering here, I think at best you are idealistic and unpragmatic. I think Tatchell is compromised and if you want to resurrect Outrage! as a campaigning grassroots organisation then you have to disassociate yourself from him then stop asking for international invasions to impose our local morality at the point of a gun.

love and kisses,

sus


Mugabe Gets the Milosevic Treatment

23.03.2007 21:51

Arthur Mutambara, the leader of one faction of Zimbabwe's main opposition party, the MDC, and one of the principals in the Save Zimbabwe Campaign that's at the centre of a storm of controversy over the Mugabe government's crackdown on opposition, boasted a year ago that he was "going to remove Robert Mugabe, I promise you, with every tool at my disposal." (1)

Educated at Oxford, the former management consultant with McKinsey & Co. was asked in early 2006 whether "his plans might include a Ukrainian-style mass mobilization of opponents of Mugabe's regime." (2)

"We're going to use every tool we can get to dislodge this regime," he replied. "We're not going to rule out or in anything the sky's the limit." (3)

Last year Morgan Tsvangirai, leader of an opposing MDC faction, and eight of his colleagues, were thrown out of Zambia after attending a meeting arranged by the US ambassador to Zimbabwe, Christopher Dell, with representatives of Freedom House, a US ruling class organization that promotes regime change in countries that aren't sufficiently committed to free markets, free trade and free enterprise. (4)

Funded by the billionaire speculator George Soros, USAID, the US State Department and the US Congress's National Endowment for Democracy (whose mission has been summed up as doing overtly what the CIA used to do covertly), Freedom House champions the rights of journalists, union leaders and democracy activists to organize openly to bring down governments whose economic policies are against the profit-making interests of US bankers, investors and corporations.

Headed by Wall St. investment banker Peter Ackerman, who produced a 2002 documentary, Bringing Down a Dictator, a follow-up to A Force More Powerful, which celebrates the ouster of Yugoslav president Slobodan Milosevic, Freedom House features a rogues' gallery of US ruling class activists on its board of directors: Donald Rumsfeld, Paul Wolfowitz, Otto Reich, Jeane Kirkpatrick, Zbigniew Brzezinski and Steve Forbes, among others.

The campaign to replace Mugabe with the neo-liberal standard bearers of the MDC is rotten with connections to the overthrow of Milosevic. Dell, the US ambassador, prides himself on being one of the architects of Milosevic's ouster. (5) He held a senior diplomatic post in Kosovo when Milosevic was driven out of office in a US-UK engineered uprising.

Dell's mission, it would seem, is to be as provocative as possible, sparing no effort to tarnish the image of the Mugabe government. In early November 2005, Dell declared that "neither drought nor sanctions are at the root of Zimbabwe's decline," an implausible conclusion given that drought has impaired economic performance in neighboring countries, and that sanctions bar Zimbabwe from access to economic and humanitarian aid, while disrupting trade and investment. "The Zimbabwe government's own gross mismanagement of the economy and its corrupt rule has brought on the crisis," Dell charged. (6)

When not disparaging Mugabe's government, Dell can be counted on to be doling out largesse to the opposition (US$1 million, according to one source, to get the Save Zimbabwe Campaign off the ground earlier this year. (7))

Responding to Dell's call for the opposition to unite, Mutambara has declared his new unity of purpose with MDC opponent, Tsvangirai. "Our core business," he announced, after violent clashes with the police earlier this month, "is to drive Mugabe out of town. There is no going back. We are working together against Robert Mugabe and his surrogates." (8)

While Mutambara is certainly working with Tsvangirai to drive Mugabe out of town, what he doesn't explain is what he wants to replace Mugabe with. The opposition, and the powerful Western governments that back it, make it seem as if they're offended by Mugabe's qualities as a leader, not his policies, and that their aim is to restore good governance, not to impose their own program on Zimbabwe.

We should be clear about what the MDC is and what its policies are. While the word "democratic" in the opposition's Movement for Democratic Change moniker evokes pleasant feelings, the party's policies are rooted in the neo-liberal ideology of the Western ruling class. That is, the party's policies are hardly democratic.

The MDC favors economic "liberalization", privatization and a return to the glacial-paced willing buyer/willing seller land-redistribution regimen a status quo ante-friendly policy that would limit the state's ability to redistribute land to only tracts purchased from white farmers who are willing to sell.

Compare that to the Zanu-PF government's direction. Mugabe's government is hardly socialist, but it has implemented social democratic policies that elevate the public interest at least a few notches above the basement level position it occupies under the neo-liberal tyranny favored by the MDC. A Mutambara or Tsvangirai government would jettison policies that demand something from foreign investors in return for doing business in Zimbabwe. Foreign banks, for example, are required to invest 40 percent of their profits in Zimbabwe government bonds. (9) What's more, the MDC leaders would almost certainly end the Mugabe government's policy of favoring foreign investors who partner with local investors to promote indigenous economic development. And Zimbabwe's state-owned enterprises would be sold off to the highest bidder.

