For nearly two years now we have been waiting for that moment when the dam bursts and the true horrific reality of the Gaza Holocaust comes crashing through into the mainstream. Yet every time an atrocity occurs that should fully open everyone’s eyes to the unfolding Holocaust, it becomes obfuscated. Our news media can be relied on to provide cover for Israel because they are deeply compromised at the highest levels. However there are signs that the system of Israel apologetics is fragile. Zionist ideology has become rigid and cracks are showing.
Until now reality has been fighting an uphill battle against a very expensive campaign of propaganda using all of the sophistication and complexity of modern communications. Much of this seems to have been aimed at blunting and confusing opposition rather than winning converts to the cause of genocide and the hatred of Palestinians. By nature this creates a building tension, a collective cognitive dissonance between the horrors we see and the bland mumbling concerns expressed by our politicians and pundits. The more expert they are in muting the natural alarm and outrage, the more pressure mounts.
I do not want to understate the capacity in the current media ecology for creating complacency and confusion, but the great weakness of pro-genocide voices is that they cannot take any criticism whatsoever. When UEFA put out a banner reading “Stop Killing Children – Stop Killing Civilians” they were accused of “blood libel” by a wide range of Zionists. The highly respected journalist Stephen Pollard posted of the sign “They might as well have gone the whole way and written ‘Fuck you, Jews’”. This sort of response may consolidate the siege mentality of their base, but it is not going to reflect well on them around the water cooler or in the pub. Most people tend to lack the nuanced understanding of antisemitic tropes that this hasbara effort relies on. In their vulgar ignorance they are liable to think that if a someone feels personally attacked by a sign saying “stop killing children”, they might have something to hide.
This is coming at a time when liberal Zionists are under pressure to be more critical of what is happening. Simply saying that you don’t like “Netanyahu and the current right-wing government of Israel” à la Bernie Sanders is not going to cut much ice. This situation creates the potential for an explosive end to pro-genocide apologism. For example the amoeboid creature that for some inexplicable reason is currently the Prime Minister of Aotearoa said that things were bad and that Netanyahu has “lost the plot”. This caused considerable brouhaha, yet in reality he was adhering strictly to the liberal Zionist party line that this is all a Netanyahu problem of allowing Israel’s perfectly reasonable need to massacre at least some Palestinians after October 7 to go too far.
The amoeba in question was guilty only of using undiplomatic language to say exactly the thing that the US wants its pets to say, yet Israel’s Deputy Foreign Minister responded angrily by suggesting that the greatest threat faced by Aotearoa is a possum whereas Israel has to deal with a “jihadi death cult”. I personally would like for her to come to Christchurch and tell that to the survivors of the massacre committed by a fanatical murderous racist Islamophobe just like her. I would like her to explain how she justifies labelling her enemies a “death cult” when the government she is part of has killed at least 500 Palestinian children for every Israeli child killed on October 7.
Racist double-standards aside, the reaction to the Prime Minister’s comment shows that some anti-Palestinian pro-genocide people cannot tolerate any deviation from a very narrow script. They are genuinely angry at the controlled opposition of Western leaders whose job is to gaslight people with their wildly understated reactions and tepid criticisms. This has been a great strength in the past with liberal Zionists able to burnish their credibility with the condemnations from zealots, but reality is starting to intrude.
The current fashionable liberal Zionist exit strategy from their past embrace of genocide is to become suddenly concerned over starving children and to reiterate that they have always been for a two-state solution, but is that a defensible position?
The best way I can illustrate the problem facing Zionists is with a hypothetical example featuring a true liberal’s liberal. Pete Buttigieg (a man, incidentally, who once took great personal umbrage at a random sign saying “don’t be a shitlib”) was interviewed on Pod Save America. Matt Lieb of the Bad Hasbara podcast summarised his inauthentic rodent vibes on this occasion by dubbing him “Rat-GPT”, which seems reasonable.
On Pod Save America Buttigieg, the former Mayor of South Bend (and first openly gay rodent to be US Transport Secretary) said that the US shouldn’t support things that are “unconscionable” and that “…[We are] Israel’s strongest ally and friend. You put your arm around your friend when there’s something like this going on and talk about what we’re prepared to do together.” The host’s reaction to this was not the nausea and rage that it should have provoked. He was as calm as if they were talking about a neighbour who was over-watering the houseplants but prickly about accepting advice. I do not know this Pod Save America guy from any other context, but I don’t need to because on the screen I can see two disgusting racists who would never use these words or maintain this casual chatting demeanour if the same atrocities happening to a less demonised group.
Imagine, though, if Buttigieg had been pressed on the details of what is “unconscionable”.
We don’t live in a world where anyone that Buttigieg would agree to talk to would question why the starving of children is somehow worse than shooting them, burning them, and burying them alive. Nor would we expect any interviewer to contextualise the current starving children (that so troubles the liberal conscience) with the mountains and mountains of evidence that Israelis have targetted and killed children in systematic ways for many years. We might, however, see someone asking for specifics about what is “unconscionable”, and for the liberal Zionist there is no right answer for that.
Clearly if you say that Israel is deliberately starving children you will be attacked violently for “blood libel”. In fact, if you don’t endorse the claim that starvation is all the fault of the Khamas jihadi death cult, you are clearly a self-hating Zionist, a Zionist-in-name-only, and an as-a-Zionist. A single sound-bite to the effect that Israel means to do all the terrible things it does is sufficient to send the Israel lobby money stampeding away from you and into the arms of the ratfuckers (which admittedly would be a fitting and amusing end for Buttigieg’s political career).
Liberal Zionists are trying to walk an impossible line. They want to condemn Israel in the abstract only, while avoiding any mention of what they are condemning so as not to bring down wrath of AIPAC-on-high that will smite them with ineluctable finality and having smit move on. Whether it is from a media interrogation or from public pressure some of them will be forced into breaking with the genocidal project, They will be rejected from the Israel supporters club because if you can’t handle the Jewish state at their mass-slaughtering holocaust worst, you don’t deserve them at their Western liberal yoga-loving gay-person-accepting settler-colonial apartheid slow-genocide creeping annexation best.
Wembley Stadium is booked in September for Brian Eno’s “Together for Palestine” one night and a Kneecap gig the next night. This is a sure sign that opposing genocide is becoming pretty mainstream all of a sudden. In these circumstances we can truly hope that people like Rat-GPT will be forced to flee the sinking ship of the Jewish-supremacist state.
In the meantime there is a lesson for humble believers in the Palestinian cause (even those not able to get Pete Buttigieg to agree to come on their podcast) because there are implications for the liberal Zionists; the philo-semitic apologists; the Israel exceptionalists; the casual racists; and the Islamophobes in our day-to-day lives. If you find someone wavering in their commitment to “Israel’s right to defend itself from Khamas” encourage them to express what it is that they are concerned about in Israel’s behaviour. The have lived in an environment where, despite the real world asymmetry, it is the crimes of Palestinians that have been emphasised and given the weight of emotion and essential meaning. Israel for them, is only reacting. Once they start to see Israel go beyond any justification, even in the fantasy they have been immersed in, then they may start to think of Palestinian resistance as the justified response. The more they start to think about these things the sooner they will realise that this is not an occasion for mild or partial criticisms. Some might even admit that they were wrong and it wasn’t all legitimate self-defence until some arbitrary time when they personally deigned to stop making excuses for the death and suffering in Gaza. Strnger things have happened.
Remember that things that can’t go on forever don’t. Palestine will be free.
No other word than Holocaust suits what is occurring now in Gaza. Perhaps the future will provide a unique term to suit the unique horror, but for now we we need to know this as a Holocaust with a capital H.
The world has never witnessed atrocities in the way that they have witnessed this the excruciation of the people of Gaza. The Gaza Holocaust stands out as defining historical event of our time.
We have seen bags filled with pieces of children. We have witnessed people burned alive. We have seen massacres with the eagle’s perspective and deaths with wrenching intimacy. We have forgotten things that would once have been unforgettable. We have seen a country driven mad by racist hate: posting war crimes for likes, destroying food meant for the starving, and rioting for the right to torture and rape prisoners.
They cannot erase this experience. This will define us in the same way that the antiwar activists of the 60s and 70s saw that struggle as the central uniting aspect of their political and civic identity. Opposing the War in Viet Nam did not lessen other struggles, it created the greatest sinews of solidarity. It created clarity. It created a culture.
The establishment elite and the fascist plutocrats believe that we will forget. They are drunk on the power that they have used to control the mass mind of the West. They think we are a collection of easily distracted children who are by definition far less intelligent and knowledgeable than they are. They rely on public amnesia.
We need to be careful that we don’t merely assume that the gravity of what is occurring (and the fact that it is all on record in excruciating detail) will set the tone of the historical record. The institutions of Western political culture work by creating areas of doubt and confusion in the face of the obvious and then exploit those areas of uncertainty as wedges to open the path to a long slow gaslighting that isolates the educated activist core from the public. So, for example, the public might retain a belief that the invasion and occupation of Iraq was wrong but come to misunderstand it as a series of errors, while the establishment figures who acted to facilitate that crime against the clear opposition of the majority reinvent themselves as the leading voices of caution.
The 2007 documentary Taxi to the Dark Side was a critically lauded. It exposed the realities of the US torture and rendition programme. It grossed about $300,000. The 2012 pro-torture propaganda film Zero Dark Thirty presented a ridiculous sickening fantasy of the US torture programme, balanced finely in such a way that misinformed people might see it agnostic and even potentially critical of the US use of torture. It grossed about $130,000,000. This followed director Katherine Bigelow’s and screenwriter Mark Boal’s prior collaboration, the 2008 “antiwar” Iraq film The Hurt Locker which received near universal critical acclaim and grossed about $50,000,000. Boal and Bigelow followed an established tradition of propaganda which suggests that the real victims of US aggression are US military personnel who, by being immersed in the barbarism that is natural to a heart of darkness like Iraq, are forced into being barbarians themselves. The film depicts the protagonist being forced to kill a child and centres his victimhood in this act, as if guided by Golda Meir’s words: “We can forgive the Arabs for killing our children. We cannot forgive them for forcing us to kill their children. We will only have peace with the Arabs when they love their children more than they hate us.”
The US can no longer do effective propaganda that portrays noble heroes fighting in unambiguous bad guys, so they present anti-heroes in gritty grey morally ambiguous struggles against unambiguous Bad Guys. That is all they need, and public opinion is informed by mainstream news and entertainment that reinforces this narrative. The path forward for Western leaders is clear. For the hardcore racists they will continue to play on the sense that Palestinians are innately barbaric, for the Western mainstream (also racist, but more discreet) they will continue the demonisation of Hamas. They will not admit that this is a genocide carried out successfully with direct participation by the US and UK and widespread and crucial support from most Western countries. They will instead present a righteous war against evil Hamas gone off the rails because of right-wing fanatics in the Israeli government. It is the propaganda of the moral grey of realpolitik in the face of the undeniable unambiguous Bad Guys called Hamas. Fortunately they do not seem to understand how they have gotten away with this in the past, and they cannot succeed to the same extent now.
Lawyer Tayeb Ali said the following in an interview:
I asked this [US official] how can you possibly back Israel in its attack on Palestinians in this way? And the answer was mind-blowing. “We did it before. We did it in Iraq and you all forgot about it, and you’ll forget about this too.” That was the answer from the lips of an American diplomat to me about this question.
The US committed genocide in Iraq. Over a million people died during the “occupation” and “insurgency” and the majority of them died from traumatic injury at the hands of the US-led coalition. Like Gaza today there were cruel attacks on all aspects of life, calculated to leave lasting agony and devastation long after the perpetrators withdrew. It was a nightmare. The Iraqis tried their best to reach the world, but the world was served a twisted version in which the true source of fear and violence was the civil war – a story that still dominates. On a gut level the Western public cannot really understand that people who look and sound like them are capable of the worst atrocities. The sense of shared identity is weaponised by propagandists such that it is the barbaric other who must be the Bad Guy on an emotional level, The victims were made the perpetrators of their own genocide.
People who tried to document what was going on were systematically killed by US forces. Rules of engagement were promulgated that designated people with cameras as “insurgents”.
More journalists were killed in Iraq than have been killed in Gaza.
It was a lonely time for activists who could oppose the occupation, but not the apologism and misdirection. Plenty of information was available but it was kept from the mainstream and politicians, media and academics could all plausibly avoid the most inconvenient facts. Using the term “genocide”, a valid framing which has the potential to abolish the obfuscations of the nature of the violence, was academic suicide.
This time is different.
The loneliness of knowing is far less acute. As with Iraq, the job of the mainstream media is not to convince people that nothing bad is happening, but that it is complicated and largely unavoidable. They do everything they can to normalise the events, such that anyone who gets emotional or accuses the perpetrators of intentionality is seen as a fanatic. Now, though, the ordinary people you meet may know very little, but they know that something notable is happening. This time, many are willing to listen.
In November of 2023 I wrote a piece entitled “The Gaza Genocide: “Genocide” is the Necessary Word”. I was very clear in that article that the assault on Gaza was not a discrete case of genocide that only began on October 8 2023, but rather that it was part of an ongoing Palestinian Genocide. At the time it was still common to treat the word “genocide” as a restricted commodity that only the anointed experts could bestow in select instances of special gravity. My point was that if we are to understand the nature of Israel’s violence in Gaza then we must understand that it is genocide. This isn’t a war against Hamas in which they have merely by accident systematically destroyed all of the universities and municipal buildings. The target of the violence is the Palestinian people of Gaza as such.
In the last week Israel has unleashed a particularly deadly wave of killing and destruction in Jabalia. They have dropped leaflets telling people to leave the area (after killing hundreds). Can any sane person say that these strikes are because they have coincidentally found a series of legitimate military targets in Jabalia at the exact time that the want to drive the population from the area? Of course not. The Israelis might rationalise this as being a necessary step in their fight to destroy Hamas, but that is beside the point. They may claim that their motive is to destroy Hamas, but their chosen means are genocidal. If their manner of waging “war” against Hamas is by attacking civilians then their intent is genocidal and their claims relating to motive are completely irrelevant.
Israel’s claims about human shields and Hamas tunnels have become so rote that they don’t even attempt to make themselves believable any more. After multiple deadly airstrikes on the European Hospital in Khan Younis last week they released the usual boilerplate propaganda wherein they had overlay red shading on an aerial photo as if this somehow proves the existence of tunnels. To be fair, the US has used this trick hundreds of times since 1990 to show everything from mobile WMD plants, to concentration camps, to exotic execution grounds. The Western media always lap it up as if they had been vouchsafed revelations from on high. In this instance, though, the Israeli hasbarists had become so lazy and slapdash that they did not even draw their little tunnel overlays on the right building. The process by now has become so routine that I doubt any of the faithful will be moved to question the validity of their beliefs. What was once sold as crucial sophisticated and exclusive “intelligence” is revealed as being just some guy using Google Photos, but by now this is no longer an exercise in persuasion. Israel’s hasbara does not aim to change minds, it aims to give people pretexts for not changing their minds (or not changing their position).
The commentary in our media is monopolised by an obscurantist priesthood of a Whiggish religion that mystifies war and genocide in equal measure. When a Western power commits genocide it is not really genocide, it is a series of missteps and miscalculations in their war against terror or their counterinsurgency. When an enemy of the West commits genocide it is not strategic, it is an expression of demonic savagery and a personal hatred. The discourse is just shit piled on shit, and I wish with all my heart that I could say that this does not apply to anti-Zionist pundits, but they are just as bad. They simply slot Netanyahu into the demon slot.
Genocide is not a thoughtless exercise of hatred, it is a strategy. Almost everything that Israel has done in its “war” against armed militants in Gaza can only be understood as genocide carried out with obvious intent. The actual counter-insurgency has been a minor note in the orchestration of murder, maiming and destruction. Why, for example, do they keep shooting kids? In Viet Nam all of the GI’s had their heads filled with lurid tales of children throwing grenades (always second- or third-hand testimony as far as I know). In 2000 the propaganda film Rules of Engagement based its entire final act pro-massacre plot-twist on a vicious Yemeni six year-old with a revolver. These are mere pretexts, of course, but where is there even a pretext in shooting kids with a drone? Are we supposed to believe that an Israeli operator is suddenly spooked and fearful that a four-year old is a threat to their quadcopter? Nor is this violence some sort of uncontrolled racist rampage. Israel is shooting, dismembering, incinerating and starving civilians with intent and at a controlled pace.
Israel’s genocidal purpose is pretty clear. This is a country that refuses to say where its borders are, is engaged in a massive decades-long settlement programme in the occupied West Bank and Jerusalem, and in which they talk of the “demographic problem” posed by Palestinians continuing to live in Palestine. If anyone needs a picture drawn, they have already drawn it, then added more pictures with helpful captions which then were collated into a graphic novel, adapted into an animated feature, then staged as a fucking Broadway musical. No one since 1945 has been so explicit about their underlying genocidal intent which has hidden in plain sight because so many Westerners harbour weird Islamophobic and racist attitudes about the victims.
“Genocide” is therefore the necessary word to understand what Israel is doing. Used correctly it strips the nonsense away. It shows the common purpose between what is happening in Gaza and what is happening in the West Bank. Otherwise how can we explain the accelerating violence destruction and ethnic cleansing happening in all parts of the occupied territories. 40,000 have been forced to flee their homes in the north of the West Bank in recent times. Are there Hamas tunnels there too? Israel always has its pretexts but no analysis in good faith can ignore the clear co-ordination and the professed intent to dispossess Palestinians and inscribe “national pattern” of the Jewish state on the land that is cleansed of Palestinians. It is just a shame that good faith is in such short supply when it comes to talking about Israel.
Genocide is not a word that denotes a given level of gravity. Genocide is always morally indefensible, but there is no threshold to be guarded against those who would overuse the term and debase the coinage. Something is either genocide or it is not genocide. “Holocaust”, on the other hand, is meant to denote a subjective judgement. That does not mean that we should tolerate the horrified pearl-clutching of the self-appointed word police who are full of wailing passion over the some victims of past horrors, but only those whose remembrance happens to promote their current politics.
In 2012 Māori scholar Keri Opai opined that most Pākehā did not understand the extent of suffering and violence inflicted on Māori and that it was “awful stuff that really does break down to a holocaust”. The screams of outrage reached right around the planet to the pages of the UK’s Daily Mail. Ironically the gammon of that right-wing organ decided it wasn’t kosher to profane the memory of those killed in The Holocaust. Yet the word holocaust has never been exclusively about Nazi genocide, and certainly not specifically about the Shoah or Judeocide.
In reality the word “holocaust” has long been used to refer to many events of death, destruction, or conflagration. Writing in the Journal of Genocide Studies in 2000 Jon Petrie gives pre-Nazi instances of the use and definition of the word:
The holocaust of war, the terrors of the Ku-Klux Klan, the lies of carpet-baggers … left the bewildered serf with no new watchword beyond the old cry for freedom. (W. E. B. Du Bois, 1903)
It was after we started with Gatsby toward the house that the gardener saw Wilson’s body a little way off in the grass, and the holocaust was complete. (F. Scott Fitzgerald, 1925)
Holocaust, strictly a sacrifice wholly destroyed by fire … The term is now often applied to a catastrophe on a large scale, whether by fire or not, or to a massacre or slaughter (Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th edn, 1910/11)
Petrie adds:
…[T]he implicit denial within the Holocaust Studies community that “holocaust” had a significant secular history prior to its employment as a referent to the Nazi Judeocide helps to support the idea that “h/Holocaust” can only be legitimately applied to the Nazi killings which, in turn, supports the pernicious ahistorical idea that since other massacres require a different vocabulary, other massacres are incomparable to the Judeocide…. [S]ubtly supporting a pernicious intellectual climate in which a well-regarded Holocaust historian can wonder if “the Holocaust … [is] an event whose mysteries were … meant to be understood.”
To put it another way the term “holocaust” is policed by people who want to mystify and confuse historical matters. The outrage of holocaust exceptionalists is based in the same studied ignorance and cry-bullying sentimentality that is used by fascists, racists, misogynists, nativists, transphobes, homophobes and authoritarians.
As things stand it makes sense to talk of the Gaza Holocaust. It is the term we have that most suits this type of historical event. Time will probably reveal a real term – a word, presumably in Arabic, that resonates with survivors as they come to terms with the as yet unthinkable meaning of the time they are living through.
The singular nature of these events cannot be denied. In terms of relentless and unremitting peril and privation I can only think to compare the Gaza Holocaust with the Siege of Leningrad. By design what is happening in Gaza is a trauma that will live for generations.
Trauma is often buried. Sometimes it is literally buried in mass graves like those of Guatemala or Franco’s Spain. In South Korea there is a word especially to denote the fearful shameful silence of not being able to talk about what was suffered at the hands of the dictatorship. We are used to giving full voice to outrage and grief over the atrocities of the enemies of the West. We weep over the dead of Rwanda, rage over the crimes of Bosnian Serbs, and are struck silent with queasy horror when we confronted with the intimate brutalities of Tuol Sleng. With the partial exception of Viet Nam, we are not used to seeing ourselves in the perpetrators boots.
