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N30: Skeleton
Woman in Seattle
by
Paul Hawken,
Director, Natural Capital Institute
© Paul Hawken, January
6, 2000
(Reprinted here
with permission from the author)
When I was able to
open my eyes, I saw lying next to me a young man, 19, maybe 20 at the oldest.
He was in shock, twitching and shivering uncontrollably from being tear-gassed
and pepper-sprayed at close range. His burned eyes were tightly closed,
and he was panting irregularly. Then he passed out. He went from excruciating
pain to unconsciousness on a sidewalk wet from the water that a medic had
poured over him to flush his eyes.
More than 700 organizations
and between 40,000 and 60,000 people took part in the protests against
the WTO’s Third Ministerial on November 30th. These groups and citizens
sense a cascading loss of human, labor, and environmental rights in the
world. Seattle was not the beginning but simply the most striking expression
of citizens struggling against a worldwide corporate-financed oligarchy
- in effect, a plutocracy. Oligarchy and plutocracy often are used to describe
"other" countries where a small group of wealthy people rule, but not the
"First World"-the United States, Japan, Germany, or Canada.
The World Trade Organization,
however, is trying to cement into place that corporate plutocracy. Already,
the world’s top 200 companies have twice the assets of 80 percent of the
world’s people. Global corporations represent a new empire whether they
admit it or not. With massive amounts of capital at their disposal, any
of which can be used to influence politicians and the public as and when
deemed necessary, all democratic institutions are diminished and at risk.
Corporate free market policies, as promulgated by the WTO, subvert culture,
democracy, and community, a true tyranny. The American Revolution occurred
because of crown-chartered corporate abuse, a "remote tyranny," in Thomas
Jefferson’s words. To see Seattle as an isolated event, as did most of
the media, is to look at the battles of Concord and Lexington as meaningless
skirmishes.
The mainstream media,
consistently problematic in their coverage of any type of protest, had
an even more difficult time understanding and covering both the issues
and activists in Seattle. No charismatic leader led. No religious figure
engaged in direct action. No movie stars starred. There was no alpha group.
The Ruckus Society, Rainforest Action Network, Global Exchange, and hundreds
more were there, coordinated primarily by cell phones, e-mails, and the
Direct Action Network. They were up against the Seattle Police Department,
the Secret Service, and the FBI-to say nothing of the media coverage and
the WTO itself.
Thomas Friedman,
The New York Times columnist and author of an encomium to globalization
entitled The Lexus and the Olive Tree, angrily wrote that the demonstrators
were "a Noah’s ark of flat-earth advocates, protectionist trade unions
and yuppies looking for their 1960s fix." Not so. They were organized,
educated, and determined. They were human rights activists, labor activists,
indigenous people, people of faith, steel workers, and farmers. They were
forest activists, environmentalists, social justice workers, students,
and teachers. And they wanted the World Trade Organization to listen. They
were speaking on behalf of a world that has not been made better by globalization.
Income disparity is growing rapidly. The difference between the top and
bottom quintiles has doubled in the past 30 years. Eighty-six percent of
the world’s goods go to the top fifth, the bottom fifth get 1 percent.
The apologists for globalization cannot support their contention that open
borders, reduced tariffs, and forced trade benefit the poorest 3 billion
people in the world.
Globalization does,
however, create the concentrations of capital seen in northern financial
and industrial centers-indeed, the wealth in Seattle itself. Since the
people promoting globalized free trade policies live in those cities, it
is natural that they should be biased.
Despite Friedman’s
invective about "the circus in Seattle," the demonstrators and activists
who showed up there were not against trade. They do demand proof that shows
when and how trade-as the WTO constructs it-benefits workers and the environment
in developing nations, as well as workers at home. Since that proof has
yet to be offered, the protesters came to Seattle to hold the WTO accountable.
