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American
3rd July 2005, 08:06 AM
White man, stop killing the poor blacks in Africa...

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2088-1678543,00.html
July 03, 2005

With a song in their heart and not much at all in their heads
SIMON JENKINS

How is a sensible person to react to last night’s Live 8/G8 extravaganza? It defies hyperbole. It steamrollers scepticism. The money swilling, the masses migrating, the greenhouse gases combusting, the publicity bingeing, are beyond all reason.

Live 8 claims political status, but the politics is totalitarian, using celebrity to mobilise a crowd. The crowd has a noble place in politics, but it is a transient one. Tomorrow it is gone and its punch leaves no bruise. Small wonder Tony Blair is playing Pope Innocent to Bob Geldof’s Francis of Assisi. He co-opts him into power.

Geldof is to fast politics what McDonald’s is to fast food. He is simply good at it. How can you do nothing, he screams, “watching people live on TV, dying on our screens!”. Fill up on McCartney and Madonna and you will feel much better.

Thus in the 1960s did students donate their virginity to Oxfam. Thus in 1969 did John Lennon and Yoko Ono stage a week-long “bed-in for peace”. Critics were dismissed as “for war”. Now they are for dead babies. Nothing changes.

Live 8 is clearly an echo of Live Aid, Geldof’s money-raising spectacular for Ethiopian famine in 1985. Live Aid was a spontaneous response to what television presented as a crisis. Its outcome has been hotly debated, most recently by David Rieff in this month’s Prospect magazine. Showering money, trucks and food on Mengistu’s Ethiopia entrenched a vicious regime and aided one of the most cruel forced migrations in history. Ethiopia was never short of food.

Live 8 seems to acknowledge this critique. The £20m it raises will go not on poverty but on itself. Not a penny will go to Africa. Indeed a potential fundraising opportunity, which might at least have bought a planeload of anti-Aids drugs, has become an exhibition of high-tech media co-ordination and a celebrity fiesta. Geldof has given up on money. He rephrases Lennon’s “All you need is love” as “All you need is awareness”.

All this asks to be taken seriously as politics. So let’s do so — and as more than background schmooze for Blair’s G8 spectacular at Gleneagles. The G8 is not a decision-making body but a “conversation” between rich nations. It has no constitution and no executive. The United Nations, not the G8, is the proper forum for collective action onworld poverty.

Targeting the G8 is in truth a hangover from 1960s left-wing agitprop, which held that the evils of the world were due to capitalism and colonial exploitation. Conventional wisdom was to dump the West’s surplus savings and produce on Africa, and then to wail when the continent was predictably corrupted. At a rough estimate some $500 billion was tipped into Africa over the past 40 years. Most observers maintain this contributed to political instability and a negative growth rate.

Geldof disagrees. He is a big-time interventionist. He claims legitimacy not by democratic mandate but by the dubious franchise of rock concert attendances. He tells his audiences that they do not need to give money or think. They can feel better just by chanting a mantra like monks. Awareness is self-defining. It accepts no responsibility for any political outcomes. Blame is transferred to elected politicians.

Buried behind these antics are two strongly contrasting arguments. Live 8’s demand is apparently that governments should up the Sixties game and assume the mantle of global welfare. Voluntary giving to charity should become compulsory. The humanitarian urge should be nationalised. In addition, outcomes do not matter. Geldof is quoted in the International Herald Tribune as claiming that something must be done “even if it doesn’t work”. For him, doing something useless even if harmful is a moral advance on doing nothing.

On this argument it does not matter if the West merely gives money to power. Too bad if it distorts markets, inflates currencies and depletes incentives. Too bad if, as an IMF report suggested last week, aid does not lead to higher growth in most of Africa and possibly the reverse. In Ethiopia Geldof appeared to agree. Aid must somehow trickle down from power to poor. Hence the continued demand to “double aid”. It is like the Pentagon strategy for bombing Iraq. Some of it must hit a target.

The second argument responds to this implied criticism by demanding that aid be “smart”. It should be conditional on countries engaging in political and economic reform, as according to George Bush. Aid should go only to those who mean to help themselves. Africa should be a continent on workfare. There should be no subsidies to corruption. Aid is a tool of the global democratic crusade.