We have never really looked in the mirror of our victims’ eyes. At a very deep level of racism – a profound Western chauvinism that even transcends issues of skin colour – people are genuinely incapable of sensing the suffering inflicted by the West. They are so invested in the underlying benevolence of Western intentions that they will not and cannot imagine the agonies of those on the receiving end of Western violence. Our victims do not suffer, they are mere lights that blink out in the passive voice. Whether the killing was necessary or yet another tragic failed attempt to do good, we need not even contemplate their fear, their lonely death agonies, or the grief of those left behind. We need not contemplate these things because they are unintended. Unlike our demonic enemies we bear no ill will to those who become collateral damage. This is a preconception so strong that no evidence of atrocities can overcome it.
As the title of Omar al Akkad’s book on Gaza tells us, One Day Everyone will Always Have Been Against This. He did not mean that as a positive optimistic statement. Western leaders are already positioning themselves to twist reality to the point where they are on the right side of history. Emmanuel Macron has been using strong words for months, clearly trying to milk as much as possible from rhetoric while doing as little as possible in real terms. UK’s Labour Party has now joined him. Keir Starmer and David Lammy have used words like “unacceptable” and “monstrous”. They have cancelled trade deal negotiations. This might seem to be substantive, but it really isn’t. The UK has sent over 500 surveillance flights to Gaza during this Holocaust to support Israel. On paper the UK imposed a partial ban on arms exports to Israel, but in reality exports have “skyrocketed”. The UK’s military base in Cyprus is available for the US to use and almost certainly is a launchpad for special operations exercises. In June of 2024 US special forces were involved in the rescue of 4 hostages that left over 200 Palestinians dead. One witness said: “I saw dead children and body parts strewn all over… I saw an elderly man killed on an animal-drawn cart… It was hell.”
The UK is a culpable perpetrator in the Gaza Holocaust. His Majesty’s Government is guilty of the crime of genocide. After 20 months of slaughter it should be seen as a joke that they would now use strong language. It is a certain sign of bad faith and duplicity, yet the strength of human suffering in Gaza is so strong that people are pulled into a sense of relief, a false belief in change that seems natural when people use terms like “monstrous”. Things are changing, of course. There was always going to be a time when the genocide in Gaza would reach a point of such obvious obscenity that even Keir Starmer would need to distance himself. Once that point comes it makes sense to use your newfound humane concern both to gain popularity and to distance yourself from the position you have taken and held previously.
UK Labour’s manoeuvring is painfully obvious if you look for it. They clearly want to separate the legitimate “war” against Hamas from the excesses of Israel’s execution of it’s right to self-defence. (In reality this is not a war and Israel has no right to exercise self-defence until it ends its occupation of Palestinian territory). The playbook is once again to allow Western actions to be seen as questionable but to reinforce the idea that they are reacting to the Bad Guys, rather than the reality of being the aggressors, the occupiers, and the perpetrators of genocide. Even Piers Morgan is ostentatiously changing his tune, but only by rearranging his notes. He is now “forced” to admit there is a genocide, but with the assistance of an unctuously collegial Mehdi Hasan, he effortless reinvents his bullying support for genocide into a mere misreading of the situation. (You can find the video online of you want, but I will not link here because, unlike Hasan et al., I refuse to do anything to provide views to that cunt’s channel.)
Once the immediate violence in Gaza comes to an end there will be the usual pressure to minimise and bring into question the amount of suffering and death caused. A lot of emphasis will be placed on any violence or strife between Palestinians. There will be hand-wringing about not foreseeing things and many BBC-toned uses of “journalistic” absolutes such as “nobody could have foreseen…” an eventuality or “nobody can doubt…” a well-meaning intent.
Every Western country will be following the same basic procedure. They are all guilty. Almost every Western leader has provided significant aid to a genocide, but they will all claim to have always been against it.
There are two ways in which Western self-exculpation and self-adulation will fall apart, though one is far from certain. The first (and uncertain) way is that the demonisation of Hamas is completely one-dimensional and therefore may break. It derives its strength from its complete lack of intelligence or intelligibility. It works by forcing people to submit saying Hamas are terrorists and condemning October 7. This sets up the framework of a just war that has been derailed by a few bad Israelis. The fragility in this is that there is nothing to back this argument – if you can weather the outrage that questioning the assumption prompts. If someone can cut through the berating and point out that Palestinian armed factions, including Hamas’s Al Qassam Brigades, have a right to use armed resistance and no one apart from a truly militant pacifist has any moral standing to condemn them for October the 7th (notwithstanding that war crimes were committed during that assault) then the anti-Palestinians will have no answer. We should not underestimate how effective a screeching fascist can be when they are in a position of authority, but it is an intellectually indefensible position and if it propaganda breaks once it will happen more easily thereafter.
A more certain thing is that the Gaza Holocaust will overwhelm the narrative of October 7th. They have stretched the unconscious tendency of Westerners to value Western life more highly than the lives of our victims past breaking point. They took for granted the idea that they can create an exclusive concern about the suffering caused in a single event by the Bad Guys, and destroyed it by an excess of violence that cannot be remedied or hidden enough to make sense. Ordinary Westerners are racist, but not racist enough for this. The sociopaths in charge clearly either do not understand the limits of their propaganda abilities or their desperation is far greater than we can see from the outside. Either way, there will never be a discussion about October 7th that occurs without the shadow of Gaza suffering destruction, starvation, dismemberment, torture, immolation and grief beyond measure. We are not going to forget and we will not let other people forget.
I will never forget the Gaza holocaust. I will never let anyone else forget about the Gaza holocaust.
No matter what happens or how this thing turns out, I will never let anyone my voice touches forget that our rulers did the most evil things imaginable right in front of us and lied to us about it the entire time.
I will never stop doing everything I can with my own small platform to help ensure that the perpetrators of this mass atrocity are brought to justice.
I will never stop doing everything I can to help bring down the western empire and to help free Palestine from the Zionist entity.
I will never forget those shaking children. Those tiny shredded bodies. Those starved, skeletal forms. The explosions followed by screams. The atrocities followed by western media silence.
I will never forget, and I will never forgive. I will never forgive our leaders. I will never forgive the western press. I will never forgive Israel. I will never forgive the mainstream US political parties. I will always want for them exactly what they wanted for the Palestinians.
No matter what happens or what they do in the future, they will always be the people who did this to Gaza. They will always be the people who inflicted this nightmare upon our species. That will always be the most significant thing about them. It will always be the single most defining characteristic about who they are as human beings.
I feel the same as Johnstone. I feel the same way about the genocide in Iraq. I won’t ever forget, but I also know that in that instance I have been isolated and powerless. But this genocide is different. There is a framework for us built from years of organising that allows us to use these feelings, because these feelings are judgements that carry real weight and real justice. We will not let these fucking scum rewrite history and paint us as the unreliable premature anti-Zionists. We will not let them rest easy.
What we do now will define us in future. We need militancy. We cannot welcome Starmer, Macron and Morgan as late-blooming anti-genocide voices, because they are not. Those who really come to understand that they are in error will be humbled and the last thing they would do is to publicly promote their new opinion as being worthy of other people’s time.
There is only one fight and there are only two sides. Everyone needs to understand this, and everyone needs to understand that the people who chose to be on the side of massacring Palestinians are not ever on our side in any respect.
I speak here off the cuff about the centrality and culpability of the US in the Gaza Holocaust. I start by explaining why I use “Gaza Holocaust” as terminology. The US is not merely supporting Israel’s genocidal slaughter in Gaza, it is a direct participant. In this video I depart from my usual format and the result is much briefer. “Consistency is contrary to nature, contrary to life. The only completely consistent people are the dead.” ― Aldous Huxley.
Even in the midst of great slaughter and suffering, Israel’s attempts at ethnic cleansing face insurmountable challenges. What may seem to be brazen acts fuelled by total impunity are actually desperate and deranged acts in a colonial genocide that has become dysfunctional. Bloodlust and fanaticism have come to over-ride cold strategic calculation. Ultimately Israel has no way of achieving the ethnic cleansing of Palestine and it cannot withhold rights from its Palestinian subjects forever.
I write this article in response to a passage that shocked me in the epilogue to Pankaj Mishra’s book The World After Gaza (2025):
As the climate crisis brings forth a world of barbed-wire borders, walls and apartheid, and cruelty in the name of self-preservation receives singularly wide sanction, most recently in Donald Trump’s electoral triumph, Israel will most likely succeed in ethnic-cleansing Gaza, and the West Bank as well.
There is already too much evidence that the arc of the moral universe does not bend towards justice, powerful men have always made their massacres seem necessary and righteous. It’s not at all difficult to imagine a triumphant conclusion to the Israeli onslaught, or its retrospective sanitizing by historians and journalists as well as politicians.
My dismay comes in no little part from how good the rest of Mishra’s The World After Gaza is. These words felt like a betrayal that hit me as an unexpected gut-punch. This is not because of my belief in the cause of Palestinian freedom. I am not letting my heart blind me to reality, in fact I believe the inverse to be true. Mishra is evincing a privileged form of defeatism. At the end of a wonderfully sober book Mishra for some reason surrendered to sentimentality. It is the inverse of baseless optimism, but it is no less self-indulgent for the fact that it makes him feel bad.
I am not a Pollyanna. I do not think that humanity is continually becoming less violent through some law of Whiggish progress. In the abstract I do not deny that what Mishra claims is possible or even probable in other circumstances. It is not hard to recall other times when horrific genocides have been turned into triumphs, and then even spawned genres of historical fiction in which the victims become the villains. From stories of Richard the Lionheart, to John Wayne Westerns, to American Sniper, this shit does keep happening. But Mishra uses the absolute term “always” far too blithely. Hitler was a “powerful” man by any normal measure but he did not manage to leave legacy in which history judges his massacres as “necessary and righteous”.
Like the Israelis, Hitler believed he could write a grand story through mass violence in the manner that had served so well in British and US colonial genocides. He was wrong. The Zionists are wrong. The world was not the same in 1939. It was not the same in 1947. It was not the same in 2023.
Colonial genocides work by destroying indigenous histories. Israel has spent decades slowly destroying the physical manifestations of historical Palestinian presence but still has come nowhere near the sort of erasure seen in the US, Canada, Aotearoa and Australia. Now they are engaged in the most futile acts of memoricide imaginable. They destroy mosques, churches, libraries and universities, but it is documented by a million Palestinian cameras and even uploaded injudiciously by their own genocidal personnel. They are not destroying Palestinian identity, they are making Palestinians one of the most recognisable groups on the planet.
Timing is everything. Aimé Césaire claimed that Nazism was only colonialism practised at home. “They tolerated Nazism before it was inflicted on them… because, until then, it had been applied only to non-European peoples.” Perhaps there is some truth here, but what might the world have looked like had Britain and France not declared war during the invasion of Poland? What would the world have looked like if Germany’s leader were a patient imperialist more like his Anglo role models? What if Germany had spent decades of playing divide-and-conquer, signing and breaking treaties then always blaming their own perfidy on the innate violence of the barbaric slavs? They might easily have replicated the success of Anglo settler-colonies.
Césaire might be right about the racist hypocrisy of Europeans, but the German-led Axis powers killed 26 million Slavs and 6 million Jews in the space of less than 6 years. No other racial slaughter in history matches this intensity. The public response in the Axis home countries was roughly no more nor less contended than that shown by British people in response to the violence of the slaughter at Ombdurman in 1898 or the brutality meted out in suppressing the Indian Mutiny.
The reason Germany could not repeat the genocidal successes of other European powers was circumstantial and seemed to be completely independent of the skin colour of the victims. The scale of the slaughter was too large and the war was not confined to the intended victim groups. Most importantly, though, they lost the war.
After 1945 things would become even more difficult for would-be settler colonials. In the wake of World War II a more determined ethos of universality took hold of the world than had occurred in the wake of World War I. Human rights were for all humans. Notably absent were the racist notions of the need for “tutelage” that allowed European powers to grab more territory as “League Mandates” after WWI.
The UN Charter, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and various conventions and treaties all pointed to a non-racist world order – on paper at least. This did not end imperialist genocides, nor the cruel depredations of neocolonialism, but it set the scene for the end of most direct colonial regimes and it made new settler colonial projects legally and morally anathema. The Shoah gave some validation of Zionist arguments for the need for a Jewish homeland and they were backed by duplicitous manoeuvrings by the UK and the US. Thus a partial blind eye was turned to this particular settler-colonial project on the basis of pretending that a “just and lasting settlement” would come at some future date. This contingent approval for a clearly insupportable injustice always needed the concealment of a mask of temporary expedient. Even as generations were born and died Israel’s existence is only regularised by a fig-leaf of future just resolutions for Palestinian refugees and occupied populations.
In 1947 the UN General Assembly proposed a partition plan in Palestine. The British knew that Zionist paramilitary leaders would not accept this and they knew that the paramilitary forces (Haganah, Irgun and Lehi) would be able to take the entirety of Palestine. Britain gave a green light to Jordan to invade and occupy the West Bank. Her Majesty’s Government was sufficiently in favour of this move that they defied a UN arms embargo to supply necessary weapons. The reason that the British did this was to further their ends of power projection into the oil-rich Arab-populated lands of the region. They wanted Israel to be insecure – a bleeding sore and a permanent source of conflict with Arabs.
This was the worst possible outcome for the Palestinian people. Had Israel taken the entirety of Mandate Palestine the remaining Palestinian population would have been large, if not a majority. The sort of ethnic cleansing required to change that would have destroyed the Zionist pretext of fighting a war, especially in the absence of an “invasion” by neighbouring Arab countries. Likewise, a partition of Palestine would have been a huge injustice in itself, and yet would have left Palestinians in a far better position in future years and decades. A Palestinian state could have sought redress as a wronged peer with a theoretically equal voice in international fora. These are simplified counterfactuals, but I hope they illustrate that the end result of losing 78% of mandate Palestine was calculated (if only incidentally) to leave Palestinians in the weakest and least secure position possible. They were effectively pawns in game of world domination.
The US inheritors of British imperial designs achieved that world domination, and control of Middle Eastern oil was arguably the keystone of the architecture.
While we are on the subject of deranged schemes it is worth recalling that wilful Zionist fantasies of a land without a people for a people without a land were never sustainable. Even the most hardline “realist” revisionist forms of Zionism were and still are deluded. To cleanse enough of the Palestinian population to make a stable “democratic” Jewish state would take either the expulsion or mass murder of millions. Killing that many would immediately create a pariah state. On the other hand, expelling them does not erase them, their identity, nor their legal rights. People whose great-grandparents were expelled from Palestine in the Nakba still have a legal claim to the right to return. People being slowly forced out of the West Bank and Jerusalem have a right of return and if things continue as they currently are will have a clear case to be considered refugees rather than migrants. Israel cannot write the story they want no matter how much Palestinian blood they use.
What path does Mishra see by which Israel will now be able follow to achieve what it could not over eight decades of trying? How would this happen?
There is clearly a crisis in the US empire and in global capitalism. I think that this is why the Gaza Holocaust is happening. Israel could have stopped its current onslaught at any time before now, leaving a battered Gaza to suffer until it finds the next pretext for “mowing the lawn”. Instead it is relentless. It has also conducted unprecedented operations in Syria and the West Bank, and is trying hard to end the power of Hezbollah entirely. No one should mistake the fact that there is an urgency in these actions. Supporters around the world are also acting as if impelled, burning up political capital furiously to provide diplomatic and discursive cover for the most documented atrocities in human existence.
History is written by the winners, but how practically can Israel “win” in terms of full ethnic cleansing? If Egypt (for example) agrees to take the entire population of Gaza tomorrow there will still need to be a forced expulsion. It would be just the first difficult step in a long process that would cause a massive popular and institutional backlash.
The winners are always those who can write the history. By the same token, no victory will ever be complete until the story of the victory is believed. Who will ever believe in the triumph of Israel over the baby-beheading rapist terrorists with what we have seen? Even the biased Western media can’t spin everything, and Israel’s genocidal machinery is writing an indelible story of obscene criminality.
There is a global reservoir of digitally-enhanced folk-memory that will keep intruding into the mainstream, even reaching the confused victims of Western news media. Around the globe there is shared a language of chants and sayings such as “every Zionist accusation is a confession”. We know of unforgettable crimes that are seared into our hearts. We know names of the dead. We can inform people about Refaat Alareer, Hind Rajab, and Hossam Shabat. We have poetry. We have music. We have statistics; photographs; running jokes; books; documentaries, dedicated news outlets, websites, logos, a brand of cola, and a massive podcast ecosystem.
Palestine solidarity activists have, by pure circumstance, developed a durable shared identity. We have the gravity of the weight of all of the tears we have shed. That will stay for our lifetimes and when the contention dies it is our stories that will inform our friends, family and neighbours about what really happened. Israel cannot silence the voices of Palestinians with all its weapons and prisons, and it has no way of extinguishing the global voices of solidarity. We cannot be forced to stop and we have no reason to stop until Palestine is free.
Israel killed journalist Fatima Hassouna just the day after it was announced that a documentary about her was accepted to be shown at Cannes this year. It is hard to believe that this is a coincidence, and what they have done is to create another enduring symbol. What impact will that documentary have now? Can it be imagined that the people who watch it will ever be able to accept future Zionist lies? Assuming it was a deliberate act, the killing of this young woman is surely meant to demoralise. It is surely meant to be a brazen display of impunity. It is surely meant to force the flak-wary leaders and organisers of the Western world to commit further to the fictions of hasbara, trapping them in a web of absurdity. But they are skinning the sheep that their forefathers have profitably shorn for decades.
Israelis are destroying the myths that have sustained 80 years of slow genocide. The frontline troops that have let their chauvinist self-belief and hatred of Palestinians lead them to make unwise advertisements of their own criminality, and the highest leaders seem to think that showing the world a face limitless brutality will create assent and compliance. How could anyone think that they will succeed this way?
The resistance is inextinguishable. That is why it is only a matter of time before Palestine is free.
Only a matter of time.
Only.
But time is not trivial. People are suffering and dying. This week we saw children incinerated in their tents. Their dying agonies should reach the world, should move the world, should shake the world like a thunderclap, but they are just another irreplaceable loss, their agonies another irreversible obscenity. Each day brings more. Perhaps that is the thing that made me feel the greatest sense of hurt when reading Pankaj Mishra’s assertion that Israel will can easily succeed in its genocide. By doing this Mishra endorses the delusion that keeps the violence going.
When I say that Palestinian liberation is inevitable it is not from optimism. It is not comfortable nor comforting because it means that each new day’s suffering is as futile and arbitrary as it is inhuman. What I mean to convey is that the more we do to end this, the fewer people will suffer. That is all.
This genocide no longer serves a purpose, not for Israel, not for the US. The US empire is retrenching, but like the cruel colonial powers of the past it is flailing destructively as it withdraws, its leaders believing they will never face justice. Maybe they are correct. Israel, on the other hand, cannot win this fight and with each passing day of violence they inflict future harm on their children and grandchildren. They inflict harm on their own future selves.
Others will pay a price too. Israel needs an international support structure to continue this Holocaust. Currently Western and many other leaders around the world are siding with power against what is right. We need to make them know that a time will come when they will pay. Their names will be dirt. Some may face prosecution. Everything is recorded. Everything is known. If they want to keep their careers they had better be in the vanguard of those who one day (as Omar Akkad says) will always have been against this.
In this episode I build on and take a different approach to things that I have written and spoke about in the past. Our vision of Nazis as the ultimate expression of political evil is not wrong in that Nazism is morally unsupportable, but exceptionalist views of Nazism blind us to dangers of Nazism returning. Obviously as a particular movement of a particular time it is unlikely (though unfortunately not impossible) that an overt self-identified “National Socialist” movement will become the ruling party in any contemporary state. That being understood, it is clear that all of the important and dangerous aspects that went into making Nazism what it was are on the rise in world politics, particularly the US and Europe.
Soon after Trump’s 2016 election I wrote of the “straw Nazis”, the street thugs, whose alarming presence was useful but ultimately expendable (https://ongenocide.com/2016/12/15/trumps-straw-nazis-a-horror-story/). I won’t say I was brilliant to predict that things would become more fascistic under Trump – anyone could see that. Looking back though I wrote a segment on how fascism would also have deepened had Clinton won with a less street-thuggish and more war-crimesy tone. I think Biden’s term in office bore out that point.
The truth is that Nazism was significant, but the individual Nazis weren’t any different than the other shitty people around the world. As Nazi ideas take hold more and more people become Nazis until it is just you random run-of-the-mill hairdresser or barista. It isn’t even about what these people believe either, it is about what they consent to be part of.
As long as we keep looking for straw Nazis we will be looking the wrong way when the actual Nazis take over.
…[T]hat insurgent horror was knit to him closer than a wife, closer than an eye; lay caged in his flesh, where he heard it mutter and felt it struggle to be born….” ― Robert Louis Stevenson, The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde
It is hard not to feel a bit optimistic watching Chris “Chippy” Hipkins present as a pragmatic but determinedly progressive leader on Big Hairy News, but we have been here before. NZ Labour are like Lucy in Peanuts repeatedly pulling away the football at the last minute, with the proviso that in this analogy NZ Labour are also Charlie Brown. They believe their own lies more than the electorate does. Like other “centre-left” parties in the Western “democracies”, they are a collective human embodiment of the fallacy called an “argument to moderation”. For decades the right have been pushing extremist policies with no concern for public opinion, and the tepid “centre-left” response actually normalises the right-wing shift. Worse still that right-wing is often a faction within the supposedly leftist party. Our own neoliberal turn in the 1984-90 Labour government is an anti-democratic case in point, as is Clintonism, Blairism and Starmerism.