On the morning of
November 30th, I walked toward the Seattle Convention Center, the site
of the planned Ministerial, with Randy Hayes, the founder of Rainforest
Action Network. As soon as we turned the corner on First Avenue and Pike
Street, we could hear drums, chants, sirens, roars. At Fifth, police stopped
us. We could go no farther without credentials. Ahead of us were thousands
of protesters. Beyond them was a large cordon of gas-masked and riot-shielded
police, an armored personnel carrier, and fire trucks. On one corner was
Niketown. On the other, the Sheraton Hotel, through which there was a passage
to the Convention Center. The cordon of police in front of us tried to
prevent more protesters from joining those who blocked the entrances to
the Convention Center. Randy was a credentialed WTO delegate, which meant
he could join the proceedings as an observer. He showed his pass to the
officer, who thought it looked like me. The officer joked with us, kidded
Randy about having my credential, and then winked and let us both through.
The police were still relaxed at that point.
Ahead of us crowds
were milling and moving. Anarchists were there, maybe 40 in all, dressed
in black pants, black bandanas, black balaclavas, and jackboots, one of
two groups identifiable by costume. The other was a group of 300 children
who had dressed brightly as turtles in the Sierra Club march the day before.
Their costumes were part of a serious complaint against the WTO. When the
United States attempted to block imports of shrimp caught in the same nets
that capture and drown 150,000 sea turtles each year, the WTO called the
block "arbitrary and unjustified." Thus far in every environmental dispute
that has come before the WTO, its three-judge panels, which deliberate
in secret, have ruled for business, against the environment. The panel
members are selected from lawyers and officials who are not educated in
biology, the environment, social issues, or anthropology.
Opening ceremonies
for the World Trade Organization’s Third Ministerial were to have been
held that Tuesday morning at the Paramount Theater near the Convention
Center. Police had ringed the theater with Metro buses touching bumper
to bumper. The protesters surrounded the outside of that steel circle.
Only a few hundred of the 5,000 delegates made it inside, as police were
unable to provide safe corridors for members and ambassadors. The theater
was virtually empty when US trade representative and meeting co-chair Charlene
Barshevsky was to have delivered the opening keynote. Instead, she was
captive in her hotel room a block from the meeting site. WTO executive
director Michael Moore was said to have been apoplectic.
Inside the Paramount,
Mayor Paul Schell stood despondently near the stage. Since no scheduled
speakers were present, Kevin Danaher, Medea Benjamin, and Juliette Beck
from Global Exchange went to the lectern and offered to begin a dialogue
in the meantime. The WTO had not been able to come to a pre-meeting consensus
on the draft agenda. The NGO community, however, had drafted a consensus
agreement about globalization-and the three thought this would be a good
time to present it, even if the hall had only a desultory number of delegates.
Although the three were credentialed WTO delegates, the sound system was
quickly turned off, and the police arm-locked and handcuffed them. Medea’s
wrist was sprained. All were dragged off stage and arrested.
The arrests mirrored
how the WTO has operated since its birth in 1995. Listening to people is
not its strong point. WTO rules run roughshod over local laws and regulations.
The corporations operating through the WTO relentlessly pursue the elimination
of any restriction on the free flow of trade including those based on local,
national, or international laws that distinguish between products based
on how they are made, by whom, or what happens during production. By doing
so, the WTO is eliminating the ability of countries and regions to set
standards, to express values, or to determine what they do or don’t support.
The result is that child labor, prison labor, forced labor, substandard
wages and working conditions cannot be used as a basis to discriminate
against goods. Nor can a country’s human rights record, environmental destruction,
habitat loss, toxic waste production, or the presence of transgenic materials
or synthetic hormones. Under WTO rules, the Sullivan Principles against
apartheid and the boycott of South Africa would not have existed.
If the world could
vote on the WTO rules, would they pass? Not one country of the 135 member-states
of the WTO has held a plebiscite to see if its people support the WTO mandate.
The people trying to meet in the Green Rooms at the Seattle Convention
Center were not elected. Even Michael Moore was not elected.