Thus one speaker last week demanded that debt relief — aid by another name — should depend upon monitored elections, anti-corruption courts and “green” audits. All this would need the revival of Africa’s old ruling class, the unemployed offspring of Europe’s rich. The Lugard tradition of Britain’s indirect imperialism returns as expatriate NGOs in white 4x4s.

I go along with neither argument. Yet my response is unlikely to be heard amid the din. If $500 billion has done Africa more harm than good, how can doubling it possibly do more good than harm? We know that aid induces dependency. The idea of aiding only those governments of whose policies we approve is what happens when charity is nationalised. It denies the humanitarian imperative, which by its nature is ad hoc and personal.

Helping only those that help themselves is a contradiction in terms. A child dying on television may be distressing, but children are dying “off television” the world over. Western peace of mind may be a worthy goal of policy, but it cannot justify a new age of imperialism in Africa.

... and accept this brain surgeon as your own moral guide to governmental policy:

http://images.thisislondon.co.uk/v2/galleries/showbiz/kabbalah/madonnaR_250x350.jpg

Ed
3rd July 2005, 08:45 AM
I am sure that all of the performers felt far better after it was over.

I am soooooooooo glad that the Brits took Madonna off of our hands.

Mycroft
3rd July 2005, 09:20 AM
Originally posted by Ed
I am soooooooooo glad that the Brits took Madonna off of our hands.

Well, it's not like they kept her. That would be something to be glad for.

That was an interesting editorial, American. Thank you for bringing it to our attention. One paragraph worth highlighting:

I hear Geldof screaming again, “So what would you do? Just let them ****** die?” I reply that, if I know of people dying, I will try to save them through charity. But if Geldof and his friends want to play politics, showing demagogic muscle means nothing. His revellers must join in the democratic debate and engage with a complex argument. The exploitation of “just in time” protest is no alternative to formal democracy. A Live 8 ticket is not a vote. Make poverty history is a cliché, not a programme.

I wish more activists were willing to give this kind of thought to their politics.

Orwell
3rd July 2005, 08:22 PM
Ok... Making fun of washed up multimillionaire rock stars doing something for them "little people" is like shooting fish in a barrel.

Now then, what I would really like to know is what you fine gentleman think the richer nations of the world should do to help Africans?

Ziggurat
3rd July 2005, 09:20 PM
Originally posted by Orwell
Now then, what I would really like to know is what you fine gentleman think the richer nations of the world should do to help Africans?

How about some genuine free trade agreements with African countries? Trade works much better than aid or "awareness", and has lasting and positive impact on increasing standards of living. Get France and other first-world countries to cut back on their agricultural subsidies, for example (I pick out France because they have been particularly reluctant recently despite direct pressure on the topic).

And in truly desparate cases, we should give weapons to Africans so that they can protect themselves against dictators who dream of genocide and mass murder - as in Ethiopia, Rwanda, Sudan, and probably Zimbabwe in short order. The world has proven it does not have the willpower to step in in such cases - we care, but we do not care enough. Unfortunately, I do not forsee this as changing anytime soon. But rather than do nothing, we should at least have the guts to empower those who DO have that willpower: the likely victims of such attrocities. We must be willing to arm them: we will not step in to save them, but at least they should have a chance to save themselves.

Orwell
3rd July 2005, 09:44 PM
One thing that there's no lack of in Africa (and it's probably one of the few things they have in abundance) is all kinds of conflicts fuelled by widely available small weapons.

RandFan
3rd July 2005, 11:54 PM
Originally posted by Orwell
Now then, what I would really like to know is what you fine gentleman think the richer nations of the world should do to help Africans? Sponsor a rock concert, tie dye some bell bottoms, fly flags, hold hands and sing kumbya.

KelvinG
3rd July 2005, 11:57 PM
Originally posted by Orwell
Ok... Making fun of washed up multimillionaire rock stars doing something for them "little people" is like shooting fish in a barrel.

Now then, what I would really like to know is what you fine gentleman think the richer nations of the world should do to help Africans?