Currently the UK is finding that the Labour Party it voted for is extremely right-wing. Can we be headed the same way? All things being equal we might be quite relieved to have Chippy back as PM with his ability to come across as something other than a sociopath, a fascist, and a grifter – a skill which Luxon, Seymour, and Peters all seem to lack. All things being equal we might be slightly reassured that on BHN he rejected neoliberalism and claimed to more inclined towards Keynesianism. But things aren’t equal. They never have been and they are even less so now. The golden age of Keynesianism wasn’t just an outcome of Keynesianism. It occurred when parties like NZ Labour (Te Rōpū Reipa o Aotearoa) were full of socialists pushing for socialist policies. Now we face a massive international turn to the extreme right which is playing out in our own country.
Many people foresaw the direction which UK Labour was taking after Jeremy Corbyn’s ouster and it became common for critics to refer to the new leader as “Keith” Starmer. This jeering (for example this parody song Pasokeithication) turned out to be far more insightful and prescient than any of the paid political commentators could manage. Now that Starmer is in Downing St. it is striking that the people who best predicted his policies were those who loathed and mocked him. It is a measure of the current state of politics.
The rules of the game are changing, and short of a massive shift in Labour Party politics the best we can hope for is Dr Chippy adding the odd bandaid and sending a few more ambulances to the bottom of the cliff. At worst though Hipkins (or his replacement) will be the thuggish Mr Keith rather than the boyishly ebullient Dr Chippy so beloved by middle New Zealand. Mr Keith will exploit the accelerating shitshow and clusterfuck that this coalition is becoming to empower a continued swing rightward. There is also a threat to Te Pāti Māori and the Greens (Te Rōpū Kākāriki) as there is also a move to solidify duopoly politics as a form of bifurcated fascism. Already Mr Keith has reared his ugly head in response to Green MP Tamatha Paul stating that she had been told by some constituents that a police presence makes them feel less safe.
Mr Keith’s response was to say: “Tamatha Paul’s comments were ill-informed, were unwise, and in fact were stupid. I don’t think responsible Members of Parliament should be undermining the police in that way.” This betrays a lot about his instincts and whom he identifies with. He is both punching left and punching down. It is not a straightforward political calculation either as there was a huge opportunity to score from the Coalition’s outraged spittle-flecked gammon responses while appearing to be the voice of reason. Luxon called her “insane” for reporting the words of her constituents and there is ample room to attack him profitably for this without being seen as an enemy of the police. Hipkins instead chose to give a free-pass to his political enemies and attacked his allies. It shows his authoritarian instincts and shows that his idea of the “public” is an ideological construct that excludes vast swathes of the public who have to live in a different world than he will acknowledge. By rejecting criticism as “undermining” he betrays the childish magical thinking of the elite who believe that dysfunction doesn’t exist if you don’t talk about it. He evinces an increasingly decadent form of groupthink (which I discuss below) that is international in scope.
The Global Context
Politics in the Western world (particularly in the Anglosphere) has clearly become co-ordinated. This emanates from a cluster of think-tanks, astroturfing organisations and para-governmental lobby groups (such as ALEC in the US that has drafted much legislations). The most evident symptom is the transnational political communications industry with its migratory talking points such as the millennial’s smashed avocado canard (which became a right-wing politician’s favourite despite originally being used ironically as a satire on boomer conservatism). Increasingly “communications” has become a key concern in policy decisions. This mimics the existing situation in the US where each high level politician is effectively a product to be marketedi and thus must put such considerations foremost in all propositions.
One of the symptoms of the creeping fascism that has taken hold in the West is that the techniques of political campaigning have become a perennial tool of governance.ii In the old days a politician only had to lie to the plebs for a month or so to secure years of tenure where they answered to no one but the civil service. Ideally the public would barely know what the ruler did in that time, let alone need to be brainwashediii into violently demanding that the ruler do it harder.
The reason our politics have turned fascist rather than merely authoritarian is precisely because of the need to maintain a pretence of democracy under the guise of an imposed form of populism. The techniques of mass manipulation have been refined to a science which I will refer to here as “shitfuckery”. In the 1950s national security states were built on bipartisan anti-communist shitfuckery. In the 1980s neoliberal states were built on bipartisan anti-socialist anti-worker shitfuckery. Now we are facing a market-fascist technofeudal state being built on bipartisan socailly reactionary shitfuckery. Previous bouts of shitfuckery acted to constrain the state against unwanted democratic influence, but this bout is evidently the beginning of a process intended to dismantle much of the state in favour of more direct oligarchic control not dissimilar to that seen in dystopian cyberpunk narratives.
This may feel very distant from Aotearoa or may feel very close depending on what you are focussing on at any given moment. On the one hand we have Blackrock, and Marc Andreessen’s a16z, and Citizen Thiel, and Brookfield, and a “bipartisan” push for more Public-Private Partnerships, and concern about a billionaire remaking NZMe into an even more right-wing organisation, and the Regulatory Standards Bill, mass public sector layoffs, Atlas Network apparatchik David Seymour’s unexplained power and impunity despite being an incredibly unpopular politician whose party won only 8% of the party vote, and the push for a “NZ DOGE”. On the other hand someone could argue that adding all of these things together comes far short of adding up to revolutionary change. The question is, just how much should we be concerned?
There are four things that we can tell from the foregoing list. The first is that this country is clearly hooked into a global movement. The second is that there is a clear direction of travel to the right. The third is that this is not constrained to an ideology of conservatism or anything that might be considered centre-right. There are multiple strains in this global movement but they are all extreme right teleologies sharing a fascist ethos. The fourth thing is that people are not taking this even remotely seriously enough. At the electoral level politics is governed by a paradigm that has been subverted because the political right are consciously acting to change the parameters of the Overton window while the political “left” are led by mostly right-wing individuals.
Paris Marx featured Aotearoa as an early adopter in the recent spate of global DOGE-style politics:
After the election, Musk congratulated National leader Christopher Luxon, writing on Twitter/X, “Congratulations and thank goodness!”
Luxon’s government is the most conservative to run New Zealand in decades, in part because of the outsized influence ACT leader David Seymour has played, despite his party holding only 11 seats. In February, Seymour was asked whether New Zealand needed a DOGE of its own. “We do have a Ministry for Regulation that is doing what some people in America are talking about,” he responded.
After taking power, Seymour formed the Ministry for Regulation with the goal of cutting regulations across government. He said that would be necessary to increase economic growth and productivity, and more recently scolded his fellow citizens to “get past their squeamishness about privatization.” But Seymour’s Ministry wasn’t just about pushing right-wing economic policy; it was also a power grab to ensure his goals can be realized.
The Rat-shit Parties and the Ratchet System
There is a calculated move by multiple actors to change the political landscape. If they make radical change then only radical repeal can counter. Hence one of the greatest dangers we face is not from those who identify as being on the right, but from those who pose as the left, but are incapable of being genuinely of the left. Throughout the Anglosphere and beyond there is a co-ordinated ongoing project to ban all genuine left-wing thought from electoral politics. The right-wing ratchet of politics is rapidly approaching a market fascist apotheosis that will unleash genuine nightmares if we cannot break this cycle. In Aotearoa we should currently be most on guard for a complete right-wing takeover of the Labour Party in the mould of Starmer in the UK. Rather than being moderated by Te Pāti Māori and the Green Party, the resulting coalition would be a trap designed to destroy the coalition partners by forcing them to alienate their electoral base.
The very concept of the left is being subsumed in a new paradigm wherein the moderate arm of an increasingly kleptocratic anti-democratic elitist oligarchy is labelled “left”. The basis of the thinking is that if your proposals for general welfare are not Swiftian solutions based on your belief that unsuccessful people are better off being humanely converted into fertiliser, you must be a bleeding-heart lefty with a weird soft-spot for the peons. In this discourse Thatcher and Reagan become moderates, if not centrists, and such historically disparate conservative German chancellors as Merkel and Bismark are recast as being centre-leftists. This creates a system in which people are trapped into supporting the right against both their interests and their will.
A political duopoly is of the utmost importance in such systems. The US is the exemplary model where two parties with ever more right-wing politics maintain an artificially balanced political landscape by actively avoiding any organically popular policies. One party foments populist fascist fervour, while the other (the rat-shit party) takes the principled stance of tutting while creeping fascism takes over the country. A shocking insight into the profundity of the problem can be gained by watching Jamaal Bowman (who was primaried and ousted by the Dems for being against genocide) talking to Briahna Joy Gray. Taken with other materiali it becomes clear that at that level of politics there is an interlocking multiply-redundant system of control that works as both direct coercion and as effective mind control. Bowman, a victim of this system, defends it and indeed seems to have internalised it as a dominant part of his self-identification. Like Winston Smith he has come to love his torturer and exult in his own persecution.
The Democrats offer no alternative to creeping fascism – only occasions of partial and temporary respite. Their leadership consciously undermines progressive reforms on which they base their appeal, such as Biden cynically normalising relations with Cuba just hours before leaving office, or putting forward progressive legislation and then applying no pressure to the “rotating villain” who is predictably able to block the legislation.ii It is the overtly hateful and hurtful rhetoric and policies of the Republican Party that generates votes for both sides. Meanwhile some element of the Democrat leadership seems always to persuade the Party that the only response must be to also embrace hate, but slightly less enthusiastically.
The duopoly system works by one party openly campaigning as right-wing while another campaigns as “centre-left”, but is controlled by people who knowingly or unknowingly have very right-wing politics. Hipkins is be just such a creature.
I was inspired to write this article in response to a recent piece published by 1/200 is entitled “Chris Hipkins is a Pathetic Loser”. The anonymous author of this piece doesn’t tell us if she thinks being a “pathetic loser” is a bad thing in a Labour leader, but the article is actually quite critical of Hipkins. The acerbic wit and lines such as that suggesting that Hipkins might be a “piece of white bread made sentient by a witch” reveal the identity of the unnamed author, who can be none other than a grudge-laden Jacinda Ardern. Clearly Ardern has finally seen through this sausage-roll eating everyman bullshit which is just a persona to hide a man whose ambition makes him a slave to established power.
I may possibly be mistaken about Jacinda Ardern embracing communism and submitting articles to such a disreputable site as 1/200, but it is almost certainly true that she, like Hipkins, would not have thought of herself as right-wing in any sense. Ardern seemed to want to be a democratic leader, and I think that says something about our political culture that her understanding of actual democracy was reminiscent of Marie Antoinette’s understanding of actual hunger.iii Her response to right-wing flak and reactionary opposition to reform was to try to use executive power to push reforms through without trying to develop a popular mandate. As a “communications” graduate it probably seemed totally natural to separate her paternalistic policy decisions from the opinions of the unwashed masses. For Ardern campaigning seemed to be an instrument to gain power by seeming slightly more credible when making almost exactly the same promises as the opponent. It makes sense in the same way that if in a quiz tiebreaker your opponent has guessed that Mt Everest is 858 metres high, you will win by saying it its 859 metres high. The lesser evil is still evil, and being very slightly less shit means you are still shit. After Obama’s 2008 presidential campaign, Western “democracy” has become ever more lost in a politics of marketing sentiments with little pretence of having a coherent political ideology.
Keith Hipkins is at best an inheritor of Ardern’s narrow and manipulative elitism. The Chippy persona might be in some sense real, but I don’t think it means anything in the rooms where decisions are made. The wishes of the electorate are to be assuaged, not obeyed – not even heeded. Instead Hipkins will reliably turn to the high priesthood of late-stage capitalism and piously obey their instructions on whom to throw into a volcano to avert the wrath of the Almighty and Vengeful Economy. (After all, why would anyone question the orthodox authorities when the entire planet and everyone on it is doing so incredibly fucking well?)
The danger that Keith Hipkins poses comes from the intensification in recent years of the ratchet mechanism. In the past the right side of politics has shifted the goalposts, while the rat-shit side simply failed to undo right-wing policies and has slow-walked progressive reform. When Ardern was not attempting reform by decree she was burying other reforms in Byzantine processes that were doomed to a slow fizzling death. This despite gaining the unprecedented mandate of an outright majority of the party vote in the 2020 election. Hipkins then made a bold point of his “bonfire of the policies” which drastically reduced the already negligible progressive impact of what could and should have been a transformative government.
Events in the UK, though, have shown that a new game is afoot. It is a pokemonesque evolution of the neoliberal turns of Rogernomics, Blairism, and Clintonism.iv For a long time the abysmal policy failures of the right and the centre-right have been used to discredit a governing party implementing those policies in such a way that the opposing “centre-left” can move to the right. Both the tribal partisanship and the focus on individual personalities create space for successor governments to adopt the same ideological and policy positions as their vanquished political enemies with a few token changes. The most obvious example of this is the Tony Blair-led Labour government that came to power in 1997. That government’s neoliberal governance is often seen as the greatest victory of Margaret Thatcher in establishing the neoliberal dictum of TINA (There Is No Alternative) as a bipartisan orthodoxy. The electorate has different ideas, but as the events of Jeremy Corbyn’s Labour leadership show there is a powerful establishment consciousness that TINA must be enforced and that only a safe pair of hands can be allowed to steer the ship of state.
Starmer is just such a safe pair of hands, but his government is taking things far further than someone like Blair. His government has embraced the ridiculous under-regulated profiteering in the privatised water and energy sectors; they have cut benefits including a massive cut in funding for the disabled; and they are now contemplating a DOGE-like attack on public sector jobs which they are referring to as “Project Chainsaw” in reference to market fascists Javier Milei and Elon Musk.
Squawkbox examined the moment in Westminster when Wes Streeting taunted the opposition:
‘We’re doing things Tories only talked about’, says red Tory health secretary – before going on to list cuts and warmongering.
Right-wing Labour Health Secretary Wes Streeting has ‘said the quiet part out loud’ and admitted that Starmer’s Labour is worse than the Tories and mounting an assault on the state and social security that British people depend on – and going further than the Tories ever dared.
And, in a sign of how removed the red Tories are from the real lives and experience of ordinary people, he didn’t seem even to realise what he was giving away, instead boasting about it and claiming this was ‘change’ that people had voted for:
The UK Labour government is pursuing many policies that are to the right of its hated Conservative predecessors while chucking a bone of overdue tax-reform to the electorate, and that should worry us in Aotearoa. This only happens because of a long-term programme of elite-capture of the “centre-left” that bears some examination.
Keir Starmer was groomed to play as a Labour politician despite having the thinnest of left-wing credentials. Part of the way political leaders are retrofitted to appeal to the plebs is a process of salting the mine. This term comes from the olden days when people would use shotguns and other methods to embed gold pellets into the walls of unproductive gold mines to convince credulous would-be buyers to part with their money. For a future politician you salt the mine with union, human rights, community and antiwar work. Thus people like Starmer, Obama and John Kerry are not fallen lefties (of whom there are plenty), but right-wing authoritarians for whom left-ish rhetoric is merely the means to the end of gaining power.
Western centre-left parties are following in the footsteps of the US Democratic Party by becoming more “broad church” and “big tent” ideologically. This is not a new phenomenon (as students of British Labour history well know) but now such parties no longer have the skeletal structure of an espoused social democrat ideology. They avoid referring to themselves as socialists and they would never think of socialism as an answer to problems. They have become amorphous blobs, like political slime moulds, without any defining shape or character apart from “in” or “out”. In these parties it is very easy for moneyed and/or security state interests to implant or co-opt those who they consider to be the best leadership for a potential governing party.
Like the most brainless of little birds, the party faithful will accept the cuckoos in their midst even as they savagely attack and evict the genuine offspring of the original movement. Some of these cuckoos probably don’t even realise what they are. They are part of the generalised fascist drift of our age. They don’t understand the concept of having principles. They come through backgrounds such as student politics where they learn to lock away and cut the blood-flow to those human traits that might cause one to lose a debate or a grade. Principles are just another dead weight like self-doubt, indiscreet honesty, and intellectual curiosity. The trick is not to lie, but to learn to believe whatever fits the format in question. The answer is that Mt Everest is 859 metres in height and giving it even one more metre is an unprofessional extravagance.
Moral, ideological and intellectual flexibility are ideal traits for success in a political party hierarchy. A party representative must represent the party. To do so without losing votes for the party they must unhesitatingly represent the views of the party as their own views. The shortest distance between two points is a straight line and thus in time the candidate in question comes to simply believe what the party tells them to believe. Any matters of principle will tend to arise from residual convictions held before joining the party. Those may or may not be profound and devout among those with an activist or union background, but those who come through student politics tend to have ideological flexibility and to see this flexibility as a moderating virtue. In other circumstances this flexibility might be a desirable trait, but it is destroying democracy because such amenable people are primed to be pushed by vested interests, by stultifying orthodoxies, and by incremental corruption.
Those parties that grew from working-class activism are very distant from their roots. Institutional and cultural changes have almost destroyed the educated working class that once provided a significant voice in politics. Party faithful for Aotearoa’s Labour Party are firmly in the middle class, including a large number of socially-conscious business owners. They are not a great bulwark against elite-capture of the party leadership. Without the direct personal stake in the welfare of the poor they don’t have the same instinctive aversion for shills in the same way that hippos don’t have an instinctive aversion for snakes. They are used to a world made benevolent for their ilk and will proudly look for the best in people, especially if they are on the same team.
The shills are not all elected officials, they can be advisors (such as those who are apparently the real power in the UK Labour government), or they can be external “experts” who incant the nostrums that fill and fatten the fatuous brains of the politicians. By nature, as non-experts, our elected representatives are giant vessels for received wisdom which they get from the extremely biased sources that they gravitate to. The result is a form of extreme collective stupidity sometimes referred to as “groupthink”. The main characteristic of groupthink is that it creates a safe space for irrational and baseless beliefs, if not extreme idiocy. Groupthink makes wisdom out of blatant fallacies, and it is the reason that the uneducated public has so often proven in polls to have better policy instincts than their leaders.
The concept of groupthink is only half of the story. The concept was first applied to politics as a form of apologism that assumes the best of intentions among decision makers. It was embraced by architects of the “tragedy” and “blunder” of the American War in Viet Nam to excuse their own brutal actions. On one hand this is a sickening response to a decade of brutal genocide that saw millions die in acts of horrific violence, and on the other hand it is an arrogantly privileged view from an elite that could never imagine that they might not really have been in charge. They created a myth of a scam with no scammer. In reality such “leaders” were and are easy marks for ruthless manipulators. Worse still they are impervious to any experts who question orthodoxy or suggest radical reform (however desperately it is needed). Being so replete with received wisdom and faith in the tenets of leadershipping (and, to be fair, generally overworked and overstretched) elected leaders are not at home to deep critical inquiry. As Jamaal Bowman exemplifies, they cocoon themselves in beliefs and pseudo-knowledge that is needed for them to function within the system in which they are embedded.
The Litmus Test
Do you think I am overstating things? Because I am not. Consider the example of reactions to the Gaza Holocaust. Admittedly NZ Labour has been a mixed bag, but they are not in power and who knows how they would run things if they were. Perhaps we could get some clue from the example of Australia’s Labor government. Their Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is not just a namesake of the redoubtable Francesca Albanese, but is himself a former pro-Palestine stalwart. As Crikey tells it: “Albanese was once one of Labor’s most outspoken MPs on the situation in the Middle East and arguably one of Labor’s most prominent pro-Palestine advocates.” Yet his centre-left government has been more anti-Palestine than our National-led coalition government (which includes David Seymour who is a pro-genocide fascist maniac). Aotearoa voted for a ceasefire at the UN in September while Australia abstained.
We have witnessed the inaction of Western officialdom to the urgent need to act to stop the slaughter in Palestine despite clear public sentiment against Israel’s actions. For most normal people it is quite achievable to condemn and oppose Israel’s violence without qualification regardless of where they stand on Hamas or any other issues. Not so with the our social betters. Political, non-governmental and corporate leadershippers have been obtuse, callous, arrogant, cowardly and sometimes brutal in service of ignorance and death. Corporate leaders chose genocide over profits. Bureaucrats choose genocide over following the law. Academic administrators choose genocide over learning. NGO leaders choose genocide over reputation. Politicians choose genocide over winning elections.
The unanimity is striking and worth taking a moment to contemplate. It is as if they are part of a CABAL or cult with a secret oath. It is as if no one is allowed to run an organisation if the security state doesn’t have material to blackmail them with.
There may be some truth to notions of global kompromat given what we know about the US approach to getting support for its genocide in Iraq, but the scale and scope of this compliance betrays a much broader disciplinary mechanism: a shared global but largely exclusive worldview. An elite groupthink. This is why I make snide references to “leadershipping”. I am referring to an ideology from the world of CEO-worship that has slipped into our political culture. It suggests that there is a discipline of leadership that is a form of expertise superior to that of people who actually understand the particulars of an issue. It is often wrapped up in the language of do-gooding NGO jargon, but it is at heart an elitist, authoritarian, anti-intellectual discourse. It is quite literally a fascist trait that has wrapped itself in a skin of paternal/maternal benevolence. It is also as ridiculous as it is dangerous. It has all of the flaws of technocracy but instead of giving power to narrow-minded nerds who vastly over-estimate their own competence, it gives the same power to baby-kissing buffoons and pillocks of the community who have perfected the art of failing upwards.
