FENCES OF ENCLOSURE
by NAOMI KLEIN
Naomi Klein is an award-winning journalist
and author of the international best seller No Logo: Taking
Aim at the Brand Bullies. She writes an internationally
syndicated column for The Nation, The Guardian and
The Globe and Mail. A collection of her work, entitled
Fences and Windows: Dispatches from the Front Lines of the
Globalization Debate was published in October 2002. In
2004, she released The Take, a film about Argentina’s
occupied factories, co-produced with director Avi Lewis.
* * * * * * * * * *
A few months ago,
while riffling through my column clippings searching for a lost
statistic, I noticed a couple of recurring themes and images.
The first was the fence. The image came up again and again:
barriers separating people from previously public resources,
locking them away from much needed land and water, restricting
their ability to move across borders, to express political dissent,
to demonstrate on public streets, even keeping politicians from
enacting policies that make sense for the people who elected
them.
Some
of these fences are hard to see, but they exist all the same.
A virtual fence goes up around schools in Zambia when an education
'user fee' is introduced on the advice of the World Bank, putting
classes out of the reach of millions of people. A fence goes
up around the family farm in Canada when government policies
turn small-scale agriculture into a luxury item, unaffordable
in a landscape of tumbling commodity prices and factory farms.
There is a real if invisible fence that goes up around clean
water in Soweto when prices skyrocket owing to privatization,
and residents are forced to turn to contaminated sources. And
there is a fence that goes up around the very idea of democracy
when Argentina is told it won’t get an International Monetary
Fund loan unless it further reduces social spending, privatizes
more resources and eliminates supports to local industries,
all in the midst of an economic crisis deepened by those very
policies. These fences, of course, are as old as colonialism.
“Such usurious operations put bars around free nations,”
Eduardo Galeano wrote in Open Veins of Latin America.
He was referring to the terms of a British loan to Argentina
in 1824. Fences have always been a part of capitalism, the only
way to protect property from would-be bandits, but the double
standards propping up these fences have of late become increasingly
blatant.
Expropriation
of corporate holdings may be the greatest sin any socialist
government can commit in the eyes of the international financial
markets (just ask Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez or Cuba’s
Fidel Castro). But the asset protection guaranteed to companies
under free trade deals did not extend to the Argentine citizens
who deposited their life savings in Citibank, Scotiabank and
HSBC accounts and now find that most of their money has simply
disappeared. Neither did the market’s reverence for private
wealth embrace the U.S. employees of Enron, who found that they
had been “locked out” of their privatized retirement
portfolios, unable to sell even as Enron executives were frantically
cashing in their own stocks.
Meanwhile,
some very necessary fences are under attack: in the rush to
privatization, the barriers that once existed between many public
and private spaces -- keeping advertisements out of schools,
for instance, profit-making interests out of health care, or
news outlets from acting purely as promotional vehicles for
their owners’ other holdings -- have nearly all been levelled.
Every protected public space has been cracked open, only to
be re-enclosed by the market.
Another
public-interest barrier under serious threat is the one separating
genetically modified crops from crops that have not yet been
altered. The seed giants have done such a remarkably poor job
of preventing their tampered seeds from blowing into neighbouring
fields, taking root, and cross-pollinating, that in many parts
of the world, eating GMO-free is no longer even an option—the
entire food supply has been contaminated. The fences that protect
the public interest seem to be fast disappearing, while the
ones that restrict our liberties keep multiplying.
When
I first noticed that the image of the fence kept coming up in
discussion, debates and in my own writing, it seemed significant
to me. After all, the past decade of economic integration has
been fuelled by promises of barriers coming down, of increased
mobility and greater freedom. And yet twelve years after the
celebrated collapse of the Berlin Wall, we are surrounded by
fences yet again, cut off -- from one another, from the earth
and from our own ability to imagine that change is possible.
