The B Vocabulary: The Western Left and Its
Sterile Field of Ideas
By Ramzy Baroud
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, June
29, 2015
Over the year, I realized that the term ‘left’ is not exclusive
to a political ideology, but a mode of thinking championed mostly by
self-tailored ‘leftist’ western intellectuals. I grew to dislike it with
intensity.
But that has not always been the case.
My
father was a communist, or so he called himself. He read the translated
work of great communist and socialist thinkers, and passed on to me his
own reading of what a socialist utopia could possibly be like. Living in
a squalid refugee camp in Gaza, locked in by a heavily militarized sea
to the west, and various Israeli ‘death zones’ everywhere else, a
proletarian utopia was a great idea, where the peasants and the workers
ruled unhindered.
Of course, there was a reason that made the
fantasy particularly meaningful. Before the establishment of Israel on
the ruins of historic Palestine, most Palestinians, who constituted the
majority of the refugees after the war of 1948, were fellahin – or
peasants. Following their forced expulsion into refugee camps, lacking
land to cultivate, they became cheap laborers, especially after the war
of 1967, where all of Palestine was colonized by Israel. No collective
anywhere in the Middle East experienced such historical tension in a
relatively short period of time as did the Palestinians.
My
family, like numerous others, became peasants-turned-workers; in fact
that marking became part of the refugees collective identity.
While the political manifestation of socialism failed in Palestine,
socialist thinking prevailed: anti-elitist and revolutionary to the
core. Even those who subscribe to other ideologies, including Islamic
thinking, have been influenced one way or another by early Palestinian
socialists.
But Palestinian revolutionary socialism, at its peak
in the 1960s and 70s, was rather different from the ‘left’ I experienced
living in the West. The latter seemed more detached, less risk-taking,
driven by groupthink and lacking initiative. It was also patronizing.
Even in my early twenties, I still couldn’t comprehend how a
group of self-proclaimed ‘leftist’, who largely existed on the margins
of mainstream politics had the audacity to cast judgement on
Palestinians for resorting to armed struggle to fend off a very vile and
violent Israeli occupation, and busied themselves debating what
constituted ‘humanitarian intervention’.
While socialist
movements in the south, from Asia, to Africa, to the Middle East to
South America took real risks to bring about social equality and
political paradigm shifts, many in the West offered ‘solidarity’, yet
largely reserved for themselves almost a total hegemony over the
socialist political discourse.
They dominated and perfected the
language, and dictated the platforms from which ideas - loaded with the
right terminology, but vacant of any practical meaning and removed from
real-life situations - are imparted.
Like the rest, I parroted
the same language, of colonialism and imperialism, hegemony and class
struggle, skipping from South America, to Angola and South Africa, to
Indochina.
But many gaps in the perfectly summed-up
understanding of the world befuddled me.
Firstly, I never
understood why those who speak on behalf of the global ‘left’ are so far
removed from the actual battlefield and mostly engaged in the
‘battlefield of ideas’.
Secondly, I found it strange that while
leftists are meant to be critical thinkers, many of those who spoke as
leftist gurus, tended to parrot recycled thoughts, which they embraced
as if religious doctrines. ‘Where is the Palestinian Gandhi?’ I was
asked by numerous leftists as if the inane question, which reflects more
ignorance than inquisitiveness, is a talking point, handed down and
repeated without thinking.
Thirdly, I found many western
leftists largely oblivious to international conflicts that don’t involve
directly or otherwise western hegemons. For example, there are many
conflicts that are brewing in Africa right now, from Congo, to Burundi,
to the Central African Republic to Sudan and elsewhere. Almost none of
them ever register on the leftist radar as long as there is no palpable
link to western governments or corporations. Only then, the lives of the
Congolese, for example, would register; only then would Sudanese become
‘comrades’ and selected few of them would be celebrated as heroes, while
others are cast aside as villains.
How long did the Syria
conflict carry on before the western ‘left’ began to formulate a stance?
Months. The conflict was just too involved, and initially removed from
western engrossment that only few knew what to think. Only when western
governments began pondering war, urged on by their regional allies, did
the left began to formulate a position around the same old discourse.
While the West and their allies had their own sinister reasons to get
involved in Syria, the war in Syria, as the war in Libya before it, was
not as simple as picking and choosing the good guys versus the bad guys.
While vehemently rejecting western military crusades that have wreaked
havoc is an admirable act, turning local dictators into modern-day Che
Guevaras reflects recklessness, not camaraderie.
Fourthly, if conflicts throughout the so-called Third World are
determined largely, if not entirely by western hegemons, then where is
the element of agency in the local actors in these conflicts?
Are local populations so submissive and docile that they are hardly
considered a factor in determining the outcomes of any conflict? What
about regional players? How about the historical context of national and
regional conflicts and struggles? Do ordinary people, when they behave
as a collective, matter at all?
This belittling view of any
other actor aside from western governments, although sold as if global
solidarity, carries a degree of racism, where only the ‘white man’
determines the flow of history and outcomes of conflicts. Everyone else
is either a helpless bystander or a ‘client regime’ that receive a ‘cut’
from the colonial spoils once the bad deed is done.
Which
brings me to my final point: The left’s insistence on the ‘client
regime’ theory is beyond limiting, yet, many find it impossible to
challenge. When some rightfully noted that Israel had much greater sway
over American politics than the traditional ‘client regime’ theory
suggested, many leftist intellectuals threw a tantrum. For them,
accepting that there might be a need to examine fixed ideas on how power
relations play out, meant that the entire discourse is in danger of
collapse, from Cuba, to Angola, to Indochina.
In 1984, George
Orwell wrote of the ‘B vocabulary’, which “consisted of words which had
been deliberately constructed for political purposes: words, that is to
say, which were intended to impose a desirable mental attitude upon the
person using them.”
While conflicts brew throughout the globe,
demanding critical thinking, mobilization and action, many in the
standardized western left are actively engaging in branding others who
dare disagree with them (thoughtcrime). They resort to the Orwellian
‘newspeak’ and overused dogmas that seem to give them more comfort than
true understanding of the world at large, a world that exists beyond the
West and its ‘battlefield of ideas’.
- Dr. Ramzy Baroud has been
writing about the Middle East for over 20 years. He is an
internationally-syndicated columnist, a media consultant, an author of
several books and the founder of PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book
is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story (Pluto Press,
London). His website is:
ramzybaroud.net.
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