I could go into much more detail about the extraordinary failure to act appropriately displayed with frightening unanimity by our leadershippers. My expectations of these people have slipped lower than ever. It is hard to even believe their willingness to apologise for mass murder; their willingness to crush those who give so much of themselves in this heartbreaking helpless effort to force an end to this horror; their willingness to twist and ignore the words of experts and even the orders of the highest court on the fucking planet.
People have been trying to point out for decades that lesser-evilism in US politics leads to pre-destined endpoint of pure evil. The same is true of incremental compromise on an individual level. Compromise is compounding and it makes governments very dangerous. If you want to know how evil comes out of banality, it is through those habits of minor compromise that add up. A process of eliminating the uncompromising and conditioning the compromised ensures that in time institutions are populated with potential monsters. They await the time that they are asked to aid in the slaughter of innocents and they will click their heels and shout “Jawohl, mein Führer!”
A key mechanism behind the creation of groupthink is an incremental intellectual compromise that is conjoined with the more obvious moral compromise. The reason that I emphasised received wisdom earlier is that there is an intellectual authoritarianism common to political leaders. High status individuals are, unsurprisingly, prone to the belief that status is an indication of merit. They have this pious faith despite some fairly obvious signs that our civilisation is decadent and incapable of even addressing existential threats of it own making. Worse still, expertise in our times is decreasingly determined by the problematic academic hierarchy and more influenced by late-stage capitalist institutions. Editors and publishers push certain individuals and even create “rockstar” intellectuals. Conjoined with the desires of the security state and the influence of plutocrat dominated think-tanks, it should surprise no one that the “authorities” thus promoted are usually bigoted and reactionary and often childish and highly emotional people whose ideas come from places of personal resentment. The ethos of merit is also a self-reinforcing dysfunction because these “intellectuals” have often succeeded in some area of scholarship but are promoted as experts on totally unrelated areas on the basis that they have big IQs.
Having myself studied the acknowledged intellectual dysfunction of the US political leaders waging genocide in Indochina, it has long been clear to me that the problem did not end in 1975. Instead the very institutions that produced that dysfunction have proliferated and are clearly deployed consciously to shape the collective mind of leaders. Politicians, journalists, academics and bureaucrats are exposed to the “real world” in curated experiences such as ride-alongs or embedding. They become psychologically reliant on and subordinate to the professional who is given direct control over them, especially if there are safety concerns. For them the world is thus turned into a Potemkin village. We now have a system where all manner of interests are incentivised to control the beliefs and perceptions of leaders and have developed a lot of ways of doing so.
The cliché is “those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities.” There is no shortage of absurdity in the world of supposed expertise. The discipline of economics has supplied a string of ideologues (stretching back to Malthus) who leverage relatively narrow empirical work to create massive sweeping constructions of dramatically bad political theory. Economics has came to function with massive over-reach, influencing policy in ways that have no valid basis. Moreover the neoliberal diktat is of late only plausibly linked (if that) to economic orthodoxy, yet it is treated by political leaders as some immutable Law that cannot be traduced: Thou mayst be tempted by the wailing of the children that hunger, but thou must gird thine loins and stuff parsley in thine ears. If thou dost feed the children The Economy will become wroth and He will smite one thousand and thirty-three for each one child that is fed by thine hand.
The atrocity is that real avoidable suffering on a very large scale comes from following policy prescriptions that come from specious and often ludicrous claims of necessity. Harry Robson published an article in Watchdog reminding us that the government of Aotearoa used to work hard to ensure that there was full employment. They weren’t all leftists, they just did their job according to the actual mandate given to them. Comparing Aotearoa with Finland Gary Payinda asks “why can’t we have nice things too?” “You can’t really call it socialism because they are a very market-based capitalist society.” In reality their government still has a residual belief in the public good, while ours are either hostile to the public good or credulously allow fake economic arguments to persuade them to continue a project of immiseration and vast inequality that worsens the material conditions of all but a fraction of a percent of the population.vi
ITSE: It’s the Stupid Economics!
Neoliberalism will not be undone by NZ Labour. Dr Chippy might claim to be more Keynesian than neoliberal but he doesn’t really grasp what that would mean. He would not, for example, contemplate fundamentally changing the Reserve Bank Act. The NZ Labour Party is not a home for free-thinkers. Hipkins is not the only potential Keith. Keithness is endemic. Take Barbara Edmonds talking about PPPs. On Big Hairy News she defended PPPs as sometimes desirable even though they are inherently more expensive. Her reasoning is that the country must maintain “fiscal headroom” which is doubly fallacious because she takes a strong stance against using PPPs for critical infrastructure, so she is saying we have to spend extra on non-critical infrastructure adding an unnecessary fiscal commitment for the future (i.e. a self-perpetuating “fiscal headroom” problem) rather than simply raise the revenue.
“Headroom” is the word of the day in the UK. Chancellor Rachel Reeves thrice boasted of her headroom creating plan in her spring statement. The Shadow Chancellor’s response to the statement invoked no less than 4 headrooms. Reeves replied with, “What the markets should see is that, when I have been tested with a deterioration in the headroom, we have restored that headroom in full. That is one of the choices that I made. He says that it is a sliver of a headroom. Well, it is 50% more headroom than I inherited from the Conservative party. When I was left with a sliver of headroom, I rebuilt it after the last Government eroded it.” All of this took me back to the grimmest days of the 1980’s, not because of the impending austerity, but because Reeves’s answer has clearly exceeded Max Headroom. I am not going to apologise for that last sentence, so let’s just move on to the fact that the UK news media are also pretty keen on the word “headroom” at the moment. The sudden rise and apparently crucial status of a word indicates that it is employed as a “thought-terminating cliché”. Edmonds use of the term is not reassuring and it is worth noting that the very concept of “headroom” is absolutely antithetical to the Keynesianism that her Party leader pretended to espouse.
“Headroom” is just another in a 50 year-tradition of economic concepts being used selectively to reject governing according to the will of the public. We live in a completely Freidmanite world – conquered by stealth and perfidy – where the government cannot act in favour of the poor because that is deemed to contravene market forces, but it can favour the rich because it is supposed that market forces will correct any economically harmful activities. Apparently that means that we don’t have to worry about politics being totally corrupt because the market will always stop it from being corrupt. It is all just a scam being made credible by economists. In reality no economic theory can provide policy prescriptions or prohibitions without context. Governance is bigger than economics. In fact, as I suggested earlier, economics is bigger than economics. Sermonising about economistic pieties such as “fiscal headroom” is merely a thought-control technique to justify unjustifiable schemes against the public interest, of which PPPs are a mere sub-category.
Edmonds’s other PPP defence was a dismal response to Pat Brittendon questioning whether it is possible for PPPs to provide cheaper outcomes when they always add the expense of a profit margin. She answered, “Some would say it is possible and because PPPs are actually found quite commonly around the world, but also it comes down to that risk threshold and that affordability threshold which is agreed to a negotiate at right at the beginning. So if the risk is low enough then yes it will be cheaper for the private sector because they won’t have the risk of basically having to pay out more at a later date. So I’m assuming that’s where it would be cheaper however the major thing for us again get it right from the start and when the negotiations have to be really really good.” I do not know about you, dear reader, but that sort of answer makes me utterly furious, not least because people like Edmonds actually seem to think that this sort of nonsense makes them the adults in the room.
Economist Craig Renney has a sobering “bluffer’s guide” to PPPs and concludes “There might at the very edges be a good case for a PPP, but it would be very rare. Great financial cases for PPPs would be even rarer.” What he implies, but does not state outright, is that there is an inherently antagonistic relationship here. The transfer of risk, which is a major justification for PPPs given by both Labour and National Parties, is something that the private corporations will do everything they can to avoid. It doesn’t take a genius to work out that private companies take government contracts to avoid risk, not take it on. It is worse than that because PPPs create a whole new level of risk because there is the intrinsic risk that the private enterprise will succeed in creating unearned income from the deal. Renney emphasises the Byzantine complexity of these arrangements and it is worth remembering that you cannot rely on good faith from these actors. While a hypothetical case can be made for that unique alignment of the planets that makes a PPP worthwhile, the practical history of PPPs reveals a litany of disaster for governments. Their Private Partners in this (for example the Compass Group) do not suffer the reputational damage that one should expect after profiting handsomely from failure.
There are three reasons why private enterprises are repeatedly allowed to effectively steal from the public with support from elected officials. The first is corruption, which includes perfectly legal acts done to show donation-worthiness to the “business community”. The second is an ideological project to increase inequality, destroy public services, and create a plutocratic feudal society with social-Darwinist pretensions. The third is the stupidity displayed perfectly by Edmonds when she said “PPPs are actually found quite commonly around the world….” This is groupthink. She is responding to a plain argument against PPPs with an argument from moderation. It may seem arrogant to go against the conventional “wisdom” of Western governments, the IMF, the World Bank, The Economist, ad very much nauseum; but the real arrogance is to fob people off with half-arsed defences of this bullshit.
Mr Keith is a Liberal Zionist
The Keithness of NZ Labour is most easily seen in the party’s liberal Zionism. Liberal Zionistsi support a project of injustice by selectively opposing the most obvious injustices and artificially separating those offences from the very enterprise that brings them about. There are two very important aspects of liberal Zionism that are apposite. One is that liberal Zionists will never devote serious energy to stopping the things they decry that are done in the name of Zionism. Every salient atrocity instead brings them to a fervour of #NotAllZionists hand-wringing and an Olympic-speed sprint to distance themselves from Netanyahu and his right-wing buddies. The second thing to note is that they constantly shift ever more into endorsing the very things they claim to oppose. At times of crisis they become full-throated pro-genocide cheerleaders. For example, every single person the world over who has endorsed Israel’s “right to defend itself” by unleashing violence on Gaza knew that masses of innocents would die or were already dying. Israel has no such right. It is this combination of ignorance, incurious stupidity, and the sheer evil of choosing to make apologies for the massacre of innocents that typifies the actual fascism of Western governments.
Israel has been doing things that liberal Zionists claim to abhor from its inception. The situation since 1967 has grown increasingly stark. If liberal Zionists were what they pretend to be every joule of their energy would be devoted to ending the genocidal creeping annexation of East Jerusalem and the West Bank, and the genocidal siege and slaughter inflicted on Gaza. Instead they contend that the features of the Zionist project are bugs. Every liberal Zionist the world over now supports the illegal settler movement in some form when they used to play at opposing it. Aotearoa is no exception. In 2015 Dr Vacy Vlazna discussed our much vaunted draft UNSC resolution on illegal settlements:
NZ normalises Israeli atrocities by falsely presenting Israel and Palestine as equal perpetrators and equal victims and by pushing the demand that Palestine gives up its endeavour for justice in the International Criminal Court thus letting Israel off scot-free for its monstrous war crimes and crimes against humanity.
While NZ demands that Israel freezes its rapacious settlement expansion…, it absurdly promotes the farce of negotiations that expand settlements. There is no demand by NZ that the zionist infiltrators leave the present settlements that have illegally expropriated half of the remaining Palestinian West Bank.
NZ obediently keeps up the pretence of a two state solution when Netanyahu has repeatedly ruled out Palestinian sovereignty.
The reaction to the injustice is not to act to prohibit the act, it is an attempt to regulate it. This is the equivalent of abolishing prosecutions for murder and replacing them with a regulatory framework seeking to place a limit on how many murders a perpetrator commits and to ensure that murders are hygienic. While not enforced by any material means, if these regulations are not obeyed the murderers could face the tepid prospect of additional unenforced regulations being imposed. Regulating something like this normalises it, and since the limitations are ignored such moves only benefit the genocidal project.
The neoliberal state is another abomination that has been embedded and strengthened by pseudo-opposition. The rat-shit “centre-left” equivocates between those who would crush the poor, exploit them for obscene gains, and send them broken to an early grave; and those who suggest that we not do those things. Since there is a power imbalance between exploiter and exploited that equivocation is effective endorsement. The welfare of the people is seen as a luxury to be attended when propitious circumstances allow, while more generally the rat-shit leaders act according to the dictates of the market fascism (because that is what The Economy needs).
Liberal Zionists showed their true colours in October of 2023. It wasn’t the first time. Every time that a pretext is there to do so liberal Zionists endorse Israeli violence and at some discretionary time later decry the inevitable results of the thing they endorsed. So too of neoliberalism. Economic shocks have been used to push radical destructive reforms. However on both counts there is now a sense that what once had to be sold as abnormal is now to be cemented in place as the permanent state of things. We know that even as mass-murder and ethnic cleansing accelerates in Palestine no major party in most Western countries is going to break with liberal Zionism and the pompous pseudo-humanitarian performance of pushing a “two-state solution” (as if that was not an effective endorsement for genocide). There are worrying signs that a similar uniformity is taking hold in the face of radical attacks on the public good.
“Welfare liberals” are falling in line with market-fascist thinking. The distinction between a “welfare” and “classical” liberals has always been a falsehood. From the outset the ideology that came to be known as “liberalism” was freighted with two hideous incurable tumours – the primacy of property rights and a religious belief in The Economy as an entity. I have made reference already to human sacrifice and this is no exaggeration. When the Great Famine broke out in Ireland the Tories liberalised the grain trade, but it did not help. When the Whigs gained power in Westminster in 1846 they decided to go much harder and cancelled government relief efforts to help starving Irish people altogether, relying on the market completely. A measure of just how successful the approach was is the fact that Ireland still has a lower population than it did in 1841. This is because they sacrificed hundreds of thousands of lives to save the economy but this actually left the economy completely wrecked.
Far from The Great Famine being an occasion for ideological reform, the British government shifted this brutal form of genocide to India, where on multiple occasions they banned the provision of relief to people suffering famine caused largely by the British Empire’s commodity-hungry and resource-extracting economic policies. Tens of millions died slow painful helpless deaths in a series of events spanning decades. The same people who murdered these millions cited free-trade for the sake of the economy but had no hesitation in preventing Indian commerce from competing fairly with British rivals.
While privileged liberal ideologues indulge themselves by rejoicing in the moral superiority of their negative liberty, it has always been the case that liberalism is selective in offering its bounty of freedom. The British and US empires have been prolific in incarcerating, torturing and killing those who exercise their freedom of speech if it threatens imperial “interests”. We see in such instances that the enemies of Western benevolence are “militants” and “terrorists”, whose “terrorism” may in fact be such dire acts as pamphleting, teaching children, organising a strike, or wearing glasses. Freedom of speech exists so long as your speech doesn’t threaten the existing power structure, and now that the Western hegemony has become ideologically fragile we see that the news media have lost their sense of flexible loyalty and have become rigid regime propaganda. Speech is becoming more openly policed. This may currently seem like a Palestine exception, but will clearly be applied to other issues immanently. “Antisemitism” has been a very useful and powerful tool to overcome residual human rights sentiments, but other pretexts are available including “grooming”, “woke”, “radicalism”, and the old faithful “terrorism”.
Liberalism has always offered freedom for me and an agonising death of starvation for thee. Friedrich Hayek even made a point in The Road to Serfdom of arguing that freedom necessarily includes the freedom to starve to death in a gutter. This book is beyond problematic and anyone who looks beyond its reductionist premise will find that every page drips with evil. It is a work of fanatical utopianism that airily espouses a system of suffering imposed by state coercion of actual people in defence of abstract “freedom”.
Welfare liberals have been lured though decades of indoctrination to view left-wing causes as indulgences and products of their own superior benevolence. They have no intellectual equipment to oppose market fascists if times of crisis are invoked. They are voting again and again to cause excess deaths and suffering by cutting welfare and public health services. The effects of this on the marginalised are real. The libs are opposed to “austerity” as such, but their argument from moderation is that we must have “fiscal prudence” (aka austerity) so that we can heal our poor wounded and bleeding economy. Once the economy recovers then the poor will once more benefit from their bounteous welfare charity (as long as we have headroom, naturally).
There are numerous problems with the idea that you have to restrict government services at times of crisis. We are always in times of crisis or recovery from crisis. Part of the manner in which economic governance has been hijacked from serving the public good is the sense of a permanent state of exception. Historically successful progressive reform has taken place without regard for the economic problems of the time. It happens when people decide that a more just world is necessary. Despite orthodox wisdom, these changes have massively benefited the economy while the belt-tightening impulses of liberals simply feed a vicious circle of dysfunction and inefficiency in the state and community sectors.
The Road to Terfdom
Where welfare liberals have succeeded is in extending the selective privileges of negative liberty to people who aren’t straight white men or able to pass as such. Identity politics is by no means unimportant and is not secondary, but liberal identity politics tends to favour the interests of those who are already comparatively privileged in terms of wealth and social capital. Another big problem that people have found in recent years is elite capture of identity politics.ii That said, even this top-down beneficence can have a profound effect in changing the day-to-day lives of marginalised people, giving them breathing room to be who they are and for their voices to be heard. Elite capture aside, the liberal rhetoric on this subject is actually true. The real problem is that these freedoms are not based on solidarity and genuine empowerment and thus they are all too easily reversed.
Any student of history who has thought about the topic will know that years of liberal progress can be undone in months or weeks. When it suits the state or the ruling class a given group will quickly become targets. Communal violence or persecution based on ethnic, religious, sectarian, caste or class identity arises almost instantly when desired. Examples include the persecution of Chinese in numerous Western settler colonies when their labour was made undesirable by economic factors; the drastic loss in status and material wealth of women after the Great War; and innumerable examples of selective or general anti-migrant sentiments arising just at the exact right time to provide a populist pretext for the state’s economically motivated crack-down on certain types of migrants. All of these things can happen without needing so much as a change in government, let alone regime, and they are starting to happen now.
The clouds of reaction loom darkly on the near horizon. The sudden reversal in women’s reproductive rights in the US is an opening shot. The global attack on trans rights is rapidly and predictably expanding into a broader fascist attack all forms of gender diversity including cis-people’s wrights to reject narrow gender norms. The powerful voices for “libertarian” ideals all seem by coincidence to be white supremacists and their “libertarian” ideals don’t seem to be any impediment to their open espousal imposing a form of serfdom on the vast majority of the population. The Venn diagram of market fascists, Christo-fascists, race fascists, male-supremacist fascists grows ever closer to a circle. The diversity that exists in their ranks is only one Night of the Long Knives away from extinction. Even if some bloody consolidation doesn’t happen, it is inevitable that the white male father will be crowned once again to stand alongside the bourgeoisie as assumed norms and assumed authority figures. This elevation, however, is a divide-and-rule strategy by a narrow elite who actually thinks of the average bourgeois white male as an insignificant bug. In late-stage capitalism the rulers are not bourgeois, they are an aristocracy cos-playing as self-made.
There is no need for a coup to bring about this fascist transformation. The so-called centre-left is happy to institute policies that further marginalise minorities and women by following economic policy prescriptions that deepen existing inequalities. The enthusiasm with which the UK Labour government is pursuing the same sort of policies as our ACT-led coalition, Javier Milei, and Musk’s DOGE shows that the centre-left is not to be trusted, or at least not their leadership. The main threat to the UK government’s massive attack on the poor, the vulnerable, and the state sector is opposition from their own party.
Starmer and his ilk were never a credible electoral force. They won by default due to a string of ostentatiously terrible Tory governments making dramatically bad decisions. There has been a trend of this sort of thing. Our ridiculous ferry and school lunch incompetence stories are tepid versions of the grandiose incompetence displayed by the likes of Trump, Bolsonaro and Milei. Despite everything the UK electorate clearly didn’t trust Starmer. Labour won a massive landslide in seats taking two-thirds of the parliament, but they only had 34% of the popular votes. Given the poor turnout they won this huge landslide with only one out of every five registered voters casting a vote for them – and many of those votes would be for anti-Starmer Labour candidates. Labour did much much better under the “unelectable” Jeremy Corbyn.
Like Biden’s victory it is only the antipathy towards the other option that has led to these unpopular leaders gaining their position. In the case of UK Labour it is clear that this fact is overtly being used as an opportunity to inflict a massive programme of neoliberal attacks against the public interest. Elected or not, this is deeply undemocratic. The risible landslide ensures that the UK government can largely ignore the public and the left-wing within their own ranks. They may concede the odd fight, but by the time the electorate get to choose another government these decisions will be well entrenched (and electors might not have much else to choose from anyway). On Double Down News George Monbiot makes many of the same points I have made, adding that Labour are running to the right of every Tory government except Liz Truss, and that by doing so they are paving the way for the rise of an openly far-right political movement under Nigel Farage’s Reform Party.
It is clear that there is a new phenomenon abroad, a new variant on the duopoly that supercharges the anti-democratic politics created by culture war which makes people choose the unpalatable rat-shit “centre-left” option because the alternative is a monster who only appeals to the delusional and the hateful. An interesting test case may be Canada’s Mark Carney. Despite his dubious establishment background Carney has progressive rhetoric, but this may just be the salting of a worked-out neoliberal mine. Carney ended a corporate carbon tax as soon as he became PM and cancelled slow-walked plans to increase Capital Gains Tax. It all seems depressingly familiar. In this case, the monster who differentiates Carney and gives him room to move right is Trump more than his actual opponent Pierre Poilievre. It will be interesting to see, assuming Carney wins, whether Trump’s hostility will create space for further neoliberal attacks on, say, Canada’s health system. I would be a lot less surprised by that than by a former reserve bank governor actually following through on his espoused progressive ideals.