While Global Exchange
was temporarily silenced, the main organizer of the downtown protests,
the Direct Action Network (DAN), was executing a plan that was working
brilliantly outside the Convention Center. The plan was simple: insert
groups of trained nonviolent activists into key points downtown, making
it impossible for delegates to move. DAN had hoped that 1,500 activists
would show up. Close to 10,000 did. The 2,000 people who began the march
to the Convention Center at 7 a.m. from Victor Steinbrueck Park and Seattle
Central Community College were composed of "affinity groups" and clusters
whose responsibility was to block key intersections and entrances. Participants
had trained for many hours in some cases, for many weeks in others. Each
affinity group had its own mission and was self-organized. The streets
around the Convention Center were divided into 13 sections, and individual
groups and clusters were responsible for holding these sections. There
were also "flying groups" that moved at will from section to section, backing
up groups under attack as needed. The groups were further divided into
those willing to be arrested and those who were not. All decisions prior
to the demonstrations were reached by consensus. Minority views were heeded
and included. The one thing all agreed to was that there would be no violence-physical
or verbal-no weapons, no drugs or alcohol.
Throughout most of
the day, using a variety of techniques, groups held intersections and key
areas downtown. As protesters were beaten, gassed, clubbed, and pushed
back, a new group would replace them. There were no charismatic leaders
barking orders. There was no command chain. There was no one in charge.
Police said that they were not prepared for the level of violence, but,
as one protester later commented, what they were unprepared for was a network
of nonviolent protesters totally committed to one task: shutting down the
WTO.
Meanwhile, Moore
and Barshevsky’s frustration was growing by the minute. Their anger and
disappointment were shared by Madeleine Albright, by the Clinton advance
team, and, back in Washington, by chief of staff John Podesta. This was
to have been a celebration, a victory, one of the crowning achievements
to showcase the Clinton administration, the moment when it would consolidate
its centrist free-trade policies, allowing the Democrats to show multinational
corporations that they could deliver the goods. This was to have been Barshevsky’s
moment, an event that would give her the inside track to become Secretary
of Commerce in the Gore administration. This was to have been Michael Moore’s
moment, reviving what had been a mediocre political ascendancy in New Zealand.
To say nothing of Monsanto’s moment. If the proposals in the unapproved
draft agenda were ever ratified, the Europeans could no longer block or
demand labeling on genetically modified crops without being slapped with
punitive lawsuits and tariffs. The draft also contained provisions that
would allow all water in the world to be privatized. It would allow corporations
patent protection on all forms of life, even genetic material in cultural
use for thousands of years. Farmers who have spent thousands of years growing
crops in a valley in India could, within a decade, be required to pay for
their water. They could also find that they would have to purchase seeds
containing genetic traits their ancestors developed, from companies that
have engineered the seeds not to reproduce unless the farmer annually buys
expensive chemicals to restore seed viability. If this happens, the CEOs
of Novartis and Enron, two of the companies creating the seeds and privatizing
the water, will have more money. What will Indian farmers have?
But the perfect moment
for Barshevsky, Moore and Monsanto didn’t arrive. The meeting couldn’t
start. Demonstrators were everywhere. Private security guards had locked
down the hotels. The downtown stores were shut. Hundreds of delegates were
on the street trying to get into the Convention Center. No one could help
them. For WTO delegates accustomed to an ordered corporate or governmental
world, it was a calamity.
Up Pike toward Seventh
and to Randy’s and my right on Sixth, protesters faced armored cars, horses,
and police in full riot gear. In between, demonstrators had ringed the
Sheraton to prevent an alternative entry to the Convention Center. At one
point, police guarding the steps to the lobby pummeled and broke through
a crowd of protesters to let eight delegates in. On Sixth Avenue, Sergeant
Richard Goldstein asked demonstrators seated on the street in front of
the police line "to cooperate" and move back 40 feet. No one understood
why, but that hardly mattered. No one was going to move. He announced that
"chemical irritants" would be used if they did not leave.
The police were anonymous.
No facial expressions, no face. You could not see their eyes. They were
masked Hollywood caricatures burdened with 60 to 70 pounds of weaponry.
