Antropologiske betraktninger om pelshvaldrift

Month: November 2025

Shouting match

I get very annoyed when people tell me that BRICS will fail, not because they are wrong, but because I assume they want BRICS to fail. Either they are extremely ignorant, I think, or they are – forgive my French – callous bastards. Maybe I’m unjust. Allow me to explain my position.

Throughout history, underdogs have revolted in various ways and almost invariably been crushed as a result. Successful revolts, or revolutions, are a rare exception. So BRICS is not blowing trumpets, not marching proudly through the streets shouting slogans and waving flowing banners. BRICS is going about its business quietly – no slogans, no insults.

The preamble to BRICS started in Bandung, Indonesia, in 1955, when the Non-Aligned Movement was founded by countries that refused to be pawns of either the USA or the USSR. In retaliation, the hosts of the Bandung Conference, the Indonesian people and Sukarno, were crucified by US minions in 1965-66, cf. The Jakarta Method (2020) by Vincent Bevins. Quoting Wikipedia:

The Jakarta Method: Washington’s Anticommunist Crusade and the Mass Murder Program that Shaped Our World is a 2020 political history book by American journalist and author Vincent Bevins. It concerns U.S. government support for and complicity in anti-communist mass killings around the world … The title is a reference to Indonesian mass killings of 1965–66, during which an estimated one million people were killed in an effort to destroy the political left and movements for government reform in the country.

I add for the record, that the book reads almost like a gripping novel, as it follows the author’s painstaking search for an understanding of what happened.

The title of the book says it all. Many of the promising leaders of global south countries died mysteriously or were not so mysteriously murdered in the years following de-colonialisation. Nevertheless, the newly liberated colonies continued to see GDP growth for some years because, as Jason Hickel writes in The Divide, “Governments across the region realised that because they controlled most of the natural resources and raw materials that Western powers needed for their industries, they didn’t have to accept the shoddy terms of trade that the West offered.”

Have you heard of NIEO? Personally, I find it interesting that I had heard of so many acronyms, WHO, WTO, GATT, G7, G20, OECD… but not of NIEO, not until I read The Divide. Yes, the NIEO was the Global South’s previous attempt to prevent the Western block countries like my own from continuing to help themselves to dirt cheap labour and raw materials (“cash crops”) and debt service at compound interest.

Needless to say, nothing came of the main reforms required by the original NIEO, although they were endorsed by the UN General Assembly in 1974.

Why? Because the former colonial powers and the new bully on the block, USA, were not imbued by the Christian spirit of sharing. They formed the G7 and systematically set out to undermine the NIEO. If you don’t believe me, read Chapter 5 of The Divide.
Or read this paper on Unequal exchange of labour in the world economy from 1995 to 2021 And that’s just labour!
Or this paper Imperialist appropriation in the world economy: Drain from the global South through unequal exchange, 1990–2015.

I have tried to find videos about “neocolonialism” and have looked at a handful of them. They all stress that the former colonies were dependent, poor dears, on their former masters and that is why they are doing so poorly. Fie! The truth is that the former masters were determined to continue to exact maximum profit from the global south.

The Western block’s treatment of the global south has not improved, according to Paulo Nogueira Batista Jr. former Executive Director at the IMF (2007-2015) and a founding Vice President of BRICS’ New Development Bank:

The Western bloc has been holding on to its privileges and using it increasingly as a political weapon… It’s weaponised the dollar, weaponised the euro, weaponised the SWIFT payment system, weaponised the IMF, weaponised the World Bank… .The United States is willing to use all instruments in a harsh and violent way to preserve the power it has…

We, the general public in the “Western block” want to believe our (Western) governments are just. We want to believe we don’t do slavery anymore. After all, we all believe in equality, don’t we?

So why do we allow “our” banks to impose Structural Adjustment Programmes (SAPs) that literally sap the blood out of each and every country they harass? SAPs deliberately preclude industrial development and strap their victims in a condition of perpetual destitution, cf. Plundering Africa – Income deflation and unequal ecological exchange under structural adjustment programmes.

We pretend we don’t know, pretend we don’t understand. Sorry, I’m being unfair: Actually, we honestly don’t know, don’t understand. Because our media tells us that we give aid and that we comply with international law. And laws are just aren’t they? Law is the English word for the Latin “juris”, which is closely related to the English word “justice.

With good reason we accuse our politicians of making false promises during election campaigns, of betraying their voters. We ask: Is this Democracy? Voting for Tom, Dick or Harry so that he (or she) can have a four-year field day? Many of us in the “Western block”are angered by the steady deterioration of our living conditions. Many of us actually freeze in our homes during winter and/or die of overheating in summer for lack of air conditioning.