The economic process that goes by the benign euphemism “globalization“
now reaches into every aspect of life, transforming every activity
and natural resource into a measured and owned commodity. As
the Hong Kong–based labour researcher Gerard Greenfield
points out, the current stage of capitalism is not simply about
trade in the traditional sense of selling more products across
borders. It is also about feeding the market’s insatiable
need for growth by redefining as “products” entire
sectors that were previously considered part of “the commons”
and not for sale. The invading of the public by the private
has reached into categories such as health and education, of
course, but also ideas, genes, seeds, now purchased, patented
and fenced off, as well as traditional aboriginal remedies,
plants, water and even human stem cells. With copyright now
the U.S.’s single largest export (more than manufactured
goods or arms), international trade law must be understood not
only as taking down selective barriers to trade but more accurately
as a process that systematically puts up new barriers -- around
knowledge, technology and newly privatized resources. These
Trade Related Intellectual Property Rights are what prevent
farmers from replanting their Monsanto patented seeds and make
it illegal for poor countries to manufacture cheaper generic
drugs to get to their needy populations. Capitalism is now on
trial because on the other side of all these virtual fences
are real people, shut out of schools, hospitals, workplaces,
their own farms, homes and communities. Mass privatization and
deregulation have bred armies of locked-out people, whose services
are no longer needed, whose lifestyles are written off as 'backward,'
whose basic needs go unmet. These fences of social exclusion
can discard an entire industry, and they can also write off
an entire country, as has happened to Argentina. In the case
of Africa, essentially an entire continent can find itself exiled
to the global shadow world, off the map and off the news, appearing
only during wartime when its citizens are looked on with suspicion
as potential militia members, would-be terrorists or anti-American
fanatics.
In
fact, remarkably few of globalization’s fenced-out people
turn to violence. Most simply move: from countryside to city,
from country to country. And that’s when they come face
to face with distinctly unvirtual fences, the ones made of chain
link and razor wire, reinforced with concrete and guarded with
machine guns. Whenever I hear the phrase “free trade,”
I can’t help picturing the caged factories I visited in
the Philippines and Indonesia that are all surrounded by gates,
watchtowers and soldiers—to keep the highly subsidized
products from leaking out and the union organizers from getting
in. I think, too, about a recent trip to the South Australian
desert where I visited the infamous Woomera detention centre.
Located five hundred kilometres from the nearest city, Woomera
is a former military base that has been converted into a privatized
refugee holding pen, owned by a subsidiary of the U.S. security
firm Wackenhut. At Woomera, hundreds of Afghan and Iraqi refugees,
fleeing oppression and dictatorship in their own countries,
are so desperate for the world to see what is going on behind
the fence that they stage hunger strikes, jump off the roofs
of their barracks, drink shampoo and sew their mouths shut.
These
days, newspapers are filled with gruesome accounts of asylum
seekers attempting to make it across national borders by hiding
themselves among the products that enjoy so much more mobility
than they do. In December 2001, the bodies of eight Romanian
refugees, including two children, were discovered in a cargo
container filled with office furniture; they had asphyxiated
during the long journey at sea. The same year, the dead bodies
of two more refugees were discovered in Eau Claire, Wisconsin,
in a shipment of bathroom fixtures. The year before, fifty-four
Chinese refugees from Fujian province suffocated in the back
of a delivery truck in Dover, England. It simply isn’t
possible to lock away this much of our collective wealth without
an accompanying strategy to control popular unrest and mobility.
Security firms do their biggest business in the cities where
the gap between rich and poor is greatest -- Johannesburg, São
Paulo, New Delhi -- selling iron gates, armoured cars, elaborate
alarm systems and renting out armies of private guards. Brazilians,
for instance, spend US$4.5 billion a year on private security,
and the country’s 400,000 armed rent-a-cops outnumber
actual police officers by almost four to one. In deeply divided
South Africa, annual spending on private security has reached
US$1.6 billion, more than three times what the government spends
each year on affordable housing. It now seems that these gated
compounds protecting the haves from the have-nots are microcosms
of what is fast becoming a global security state -- not a global
village intent on lowering walls and barriers, as we were promised,
but a network of fortresses connected by highly militarized
trade corridors.