These were not the men and women of the 6th precinct. They were the Gang
Squads and the SWAT teams of the Tactical Operations Divisions, closer
in their training to soldiers from the School of the Americas than to local
cops on the beat. Behind them and around were special forces from the FBI,
the Secret Service, even the CIA.
The police were almost
motionless. They were equipped with US military standard M40A1 double-canister
gas masks, uncalibrated, semi-automatic, high velocity Autocockers loaded
with solid plastic shot, Monadnock disposable plastic cuffs, Nomex slash-resistant
gloves, Commando boots, Centurion tactical leg guards, combat harnesses,
DK5-H pivot-and-lock riot face shields, black Monadnock P24 polycarbonate
riot batons with Trumbull stop side handles, No. 2 continuous discharge
CS (ortho-chlorobenzylidene-malononitrile) chemical grenades, M651 CN (chloroacetophenone)
pyrotechnic grenades, T16 Flameless OC Expulsion Grenades, DTCA rubber
bullet grenades (Stingers), M-203 (40mm) grenade launchers, First Defense
MK-46 oleoresin capsicum (OC) aerosol tanks with hose and wands, .60 caliber
rubber ball impact munitions, lightweight tactical Kevlar composite ballistic
helmets, combat butt packs, .30 cal. 30-round magazine pouches, and Kevlar
body armor. None of the police had visible badges or forms of identification.
The demonstrators
seated in front of the black-clad ranks were equipped with hooded jackets
for protection against rain and chemicals. They carried toothpaste and
baking powder for protection of their skin, and wet cotton cloths impregnated
with vinegar to cover their mouths and noses after a tear gas release.
In their backpacks were bottled water and food for the day ahead.
Ten Koreans came
around the corner carrying a 10-foot banner protesting genetically modified
foods. They were impeccable in white robes, sashes, and headbands. One
was a priest. They played flutes and drums and marched straight toward
the police and behind the seated demonstrators. Everyone cheered at the
sight and chanted, "The whole world is watching." The sun broke through
the gauzy clouds. It was a beautiful day. Over cell phones, we could hear
the cheers coming from the labor rally at the football stadium. The air
was still and quiet.
At 10 a.m. the police
fired the first seven canisters of tear gas into the crowd. The whitish
clouds wafted slowly down the street. The seated protesters were overwhelmed,
yet most did not budge. Police poured over them. Then came the truncheons,
and the rubber bullets. I was with a couple of hundred people who had ringed
the hotel, arms locked. We watched as long as we could until the tear gas
slowly enveloped us. We were several hundred feet from Sgt. Goldstein’s
40-foot "cooperation" zone. Police pushed and truncheoned their way through
and behind us. We covered our faces with rags and cloth, snatching glimpses
of the people being clubbed in the street before shutting our eyes.
The gas was a fog
through which people moved in slow, strange dances of shock and pain and
resistance. Tear gas is a misnomer. Think about feeling asphyxiated and
blinded. Breathing becomes labored. Vision is blurred. The mind is disoriented.
The nose and throat burn. It’s not a gas, it’s a drug. Gas-masked police
hit, pushed, and speared us with the butt ends of their batons. We all
sat down, hunched over, and locked arms more tightly. By then, the tear
gas was so strong our eyes couldn’t open. One by one, our heads were jerked
back from the rear, and pepper was sprayed directly into each eye. It was
very professional. Like hair spray from a stylist. Sssst. Sssst.
Pepper spray is derived
from food-grade cayenne peppers. The spray used in Seattle was the strongest
available, with a 1.5 to 2.0 million Scoville heat unit rating. One to
three Scoville units are when your tongue can first detect hotness. The
habañero, usually considered the hottest pepper in the world, is rated
around 300,000 Scoville units. The following description was written by
a police officer who sells pepper spray on his website. It is about his
first experience being sprayed, during a training exercise:
"It felt as if two
red-hot pieces of steel were grinding into my eyes, as if someone was blowing
a red-hot cutting torch into my face. I fell to the ground just like all
the others and started to rub my eyes even though I knew better not too.
