Despite his own denials, anti-Muslim xenophobia
underwrites the 74-page manifesto compiled by Australian mass
murderer Brendan Tarrant. The title itself, The Great
Replacement, references a far-right conspiracy theory holding
that white genocide is being engineered by useful idiots amongst the
liberal elite advocating mass migration, demographic growth and
cultural diversity.
To this conspiracy theory, the failure to uphold
cultural and racial supremacy is identified with the destruction of
whites. The politics of the dummy spit underwrite the belief that
acknowledging the existence of and respecting other cultures and
ethnic groups is tantamount to the death of the Self. It reflects the
mentality of the infantile ego, yet to discover the existence of
others outside of the realm of the known, associated in practise with
the ego.
It is not a little telling that this atrocity was
carried out on the same day as the latest in a series of large-scale
climate strikes by secondary students throughout Australia and the
world. On the one side, those directly threatened by a very real
crisis took active measures to do something positive and
constructive. On the other, a small group of people preoccupied with
the threat of the existence of others carried out a negative and
destructive atrocity. The contrast could hardly be clearer.
What to make of the difference between the two? In
an eponymous 2017 work, anthropologist Ghassan Hage enquires, is
racism an environmental threat? Hage explicitly links the global
rise in racism, demagoguery and bigotry, of which we can quite easily
include this latest Christchurch massacre, with a reaction amongst
elite groups to the social consequences of climate change.
In awakening a need for meaningful and profound
social change amongst increasingly vast sectors of the world’s
population, Hage argued, the climate crisis has come to present
increasingly clear and present threats to elite privilege. It has
done so in the main, he contended, through rude infringements of
scientific fact and lived daily experience on the ideological mores
that have upheld a world order of haves and have nots built on 500
years of colonialism.
Not the least of these was the Self vs. Other
binary that had been at the core of what Edward Said called
‘Orientalism.’ Orientalism referred to the paternalistic frame of
reference for subjugated peoples used to rationalise colonial
extractivism as ‘civilising the savages’—a mentality with roots
in the Roman propensity to view everyone not under their control as
‘barbarians,’ until they were ‘civilised’ (with all the
attendant tributes for the imperial power).
Such formed the basis, Hage argued, for a tendency
within advanced capitalism to oscillate between what he
called‘savage’ and ‘civilised’ capitalism—the ‘savage’
being that of the racialised associated with the early period of
colonialism. The ‘civilised,’ by contrast, was of the type
commonly associated with modern industrial capitalism and the liberal
democracies associated with it.
This oscillating tendency reflected in essence a
scapegoating dynamic, deriving from the fact that capitalist
development remained an ongoing process after it had reached an
advanced stage. This was specially insofar as late capitalism is
plagued by periodic crises driven by the tendency of the rate of
profit to fall, or by democratic challenges from below. This, Hage
argued, drove the oscillation between ‘civilised’ and ‘savage’
modes, as privileged elites returned to violence to rescue their
privilege from the shortcomings of the system that upheld them, or
from democracy, or from both.
Periodic returns to the ‘savage’ modalities
and mentalities accompanying the conditions that produced its birth
was encouraged then as a stopgap against crisis—in the manner
documented by sociological research into moral panic and the
documented tendency of elite-controlled corporate media to
manufacture consent through scaremongering and the production of
deviance. Herman and Chomsky produced a classic work exploring this
phenomenon; more recent scholarship has identified moral panic in the
process.
The Islamic bugbears and hobgoblins in particular
were created as a result of the power of the corporate media to
control the meaning of deviance and impose their definition on public
discourse—not on the features of those so demonised. The global
instability created by a world order in which the richest one percent
owned half the world’s wealth and the richest ten percent owned ¾
of it could be blamed on the Islamic Other.
Which brings us back to this latest example of
white supremacist terrorism in Christchurch. Nothing about this
atrocity and the terrible loss of life is special, other than the
fact that it took place on the same day as the latest round of
climate strikes lead by secondary students. The contrast between the
preoccupation with conspiracy and manufactured crisis and the very
clear scientific understanding of climate crisis reflects with a
unique conspicuousness the function of the former in dodging the
reality of and constructing scapegoats for the latter.
If whites are feeling insecure, this has nothing
to do with the social and environmental consequences of global
economic modality built on the assumption that the world is an
infinite resource and infinite garbage dump—it is the fault of
those existing outside of the culturally hegemonic and supremacist
monoculture for existing. Herein lies the scapegoating dynamic of
savage capitalism, built on a white victim complex refusing to
acknowledge any difference between respecting other cultures and the
death of the Self.
As Ghassan Hage noted, the impetus for the
scapegoating of savage capitalism and the white victim complex arises
out of accumulation crisis, as the very real social, economic and
environmental consequences of maintaining the world of haves and
have-nots becomes harder and harder to sweep under the rug. As
corporate-captured governments around the world continue to fail to
act on climate change in prioritising profit over the planet,
opposition from the young in particular can only ever grow.
In the face of this dire threat of democracy, the
value of manufactured conspiracy theories alleging racial existential
threats to be used as scapegoats increases accordingly—all the more
so as the climate crisis continues to worsen, presenting an
increasingly unavoidable existential threat to human society.
Atrocities like those perpetrated in Christchurch
in the final analysis are driven by the impulse to blame the
consequences of the social and economic modalities behind climate
change on the victims and any other convenient scapegoats. They are
driven by the impulse to reassert the fundamental modalities and
mentalities that produced the interconnected crises of our age in the
first place.
As long as they continue to be useful in suppressing the ultimate reality that there is no class privilege on a dead planet, prominent Islamophobes in the corporate media and politics (Andrew Bolt and Cori Bernadi here in Australia being prime examples) will continue to promote the conspiracy theories driving the likes of Brendan Tarrant and Anders Brevik to deadly violence. In the end, the terror that these atrocities produce for the affected communities only reflects the racialised terror from which the Western-dominated world order was born, and whose consequences condemn us all to ecological Armageddon. ■
Ben Debney lives in
Melbourne, Australia. Twitter: @itesau
This article first appeared at Counterpunch.org