Sit back, scoff, mock, criticize, but don't do sh*t.

Zep
4th July 2005, 01:03 AM
Originally posted by Orwell
Ok... Making fun of washed up multimillionaire rock stars doing something for them "little people" is like shooting fish in a barrel.

Now then, what I would really like to know is what you fine gentleman think the richer nations of the world should do to help Africans? Let's see...

The majority of the problems in Africa, so we are led to believe by those who actually know, are caused by corruption and poverty. Both lead to inordinate amounts of capital by way of freely given loans ending up in the very few concscience-free hands, to be squandered in ways far worse than any Western demagogue can appreciate. And meanwhile the people so deprived of bargaining power never get the wherewithal to be able to get a foothold in any workable economy, even if one should be stable enough to proceed. They end up living hand-to-mouth and even then not very often, and becoming oh-so-easy prey to religious and racial exploitation of the very type that put the exploiters in place in the first place - perpetuating the whole top-heavy and tottering mess.

So... What to do, what to do...

Perhaps a good start might be to eliminate some of that poverty. Not necessarily give all of them thousands of dollars each, but at least remove the requirement for them to owe that much each forever to foreign governments who don't really need it. And to seek out and remove corrupt governments by using their political will, in order to cancel those outstanding debts that will never be able to be repaid. Should be a good start on helping them stand up on their own two feet and make their own way for a change, instead of being perpetually on their knees and in poverty and debt.




Hey...just a sec... WHAT was the motto of Live8 again??

epepke
4th July 2005, 01:23 AM
Originally posted by Orwell
Now then, what I would really like to know is what you fine gentleman think the richer nations of the world should do to help Africans?

On another thread, I had the unmitigated audacity to suggest that you could do far more for Africa by using the money to import actual African musicians and paying them Union scale. Not only would it benefit the musicians directly and put more money into the economies, there is the chance that a few of them might have some worldwide hits, providing money and an incentive for a new export--music. Africa has some kick-ass music, but hardly anybody outside knows about it.

I was immediately upbraided by some right-thinking white person who smugly proclaimed that this wouldn't help vast Africa.

Given Geldof's admissions, I think that it's fair to say that the right-thinking PC white people don't give a flying leap at a rolling doughnut whether actual Africans are helped. All that matters is boogying down and feeling smug. Once the money has left, hey, to quote Tom Lehrer in "Vernher von Braun": "That's not my department."

shemp
4th July 2005, 06:39 AM
Originally posted by Orwell
One thing that there's no lack of in Africa (and it's probably one of the few things they have in abundance) is all kinds of conflicts fuelled by widely available small weapons.

Yes, this is the problem. The solution is to give them bigger weapons.

Ziggurat
4th July 2005, 07:00 AM
Originally posted by Orwell
One thing that there's no lack of in Africa (and it's probably one of the few things they have in abundance) is all kinds of conflicts fuelled by widely available small weapons.

It's not that simple. If arms were plentiful among the blacks of Darfur, the janjaweed militia would not be able to engage in their ethnic cleansing campaign with impunity. If guns were plentiful in Rwanda, the Hutu militias wouldn't have been able to wipe out most of the Tutsis with machetes without fear of retribution (and never forget that: most of those killed in Rwanda were not killed with guns, but with machettes). And Mugabe is currently making sure his opposition has no weapons: with a monopoly on guns, he's going to start doing REALLY nasty things, and the opposition is going to be powerless to stop him without guns. The problem isn't simply that guns are widely available, because they aren't, particularly among those victimized by such violence.

Orwell
4th July 2005, 08:08 AM
Zig, here's a list of wars and armed conflicts in Africa since 1945:

http://www.ppu.org.uk/war/countries/africa/africa_index.html

Note that many of these conflicts took place during the cold war. During those days, the two blocs supported different sides, and they made sure that the side they supported were well armed. For instance, in Angola, the west armed UNITA with help from South Africa, while the Soviets armed the government with military help from Cuba.

Many of the present day conflicts in Africa are "aftershocks" of this period.