The heat from the pepper spray was overwhelming. I could not resist trying
to rub it off of my face. The pepper spray caused my eyes to shut very
quickly. The only way I could open them was by prying them open with my
fingers. Everything that we had been taught about pepper spray had turned
out to be true. And everything that our instructor had told us that we
would do, even though we knew not to do it, we still did. Pepper spray
turned out to be more than I had bargained for."
As I tried to find
my way down Sixth Avenue after the tear gas and pepper spray, I couldn’t
see. The person who found and guided me was Anita Roddick, the founder
of the Body Shop, and probably the only CEO in the world who wanted to
be on the streets of Seattle helping people that day. I could hear acutely.
When your eyes fail, your ears take over. What I heard was anger, dismay,
shock. For many people, including the police, this was their first direct
action. Demonstrators who had taken nonviolence training were astonished
at the police brutality. The demonstrators were students, professors, clergy,
lawyers, and medical personnel. They held signs against Burma and violence.
They dressed as butterflies.
The Seattle Police
had made a decision not to arrest people on the first day of the protests
(a decision that was reversed for the rest of the week). Throughout the
day, the affinity groups created through Direct Action stayed together.
Tear gas, rubber bullets, and pepper spray were used so frequently that
by late afternoon, supplies ran low. What seemed like an afternoon lull
or standoff was because police had used up all their stores. Officers combed
surrounding counties for tear gas, sprays, concussion grenades, and munitions.
As police restocked, the word came down from the White House to secure
downtown Seattle or the WTO meeting would be called off. By late afternoon,
the mayor and police chief announced a 7 p.m. curfew and "no protest" zones,
and declared the city under civil emergency. The police were fatigued and
frustrated. Over the next seven hours and into the night, the police turned
downtown Seattle into Beirut.
That morning, it
had been the police commanders who were out of control, ordering the gassing
and pepper spraying and shooting of people protesting nonviolently. By
evening, it was the individual police who were out of control. Anger erupted,
protesters were kneed and kicked in the groin, and police used their thumbs
to grind the eyes of pepper-spray victims. Protesters were defiant. A few
demonstrators danced on burning dumpsters that were ignited by pyrotechnic
tear gas grenades (the same ones used in Waco). Tear gas canisters were
thrown back as fast as they were launched. Impromptu drum corps marched
using empty 5-gallon water bottles for instruments.
Despite their steadily
dwindling number, maybe 1,500 by evening, a hardy remnant of protesters
held their ground, seated in front of heavily armed police, hands raised
in peace signs, submitting to tear gas, pepper spray, and riot batons.
As they retreated to the medics, new groups replaced them. Every channel
covered the police riots live. On TV, the police looked absurd, frantic,
and mean. Passing Metro buses filled with passengers were gassed. Police
were pepper spraying residents and bystanders. The mayor went on TV that
night to say that as a protester from the ‘60s, he could never have imagined
what he was going to do next: call in the National Guard.
This is what I remember
about the violence. There was almost none until police attacked demonstrators
that Tuesday in Seattle. Michael Meacher, environment minister of the United
Kingdom, said afterward, "What we hadn’t reckoned with was the Seattle
police department, who single-handedly managed to turn a peaceful protest
into a riot." There was no police restraint, despite what Mayor Paul Schell
kept proudly assuring television viewers all day. Instead, there were rubber
bullets, which Schell kept denying all day. In the end, more copy and video
was given to broken windows than broken teeth.
During that day,
the anarchist black blocs were in full view. Numbering about one hundred,
they could all have been arrested at any time, but the police were so weighed
down by their own equipment, they literally couldn’t run. The police and
the Direct Action Network had mutually apprised each other for months prior
to the WTO meeting about the anarchists’ intentions. The Eugene police
had volunteered information and specific techniques to handle the black
blocs but had been rebuffed by the Seattle Police. It was widely known
that the anarchists would be there and that they had property damage in
mind.