But we cannot feel the hunger of the global south and our media does not tell us that the global south pays our financial oligarchs infinitely much more (thanks to compound interest) than it ever received in the shape of aid + loans.
Even AI services recognise this:

Q: How much have the African countries paid servicing debt over the past 10 years?

AI: Debt‑service has more than doubled compared with the early‑2010s level. ….

African nations have paid on the order of one trillion US dollars in external debt‑service over the past ten years, with the annual burden accelerating sharply and now exceeding $150 bn per year. This scale underscores why debt‑sustainability reforms and concessional financing remain central policy priorities for the continent.

Alas, debt‑sustainability reforms have been on the African agenda since day 1 . All our talk about “equality”, “liberalism” and “justice” is window dressing. What is real is something else, something rather ugly. I’ll leave that for another day.

Fiction versus science versus compassion

Listening today to the mild-mannered social anthropologist Emmanuel Todd on Glenn Diesen’s substack, I was struck by the fact that he does not claim to be a political scientist. Yet he reaches conclusions similar to those posited by the political scientists I have been following, who focus on economic, diplomatic and military observations of the geopolitical chessboard.

Emmanuel Todd uses the tools of his field, the science of social anthropology. Similar conclusions are reached in an article on the role of energy over the past five centuries by means of another scientific field, that of the historian Alfred W. McCoy.

I am stressing the word “scientific”, because what we hear and see in the media regarding geopolitical issues does not even pretend to be scientific and is often divorced from reality. Is it fiction? In a sense, yes.

On the other hand, much of what I have learnt in life, I have learnt from fiction, i.e. from novels and short stories. Science is not supposed to be ideological. We can like or dislike its findings, but like it or not, science is heartless. Science will not tell you that genocide is evil. Treatises, scientific papers, statistics, etc. can support or dismiss hypotheses about human interaction, but only fiction can flesh out the real thing.

Let me spell it out: If your wife breaks your heart telling you she wants a divorce, statistics won’t heal your heart; far less give you a clue as to how you can reignite her attachment to you. Fiction will be your best bet.

So my third source for today is the 2024 novel Enter Ghost by Isabella Hammad. The protagonist is a British actress, whose father is a Palestinian. She feels British, but visits, almost reluctantly, her father’s family in Israel/Palestine and gets involved in a theatre production of Hamlet on the West Bank.

I chose to read the book because it seemed innocuous. There would be no explicit genocide, no horrors of Gaza. What there was, however, was in a sense worse; the day-to-day humiliation of Palestinians. This undramatic aspect of life under Israeli subjugation was actually not really known to me. I was forced to feel what Haneen, Ibrahim, Wael and the others felt, for example at IDF-controlled checkpoints. Only an accomplished writer of fiction could force me to continue reading after having cringed at the insults of a 19-year-old Israeli brat with a gun.

The worst part, for me at least, is that the Palestinians cannot, must not under any circumstances tell the brat what they think of him.

If you have been following me here, you will know that I feel very strongly about Palestine. I ask myself: Had I suffered as much compassion with the protagonists if they had been from Sudan or Yemen?

Alas, no. Why? Because I know Palestinians! I have witnessed their grief, shared a little part of their pain. For decades I have known that Israel was committing genocide! I know no Sudanese and nobody from Yemen.

One of the characters in Enter Ghost tells a disheartened compatriot: “[No] we haven’t won, but it doesn’t exactly look like they’ve won either.” That’s just it! Palestine is occupied. Yes, But the diaspora of the Palestinian people is alive and well. They have lived to tell the story. Israel tried but could not silence them. Israel will for ever be compared to Nazi Germany. That is not “victory” and it never will be.

There is no diaspora from Sudan or Yemen. Alas. I truly wish there were!

My conclusion, then, is that knowledge requires both science and fiction. However without compassion, knowledge is hollow. Compassion requires people with whom we can bond.

Coincidences

I am no angel, believe me. Every year I commute, as it were, across Europe, not once, but twice: Four trips in all, by plane. Moreover, I have four computers, bought within the last six years, and three mobile phones, the most recent of which I bought just last week. So my carbon footprint is no better than that of my compatriots, which is worse than that of citizens in any other European country.

Why am I confessing my sins to you? I am not a Catholic and you are probably not a priest. The answer is simple: I know that I am no better than most. We Norwegians buy too many clothes, too many new cars and we refurbish our houses too often. However we look at it, most of us Norwegians throw away too much and buy far too much. Period.

Perhaps you did not know this, but “Nordic countries have among the highest consumption-based CO2 emissions in the world, worse than the rest of Europe…. Gains in domestic renewable energy are wiped out by consumption-based emissions”.

My country is virtually self-sufficient in terms of clean electricity, yet … Well, to be brief, I suggest you listen to this zoom presentation by Jason Hickel.