If
this picture seems extreme, it may only be because most of us
in the West rarely see the fences and the artillery. The gated
factories and refugee detention centres remain tucked away in
remote places, less able to pose a direct challenge to the seductive
rhetoric of the borderless world. But over the past few years,
some fences have intruded into full view -- often, fittingly,
during the summits where this brutal model of globalization
is advanced. It is now taken for granted that if world leaders
want to get together to discuss a new trade deal, they will
need to build a modern-day fortress to protect themselves from
public rage, complete with armoured tanks, tear gas, water cannons
and attack dogs. When Quebec City hosted the Summit of the Americas
in April 2001, the Canadian government took the unprecedented
step of building a cage around, not just the conference centre,
but the downtown core, forcing residents to show official documentation
to get to their homes and workplaces. Another popular strategy
is to hold the summits in inaccessible locations: the 2002 G8
meeting was held deep in the Canadian Rocky Mountains, and the
2001 WTO meeting took place in the repressive Gulf State of
Qatar, where the emir bans political protests. The 'war on terrorism'
has become yet another fence to hide behind, used by summit
organizers to explain why public shows of dissent just won’t
be possible this time around or, worse, to draw threatening
parallels between legitimate protesters and terrorists bent
on destruction. The first time I participated in one of these
counter-summits, I remember having the distinct feeling that
some sort of political portal was opening up -- a gateway, a
window, “a crack in history,” to use Subcomandante
Marcos’s beautiful phrase. This opening had little to
do with the broken window at the local McDonald’s, the
image so favoured by television cameras; it was something else:
a sense of possibility, a blast of fresh air, oxygen rushing
to the brain. These protests -- which are actually week-long
marathons of intense education on global politics, late-night
strategy sessions in six-way simultaneous translation, festivals
of music and street theatre -- are like stepping into a parallel
universe. Overnight, the site is transformed into a kind of
alternative global city where urgency replaces resignation,
corporate logos need armed guards, people usurp cars, art is
everywhere, strangers talk to each other, and the prospect of
a radical change in political course does not seem like an odd
and anachronistic idea but the most logical thought in the world.
Even
the heavy-handed security measures have been co-opted by activists
into part of the message: the fences that surround the summits
become metaphors for an economic model that exiles billions
to poverty and exclusion. Confrontations are staged at the fence—but
not only the ones involving sticks and bricks: tear-gas canisters
have been flicked back with hockey sticks, water cannons have
been irreverently challenged with toy water pistols and buzzing
helicopters mocked with swarms of paper airplanes. During the
Summit of the Americas in Quebec City, a group of activists
built a medieval-style wooden catapult, wheeled it up to the
three-metre-high fence that enclosed the downtown and lofted
teddy bears over the top. In Prague, during a meeting of the
World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, the Italian
direct-action group Tute Bianche decided not to confront the
black-clad riot police dressed in similarly threatening ski
masks and bandanas; instead, they marched to the police line
in white jumpsuits stuffed with rubber tires and Styrofoam padding.
In a standoff between Darth Vader and an army of Michelin Men,
the police couldn’t win. Meanwhile, in another part of
the city, the steep hillside leading up to the conference centre
was scaled by a band of 'pink fairies' dressed in burlesque
wigs, silver-and-pink evening wear and platform shoes. These
activists are quite serious in their desire to disrupt the current
economic order, but their tactics reflect a dogged refusal to
engage in classic power struggles: their goal is not to take
power for themselves but to challenge power centralization on
principle. Maybe it’s students kicking ads out of their
classrooms, or swapping music on-line, or setting up independent
media centres with free software. Maybe it’s Thai peasants
planting organic vegetables on over-irrigated golf courses,
or landless farmers in Brazil cutting down fences around unused
lands and turning them into farming co-operatives. Maybe it’s
Bolivian workers reversing the privatization of their water
supply, or South African township residents reconnecting their
neighbours’ electricity under the slogan Power to the
People. And once reclaimed, these spaces are also being remade.
In neighbourhood assemblies, at city councils, in independent
media centres, in community-run forests and farms, a new culture
of vibrant direct democracy is emerging, one that is fuelled
and strengthened by direct participation, not dampened and discouraged
by passive spectatorship.
Despite
all the attempts at privatization, it turns out that there are
some things that don’t want to be owned. Music, water,
seeds, electricity, ideas -- they keep bursting out of the confines
erected around them. They have a natural resistance to enclosure,
a tendency to escape, to cross-pollinate, to flow through fences,
and flee out open windows.
As
I write this, it’s not clear what will emerge from these
liberated spaces, or if what emerges will be hardy enough to
withstand the mounting attacks from the police and military,
as the line between terrorist and activist is deliberately blurred.
The question of what comes next preoccupies me, as it does everyone
else who has been part of building this international movement.
The question punctuates a very old and recurring story, the
one about people pushing up against the barriers that try to
contain them, opening up windows, breathing deeply, tasting
freedom.
For Spanish version, click
HERE.