To the credit of
the mayor, the police chief, and the Seattle press, unlike some national
commentators they consistently made distinctions between the protesters
and the anarchists (later joined by local vandals as the night wore on).
But the anarchists were not primitivists, nor were they all from Eugene.
They were well organized, and they had a plan. The black blocs came with
tools (crowbars, hammers, acid-filled eggs) and hit lists. They knew they
were going after Fidelity Investments but not Charles Schwab. Starbucks
but not Tully’s. The GAP but not REI. Fidelity Investments because they
are large investors in Occidental Petroleum, the oil company most benefiting
from the violence against the U’wa tribe in Colombia. Starbuck’s because
of their non-support of fair-traded coffee. The GAP because of the Fisher
family’s purchase of Northern California forests. They targeted multinational
corporations that they see as benefiting from repression, exploitation
of workers, and low wages. According to one anarchist group, the ACME collective:
"Most of us have been studying the effects of the global economy, genetic
engineering, resource extraction, transportation, labor practices, elimination
of indigenous autonomy, animal rights, and human rights, and we’ve been
doing activism on these issues for many years. We are neither ill-informed
nor inexperienced." They don’t believe we live in a democracy, do believe
that property damage (primarily windows and tagging) is a legitimate form
of protest, and that it is not violent unless it harms a person. For the
black blocs, breaking windows is intended to shatter the smooth exterior
facade that covers corporate crime and violence. That’s what they did.
And what the national media did in much of their coverage is what I just
did in the last two paragraphs: focus inordinately on the tiniest sliver
of the 40,000-60,000 marchers and demonstrators.
It’s not inapt to
compare the pointed lawlessness of the anarchists with the carefully considered
ability of the WTO to flout laws of sovereign nations. When "The Final
Act Embodying the Results of the Uruguay Round of Multilateral Trade Negotiations"
was enacted April 15th, 1994, in Marrakech, it was recorded as a 550-page
agreement that was then sent to Congress for ratification. Ralph Nader
offered to donate $10,000 to any charity of a congressman’s choice if any
of them signed an affidavit saying they had read it and could answer several
questions about it. Only one-Senator Hank Brown, a Colorado Republican-took
him up on it. After reading the document, Brown changed his opinion and
voted against the Agreement. There were no public hearings, dialogues,
or education. What was approved was an Agreement that gives the WTO the
ability to overrule or undermine international conventions, acts, treaties,
and agreements. The WTO directly violates "The Universal Declaration of
Human Rights" adopted by member nations of the United Nations, not to mention
Agenda 21 of the 1992 Earth Summit. (The proposed draft agenda presented
in Seattle went further in that it would require Multilateral Agreements
on the Environment such as the Montreal Protocol, the Convention on Biological
Diversity, and the Kyoto Protocol to be in alignment with and subordinate
to WTO trade polices.) The final Marrakech Agreement contained provisions
that most of the delegates, even the heads-of-country delegations, were
not aware of, statutes that were drafted by sub-groups of bureaucrats and
lawyers, some of whom represented transnational corporations.
The police mandate
to clear downtown was achieved by 9 p.m. Tuesday night. But police, some
of whom were fresh recruits from outlying towns, didn’t want to stop there.
They chased demonstrators into neighborhoods where the distinctions between
protesters and citizens vanished. The police began attacking bystanders,
residents, and commuters. They had lost control. When President Clinton
sped from Boeing Airfield to the Westin Hotel at 1:30 a.m. Wednesday, his
limousines entered a police-ringed city of broken glass, helicopters, and
boarded windows. He was too late. The mandate for the WTO had vanished
sometime that afternoon.
The next morning
and over the next several days, a surprised press corps went to work and
spun webs. They vented thinly veiled anger in their columns, and pointed
fingers at brash, misguided white kids. They created myths, told fables.
