Eric Beck on Tue, 14 Jul 2015 23:38:29 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> "An outrageous defeat, not for Greece, but for the |
On Tuesday, July 14, 2015, <sebastian@rolux.org> wrote: YV: Well, when I go to parliament, I have to look at the right hand side of the auditorium, where more than ten Nazis sit, representing Golden Dawn. If our party, Syriza, that has cultivated so much hope in Greece, to the extent that we managed to score 61.5 percent in the recent referendum, if we betray this hope, and if we bow our heads to this new form of postmodern occupation, then I cannot see any other possible outcome than the further strengthening of Golden Dawn. They will inherit the mantle of the anti-austerity drive, unfortunately, tragically. This guy. In January he and his party formed a government with a ultranationalist antiausterity party, even handed them the keys to the defense ministry, and now in July he gets worried about Nazis and far-rightists taking over the country? I think it's a little too late for that Dr. V,; you already put them there. Where does this complete lack of self-awareness come from? Like their supporters around the world, Syriza seems to think that since they are pure of heart and not racist maniacs themselves, their rationality will win out and their role in creating a renationalized Greek body politic is not a substantive feature of their politics but a negotiating ploy, just as the initial alliance with ANEL was described as a mere "parliamentary maneuver." My guess is that this distinction is lost on the victims--migrants, queers, children subjected to Orthodox orthodoxy, pensioners, unemployed youth and women--of this new nationalism, who are not sophisticated to understand Syriza doesn't really mean to endorse far-right politics when it gives ANEL a prime ministerial appointment. But this isn't politics; it's adminstration. I guess that is appropriate since Syriza has spent the last three-plus years draining Greek social movements of their life, of their politics, in order to get to its leadership position. And it's this tiff over administration that lies at the heart of various debates over the last few days, the Gindin-Panitch vs. Seymour one being exemplary. Both love Syriza, and have no problem with its tactics over the last few years, but are quibbling over last-minute negotiating strategies, because for both sides it's not a question of whether there are political differences within Greece--there aren't--or whether Greeks should be managed by socdem technocrats--they should be. The left's propensity to want to saddle swarthy people on the periphery with regimes they'd never countenance themselves inches a little closer to the center. So Dr. V worries about nationalist, racist politics taking over. But read his interview and it's clear the language of aggrieved nationalism is already prominent: fretting over "national sovereignty," worrying about "dignity," feeling a national "humiliation." If the Golden Dawn does take power, Syriza will have opened the door for them. # 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://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org