So far, the more the Coalition here in Aotearoa reveals itself to be a collection of idiots, lunatics, charlatans and fanatics the more Hipkins shows his Mr Keith side. His endorsement of the attack on Tamatha Paul should be put in the context of a long relentless dirty politics campaign against left-wing Green Party parliamentarians. In an MMP environment it may seem counterproductive on the surface to allow, let alone endorse, attacks on the caucus members of such a close ally. On another level there is a clear (if totally disgusting) rationale in that Labour’s leadership knows that a sizeable chunk of National voters will vote for them in the right circumstances, such as a disastrous pandemic or calamitous coalition government. But even if that is strictly true it is only a pretextual rationale because Labour could run as a left-wing party rather than trying to be the more credible and less cruel conservative alternative. Their electoral calculus is not neutral, it is bound by neoliberal TINA assumptions.
How to Tell Four Lies in Only Two Assertions
On the “NZ Leftist Collective” podcast Samah Huriwai-Seger let it be known that she did not consider the Labour Party to be on the left. This provoked both disbelief and indignation from fellow panellists. Eventually the spluttering died down and some arguments were made around ways in which Labour policies have benefited people (including the “working for families” tax credit, which was fantastic apart from the tiny detail that it deliberately excluded the poorest children in the country).
There were two reactions to Huriwai-Seger that were very telling. One was that all four other panellists (one being Labour MP Kieran McAnulty) made a point of saying that Labour wasn’t National. ACT or NZ First. This sounds very much like the political style of US Democrats and UK Labour, a fact which should send chills down the spine. Another was Craig Renney’s answer to Huriwai-Seger’s contention that Hipkins gave a “green light” to Israel’s genocide in Gaza. Renney pointed out that he had been in rooms full of Labour Party faithful who were unanimously opposed to the genocide. This is a completely fallacious understanding of the way party politics works. After all, if you were in a room full of UK Labour members 6 months ago you would have been very hard-pressed to find any who supported benefit cuts to disabled people let alone the entire package of right-wing measures that is at the very core of the current government. Renney’s thinking has no allowance for the elite capture of political leadership when that is perhaps the most important thing shaping policy, governance, and even ideology in our time.
The question of Hipkins giving a “green light” to genocide when he was Prime Minister is beautifully illustrative. On the surface Huriwai-Seger might seem to have been reading a lot into Hipkins making the blandest of prevarications. In reality the conventionality of Hipkins response shows the power of groupthink to be violently immoral and deceptive in an offhand way. Asked directly about a “cutting of food, fuel, water and electricity” Hipkins answers that Israel “has a right to defend itself” but “there are international norms” of proportionality and “I’m not going to make a judgement on the specifics”. In a few short words he manages an incredible amount of lying.
The first lie is that Israel has a “right to defend itself”. It cannot claim self-defence against resistance forces as an occupying power. I covered this fully when the Gaza Holocaust first began.
The second lie is that this is a question of “norms” rather than laws. Sieges for a legitimate military purpose are legal, but it is illegal to trap civilians or blockade food. This sort of blockade is also prohibited under clause (c) of Article ii of the United Nations Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.
The third lie is the implication that this is not also a blatant violation of the Fourth Geneva Convention which obliges the occupant to ensure the welfare of the occupied. This is where a simple negation can hide Byzantine doublethink. Hipkins must have been given official advice on more than one occasion that Israel is the occupying power, yet it doesn’t seem to penetrate his smug-shrouded skull to think what this means in moral and legal terms. Huriwai-Seger references the fact that for people “who see themselves in Palestinians” this is a “green light for explicit genocidal intent”. I raise this here because even though Hipkins is clearly aware that Israel has an ongoing control over the movement of people and goods in and out of Gaza (including on the border with Egypt), Hipkins acts as if they are not committing blatantly cruel immoral and illegal act against a helpless population of non-combatants. The implications are that Hipkins doesn’t really think of Palestinians as being worthy of the same moral calculus that he would use for Westerners (including Israelis) and that he believes that International Humanitarian Law is actually just a bunch of fuzzy “norms” that for some reason makes no provision to prohibit this form of mass atrocity.
The fourth lie is the old complexity canard hidden in hidden in Hipkins’ refusal to judge “specifics”. We have seen a lot of this during the last 18 months. No matter how blatant and clear-cut the situation becomes people trot out old clichés of a complicated and intractable age-old conflict. In fact, there are no possible “specifics” that can justify inaction when someone announces that they are about to commit a crime. Hipkins had a clear moral and legaliii obligation to denounce Israel’s genocidal rhetoric and the actions taken to enact those threats. To plead that this is premature judgement is the same as saying that one cannot consider an obvious crime to be a crime until someone has been convicted of it. This is the equivalent of saying that no one can ever be an accessory to a crime because the perpetrator enjoys the presumption of innocence so it is impossible to be an accessory until a conviction has been entered.
The fact that Hipkins is so egregiously deceptive and immoral in so few words shows the power of orthodoxy. His groupthink-captured mind is so immersed in a world of political compromise and politically-compromised intelligence that there is no actual bottom line. For anyone who is capable of putting aside racially-informed prefigurations, what he was confronted with when was a stark and alarming intent to inflict suffering and death on defenceless people. It had none of the usual camouflage. It was right there and people were already suffering and dying as it was put to him, and yet he found room to prevaricate.
One of the dangers is that “centre-left” political leaders see themselves as the adults in the room, but this prejudices them against understanding what is really going on. They are conservative and authoritarian in their choice of who to trust as sources of information. For example, Kieran McAnulty, on the same podcast I have mentioned, found out for the very first time that “defund the police” is not a call for abolishing the police. The slogan actually cohered after more than a decade of growing and uncontroversial awareness that the police have increasingly been used inappropriately to deal with problems arising from the underfunding of needed social services. It might be a bit of a stretch to go from that one piece of data, but it was noticeable that he was the only one on the panel of 5 to whom this was news. With exceptions for some specific causes, most Labour parliamentarians are not activists. As such they take the nonsense that is spread in mainstream circles as authoritative while tending to view those who have more knowledge and clarity as being emotional and overly partial. Increasingly on many topics they live in an information bubble that is controlled by fascist billionaires and, whatever their personal inclinations, that means they will default to fascist positions and then defend them against those they see as extremists.
As things stand, the rise of Mister Keith in this country seems like an inevitability. The economic mismanagement of the coalition and the terrible situation they are creating will be the ready excuse for continued austerity and continued attacks on the coherence of the public sector. The thing that might stop Chippy from going full Keith is the power of the Greens and Te Pāti Māori.
Through no fault of their own Te Pāti Māori are less of a threat to the right simply because in our media and political ecosystem every move they make that energises progress also creates and equal and opposite reactionary excitement. On the other hand the campaign against the Greens is a clear fixation. The dirty politics that has long festered in this country has evolved into a more establishment-wide attack on the party that is becoming akin to the anti-Corbyn campaign. It is the fact that left-wing ideals have won control of the leadership of the party (rather than merely its members and voters) that has made it a target. In the past the party has been reliably neoliberal, with the party’s left-wing always disadvantaged by the politics of working with neoliberal-dominated Labour.
Two-Faced Fascism
The new fascism that we face does not require a single Party nor a single Leader, but it must be able to exert the same level of control in its ability to foreclose on genuine democratic left-wing politics. As I have mentioned there is an existing international model of duopoly that exploits the ostensible diversity of a having a “liberal” and a “conservative” wing fighting like Lilliputians over egg prices as camouflage for actual uniformity.
On 1/200 podcast recently Oliver reiterated a point made some time ago that this fascist shift is in response to a crisis in imperial hegemony and late-stage capitalism. As he points out, it is an alternative to a New Deal style reform or (I would add) the mollifying reforms that ended the uprisings of 1967-68. I believe that this time of crisis has been long foreseen and this fascist response has been in the pipeline for around 30 years. There is a neo-Malthusian, neo-feudal, neo-aristocratic, racist, market-fascist synthesis that is currently directing world events with a power vastly disproportionate to the political appeal to sane people. Because people are fixated with the rise of far-right populism they have been slow to recognise the hegemony of far-right ideas among the most elevated Western circles. As such many powerful, but not ultra-elite, people are adherents to and servants of a project that they do not understand.
All of the problems that face us have clear socialist solutions, but they can only be undertaken by rejection of the tumours of liberalism – economism and the selective fetishisation of property rights. From an ultra-elite perspective the problem with this is that it is democratising. Once people take control of economic functions to avert crisis, then they will have a very clear and compelling path forward to use that same control to create justice. They are clearly determined to allow crises to continue accelerating to the point of no return. It is no exaggeration to state that these people are pressing towards a future in which they are overlords in a world of slaves.
The danger that the leftist Greens present is that the public is increasingly hungry for radical answers because the status quo is looking more and more frightening. Right-wing radicalism is embraced by the establishment proudly. Yet another important point raised by Samah Huriwai-Seger was that despite a long relationship the Greens have never had a cabinet position in a Labour-led government. In contrast Winston Peters has been Deputy PM and foreign minister under both Labour and National. In the current Coalition the minor parties both have 3 cabinet posts. In both cases they have pushed radical measures and have created massive headaches for the government. Labour’s leaders may or may not believe the rationales they use to explain keeping the Greens out of government, but the reality is that the establishment simply doesn’t trust people who are not ideologically captured. For example, who could imagine Chlöe Swarbrick answering a question about PPP in the way that Barbara Edmonds did?iv
As business-as-usual answers become ever less credible, the power of socialist ideas becomes hard to suppress with the normal bullying superiority of privileged rhetoric. The ideological divide is becoming ever more clear. The centre cannot hold. The right are racing to end all possible expressions of democratic politics while rapidly creating a mass-movement of violent fascists from the discontents that they themselves are creating. The left has only truth and clarity on its side. Socialist answers are not abstractions. A socialist answer to a problem is to fix the problem, not to leave the problem because of a superstitious notion that acting directly to fix the problem will actually somehow make the problem worse.
The establishment has been playing a game of whack-a-mole for decades in which it attacks any potentially transformative democratic politics with increasingly tired economic nostrums and irrelevant anti-communist screeching. None of it ever made sense, but as long as bad times could be relied on to be followed by better times it was a saleable bad-deal – like a high-interest car loan for an overpriced vehicle that you are buying for status rather than utility. Now we are starting to realise that a decent bus service is actually more important in the grand scheme of things. The establishment reaction is that if we don’t want to work our lives away to pay for a late model Ford Ranger, then we should die in a gutter as a salutary economic lesson. The crisis we face is not one of limits to growth it is one of limits to excess. Human productive power is so great that it far exceeds that required to maximise health and happiness. Once we start solving crises through direct socialised means we will inevitably address the injustices of inequality, and that will mean the end of the current world order.
The centre is collapsing on multiple fronts. The death/unmasking of liberal Zionism is the paradigm of our political moment. I highly recommend the bookPalestine Hijacked by Thomas Suarez which shows that fascism became the driving ideology of Zionism in the 1920s and has secretly remained so since. If you go back a decade or two, right-wing expansionary settlers were considered a fringe of Israel’s political landscape and yet their project was underwritten by the state. Now Ben Gvir and Smotrich are at the centre of power, but also their “left-wing” opponents will never go back to the pretence of seeking peace with Palestinians under a two-state solution. The liberal Zionists have embraced ethnic cleansing and annexation and the smattering who can’t swallow that reality have had to turn against Zionism altogether. The same is true of liberals in the rest of the world. They have supported oligarchic capitalism on delusory grounds for so long that now the fascist pivot has come they are simply embracing it. They are establishment loyalists who believe that following the rules of “liberal democracy” must be safeguarded against the any socialist notions that might take hold amongst the credulous public. Liberal democracy, as Walter Lippmann wrote over 100 years ago, must be safeguarded against the will of the public by an elite who employ the “manufacture of consent”.
For all of these reasons duopoly politics is essential. The duopoly is the new Fascist Party. The UK experience shows us that the only impediment to a “centre-left” party leading a radically far-right government is a genuine alternative with a parliamentary voice to strengthen the remnants of the left within the governing party. It may be that the end of this fascist turn only comes when polities like the UK and Canada end first-past-the-post voting and the US either stops being insane or stops being so relevant.
In Australia, where the duopoly is constrained by minor parties and independents, the duopoly have passed bipartisan (actually tripartisanv) legislation vastly increasing political spending limits so that they can flood selected seats with money to get rid of such roadblocks. The tolerance for extreme right-wing minor party politics and the intolerance for any real left-wing politics is the same on both sides of the Tasman.
Certain people in NZ Labour will be looking to take down the Greens and TPM wherever possible. By undermining the ability of their partners to achieve position themselves on the left, they also weaken their electoral support. Right-wing politics is fed by two things: rich people’s money and poor people’s sense of futility. Clearly we need to grow support for the left-wing of both of Labour’s potential coalition partners.
Things Change
Samah Huriwai-Seger suggests that we might need a new left-wing worker’s party, but I think that the history of New Labour and the Alliance in this country shows hard limits in this approach. Without the extra constituency that a “green” or Māori party have to differentiate them they are easily smothered by Labour. Moreover we don’t need to follow the failed tactics of the past because we are not necessarily caught in the same trap that existed then.
A few years ago I would have considered NZ Labour to be an irredeemable shitlib smugfest of people madly in love with repeating the mistakes of the past. I would have considered an Aotearoan Jeremy Corbyn an impossibility because no sensible left-wing person would be part of NZ Labour. But things change. Labour voters, Labour members, and even most of the Labour caucus is not going to be wildly enthusiastic about repeating what is going on in the UK under Starmer’s Labour.
Under Jeremy Corbyn the Labour Party became the largest party in Europe by membership. When the Labour leadership started using the undemocratic constitution of the party to over-ride the membership there was a mass exodus. This is understandable, but it was very frustrating to watch. Once the right-wing had showed its hand it was the perfect opportunity for a movement to organise the rank-and-file against the takeover of the party. It might seem hard when the putative left-wing Momentum movement in Labour had been subverted, but doing something that might have seemed futile at the time may have paid off. Starmer is unmasked for what he is. The antisemitism ruse is played out. Ordinary people abhor the Israel’s genocide and want action from their government. The US empire and its bullshit capitalism looks ever more alarming as Trump and his collection of fascists attack friends and enemies alike. If there had been a co-ordinated leftist movement to contest the heart of British Labour it might be looking well-positioned right now to change the government.
I don’t know whether Chris Hipkins is redeemable, but I believe that people like McAnulty and Edmonds genuinely want to be of the left. I think that people in NZ Labour can understand the need for genuine transformational politics. More importantly, though, I think that they can finally be brought to understand that the reason the Clark and Ardern governments were not transformational was that they never tried to be transformational. Loyalists can point to various things they did that benefitted people greatly, but the figures on things like housing and inequality show the underlying malaise. Labour members are as hungry for change as anyone else, the trick is to persuade them to stop deferring to failed leadershippers and to start relying on knowledge rather than authority.
A lot of people are starting to see an emergence of fascism in response to crisis, but another way of looking at it is that an extant fascism is unmasking itself because its liberal capitalist outer shell is cracked. It may be a terrible time, but it is a time of clarity and a time when there is greater hope for change than there has been for years.
For better or worse there can be no armed revolution, our only choice is to use the institutions of liberal governance and make them into the democratic instruments that they purport to be. That must be a movement fighting on a thousand different fronts. Amongst many other things that means that Labour Party members have to end the elite capture of their party. They need to purge the establishment leaders and those creepy fucks who are linked to the security state. They can’t allow rule by advisors and they can’t keep accepting pragmatism as an excuse for right-wing governance. They need to stop worshipping Chippy. If he is not replaced or forced to change then he will be the next Starmer. If he is prevented from instituting austerity by coalition partners then his job will be to destroy those partners. Does he even know this himself? I doubt he does, but we do and that is more important. We shouldn’t continue letting the elite perspective persuade us that what we see isn’t real.
Can this happen before the next election? Maybe not. But every moment that passes makes our choice clearer. It is a choice of socialism or fascism (and there is no appetite for authoritarian “socialism”). This moment of clarity means that the disagreements of the left begin to look less important at exactly the same time that establishment liberal solutions reach a low point in public credibility. That means that there is a potential to penetrate through the media miasma. People don’t want Mr Keith and they do not need to accept him.
TIFA.
There is a fucking alternative.
iI want to note here that I am using this language as a familiar framework, but I do think that strictly speaking there can be forms of Zionism in the broadest sense that do not support or seek to justify any offences against Palestinians. When I use “liberal Zionism” I include Zionists of the left (if they can be called that), but I do want to acknowledge that there are a few radically pro-Palestinian Zionists out there who want a democratic homeland with no exclusive rights for Jews. I believe we should emphasise being pro-Palestinian over being anti-Zionist. I understand it makes little difference at this time, hence my adoption of standard anti-Zionist terminology, but there may come a time when having the clarity to remember that the fight is for Palestinian justice, safety and human rights, not against an abstract.
iiPlease readElite Capture: How the Powerful Took Over Identity Politics (And Everything Else) by Olúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò.
iiiUnder the Genocide Convention. This is putatively not enforceable because it is not in our genocide legislation, but I would argue that an obligation does not have to be judicially enforceable to be an obligation and that our growing tendency to believe otherwise (such as with UNSC resolutions that do not authorise force being labelled “non-binding”) is a sign of the metastasis of fascism in global politics. Moreover, as Craig Mokhiber has pointed out with regard to Yemen’s attacks on shipping, the obligation to act against genocide is jus cogens and thus is legally binding without specific legislation.
ivI feel like I am tempting fate here, but it really isn’t about individuals. In a different political culture with different expectations Edmonds would not have answered the way she did either.
vThe “centre-right” party in Australia is a coalition of Liberal and National parties, with the latter being very right-wing indeed.
iThere are two follow-up pieces first with a very frank Kshama Sawant, then a lengthy but sometimes revealing livestream in which Bowman and Cori Bush’s new podcast on Zeteo.
iiThis is discussed in the livestream referenced in note iii.
iiiI know it’s actually apocryphal. Fuck off please.
ivYou are allowed to take a moment here to imagine political leaders as battling Pokemon. It is therapeutic.
vOut of 57 British Prime Ministers Starmer is the 30th to be Oxford educated.
viAlong with the economic losses created by straitjacketing the government and by the economic effects of inequality, even the rich lose access to public services. Where they exist, the private replacements such as private healthcare, are plagued by antagonistic incentives to make profit where possible. The rich also lose freedoms and quality of life as these criminogenic policies create safety issues. They do not even save in taxes because the long-term costs generated by poverty are greater than the savings.
iIn other countries party structures place their emphasis on balancing appeal to local party members, local voters, and the party hierarchy. In the US the appeal is to party leadership, to donors, and to voters, but the major parties do not have a party membership so the representational mandate element is already reduced making the process far more of a sales pitch for the individual rather than a selected individual chosen to sell the party.
iiIn this, like many other things, fascism is a distorted mirror of the left. True left-wing governance involves a constant discourse with a thinking and involved public, a burden which “left-wing” governments have often proven to be disinclined to bear. Fascism, on the other had, seeks to empower its policies by a continual mobilisation of the public through brainwashing, by which I mean propaganda, by which I mean “public relations”, by which I mean “communications”.
iiiI use the term brainwashing advisedly having myself studied Brainwashing 101 at a journalism school. That said, I did fail the first hurdle of brainwashing school, to wit the very first lesson in which we were meant to be brainwashed into believing that our brainwashing was not brainwashing and was in fact a crucial yet trivial service called “communications”. The reasoning was that the brainwashing techniques we were to be taught would not be used for brainwashing due to our professional ethics. These ethics were taken to be universal for absolutely everyone and backed by a rigid ethos sufficiently strong to survive in a world which runs on [checks notes] massive near universal corruption. Many of the successful brainwashing graduates probably went into harmless communications roles, but lets face it, people like Christopher Luxon do not get elected without the help of expert brainwashers.
Eighty years is too long to wait. Free Palestine before ‘28.
I am not Palestinian and I cannot claim to speak for Palestinians, but I give this work as a mere offering. I can only hope that it rings true in the minds of the people who must live the horrors we seek to end. To silence myself in deference to an identity would serve no purpose.
I am not Israeli. I see the issue of Palestinian freedom as an issue of oppressor and oppressed rather than as a two-sided conflict, yet I still acknowledge the humanity and inextricable interests of Israeli people in the issue and it’s necessary solution.
The only solution is a one-state solution. This is known to any who are honest and uncompromised by vested interests. A two-state solution would never have resolved issues such as the rights of Palestinian refugees whose origins lie in present-day Israel. These rights were recognised in UN General Assembly Resolution 194. Records of refugee status have been maintained through the decades. No political solution can erase the inalienable human rights of these refugees.
The two-state solution stands revealed now for the nonsense that it has always been. There is no plan to force Israeli settlers from the occupied territories. There is no hope for a Palestinian state with territorial integrity. The people of this state would have no protection from Israeli strikes and incursions. Western nations can not be trusted to respect any political autonomy in a Palestinian state because they freely delegitimise and sanction factions whose politics they dislike, labelling them “terrorists”.
Supporters of a two-state solution do not explain how they will establish justice by giving only 22% of the land of mandate Palestine to the Palestinians – they seem instead to think that because Palestinians are suffering they should be grateful to accept less than is their due.