What a majority of media projected onto the marchers and activists, in
an often-contradictory manner, was: that the protesters are afraid of a
world without walls; that they want the WTO to have even more rules; that
Eugene anarchists who followed John Zerzan ran rampant; that they blame
the WTO for the world’s problems; that they are opposed to global integration;
that they are against trade; that they are ignorant and insensitive to
the world’s poor; that they want to tell other people how to live. The
list is long and tendentious. Outstanding coverage came from Amy Goodman’s
Democracy Now on Pacifica radio and The Nation.
Patricia King, one
of two Newsweek reporters in Seattle, called me from her hotel room at
the Four Seasons and wanted to know if this was the ’60s redux. No, I told
her. The ’60s were primarily an American event; the protests against the
WTO are international. Who are the leaders? she wanted to know. There are
no leaders in the traditional sense. But there are thought leaders, I said.
Who are they? she asked. I began to name some: Martin Khor and Vandana
Shiva of the Third World Network in Asia, Walden Bello of Focus on the
Global South, Maude Barlow of the Council of Canadians, Tony Clarke of
Polaris Institute, Jerry Mander of the International Forum on Globalization,
Susan George of the Transnational Institute, David Korten of the People-Centered
Development Forum, John Cavanagh of the Institute for Policy Studies, Lori
Wallach of Public Citizen, Mark Ritchie of the Institute For Agriculture
and Trade Policy, Anuradha Mittal of the Institute for Food & Development
Policy, Helena Norberg-Hodge of the International Society for Ecology and
Culture, Owens Wiwa of the Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People,
Chakravarthi Raghavan of the Third World Network in Geneva, Debra Harry
of the Indigenous Peoples Coalition Against Biopiracy, José Bové of the
Confederation Paysanne, Tetteh Hormoku of the Third World Network in Africa,
Randy Hayes of Rainforest Action Network... Stop, stop, she said. I can’t
use these names in my article. Why not? Because Americans have never heard
of them.
Instead, Newsweek
editors put the picture of the Unabomber, Theodore Kaczynski, in the article
because he had at one time purchased some of John Zerzan’s writings.
Some of the mainstream
media also assigned blame to the protesters for the meeting’s outcome.
But ultimately, it was not on the streets that the WTO broke down. It was
inside. It was a heated and rancorous ministerial, and the meeting ended
in a stalemate, with African, Caribbean, and some Asian countries refusing
to support a draft agenda that had been negotiated behind closed doors
without their participation. With that much contention inside and out,
one can rightly ask whether the correct question is being posed. The question,
as propounded by corporations, is how to make trade rules more uniform.
The proper question, it seems to me, is how do we make trade rules more
differentiated so that different cultures, cities, peoples, places, and
countries benefit. Arnold Toynbee wrote that "Civilizations in decline
are consistently characterized by a tendency toward standardization and
uniformity. Conversely, during the growth stage of civilization, the tendency
is toward differentiation and diversity."
Those who marched
and protested opposed the tyrannies of globalization, uniformity, and corporatization,
but they did not necessarily oppose internationalization of trade. Economist
Herman Daly has long made the distinction between the two. Internationalization
means trade between nations. Globalization refers to a system of uniform
rules for the entire world, a world in which capital and goods move at
will without the rule of individual nations. Nations, for all their faults,
set trade standards. Those who are willing to meet those standards can
do business with them. Do nations abuse this power? Always and constantly,
the US being the worst offender. But nations do provide, where democracies
prevail, a means for people to set their own policy, to influence decisions,
and determine their future. Globalization supplants the nation, the state,
the region, and the village. While eliminating nationalism is indeed a
good idea, the elimination of sovereignty is not.
One recent example
of the power of the WTO is Chiquita Brands International, a $2 billion
corporation that recently made a large donation to the Democratic Party.
Coincidentally, the United States filed a complaint with the WTO against
the European Union because European import policies favored bananas coming
from small Caribbean growers instead of the banana conglomerates. The Europeans
freely admitted their bias and policy: they restricted imports from large
multinational companies in Central America (plantations whose lands were
secured by U.S. military force during the past century) and favored small
family farmers from former colonies who used fewer chemicals. It seemed
like a decent thing to do, and everyone thought the bananas tasted better.