RandFan
4th July 2005, 08:15 AM
Originally posted by KelvinG
Sit back, scoff, mock, criticize, but don't do sh*t. Oh lighten up, I'm mocking what I think is typical feel good do nothing sentimentality. If the concert helps in the end then I'm happy and I'll gladly admit that. The problem is that this is a complex issue and I'm really skeptical of many of the proposed solutions. In fact I think some of the proposed cures might simply exasperate the problems. I don't have an issue with raising awareness but I think we should be realistic about the likelihood of effecting any change by throwing a rock concert. Criticism should not be confused with the desire to do nothing. And BTW, I live in America where it is a tradition and a right to criticize any and everything. Sacred cows are fair game. You'll note that Bush is mocked often as are many other American and western institutions. I say hurray, it's a good thing.

Skeptic
4th July 2005, 09:37 AM
I dunno, Orwell. According to some people, modern African history is divided into three stages: "colonialism", when all the trouble of the poor, helpless Africans were caused by the colonialisation of their continent; then, "cold war", when all the trouble of the poor, helpless Africans were caused by the cold war power struggle between the US and the USSR; and now, "globalization", when all the trouble of the poor, helpless Africans are all vicims of the greedy capitalists corporations.

Strangely, however, Asia--and the pacific rim, in particular--had been subject to just as much (if not more) colonialization, cold-war politics, and globalization as Africa--yet, on the whole, they are either flourishing westernized nations (such as Taiwan and Japan) or emerging ones (such as India and, now that its communist madness period is practically over, China).

The fault is "not in the stars, but in ourselves", as Hamlet said. It is not lack of western help or western colonialization that destroyed Africa, but the barbaric behavior of the African leaders towards their own people, where stealing anything one can is the norm, and genociding all who criticize you common.

Until that is solved, it is more than likely that 90% of "Live8"'s money would disappear into corrupt officials' swiss bank accounts and the rest divested go to buy their armies weapons. That is what happened to virtually all the money the west spent on Africa before; no reason to believe that it would be different now.

Orwell
4th July 2005, 10:36 AM
Personally, I'm in favour of aid for concrete immediate problems (education, basic hygiene and disease control, some basic infrastructure, etc.), the kind of aid that is immediately useful and relatively easy to track. Doing nothing would, I think, be worse in the long run, from an humanitarian, political and security standpoint. As for the rest, I agree that debt relief is not enough (specially if it comes with conditions like totally opening recipient African countries to trade). But, regarding trade, I mostly agree with this:

Africa is asked to open its markets to the massively subsidized goods of the rich, thus destroying their own agriculture and attempts at export. “Trade is the root of the problem,” the Make Poverty History campaign has told the BBC. But trade is not mentioned.

I cannot rate corruption as Africa's second-biggest problem, lacking the space to explain the ironies, given the corruption of U.S. corporations and the amusing fact that the G8 nations have refused to sign the UN convention against corruption. They'd rather pay the bribes. And the most corrupt nations are IMF pets.

Debt is bad, but debt relief is worse (http://www.rabble.ca/columnists_full.shtml?x=40001)

I said this on another thread, but I think it applies here too, even if it's kind of stating the obvious:

Different regions, countries and cultures demand different strategies when it comes to encouraging development. What has worked in, say, Southeast Asia won't necessarily work in Africa. You have to remember that African countries, in general, have been subjected to colonialism for far longer than most countries elsewhere in the world, and that they're generally more ethnically diverse. Their borders tend to be pretty artificial, and you can have a wide variety of social and cultural practices inside one single country. Culturally and ethnically speaking, Africa is the most diverse of all continents. Even from the economic point of view, the place is quite diverse. Considering all this, opening up one country to commerce may be a mistake, while opening up another country might be an good idea. It is counter-productive, I believe, to impose a single model of economic development for all of Africa, hell, for all of the world.

All the countries that have managed to slowly increase their levels of living (China, Malaysia, Thailand, etc., even Brazil and India are improving their situation) have one thing in common: they mostly took things into their own hands, they came up with their own policies. Most of the countries that are now even worse than they were before also have something in common: they did what the richer nations, through the intermediary of the World Bank and the IMF, told them to do.