The two-state solution has always been a false hope that is exploited by those who perpetuate a system of apartheid and perpetrate a genocide. The two-state solution has also been cynically used by supporters of Israel’s genocide. The two-state solution has been embraced by cowardly political leaders throughout the world who wish to pretend that they support peace and justice while throwing their energies into ensuring the continuation of violence and injustice.
From the inception of the Zionist project by the British Empire there has been a calculated strategy of keeping Palestinians and their allies on the back foot. They created a racial hierarchy of reporting and of policy. Despite the indigenous residency of Palestinians and the migrant status of most Jews, Jewish rights became something that were presumed and had to be argued against, while Palestinian rights were assumed to be null and had to be argued for.
Our leaders fear the consequences of opposing genocide and seem to think that they will never pay a price for supporting genocide. Such people obey lawless power and spurn powerless law, but true law is an instrument of the people and an expression of their power. When the people awaken, the leaders will rush to have been always against the genocide.
The racist double-standard continues. If a Palestinian commits a crime or atrocity it is taken as evidence of Palestinian terrorist barbarism, yet the very same act could be carried out by Israelis ten or one hundred times and the explanation is that it is a response to Palestinian terrorist barbarism.
As I write we have just witnessed weeks of stories of the brutality, torture, rape, starvation and medical neglect evident on the faces and bodies of those released from Israeli captivity. Our news media have greeted this with silence. Yet when three prisoners of war were released from captivity in a besieged and deliberately starved territory there is an international outcry over the fact that they are gaunt and weak. History will know and judge this reporting for the pro-genocide propaganda that it is.
We can no longer accept this racist framing. We can no longer try to meet disputants halfway when their minds are full of evil racist hate. We can no longer pander to the misapprehensions of the misinformed public. We must strike back mercilessly. Nonviolence does not mean that we will leave people with the comfort of their self-serving lies. If reality causes people pain the real culprits in their suffering are those who convinced them to live in the zone of genocidal fantasy.
Palestinians have been shackled ever since 1948 with the cruelty of having to negotiate for rights that were declared “universal” for everyone but them. They were made stateless in a Zionist settler colonial project that only took root because it was also a British and US imperial project.
The very people who made them stateless have used their own crime as a justification for treating Palestinians unfairly in negotiations. Their statelessness was used to defer recognition of their human rights as if they had somehow not yet achieved the status of human. Though framed as temporary this state has lasted generations and now the very same people treat the historic offences against Palestinian rights (which are still causing harm today) as a mere past grievance to be tutted about and shrugged off. The reaction to oppression that is framed as the problem, not the oppression itself, and the victims are expected to be penitent for their “terrorism” and offer recompense.
The Oslo “Peace Process” was a process leading to no possibility of peace, and the two-state “solution” is no solution. No matter how much Palestinian officials have offered to sacrifice they have been condemned invariably as intransigent for not agreeing to relinquish rights which they have no power to relinquish. Meanwhile Israel is trapped in a web of extralegal entanglement, shackled to the Palestinian people and their ultimate emancipation. The phrase “final status issues” was left hanging in the air after Oslo as a direful reminder that Israel can only exist in its current form by continuing a genocidal conflict indefinitely, or by seeking a brutal final solution of mass death and ethnic cleansing.
As long as Israel continues to insist on being a majority Jewish state controlling the majority of the former Mandatory Palestine they will be inimical to Palestinians. This has nothing to do with conflict, nor any action of resistance by Palestinian groups. Palestinians are enemies of the state of Israel merely by existing. The inalienable human rights of Palestinians cannot be realised while Israel exists on the terms its political leaders insist upon. Thus Israel has long been engaged in a slow but intensifying genocide that seems to be heading inevitably towards the logic of extermination.
For Palestinians the situation becomes ever more horrific. The violence keeps increasing in tempo and magnitude. Officials documented over 60,000 deaths in Gaza from October 2023 to January 2025. The vast majority of these were from the direct trauma of armed violence and they represent only a fraction of those who died prematurely through the total effects of war, including undocumented violent deaths as well as preventable deaths from health conditions, exposure, neglect, poisoning, and malnutrition.
Along with the shocks of armed mass violence, Palestinians face an ever more oppressive web of apartheid control. In Hebrew this is known as hafrada which, as with the Afrikaans word apartheid, can be translated as “separateness”.Like the Indian Pass Laws of California, the Nuremburg Laws, and South African Pass Laws these practices make a false pretence of serving a security purpose.
Apartheid practices cannot serve as a counter-insurgency strategy as they deliberately create a monolithic group based on ethnic identity, not on insurgent activity. Such a strategy seeks to incapacitate resistance rather than ending it, and because its oppression provokes the very resistance it claims to oppose, the ultimate logic is that security only comes from complete enslavement or extermination. Apartheid is inherently genocidal.
Enhanced by technology Israel’s apartheid tactics are ever more pervasive. The controlling electronic presence began by taking streets and public spaces then moved into homes as mobile phones were turned by spyware into bugs, trackers and hidden cameras. Through biometrics the techno-apartheid has invaded people’s bodies themselves. The digital world is full of paranoid spies and aggressive guards who pose real world danger. A post merely expressing a wish for Palestinian freedom can lead to time in a brutal political prison system under “administrative detention” or after being found guilty by a military court of “incitement”.
The control and fear is everywhere. Violent death can come from an innocent misstep. On February 10 2025 a woman who was 8 months pregnant was shot dead because she looked at the ground in a manner considered suspicious. Terror and coercion are constant and inescapable.
Israel also uses automated systems to control the bodies of Palestinians physically. The high technology approach of “frictionless” automated control is a dystopian abomination. It strips all autonomy from subjects, making all life a prison sentence of constraint and insecurity.
For both Israel and the US any challenge to a self-appointed imperium beyond their legal territory is to be met with fetishistically robotic forms of control and killing. The proponents become ever more murderous and inhuman by cultivating a fixation on clinical, sterile, detached “precision” killing. The victims die screaming in bloody chaos, in fear, and in agony, but we privilege the perspective of distant operators and their superiors who call this abomination “surgical”.
“AI” near instantaneously generates death lists of any required number of targets. This is death by datafication. Those deemed terrorists are “proven” to be terrorists by the fact that a computer programmed to designate them as terrorists did so. It is a closed loop; a deadly tautology. In Gaza it is clear that the “AI” system was simply a fast way of producing “signature strike” victims based on phone movements, rather than any sightings of individuals. They use the phrase “artificial intelligence” as if conjuring magic, invoking a sophistication that doesn’t exist. These are just signature strikes produced with great rapidity. They probably produce far more false positives among civilians who haplessly carry unshielded mobile phones than positives among armed resistance members who evade such detection.
The self-fulfilling datafication that defines “terrorists” follows in a tradition of racists, fascists and other megalomaniacs. Those who used phrenology and physiognomy to “prove” low intelligence, criminality, and racial inferiority have been succeeded by racist digital heirs. A whole science is being developed to create a body of knowledge in which “Palestinian” is a subspecies of “terrorist”. This comes to predominate in the crafted and truncated epistimologies that dominate in bureaucratic, journalistic, political, criminological and (above all) military milieux.
The fascistic minds of the oppressors view all Palestinians as actual or potential monsters. They create cruel rituals to cement in their own minds the supernatural evil of their chosen enemies. Prisoners are stripped, blindfolded and bound hand and foot. They are forbidden movement and speech.
In WWII, Germany’s most fanatical SS troops were merely led in columns by scarce Allied soldiers, yet even a Palestinian child is treated like Hannibal Lecter. This is humiliation. This is often painful torture. This is dehumanisation that makes human victims into mere objects, and often obstacles, to those who have power over them. Yet the most important function of this ritual is to reify in Israeli minds the animalistic violence that they choose to see in Palestinians. The ritual sends a message that each Palestinian is like a lethal poisonous animal and could at any time choose to explode in an action-movie frenzy of homicidal/suicidal rage.
The weapons used to kill, maim, incapacitate and poison Palestinians; the technology used to monitor and control Palestinians; and the self-fulfilling racially-informed “science” that defines Palestinians are all developed in a dynamic discourse with other jurisdictions and with other target populations. We know that whatever we allow to happen to Palestinians will come to us in time.
Like the rules of the Jim Crow era in the former slave states of the USA, the rules of hafrada are the formal tip of an iceberg of wider ideology of violent racial supremacy. Among those in uniform the fanatical, the callous and the overly obedient can be equally deadly. Inevitably the disparity in power creates opportunities of impunity for rapists, sadists, and murderers. Palestinians have no meaningful protection from Israelis in uniform.
Out of uniform, civilians exercise nearly as much control enjoying nearly as much impunity as their official compatriots. The selfish and greedy take property, including people’s land and personal homes, with sanction and protection from the state of Israel. In this they act outside of their recognised territory and in ways that blatantly violate its own laws and constitution, with the two wrongs somehow combined into a grotesque legalistic parody of a right.
Settler fanatics inflict cruel harm for reasons beyond material gain. Out of hatred and fervour for the cause of a Greater Israel, they attack people, vanadalise homes, burn trees, kill or steal livestock, cut water lines and even poison wells. Israeli soldiers provide protection for them even when they are committing blatantly criminal and morally indefensible acts.
The complexity and diversity of the oppression of Palestinians cannot be summarised here. The historical nature of the Palestinian genocide is such that it has always sought to cloak itself by denying the existence of Palestinians as a people and by the outright erasure of important historical events such as massacres. As the lies of Zionist historiography were exposed, and as the Palestinian people fought successfully to show the world that they existed as such, the cloaking of the genocide shifted to the pretence of counterinsurgency and counterterrorism.
After the First Intifada the genocide began to hide itself increasingly through a proliferation of trivialities. This is an expected part of genocide, which Lemkin first defined as encompassing everything from censoring poetry to the “organized murder” of millions of Jews. In genocide “different actions” are used to a single end. The slow and longstanding nature of the Palestinian genocide, and the requirements of Israeli hasbara (propaganda) dictate that its intensification came first came in the form of petty injustices creeping into every aspect of life, making simple existence a painful struggle.
Stolen land and homes, destroyed infrastructure, and demolished houses are made irreplaceable by Israeli authorities. Life is deliberately calculated to be intolerable and it has become clear that Israel is using this banal torment as a way of coercing young Palestinians into migrating away.
As the genocide intensifies the violence exceeds the bounds of pogrom and becomes a periodic Holocaust. There is no longer a credible pretence that the pauses between the massacres are opportunities to work towards a peaceful solution. That scam is played out. The era of plausible denial of genocidal intent is gone and we are in an era of implausible denial. Vanishingly few ordinary people believe Israel’s lies about its peaceful aims, but the international leaders need to pretend to believe the lies. (When the tide turns and reality finally pops the bubble of hallucinogens that enwraps the Western world, they will wring their hands and proclaim “nobody could have known”.)
As the genocide becomes ever harder to deny, the anti-Palestinians in all parts of the world have decided they will not concede a millimetre. They have doubled-down on embracing brutal and murderous bullying while becoming ever more histrionic about antisemitism and Israeli victimhood. They have backed themselves into a corner. There is no reasoning with them. They can only be defeated and forced to accept peace.
It may seem hopeless to coerce the 16th most powerful military state on the planet when it has nuclear weapons and the apparently immutable support of the 1st and 6th most powerful military states, yet Israel lives by its international legitimacy. To survive it needs Western backing. We can, however, force Western governments to end their support of Israel’s genocide.
The legal and scholarly consensus has already been settled. The International Court of Justice may be subverted to rule against it, but the fact of the genocide is already established beyond reasonable doubt. At this stage the fight for formal recognition of the genocide has effectively become a litmus test of whether international law is real or merely a mask for the exercise of raw power.
The problem of the illegitimate exercise of power is nothing new. By nature, those with power do not respect the rule of law and are only constrained by the fear of arousing the power of the masses. International law has largely evaded democratic constraint and has been twisted into a system of imperial tyranny. This too is a spreading cancer.
If we do not win the fight to stop the Palestinian Genocide we will lose the most important battle in the fight against creeping global fascism. The US will continue to accelerate its claims to exercise universal jurisdiction beyond its borders, indicting and extraditing people who have never set foot in US territory. Moreover, given that Donald Trump has already claimed that he can ethnically cleanse Gaza under “the authority of the United States”, this means that the executive would not even be constrained by US law. Those countries too weak to resist will become zones of lawless power in the mould of the occupied Palestinian territories, or Iraq under occupation.
Meanwhile the fascist creep into domestic politics will be emboldened. Executive branches will increasingly rule through decree. Legislation will become codified tyranny by enacting “laws” that cannot be reconciled with justice. The police and judiciary will increase the level of colluding obeisance they make to plutocratic power expressed in ever more racist, sexist, classist, transphobic, and homophobic reaction.
The political conversation is the real battlefront that we need to fight on. Genocide apologists hide behind a mask of uncertainty that must be ripped away. The code of journalistic silence has to be broken and politicians must be made to show their hands, choose their side, and see who wants to vote for them once they admit that they support oppression and slaughter. Once the stampede starts, no moderate will want to be the last mainstream political hopeful to be cheerleading a genocide. The remaining fanatic anti-Palestinians will be left with their yapping constituents, revealed as the hateful fringe that they are.
In order to maintain a level of truthfulness we cannot allow the political conversation to be dragged back into the thickets of prevarication. The reality is stark and we cannot tolerate people finally acknowledging the simple morality of ending genocide only to then obfuscate the issue with manufactured complications about implementing the end of that genocide. We have to be sensitive to the human rights of Israelis, but we must accept that some people will pay a price. There is no reason, for example, that any settler who moved to occupied Palestinian territory as an adult should have any right to retain real estate or receive compensation. They are due only humane treatment and welfare provisions that are commensurate with their needs.
Along with many other facts in its favour, a one-state solution provides the clarity that will be needed to end the genocide and restore peace and justice. It is a simple matter of giving equal rights to all of the residents of the territory of Mandatory Palestine. Everyone equal. It may not be easy to achieve, but it is simple to understand and it is simple to demand. There is no other choice.
The rights of current citizens of Israel must be respected, but the resources of the state must be turned away from war and oppression and harnessed to act in recompense for everything that has been taken from Palestinians.
The new democratic state should not be expected to stand alone. The UK and the US owe a massive debt for all they have wrought and they can afford to pay in money and in construction. Those states who voted to partition Palestine also owe a special debt, but all UN member states owe something (if only for allowing Israel to exercise the rights of UN membership when it never even attempted to fulfil the conditions under which it was admitted by complying with UNGA Resolution 194). A revitalised and relegitimised UN can take on the project of building a new Palestine.
Respect should be paid to religious and cultural Jews, to the Hebrew language, and to the name Israel. The new Palestine will be a land that celebrates indigeneity and immigrant culture as complementary. Palestine will be both a bicultural land with intrinsic “Palestinian” and “Israeli” characteristics, and a multicultural land that has always been a fabric woven of many changing threads.
I am not being idealistic. These seeming ideals are just a framework, and within that framework there may be many injustices. Without this framework, however, there will only be endless strife and suffering. Without this both peoples face a future that is bleak. Israel has already become a pariah in much of the world. It cannot resolve its problems with the methods it is currently pursuing. All it can do is fall off the cliff of madness that it teeters on. If Israel’s thought leaders had real freedom of thought they would know this. The world will never forget the Gaza Holocaust, and they will never forgive the next such slaughter. Once Israel becomes too much of a liability the US will no longer protect it or its people. The time to move towards real peace is now.
I have watched events descend into worse and worse violence and destruction. Each time I think this can’t go on; this is too much; the world will not stand for this any longer. And then it just goes on. Most Westerners don’t even get to see the horrors that we see in our social media. The genocide must inevitably end, but if we don’t end it – if we don’t wake the world’s outrage – then the alarm that finally wakes the world will be body count so big that even the Western media and Western politicians cannot ignore the stench of the mass graves. How many people have to die before the world accepts the inevitable?
At each point of new unprecedented horror the anti-Palestinians, in Israel and beyond, have shown that there is no limit to their genocidal thinking. It should be clear now to everyone that there is no crime too ghastly for them to justify, there is no line that can not be crossed. It should also be clear that Israel will only increase its violence over time. Without Palestinian liberation another holocaust is inevitable. It is the global public that must decide that this cannot continue. The people of the West in particular must have a culture change towards democracy and accountability.
We must internalise this struggle, then externalise it.
“In the Greek myth, Sisyphus, a mortal, is condemned by the gods to endlessly roll a rock up a mountain, only to have it fall back down again. Each time the rock rolls down the mountain, he pushes it up, and in the most optimistic telling of the story, he hopes that it will be the final time. This is his punishment for defying the gods and for imagining his life, his fate, equal to their own.”
In 2011 Edwidge Danticat made a comparison between Haiti and Sisyphus and my immediate reaction was to wonder if Prometheus was a better analogy. Both men were punished by the gods for daring to challenge their low station as mortals, but it was Prometheus who suffered the greater agony of daily torture. It seems to me that Haiti suffers a similar excruciation and torture that never ends. Their crime was to throw off the shackles of slavery rather than allowing their masters exploit them for another half century before generously freeing them to live in a country where everything, including all necessities of survival, would be owned by their former masters (the racist violent former masters who view them as subhuman animals).
Haiti’s punishment began with France returning, decades after Haiti broke free, to demand that they pay for the privilege of being independent or face military action. It took 122 years to pay the debt, which kept Haiti in chains of underdevelopment and is estimated to have cost a total of $US115 billion in lost wealth due to the compounding effects of underinvestment. That is over $US21,000 per adult in a country that has the lowest median wealth in the world ($US207 per adult). This impoverishment, though, is never enough. Every time the people of Haiti try to raise themselves the US (with the collusion of France and Canada) has been there to drag them down, sometimes through direct military intervention. The US occupied the country from 1915 to 1934, then supported the brutal regime of the Duvaliers, and helped oust Jean-Bertrand Aristide and the subsequent suppression of Fanmi Lavalas, the only popular political faction with a potential to govern democratically to exist in decades. While US clients enforce neoliberal piracy and police brutality, they have sham elections with pitiful turnouts so they can call themselves leaders. The instability has lead to gang warlordism. While wealth is shipped offshore, and US companies profiteer by lining their pockets with aid money, the people suffer violence, poverty and disease. In 2009 the US intervened to try to keep the Haitian government from implementing a rise in the minimum wage which was 22 US cents an hour. In 2010 a US contractor dumped raw sewerage from a UN peacekeeper base causing a cholera outbreak that killed about 9000 people and has yet to be eradicated.
Once the imperial mechanisms of oppression and greed are unleashed they are tireless and merciless. There is no room for peace and justice, nor room for simple honesty. The abusers paint themselves as saviours and camouflage their brigandage as “aid”. Those Westerners who do seek to act from fairness are overwhelmed by the greedy, the racist, the fanatical, and the paranoiac. Many Western officials, oligarchs and functionaries embody all of these traits. They loathe, they covet, they despise and they fear the possibility that their victims might one day develop strength. Unions, socialism, nationalisation, independent foreign policy, control of natural resources are all anathema. As circumstances change they alter the methodology of oppression. This creates phases, and what is happening in Palestine with a ceasefire can be seen as a phase-change in an ongoing genocide.
The nature and dimensions of this next phase can best be understood through an examination of the evolution of Balkanisation, neocolonialism and structural violence in the 20th century. To really understand what happens, though, it is necessary to leave aside any notions that legal concerns or humane sentiments play a role in these actions. This is a cycle of repeated and relentless violence premised on abstract notions of weakening and controlling nations as. Very few civilian or military personnel ever lose faith because they become aware of the human cost; in fact it is far more likely that people will question the morality of causing mass death and misery if they begin to question underlying mythology of moral righteousness at the centre of their imperialist ideology. This is very alarming in light of the current chauvinistic exceptionalism in the West generally, in Israel, and in the USA most especially.
The ancient imperialist practice of divide-and-rule finds modern expression in practices such as partition, Bantustanisation, and sponsorship of separatism. The imperial and Great Power practice of fomenting and sponsoring ethnic separatism amongst enemy polities grew in the 20th century to include ideological, religious and sectarian forms of division which can be seen in US-backed colour revolutions and the sudden rise of the Islamic State. Currently the US empire has created a situation in which countries must either be “open” societies into which it can pour money and corrupt the system through overt and covert means, or they must choose to be undemocratic thus giving a pretext to the US to impose sanctions and use other covert means of destabilisation and enfeeblement.
Division and destabilisation operations are used as a form of undeclared warfare, notably being used to precede US-backed coups. TP-AJAX, the plan to overthrow the Mossadegh government in Iran, was originally a British plan taken over by the US. They started by attacking the economy, causing instability and scarcity, but above all causing fear. They fomented discontent and paid people to demonstrate, often with violence and destruction. As with roughly contemporaneous actions in Viet Nam and Guatemala they created false-flag communist terror attacks so that right-wing puppets could switch between denouncing the reformist government as themselves being crypto-communists, or as being incapable of dealing with communist insurgency. In the victim country and in the beltway halls of power, a wave of paranoiac fabulism is unleashed by imperial agents that would make a Q-anon fanatic seem like a Chomskyan realist. The terrorists are under the beds, in the wall cavities, and ready to leap out of laundry hampers. This creates a sense of panic; a sense of both a need and a license to use violence; and a sense that those who do not side with you are siding with the enemy. Variations on this playbook have continued to this day in dozens of different interventions.