In much of Europe, the indigenous population is plummeting because young people cannot afford to buy a flat where they can procreate and rear children. So the European countries need to import desperate immigrants who, incidentally, are willing to work for next to nothing. Even in Norway, that is increasingly the case. Why? Why are the prices of ordinary flats prohibitive for hard-working young couples?

Is it a coincidence that while the price of a place to live is exorbitant, outdoor temperatures are starting to kill us? “A searing heatwave that swept across parts of Europe in late June 2025 has been linked to nearly 2,300 excess deaths, …”

The heat wave referred to by the journalist lasted only “ten days”. But for much of Europe, the heat continued to kill people for four months. The murderous temperatures are no longer a “heat wave”; they are the new “normal”.

I ask again: Is it a coincidence that more and more young people have nowhere to live, that much of this continent is becoming uninhabitable from June to September, while deliberate total destruction (AKA war) is being perpetrated all over the planet. Most ongoing wars could have been avoided! I put to you that the reason they are not avoided is that for a handful of powerful people with seriously warped mindsets, war – per se – is a source of enrichment and/or power and therefore a blessing.

Even Forbes admits that

[r]ecent research has found that global militaries are responsible for nearly 5.5% of total global greenhouse gas emissions—a staggering figure that puts military emissions on par with the global cement industry. If it were a country, it would be the fourth biggest emitter in the world.

But the real cost is much greater, cf. Covering Climate Now

because a loophole the US inserted into the Kyoto Protocol in 1997 exempts all militaries from disclosing their emissions – meaning the world’s total emissions are significantly higher than officially recognized.

Now why would the US insert such a loophole, I wonder? Is it a coincidence?

Distrust

I was taught in primary school – we all were – to adore my country, its flag, its king and its government, which represented us and acted on our behalf.

As we grew older, we could not fail to notice that our government often made what we considered mistakes, though we assumed it always did its best. After all, nobody’s perfect.

In high school, more and more of us started taking sides, right wing or left wing. Of course you also had the smug set, the people who maintained they followed a middle course.

We voted, defended the party we voted for, and denigrated the other parties. We read the paper we subscribed to and/or listened to our favourite news channels. Those were the days of innocence! Governments came and governments went; left side, right side (or, as they are now called, “centre left” and “centre right”). We would grumble when our side lost as though the whole business of elections was a sports event, and between elections we would discuss the performance of prominent politicians when they appeared on television.

Did we really think that the lies that led to the war on Iraq were a one off? Yes, I’m afraid we did. As for the lies that led to our war on Libya – well, they were never really exposed, were they. At least they were not loudly exposed, not in the mainstream press.

The outrageous persecution of Julian Assange was a wake-up call for quite a few of us, not least since even the Guardian joined the witch hunt.

For some time now, I have realised that we need to go back and re-assess a great deal of post-WWII history. What really happened when Yugoslavia was dismantled, for instance, and why? What they told us was definitely not true. What is? David Gibbs has spent years studying the matter.: I find his book very unsettling and interesting.: First Do No Harm: Humanitarian Intervention and the Destruction of Yugoslavia. I also enjoyed the documentary The Weight of Change, which challenges the official record.

Now, many of us “Westerners” – even many of Charlie Kirk’s people – have understood that we have been lied to about Gaza. Actually, we have been lied to for decades about Israel and its treatment of the Palestinian refugees after the Nakba (many of whom settled in Gaza) and about its gradual but methodical ethnic cleansing of the occupied West Bank.

I wonder how Trump voters of median and lower income will feel in the face of the unassailable fact that living conditions will remain as bad or worse under his rule as under Biden. Trump duped his voters.

They all do, of course. It’s a show, after all.

Someone shouted at me the other day during a discussion: “I don’t want to distrust everybody!” No, I certainly understand that.

And it’s not that everybody merits distrust. It’s not the players that need to be replaced, but the rules of the game. That’s what Zohran Mamdani seems to have understood. Who knows, maybe he will prove to be the spark that sets fire to the refuse left by years of mismanagement in Europe, as well as in the USA. If he can inspire the rest of us to demand the Democracy we were promised, that would indeed be great.

Alas, I am not optimistic. Many have tried in various parts of the world, and they have been undercut or killed. Even JFK was killed when he showed indications of leaving the track that had been laid out for him.

And if there is to be real democracy – Ben Norton maintains that Western governments are NOT democracies, they are oligarchies – we must understand that financialization of our countries’ economies is not the way to go.

Another thing we must understand is that “sustainable growth” is a contradiction in terms economically and certainly ecologically. At least in the so-called West. My country talks louder than most about “sustainable growth”, and performs worse than most, according to an assessment of the Nordic countries’ very considerable contribution to the accelerating ecological breakdown .

Finally, let it be clear: War destroys immeasurably. Yes, there are occasions when there is no alternative to armed self-defence. But it must be a last – a really LAST – resort. Imposing “democracy” is not a plausible excuse for violence.

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