Moreover, the land redistribution program would be effectively shelved, delaying indefinitely the achievement of one of the principal goals of Zimbabwe's national liberation struggle reversing the plunder of the indigenous population's land by white settlers. Mugabe, it is sometimes grudgingly admitted in the Western press, is a hero in rural parts of southern Africa for his role in spearheading land reform, something other south African governments have lacked the courage to pursue vigorously. South African president Thabo Mbeki's reluctance to join in the collective excoriation of Mugabe is often attributed to "respect for Mr. Mugabe as a revolutionary hero (he led the fight that ended white rule in Zimbabwe in 1980, and was a key opponent of apartheid) and because the issue of white ownership of land in South African is also sensitive." (10)

Contrast respect for Mugabe with the thin layer of support the US-backed Save Zimbabwe Campaign has been able to muster. It "does not yet have widespread grassroots support," (11) but it does have the overwhelming backing of the US, the UK, the Western media and US ruling class regime change organizations, like Freedom House. Is it any surprise that Zanu-PF regards the controversy swirling around its crackdown on the opposition's latest provocation as an attempt by an oppressor to return to power by proxy through the MDC?

NOTES

1. Times Online March 5, 2006.
2. Ibid.
3. Ibid.
4. The Sunday Mail, February 5, 2006.
5. The Herald, October 21, 2005.
6. The Herald, November 7, 2005.
7. The Herald, March 14, 2007.
8. The Observer, March 18, 2007.
9. The Observer, January 28, 2007.
10. Globe and Mail, March 22, 2004.
11. Ibid.

Stephen Gowans
- Homepage: http://www.counterpunch.org/gowans03232007.html


mugabe

24.03.2007 11:53

say what you want about mugabe, but you got to love him and his body guards. seeing that pro-labour scum tatchell slapped down by mugabe's bodyguard when trying to perform a citizens arrest was just great!

ross


Zimbabwe is not in the UK !

24.03.2007 13:43

Doh ! Of course I don't protest against what Mugabe is doing - Zimbabwe is in Africa !

I protest against what the Governement of the country I live in is doing ! If the UK goes to war, if the UK sells weapons to oppresive regimes, if the UK supports oppresive regimes. But the governement of the UK does not support the Mugabe regime -- what should I protest for ? Should I ask that we send troops in to remove Mugabe ?

blip


KNACKERED

26.03.2007 15:28

WE ARE UNPAID & BLOODY KNACKEDED,
MANY OF LEFT WORK IN LOW PAID OR WORSE VOLUNTARY WORK WHICH IS LOOKED DOWN ON & UN-UNIONISED OR HELPED BY MANY INCLUDING SOME OF THE PETIT BOURGOISE BLOODY LEFT.
WE NEED MORE RECOGNITION OURSELVES, INSTEAD OF BEING SHAT ON & BECOMING AN ENDANGERED SPECIES OURSELVES.
WE HAVE TO SURVIVE NOT ALL OF US LIVE IN COMFORT & NEED MORE SUPPORT, FUNDS & ORGANISATION.
THIS COULD BE DONE MORE EASILY IF PEOPLE ORGANISED WITHIN COOPERATIVES & FREE TRADE UNIIONS

CHECK IWW.ORG.UK

SORRY ABOUT CAPITALS, HAVENT GOT TIME TO CHANGE THIS AS iVE BEEN DOING 2 VOLUNTARY JOBS & BEEN AN ACTIVIST FOR LAST 10 YEARS & WE NEED TO RECOGNISED AS ORGANISERS/EDUCATORS WITH ADEQUATE FUNDS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

JONI


Dump the bosses off your back

26.03.2007 22:36

"WE ARE UNPAID & BLOODY KNACKEDED. CHECK IWW.ORG.UKSORRY ABOUT CAPITALS, HAVENT GOT TIME TO CHANGE THIS AS iVE BEEN DOING 2 VOLUNTARY JOBS & BEEN AN ACTIVIST FOR LAST 10 YEARS"

If your keyboard is broken then say so and I'll send you one. If your software is knackered then ask for advice. If you are just too tired to hit the CAPS LOCK key then you really need to take a break. You can come to where I stay and have a back massage, some aroma-therapy and a walk in the country, or just resign yourself to taking a bit of a break from one of your voluntary jobs. I'm not poking fun at you, I know we all get too stressed out sometimes.

Long live the wobblies !



Are you poor, forlorn and hungry?
Are there lots of things you lack ?
Is your life made up of misery?
Then dump the bosses off your back.
Are your clothes all patched and tattered ?
Are you living in a shack ?
Would you have your troubles scattered ?
Then dump the bosses off your back.

Are you almost split asunder?
Loaded like a long-eared jack ?
Boob - why don't you buck like thunder,
And dump the bosses off your back ?
All the agonies you suffer
You can end with one good whack
Stiffen up, you orn'ry duffer
And dump the bosses off your back.

orca


We are not answerable to The Broken Left

09.01.2008 07:39

Let the demented comments on here once again reinforce my view that gay people, like Jews, the disabled and black people, must sever completely from the exploiters of the political left. They've never lifted a finger to stop the brutalisation of any of our people, instead using us as their cannon fodder. What irritates much of the left is that we are powerful in our own right, we speak for ourselves and don't need their sick mediating ideologies to justify our existence. Gays and lesbians still working in leftist organisations do sterling work, but faced with the ignorant homophobia of Indymedia's swaggering hetero boys, should always keep open the option of leaving a movement that oftentimes fails to appreciate their efforts.

Caz
- Homepage: http://www.indymediawatch.blogspot.com