The next part of the sequence is the most overt period of violence and destruction. This is the sort of shock that Naomi Klein wrote about in The Shock Doctrine. Discord and instability are sown to effect regime change and then the true violence is unleashed. For example, the destabilisation leads to a coup as above or as in 1965 Indonesia, 1973 Chile or 1993 Russia. Then, once a new regime is in place, they generally unleash mass violence and dismantle social and economic institutions (possibly facilitating mass expropriation by US, and possibly collaborator, profiteers). This pattern is not confined to coups. Regime change, in this instance, means substantively changing the way a target country works generally. Libya in 2011, for example, experienced a structural analogue in that the first shock of destabilisation created a new “regime” by creating the pretext for the second shock in terms of the violent aerial campaign launched by NATO. Equally, consistent with Klein’s depiction of the shock doctrine, you can see the same one-two punch system in the 1980 US presidential election where a radically neoliberal regime change (that arguably took hold while Carter was still in office) led to sudden “privatisation” and structural violence.
The third part is the new normal, which is likely to be a state of extreme deprivation and may involve intractable armed conflict and political fragmentation. It entails more divide-and-rule among other things. If a puppet leader has been put in place it is highly desirable that they be politically weak – divided from their own people and reliant on US support to survive. Though the US called its Cold War puppets “nationalists” (in contradistinction to the “internationalists” of the left) this was a heavy irony. The leftist enemies of US imperialism tended to be nationalist by default. Moreover US clients who developed nationalist tendencies were anathema and had to be removed if they put their own country first. In Viet Nam in 1963 and 1964 alone the US caused the overthrow of three leaders it had previously chosen, each on the basis of doing things they thought best for their country rather than doing what they were told. Similar things happened in other countries with one such incident bringing Saddam Hussein to power.
During this period many people suffer greatly, but their suffering is rendered mute and, more importantly, the hand behind it is made invisible. It took many years of activism, including difficult investigative journalism, to alert people of the mass deaths being inflicted on the people of Iraq by the US and UK. Desert Storm, the 1991 bombing campaign against Iraq, inflicted the sort of shock and degradation that created the vulnerability for later quieter forms of genocidal mass-murder. The following is an excerpt from my own previously published work:
“Desert Storm…, was as genocidal as previous bombing campaigns, the use of laser-guided weaponry and the incessant propaganda about accuracy serving only, in a sober analysis, to underscore the intentionality of the crime. The targeting of civilian infrastructure which had absolutely no bearing on the uneven military contest was the norm. For example, a baby milk factory was targeted and destroyed while the Pentagon blithely lied and said it was involved in making biological weapons. Ramsey Clark wrote afterwards that there were:
One hundred ten thousand aerial sorties in forty-two days by the United States alone. That’s one every 30 seconds. In an admission against interest, the Pentagon says U.S. aircraft alone dropped the equivalent of 7.5 Hiroshimas – 88,500 tons of explosives.
They say about 7% were directed…. They were intended specifically to destroy the life-support system of the whole country. … This is an assault you can’t resist. … The United States lost fewer aircraft in 110,000 aerial sorties than it lost in war games for NATO where no live ammunition was used. … There is not a reservoir, a pumping station, the filtration plant that wasn’t deliberately destroyed by U.S. bombing to deprive the people of water.
We knocked out the power. It doesn’t sound like a big deal. … But it meant, among other things, that 90 percent of the poultry was lost in a matter of days…. They lost over a third of all their livestock…. Another third was driven out of the country to save them. Because you couldn’t pump water.”
… From prewar levels of 450 litres per person per day in Baghdad, supplies were 30-40 litres. This was not safe to drink but while “the water authority has warned that the water must be boiled, there is little fuel to do this and what exists is diminishing.” Conditions outside of Baghdad were most probably worse in most instances. “The mission concluded that a catastrophe could be faced at any time if conditions do not change…”
Professor Thomas Nagy found declassified documents, Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) studies, which showed that the US clearly calculated and comprehensively understood that its bombing and subsequent embargoes would cause massive civilian deaths, particularly to children. Nagy concludes:
For more than ten years, the United States has deliberately pursued a policy of destroying the water treatment system of Iraq, knowing full well the cost in Iraqi lives. The United Nations has estimated that more than 500,000 Iraqi children have died as a result of sanctions, and that 5,000 Iraqi children continue to die every month for this reason.
No one can say that the United States didn’t know what it was doing.
The figure of 500,000 dead children comes from a 1996 UN Food and Agriculture Organisation report which has been seriously criticised for its methodology. The absolute numbers were, at this time, debatable but according to first-hand accounts disease and malnutrition had reached levels which beggar belief. I could here quote John Pilger, Robert Fisk, Patrick Cockburn, Kathy Kelly, or a number of others who saw with their own eyes and documented the suffering, but I will return to Ramsey Clark:
During last week, which I spent in Iraq, my fifth annual inspection since the sanctions were imposed, I visited ten hospitals in four governates which have nearly 15 percent of all hospital beds in the country. Conditions are tragic. Lighting is dim, even in operating theaters, for lack of bulbs. Wards are cold. Pharmacies are nearly empty with only a minor fraction of needed medicines and medical supplies. Most equipment, X-ray, CAT scan, incubators, oxygen tanks, dialysis machines, tubes and parts for transfusions and intravenous feeding, and other life-saving items are lacking, scarce, or inoperable for lack of parts. Simple needs like sheets, pillows, pillowcases, towels, bandages, cotton balls, adhesive tape, antiseptic cleaning liquids are unavailable or scarce. Surgery is at levels below 10 percent of the 1989 numbers in all ten hospitals.”
By 1995 it was known that Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction had been effectively neutralised, but once the UN security council authorised the use of force in 1990 it was possible for the US and/or UK to veto any rescinding of that authorisation, so they started a cruel game of pretending that there were still WMD while undermining the inspections regime in numerous ways. The sanctions were to continue for another 8 deadly years, and if the UNFAO figure of 1 million excess deaths including 500,000 children might have been exaggerated in 1996 it should be remembered that this was less than halfway into the genocidal sanctions period.
As outcry began to grow, the sanctions were transitioned to a new “oil-for-food” programme. This was no real change. The programme was under the umbrella of the UN but was controlled by the US and UK. In 1989 the United Nations Humanitarian Coordinator in Iraq, Denis Halliday, resigned citing the sanctions and “oil-for-food” programme as “genocide”. His successor Hans van Sponeck would also resign and then write a book called “A Different Kind of War” which detailed the genocide, while avoiding the use of the term (perhaps because of the politics of a German national using the term), though he would later admit the validity of its usage.
The sanctions regime might have succumbed to international pressure if it were not for the advent of the Global War on Terror. By the time public pressure had rallied once more to end the genocidal sanctions the US was ready for the next phase of genocide – another shock campaign then a genocidal occupation, fomenting a civil war and trying to further partition the country, then arming their putative enemy, which would become the Islamic State, to inflict further chaos and suffering on the people of Iraq. The cycle is never meant to end and you can guarantee that right now there are plans in the US to enact further attacks on the nation and people of Iraq under the rationale of the “containment” of Iran.
Iraq is only an illustrative example. The same logic applies in other places, always slightly different, but always with merciless resolve. Many places that the US decides to view with interest end up in a state of permanent low-intensity conflict. Places like Somalia join Haiti in being sights of normalised dysfunction. Afghanistan was inflicted with a brutal and pointless 2 decades of war only for the US and its collaborators to hand back a much more divided and degraded country to a much more bitter and stubborn Taliban. Everywhere Africom’s “anti-terror” tentacles reached found themselves facing vastly increased terrorism and everywhere in Latin America that the War on Drugs penetrates finds themselves with more drugs and more violence. Yugoslavia, on the other hand, they simply looted then destroyed. Palestine stands out for a number of reasons, but it is not exceptional. That is why historical analogues can point us to what happens next.
During the oil-for-food programme in Iraq the stated humanitarian purpose of the system became a cruel irony. The main mechanism used to this end was the control the US and UK wielded over what was allowed in to Iraq. They would deem certain essential items to be “dual use” – meaning that they might be used for military purposes. This is self-evidently open for abuse.
In 1991 Israel started controlling the entry of goods into the Gaza Strip. This intensified after the 2005 withdrawal of Israeli settlers from the strip and then became a full-time blockade in 2007. Israel uses exactly the same “dual use” pretext as was weaponised against the people of Iraq. The most prominent basic needs that are denied as dual-use are drugs and medical equipment and construction materials. The denial of these items after assaults such as Israel has executed against the territory causes predictable suffering and predictable excess death. It is intentional pre-meditated structural violence causing death. It is a war crime and it is an act of genocide as detailed under Article II (c) of the United Nations Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.
The sooner we mobilise against these acts of “deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction”, the fewer people will die. If it is not stopped then ultimately this phase of genocide will take more lives than the Holocaust that has just ended. Ultimately, though, the genocide against all Palestinians will continue. Every day brings more news of increasing violence in The West Bank and East Jerusalem. The only end to this is a free Palestine. We can and must exert as much pressure as humanly possible to bring as much relief and safety to people in the Gaza Strip, but they will never be safe until they are have full political control and human rights. It is the need to suppress them as a people, to prevent them from exercising their autonomy and inalienable rights, that causes Israel to keep inflicting violence as if somehow this will rewrite history and erase the right of Palestinians to live freely in their recognised land of origin.
The question is how can we change things now that the newsworthy part of the genocide is over, and that is exactly why the US and Israel have done things this way. Many people know about the NATO air campaign against Libya, but regardless of their feelings on that intervention, very few people in the Western public know what has happened in the country since then. Once something drops from the top headlines of a 24-hour news cycle the number of people who know of it shrinks drastically. When people are better informed through alternative media, actively searching for information, or a social media feed based on their own predilections, they are liable to overestimate how broadly such things are known.
People are mostly opposed to Israel’s violence in Gaza, but it pays to think about the emotional affect as well. The emotive stories that have been in the headlines are the deaths on October 7 2023, the plight of Israeli hostages and their deaths or repatriations, the mass rapes on October 7, and the beheaded babies on October 7. Two of those things are completely fictional, but they provide more passionate intensity than the many actual Palestinian beheaded babies and raped Palestinian prisoners. We need to provide the greater context and since we don’t get to choose the bulletin headlines that means getting people to expand the amount of education they allow in to their unquiet and overstimulated brains.
If 25% of the population are committed anti-Palestinian and 25% are committed pro-Palestinian, then it is really the other 50% that we must concentrate on. Because of the emotional weight of the information (and, frankly, conditioning) they have received they view Hamas as barbaric savages and Israelis as being like us (though perhaps with the Israeli government being a bad right-wing government). Israel, by these lights, has every legitimate reason to attack and indeed to wipe out the intractable irrational savage murderers of Hamas. These are, after all, fanatical animals that will never accept Israel’s right to resist. But then, Israel has killed a lot of civilians and you can’t really blame everyone for what Hamas does; but then, you kind of can because they clearly support Hamas; but then, some of them are just kids; but then, Hamas is using them as human shields and Israel has no choice; but then, they seem to be taking things to excess; but then, if they don’t finish the job this may all have to happen again and that means even more dead children; and so forth ad infinitum.
Our challenge is to break through the manufactured synthetic ambivalence enthralling half of the population. One advantage that we have is that the numbers do not lie. Palestinian deaths so greatly exceed Israeli deaths that the Israeli narrative cannot withstand the weight. We must push for real estimates of total deaths caused and fight to correct those that misrepresent the body count as an “estimate” when it must clearly understate the total number of deaths. The current body count of around 46,000 Palestinians is likely to represent less than 20% of the total. We must also work to make people know that the violent deaths and the deaths through deprivation are all brutal and tragic. There is no hierarchy of suffering nor of victimhood. People’s suffering should be measured by the number affected, not some qualitative distinction that effectively makes some people less human than others.
Our efforts also have the advantage that any role-reversal will immediately reveal the double-standards involved. If we aim some of our informational effort at getting people to reflect on how they would feel if the identities of the actors were reversed this can create a permanent habit of mind. Our greatest asset, though, may be the anti-Palestinians. They have no room for adjustment. Any significant challenge will lead to outright denial and aggression because their narrative is too fragile for them to concede anything. We will win once half of the confused public starts to see the anti-Palestinian people for what they are. They have been accorded an unearned legitimacy for far too long and once people see them for what they are the media and politicians will have to adjust.
To effect these changes we must maintain our visibility and extend educational outreach. We have to keep Palestine on people’s minds and show them that the genocide continues and that Israeli aggression was not a finite response to Hamas, but rather a permanent state of affairs. Most people’s minds are part of the way there already, but we need their hearts. We need them to feel the pain of the daily humiliation and persecution and the unending insecurity. We need them to see the cruelty of the apartheid – both the callous impersonal cruelty and the personal fascistic aggression.
In short, the real job in front of us is simply to get about 25% of the population to think what it must be like to be Palestinian.
“The ceasefire isn’t peace. It’s just a pause, and pauses don’t heal wounds, they just give you time to feel them.” Mohammed Marwish – “Reflections on the Ceasefire in Gaza”
A ceasefire in Gaza does not mean the end of genocide and it does not mean the end of mass killing. The ceasefire is bringing in a new phase. In truth, Israel itself needed this. There have been growing morale problems in its military and economic pressures on the home front. There is also pressure on foreign governments to fulfil their legal obligations to end their support for Israel’s genocide. We must therefore be careful not to mistake the fatigue of a butcher whose arm is tired for a lessening in bloodlust. There was also an apparent decision in the US to time the ceasefire with the change of Presidential administration, presumably as a wayto funnel any discussions about its role into vituperative dead-end arguments about partisan politics. Israel seems to have had some foreknowledge of this and the Knesset earlier passed legislation to ban UNRWA timed so as to cause the greatest possible harm and suffering with the least possible coverage and reaction. This is a foretaste of the way genocide will continue under the “ceasefire”.
Historically Israel does not honour ceasefires. This is a deliberate strategy on its part to normalise its violations of ceasefires and establish a de facto claim to have a routine right to use armed violence outside of their recognised borders.
It will surprise no one who knows the history of “ceasefires” in Lebanon and Gaza to read that Israel had continued murdering people. 80 inhabitants of the Gaza strip were killed by Israel in the first 12 days of what is called a “ceasefire”. In the meantime the military violence in the West Bank keeps increasing, especially in and around Jenin, while settler violence increases and looks ever more ominous. Israeli leaders have openly talked of applying lessons learned in Gaza to Jenin, where 14 people have been killed in this one week of “ceasefire”. Hundreds of residents have been forced to move after being given Gaza-style “evacuation orders”. Meanwhile Israel, which is thought to have violated the “ceasefire” in Lebanon around 100 times in its first week, has not removed its forces and at last count as I write has massacred 22 Lebanese civilians trying to return to their homes in southern Lebanon.
Israel’s mockery of the concept of a ceasefire, of power parity, and of reciprocity itself extends to their treatment of released prisoners. As they have in the past, they increase the numbers of Palestinians they take from the occupied territories even as they release an agreed amount. One day after they released 90 prisoners they took another 64 into custody. Since then they have raided Jenin on multiple days taking significant numbers into custody.
The state of Israel continues to reinvigorate norms of might makes right, wherein their extraterritorial and extralegal murder and abduction of people is treated as a regular and accepted part of life. The events of the last 15 months have created a new watershed at which a higher level of violence is rendered invisible to Western editors, politicians and pundits. Actual deaths of Palestinians will be reduced in value far below mere potential Israeli deaths, let alone actual Israeli deaths. Once again, footage, column inches, gigabytes and megapixels will all be focussed more on the plight of Israelis who must live in the fear that the people their government kills every day might find ways of striking back. In the name of security Israel will keep killing and killing and killing; one here, another here, four more here, just a small family over there. Nothing that would mean anything to a Western news gatekeeper. Yet this horrible unspoken killing will likely be only the tip of the iceberg, while the Israeli siege kills far more people through deprivation than it does through armed violence.
If a ceasefire beds in Israel will find it difficult to restart the Holocaust with the same level of violence, however history suggests that they will push the boundaries of the term “ceasefire”. In all Palestinian territories the higher levels of armed violence that have taken hold will continue. More to the point, though, having reduced the people of the Gaza Strip to a condition of extreme vulnerability, Israel will use deliberate acts of deprivation to kill people just a surely as with force of arms. If Israel is not stopped the next few years will come to feel like the second phase of the Gaza Holocaust, and like the first phase it will seem inexplicable to the people suffering through it that the world is letting this happen.
If Israel does not keep killing as many people in Gaza with bombs and bullets and missiles and drones, it does not mean they will be killing fewer people over time. Even drastic drops in deaths through traumatic injury and starvation will not translate into a correspondingly drastic drop in excess mortality.
The current condition of the people in Gaza is so reduced that they are vulnerable to deaths from disease, deprivation, exposure, despair and malnutrition. The genocide is going into stealth mode, cloaking itself in the passive voice even more thoroughly than it has previously managed. This has happened before. By preventing the necessities of life from entering the Gaza strip Israel can kill more people with far less attention and without the pressure to end the killing. The killing will be slower, but not necessarily much slower.
Genocide does not mean that a certain quantity of people must die, yet it is entirely possible that people in Gaza will continue to die prematurely at levels that will quickly reach hundreds of thousands within a few years. There is a clear precedent for this outside of Palestine. After the destruction of Desert Storm the US instituted a genocidal sanctions regime that is estimated to have caused one million Iraqis to die of preventable disease and malnutrition.
There are other precedents that I will outline in part 2 of this article. In these precedents a moment of crisis and shock in which massive deadly force is unleashed is followed by endless “low intensity” conflict, political and social fragmentation, and deadly structural violence. Armed violence persists, but at lower chronic level that seems strangely incurable. With the compliance of news media the structural violence is made invisible to people and the instability is made to seem endemic so that over time the deadly genocide appears as a normal state of affairs, even to the point where it seems that the victims themselves create the misery through their own deficiencies. This is predictable as part of the future in all of occupied Palestinian territories, because it has already happened, because it was already happening. The Gaza Holocaust has ushered in a heightened level of violence beyond the Gaza Strip, but this is an intensification of existing processes. Palestinians throughout the Occupied Territories face greater suffering in the coming years than the considerable suffering they faced before October 2023.
Despite this some Palestine solidarity organisations seem determined to support this new phase of genocide by signalling to the public that the ceasefire changes everything, even when amongst themselves they clearly understand that this is not the case. Unconsciously they are letting the public misapprehension about the situation dictate their strategy rather that critically reflecting on it and reacting appropriately. It is very important that the public is kept awake despite the heavy sedative pressure that the media and political establishment will exert on them. That means that visible activism should be maintained as is for quite some time even as efforts shift in future months to outreach, education and BDS activities.
Far from being a time to pause this is a time to work towards increasing efforts. It may be that momentum is lost, but the less we lose now the less we need to regain later. We can no longer pretend that our role is to apply pressure so that the Powers That Be will finally recognise the injustice and act to re-establish the International Rules-Based Order. Legal avenues and formal political participation at various levels of government are important tools, but ultimately it will only work as expressions of wider democratic pressure coming from a public roused to action in very large numbers. It should be obvious by now that protecting Israel’s right to commit genocide is such a key strategic plank of US imperial power that it is willing to call in all favours and spend any amount of political, cultural and economic capital to maintain the Zionist outpost to control the oilfields of the Middle East. Throughout the West, leaders in politics, media and commerce have shown themselves to be slaves of an authoritarian obedience to power even at their own expense, and those chains can only be broken by the realistic threat that they will lose their positions, their money, and their power if they do not change. Many will simply have to be driven out of public life.
The fact is that all around the world Zionists have absolutely committed totally to their cause. They have left no room for compromise and we have no choice but to see this through to its completion. As Abby Martin told TRT World: “There is no way forward except for the total liberation of Palestine.” The Gaza Holocaust has been a mask-off moment and we now know that the Zionists thorughout the world have transitioned to full-fat fascism. They believe that controlling information creates reality in a literal sense and they cannot be reasoned with or debated. You cannot show them images of dead and mutilated children, cities turned to moonscapes, prisoners being tortured, or mass graves and cause any change in their beliefs. It is only when people lose their illusions and discard the myths that they regain their humanity.
Consider the example of Piers Morgan who has tried to position himself from the beginning as some form of honest broker willing to criticise the Israeli government. In the last 16 months he has been made to confront some of the horrors of the genocide, though he manages to remain ignorant of some inconvenient facts to a remarkable degree. His schtick means that he cannot simply deny and gainsay everything he is confronted with otherwise he would serve no purpose. He would be another Eylon Levy or Danny Danon or Mark Regev. These people are useful for rabble-rousing among anti-Palestinian zealots, but they have become liabilities in the general public whilst there is an awareness of the mass deaths that Israel is causing among innocents. Morgan’s role is not to deny everything it is to cast doubt, throw shade and sow confusion, but as more atrocities are exposed and proven he is forced into extreme positions. In a conversation with Tucker Carlson he endorsed the deliberate killing of children as a moral act “if there is a world war and it threatens the entire world”. It is hard not to conclude that he is shifting his moral goalposts by changing the way he views the context so as to make room for defending the documented systematic killing of children that has been occurring. It is a reminder that although spreading emotive information about the human costs of genocide is important, it may be more important to challenge the one-sided framing of the causes of violence. Israel does not have a right to use armed violence and claim self-defence and Morgan should have been challenged on that from the first time he bullied guests into accepting that framework. If people can use foundational myths to legitimate one murder, they will simply increase the perceived stakes to justify one million murders.
