Benjamin Geer on Thu, 15 Nov 2007 14:03:53 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> The Messy, Dirty, Silly Interplay of Art and Activis Artivistic 2007 |
On 15/11/2007, tobias c. van Veen <tobias@techno.ca> wrote: > > I disagree. I think the whole discourse of "rights" is useless > > nonsense. > > Because you have them. No, because so many of the ones I have are useless. For example, I lived for most of my life in the US, which is a signatory to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which says that every human being has a right to health care. A lot of good it did me in a country with no public health care system, where you have to be rich to afford good health care. What was I supposed to do? Go to a human rights tribunal and argue that my rights have been violated because the US has no public health care system? Even if the tribunal ruled in my favour, would that solve the problem? Of course it wouldn't. Public health care systems get created not because people have rights, but because they have political power, the power to legislate and create the institutions they need. And in the US, again, you don't have that power unless you're rich. So Americans don't need more rights, they need a new political system, one that gives power to the poor. > As for the rest -- B., you mix up nation & territory. Political > power for First Nations in Canada remains with the land for the > single reason that is nondeconstructible: justice. You're the one who's mixing up nation and territory here. Can a territory have power? I think not. > With land comes economic subsistence So what makes you think people need to belong to "nations" in order to have land? They had land for millions of years before the thoroughly modern idea of "nation" was invented (in the 18th and 19th centuries). > You want to deconstruct the land of the indigenuous? No, I want human beings who need land to have land. I see no reason to call them "indigenous" for that purpose. > 'rights' speak the language, at least for now, of justice I disagree completely. I think the whole discourse of rights was invented in order to frustrate the efforts of the powerless to gain power. This discourse says: You're poor and your vote doesn't count? You shouldn't complain: you have lots of rights. Enjoy them! > Canada is an unfinished colonial project. With what violence would > you close its making? "Canada" is just another nation-state, just another myth. It doesn't matter what happens to it. What matters is how the people living in that part of the world can create a political system that will give the poor and powerless enough political power to ensure their own well-being, whether they're "indigenous" or just homeless in the streets of Toronto. Calling one group of people "indigenous" and thinking that this makes their suffering somehow special, to be treated differently, is actually to participate in the divide-and-conquer strategies of the rich and powerful. In Palestine, there are two groups of people fighting over ancestral rights to the same small patch of land. Whose interests does that conflict serve? Not those of the Palestinian poor, of course, nor those of the Israeli poor. I think it just serves the interests of the elites in both groups. If the poor and powerless in both groups got together and made common cause, what might happen? The conflict might be resolved, at the expense of both the nationalisms in question. > Reserves are aporetic: the reserve is both prison and autonomous > patch of territory consigned without care by colonial powers. > Does a deconstructive politics mean to negate the Reserve > and thus potential autonomy of -- is this too essential? -- > 'self-determination'? Heck no! In Canada a deconstructive politic > means to engage the potential of the Reserve to de_nationalize > Canada -- beginning with its colonial myth of English-French > foundation. And here, well, maybe this is a special case: we *can* > redistribute territory as, well, we've got a freakin' LOT of it. > Imagine that. Why not deconstruct both? As long as the end result is that everyone who needs land gets land, why do you need a reserve? Why do you need "indigenous" people? Why not just think in terms of human beings who need land? > > Rights don't matter. > > Which is why the privileged continue to dismiss them. The privileged were the ones who invented the concept of rights, in order to keep the poor from demanding power. Ben # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mail.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org