Some people never admitted that Adolf Hitler did anything wrong, and there was no way of making them do so. The answer to this problem was to ensure that a consensus existed among the general society that Hitler’s crimes were real and inexcusable. Zionist or Nazi, the only way to push fanatics out of the mainstream discourse in our decadent society will be to rouse the passion of the majority against them. Above all that means creating certainty. Currently the average person does not like what Israel has done in Gaza, but they are kept in a space of extreme ambivalence, if not confusion, by the constant repetition of Israeli hasbara in our media. The fact that polls show that the public mostly sides with Palestinians in simple binary terms, should not fool activists into think that the public really grasps what is going on. They are kept in a fog of uncertainty and made to feel that some aspects of the situation are very complicated and difficult. They are told repeatedly that the causes of violence in Palestine are ancient enmities and they are not given any reason to question that lie.
Hasbara can be thought of as propaganda, but the word means “explaining”. Western media has been very careful to always leave room for people to give credence to the hasbara – the Zionist explanation – often by simply leaving out the parts of the news that blatantly contradict said hasbara. We need to create education and awareness so that people understand that Israel’s explanations do not create the controversy that people are led to believe. There are no two sides to this and once a majority understand this the politics will have to shift. Once that motion starts it will create its own momentum as each new Israeli atrocity or attempt at diplomatic bullying is seen for what it actually is. At some point many of us crossed a line in our lives when our received notions of Arab savagery, Israeli nobility, Islamic fanaticism, and Jewish urbane humanism no longer persuade us that the victim is the murderer. As much as we need to end the distortions of emphasis and viewpoint and scale in our media, we also need to convince people to believe the evidence of their own eyes.
Israel is still killing people in Gaza, in the West Bank, in East Jerusalem, and in Lebanon. It is not going to end. They will be committing even worse crimes by putting a genocidal stranglehold on goods entering the Gaza Strip. This has happened before and it has cost many lives already. The people who dies from preventable and treatable diseases are just as precious. They and their loved ones must often endure the agony of knowing that they are being murdered through a system of detached cruelty and banal evil.
We must do our best to bring freedom to Palestine because the genocide will continue until this is over. The best way to understand deadliness of this phase is to look at the genocidal sanctions regime imposed on Iraq in the 1990’s. The events show the power of the US empire to replace one mode of genocide with another as required. Imperial powers do not relent and they will not ever tire or recoil from the inhumane expedients that create their hegemony. The only way out of this is a full conscious movement of solidarity between the masses at the “core” and those at the “periphery”. The nature of imperial genocide is found beyond war and conquest and massacres, it is found in neocolonialism, neoliberalism, structural violence and the perpetual suffering that is inflicted as a matter of course by the implacable and fanatical mass-murderers that wield power in the Western world.
The “ceasefire” has left a situation in which misery and death will continue of it own accord, but which will be aggravated and accelerated by the structural violence brought to bear. Chris Hedges’ article “The Western Way of Genocide” opens:
Gaza is a wasteland of 50 million tons of rubble and debris. Rats and dogs scavenge amid the ruins and fetid pools of raw sewage. The putrid stench and contamination of decaying corpses rises from beneath the mountains of shattered concrete. There is no clean water. Little food. A severe shortage of medical services and hardly any habitable shelters. Palestinians risk death from unexploded ordnance, left behind after over 15 months of air strikes, artillery barrages, missile strikes and blasts from tank shells, and a variety of toxic substances, including pools of raw sewage and asbestos.
Hepatitis A, caused by drinking contaminated water, is rampant, as are respiratory ailments, scabies, malnutrition, starvation and the widespread nausea and vomiting caused by eating rancid food. The vulnerable, including infants and the elderly, along with the sick, face a death sentence. Some 1.9 million people have been displaced, amounting to 90 percent of the population. They live in makeshift tents, encamped amid slabs of concrete or the open air. Many have been forced to move over a dozen times. Nine in 10 homes have been destroyed or damaged. Apartment blocks, schools, hospitals, bakeries, mosques, universities — Israel blew up Israa University in Gaza City in a controlled demolition — cemeteries, shops and offices have been obliterated. The unemployment rate is 80 percent and the gross domestic product has been reduced by almost 85 percent, according to an October 2024 report issued by the International Labor Organization.
In Part 2, I will discuss the phase that comes after this intense destruction – a Sisyphean curse of slow genocide that the West inflicts on its former colonies and potential rivals.
In 1945 civilians from the German village of Hurlach were marched into the midst of the horrors of newly liberated Kaufering 6, a sub-camp of Dachau. As they moved from the crisp spring air into the zone of stench and death and disease they protested that they did not know that this horror existed. Could it be true that people living in the midst of 11 such subcamps, 11 such sites of oppression and misery, did not understand what was happening to their fellow humans on their very doorstep? Could it be true of other Germans? The answer is that they knew enough to avoid knowing more, effectively giving consent to Nazi crimes by embracing ignorance. They turned their backs on those whose suffering should have made them weep and rage and take action. They were monsters, but they were human monsters, ordinary monsters.
We know that the protestations of innocence among ordinary Germans were hollow. Innocence is not knowing something, ignorance, on the other hand, comes from the word “ignore”. Ignorance is an act of will. But in our time are we not even closer, in our digital world, to the suffering of the Gaza Holocaust? The images of death, the sounds of pain and the voices of grief and fear penetrate our homes. We carry them in our pockets – we carry them in our pockets. It is likely that few of the people reading or hearing these words are among those that ignore this torrent of suffering, and many of us probably feel a duty to bear witness by enduring the sights and sounds and stories; knowing that the pain of doing so is but a distant muffled echo of the pain of those who must live these events in person. But we are not representative of our society. We are surrounded by those who embrace lies and hate, those who refuse to know, and those who understand that a wrong is being done, but who fail to take any real stand.
The people of Germany during World War II were not a different species than us and we are not immune from the same descent into inhumanity. Monsters are not born, they are made. They are made by a machine. Germany had a monster making machine, and we have our own.
The machine has many parts, but the mechanism at the centre is the news media industry. The more you look into their behaviour in reporting the Gaza Holocaust, the more horrifying their actions become. Their role in this regard is almost exclusively to promulgate callousness, ignorance, cowardice, confusion and spite. Not one day of the last 15 months has passed in which they have not radically and profoundly violated the journalistic standards and news values that are at the centre of their claims to professionalism.
It began with the shock of the attack on October 7th 2023. It was immediately obvious that the Israeli response was going to be far more deadly than the incursion into Israel. Few could have guessed the scale and the duration of the holocaust that was to come, but no reasonable person could not have known that thousands of innocent Palestinians were going to die. Did the media respond with the basic human duty to act to protect those innocents? They did not. They employed every iota of sensationalism and sentimentality they could, effectively whipping up fervour with no regard for what was about to be unleashed. Did the media feel that with the threat of mass death hanging over a people known to be trapped and defenceless it should at least practice strict vetting so as to not promulgate disinformation and misinformation? They did not. They allowed the Israeli government and dubious non-governmental organisations to spread lies – lies that many people believe to this day.
Many people believe that 40 babies were beheaded; many people believe that a baby was roasted alive; most people believe that there were mass rapes committed by Palestinians. Those lies are spread with the volume turned up to 11 and only a tiny minority of organs ever report when they are debunked – and they do so with far less fanfare. The New York Times published the malicious fabrications of “Screams Without Words” and received global coverage, while those who raised clear concerns that demanded answers were absent from the media. Israel’s prosecution service has just admitted that despite rigorous efforts they cannot yet find substantive evidence of a single instance of rape to build a case from. Not one single case where enough evidence exists to pursue a prosecution. That means that those who claimed to have proof of rape are liars. That means that those who claimed to have meaningful evidence of rape are liars. And that means that the news media who promulgated those claims as if they were all but proven are liars, liars, liars!
Nor do they have any compunction about keeping lies alive long after it is known to be a lie. When Joe Biden said “I never really thought that I would see and have confirmed pictures of terrorists beheading children,” the follow up was more of a cover up. The White House “walk back” of the comments made absolutely no explanation of why they were said. No news media asked obvious questions about why the statement was made, including the most obvious question of whether this crucial leader responsible for the ongoing genocide was deliberately lying to promote slaughter or whether he himself had been deceived to that same end. Amidst an endless churn of media interest over Biden’s acuity and competence this explosive story was for some reason treated as a mere gaffe.
A similar mumbling silence descended on the worlds news reporters when Annalena Baerbock, the foreign minister of Germany, claimed unambiguously to have seen a woman being raped “on camera”. The duty for journalists to expose the lies of high officials is clear and there could be no more urgent and grave circumstance than during a time of relentless daily slaughter. She lied blatantly and the purpose of the lie was to generate support for the killing of innocent people. Why was this not a massive story?
Meanwhile, all of the violence being inflicted on Palestinians is normalised, minimised and sanitised. “Lives lost when hospital struck” we are told. By whom? The passive voice has become so overused in headlines that it is like a sick joke and for some reason no matter how much ire it raises the habit remains, as if they are afraid that changing will just highlight how cruel and dehumanising the practice has been. Now attacks on hospitals don’t even make it into most news formats.
Imagine the drama of the stories coming out of Kamal Adwan hospital in its last days. Patients and medical staff dying in air strikes and sniper attacks even as they struggle to save the lives of those maimed in outside attacks. Think only of the story Mahmoud Abu Al-Eish, an injured 16 year-old boy who was in the foyer of the hospital, confined to a wheelchair while waiting for an x-ray, when quadcopters entered into the hospital shooting at will. He was killed along with another patient. There are pictures available of the dying boy as staff struggled to save his life. What could be more worthy of the so-called “news values” that are meant to shape editorial decisions? How could there be a more dramatic story than this high tech murder so reminiscent of dystopian science fiction? Most people in the West probably do not even know that there are small armed drones that literally hunt people down. Most people don’t even know that they hunt down and kill children, including small children. They hunt down and kill children, with reports suggesting that children are the most common victims of this form of violence.
There are so many stories that are too too moving, too novel, and too significant for any reasonable person to judge them unworthy of coverage, yet they remain unknown to most Western news consumers. Let me just focus on one small but important group of people: doctors. How many people know, for example, that the head of orthopedics at Al-Shifa hospital, Dr Adnan al Bursh died in the notorious Sde Teiman detention centre of maltreatment? Testimonies about the circumstances of his death suggest that he died of internal injuries sustained through rape. This prominent man seems to have been raped to death and that is not judged to be particularly newsworthy.
The eyewitnesses who have travelled there and returned are almost absent from most coverage, including very prominent doctors. Where, one might ask, are the long prestigious mainstream interviews with people like Ghassan abu Sitta, or Mads Gilbert, or Nizam Mamode. The latter doctor is a professor of transplantation surgery who gained a little bit of coverage when he broke down giving testimony to a UK parliamentary committee. He said that after air strikes “The drones would come down and pick off civilians – children. We had description after description – this is not an occasional thing.” Mamode is certainly well-spoken and authoritative enough that you would think they would be clamouring to feature him in all forms of media, especially when you consider that he has made significant contributions to medical science and has appeared in the famous popular drama The Crown. Editors and producers should be hungry to profile and interview this doctor or others like him, but they are nowhere to be seen.
We can probably all think of stories we know that would shake our Western compatriots from their complacency – from statistics, to personal stories of loss, to statements of visceral hatred and criminal intent from Zionist leaders. Just a few such stories would serve to show most people that Israel’s actions are not merely tragic, excessive or insufficiently mindful of civilian suffering. The suffering they inflict is not incidental, it is part of their genocidal purpose, it is the armed conflict with the tattered remnants of some impoverished militias that is incidental – militias, by the way, whose only source of weaponry is now the unexploded ordinance used so profligately against their civilian compatriots.
Instead of manufacturing a false balance, the reporting should be relentless and one-sided because the events are relentless and one-sided. It is only at this late stage that our media are slowly moving away from framing each new day of massacres and hunger and cruel displacement with constant references to October 7 and hostages as if of Gaza’s population shared a collective guilt. This is a form of racism made to seem acceptable by making the false claim that Israel has some form of legal right to use military action as ‘self-defence’. The constant refrain that ‘Israel has the right to defend itself’, spouted ad nauseam by the likes of Piers Morgan, is the Big Lie of these times. It is a bad faith argument that falls apart once you admit that Palestinians have a right to self-defence and think through the consequences of that. But you never hear or read in mainstream analysis that Palestinians have a right to self-defence. Israel has the right to use legal avenues to seek the prosecution of individuals who committed crimes or ordered them to be committed; but the right to use military force in self-defence cannot be invoked in the case of ongoing aggression or occupation. In response to armed resistance Israel does not even have the right to use military force against armed groups outside of its internationally recognised territory, let alone inflict collective punishment, let alone commit genocide.
The media are fabricating excuses for Israel and creating false equivalence between murderer and victim. This is purely a response to power. They have internalised the need for fake balance so much that they avoid newsworthy stories that shatter that fragile construction. They evidently feel that they would fail if their hard news products do not leave room for confusion and ambivalence. Then they assuage their consciences by running colour pieces about the human cost, as if this were not the real story, as if the ground truth meant nothing in understanding the actual nature of events. A holocaust is occurring and only the most tiny amount of the violence has been in actual combat, yet these pathetic hacks call this orgy of genocide the “Israel-Hamas War”.
There are no two sides to this holocaust. There is no room for debate. There is truth and there is deceit. There should be no in-between, but in our age of post-truth politics, digital authoritarianism and focus-group-driven-fascism, the vast bulk of Western people live in a limbo of delirium, amnesia, emotional fatigue, and consumerist narcissism. That space is created by the monster making machine, with our news media at the centre.
The truth of what is happening in Gaza is available to our journalists in a flood, a deluge that keeps pouring out of that tiny territory with a force unlike anything the world has seen before. The most documented holocaust in history is everywhere and it takes a powerful act of will to avoid the truth. The worst thing of all is that in doing so the Western media are betraying the extraordinary work of their Palestinian colleagues. 203 journalists and media workers have been killed in Gaza since October 2023. Abubakr Abed gave a recent speech pleading for solidarity and referring to journalists killed by being “immolated, incinerated, dismembered and disembowelled”.
I do not believe in heroes, but I struggle to find any other way of referring to the journalists of the Gaza Strip. Israel has excluded Western reporters, but there is no shortage of quality journalism coming out of the holocaust. There are things that are familiar to activists, but unfamiliar to the public such as the Flour Massacre, the Superbowl Massacre, the debunking of the lies about al-Shifa tunnels, the stories of starvation, the murder of people fleeing in “humanitarian corridors” or in “safe zones” and much else. These things we know largely because of the work of Palestinian journalists. They produce a surfeit of important stories. Therefore, as an editorial decision does it not behove Western media outlets to react to the banning of Western journalists by refusing to allow Israel’s blatant attempt to conceal the truth of its actions? Would it not make sense to say that if our journalists are not allowed to report we will use the large corps of journalists already there and soon Israel will see the futility of trying to prevent reporting and thus let our reporters in? That could have happened, but the Western world refuses to treat these professionals with the respect they deserve. In a recent interview award-winning correspondent Hind Hasan said that Arab journalists are treated as intrinsically “political”. To me this is a polite way of referring to despicable racism. Hasan mentions the killing of Shireen abu Akleh which was witnessed by five professional journalists. Five people who make a living from reporting on events witnessed the killing, but when it came to Western news media they were brushed aside in favour of Israeli hasbara-mongers whose profession is to push a predictably one-sided narrative with only a very tangential relationship to factuality.
Israel’s denials of wrongdoing are so predictable and so irrelevant to evidence of fact that it seems almost bizarre that they feature in our news at all. So often though, the news media insist on treating them as authoritative to the point where, as with the Abu Akleh killing, we are expected to accept their own self-exonerations. The implication is that as a Western power their institutions seek to ensure that their personnel act with legality. This is a racist lie. We don’t accept non-Western countries investigating their own war crimes as being authoritative. We should not accept it for any Western country and given Israeli citizen’s well-documented proven repeated unpunished criminal acts it is clearly a malicious practice to give any credence to their inevitable claims of innocence.
It is not merely the work of Palestinian journalists and witnesses that is given the right-of-hasbara-response treatment by our media. Third parties, regardless of how authoritative and disinterested, are treated as if they are partisans making their meticulously researched 400-page reports simply because they have beef with Israel and therefore Israel must be given equal space and time to deny the reports. It is not as if they ask Hamas their opinion on such reports, even though this slaughter is apparently the “Israel-Hamas War”.
Western media love Israeli hasbara to the point where self-evident information operations by intelligence organisations are amplified with wilful credulity by some and with malicious pro-genocide racism by others. Israel’s famous pager attack in Lebanon killed and maimed many civilians, especially healthcare workers. 300 people lost both eyes in the attack and 500 each lost one eye. Reports of children killed were available almost immediately as was shocking footage of civilians maimed in these attacks. The illegality was glaring. The attacks clearly violated the principle of distinction between legitimate and illegitimate targets established in the Geneva Conventions. They are even more blatantly in violation of an additional protocol which states “It is prohibited to use booby-traps or other devices in the form of apparently harmless portable objects which are specifically designed and constructed contain explosive material.” When this shocking crime occurred, though, there was an obvious simultaneous information operation to accompany it. The giveaway that makes this operation so evident was the immediate consensus around tone and themes. If you cast back your mind you may remember that within an hour of the first attacks there were many instances of the same puerile statement that thousands of Hizbullah terrorists had simultaneously had there testicles blown up. This childish sadism and triumphalism is frighteningly reminiscent of the way fascists and Nazis portrayed their early atrocities, yet it became the baseline emotion, and the angle from which the Western media approached the crime. Far from being the wary skeptics that journalists would like us to believe they are, they showed themselves to be easy marks whose culture of self-congratulation creates a herd of infantile sheep.
Now, with a ceasefire imminent Western news media and other institutional liberals are gearing up to rewrite history so that they were the voices opposing genocide all along. Amnesty International has already positioned itself as the superior voice because it waited for over a year before using the dreaded g-word, as if the case presented 10 months and thousands upon thousands of deaths earlier by South Africa at the ICJ was in any way inferior to their belated response. Those who abetted the genocide will now re-invent themselves as its greatest and most important opponents. We who stood against the lies of self-defence, we who called it genocide from the beginning, will be treated as the “premature antifascists” after World War II or the equally premature antiwar lefties of the 60s and anti-apartheid dissidents who were repressed for decades and then treated as irrelevant. The beauty of Western liberalism is that matter what horrid things you actually do, you can always claim to have been pulling in the other direction because of your innate and unquestionable “values” of equality, democracy, and happy Hollywood endings.
Now is also that rare moment when someone in my position is able to do something other than preaching to the choir, because a lot of you hearing or reading these words are going to be tempted by the post-ceasefire narratives of the resumption of normal service. They will lure you with the sense that belatedly the institutions of Western justice have started to move back into gear, enforcing norms and being a role model to lesser countries just as God and Voltaire intended.
However, this ceasefire will not be a ceasefire. It will bring much relief from the intensity of the current situation, but the people of Gaza will still be suffering under deprivation and continued violence. The genocide did not begin in 2023 and it will not end with a ceasefire. Worse still, history going right back to the opening of the First Intifada in 1987 has shown that each time Israel reaches a new watershed in the intensity of its violence it maintains a higher level subsequent level of normalised murder – banal slaughter that comes in dribs and drabs that (not coincidentally) is considered too regular and expected to be newsworthy. This has already been happening in the West Bank and East Jerusalem while attention is drawn away by the slaughter in Gaza. History also suggests that the next time there is an explosion of Israeli military force it could be of a similar magnitude to that unleashed in the Gaza Holocaust. This happened after the 2008-9 assault known as Cast Lead which established a clear pattern of behaviour. The more such violence becomes habitual, the less our news media deign to care about it.
Ceasefire notwithstanding, our activism must continue with as much dedication as ever. We are not fighting to end the current holocaust – perhaps that was never possible – but we must fight to stop the next. We have the greatest tool, the greatest weapon possible in that battle. We have truth. We have truths. Documented, demonstrable, incontrovertible truths that must be made into universal known verities. Things will change if we make it impossible for our political leaders, our academic leaders, and our news media to prevaricate. But be aware that the storyline will change next time, the scam will change. That is why it is crucial that we do not leave the self-defence lie unchallenged. That is why it is crucial that we do not allow them to imply that the genocide is ended with a ceasefire or is somehow only technically a genocide now that fewer people are being incinerated each week. Genocide is never acceptable regardless of the level of accompanying violence and it is not merely a legal fiction to call a slow genocide a genocide.
The more bitter truth that we must face, though, is that Israel has every reason to congratulate itself on its recent geopolitical victories in the region, including the massive immiseration of the people of Gaza. Undoing that immiseration is a monumental task. We have to work to abolish the genocide support systems that allow Israel to do this, and that means fixing our politics and fixing our media. We have to be resolute, we have to be meticulous, we cannot lose faith, and above all we have to support each other. We are not fighting to be winners, we are not fighting for victory over enemies, we are fighting for justice and peace. The struggle always continues.