For the banana giants, this was untenable. The United States prevailed
in this WTO-arbitrated case. So who won and who lost? Did the Central American
employees at Chiquita Brands win? Ask the hundreds of workers in Honduras
who were made infertile by the use of dibromochloropropane on the banana
plantations. Ask the mothers whose children have birth defects from pesticide
poisoning. Did the shareholders of Chiquita win? At the end of 1999, Chiquita
Brands was losing money because it was selling bananas at below cost to
muscle its way into the European market. Its stock was at a 13-year low,
the shareholders were angry, the company was up for sale, but the prices
of bananas in Europe are really cheap. Who lost? Caribbean farmers who
could formerly make a living and send their kids to school can no longer
do so because of low prices and demand.
Globalization leads
to the concentration of wealth inside such large multinational corporations
as Time-Warner, Microsoft, GE, Exxon, and Wal-Mart. These giants can obliterate
social capital and local equity, and create cultural homogeneity in their
wake. Countries as different as Mongolia, Bhutan, and Uganda will have
no choice but to allow Blockbuster, Burger King, and Pizza Hut to operate
within their borders. Under WTO rules, even decisions made by local communities
to refuse McDonald’s entry (as did Martha’s Vineyard) could be overruled.
The as-yet unapproved draft agenda calls for WTO member governments to
open up their procurement process to multinational corporations. No longer
could local governments buy preferentially from local vendors. Proposed
rules could force governments to privatize medical care by allowing foreign
companies to bid on delivering national health programs. The draft agenda
could privatize and commodify education, and ban cultural restrictions
on entertainment, advertising, or commercialism as trade barriers. Globalization
kills self-reliance, since smaller local businesses can rarely compete
with highly capitalized firms that seek market share instead of profits.
Thus, developing regions may become more subservient to distant companies,
with more of their income exported rather than re-spent locally.
On the weekend prior
to the WTO meeting, the International Forum on Globalization (IFG) held
a two-day teach-in at Benaroya Hall in downtown Seattle on just such questions
of how countries can maintain autonomy in the face of globalization. Chaired
by IFG president Jerry Mander, more than 2,500 people from around the world
attended. A similar number were turned away. It was the hottest ticket
in town (but somehow that ticket did not get into the hands of pundits
and columnists). It was an extravagant display of research, intelligence,
and concern, expressed by scholars, diplomats, writers, academics, fishermen,
scientists, farmers, geneticists, businesspeople, and lawyers. Prior to
the teach-in, non-governmental organizations, institutes, public interest
law firms, farmers’ organizations, unions, and councils had been issuing
papers, communiqués, press releases, books, and pamphlets for years. They
were almost entirely ignored by the WTO.
But something else
was happening in Seattle underneath the debates and protests. In his new
book, The Clock of the Long Now-Time and Responsibility, Stewart Brand
discusses what makes a civilization resilient and adaptive. Scientists
have studied the same question about ecosystems. How does a system, be
it cultural or natural, manage change, absorb shocks, and survive, especially
when change is rapid and accelerating? The answer has much to do with time,
both our use of it and our respect for it. Biological diversity in ecosystems
is buffered against sudden shifts because different organisms and elements
operate on different time scales: flowers, fungi, spiders, trees, laterite,
and foxes-all have different rates of change and response. Some respond
quickly, others slowly, and as a result the system, when subjected to stress,
can move, sway, and give, and then return and restore.
The WTO was a clash
of chronologies or time frames, at least three, probably more. The dominant
time frame was commercial. Businesses are quick, welcome innovation in
general, and have a bias for change. They need to grow more quickly now
than ever before. They are punished, pummeled, and bankrupted if they do
not. With worldwide capital mobility, companies and investments are rewarded
or penalized instantly by a network of technocrats and money managers who
move $2 trillion a day seeking the highest return on capital. The Internet,
greed, global communications, and high-speed transportation are all making
businesses move faster than before.
The second time frame
is cultural. It moves more slowly. Cultural revolutions are resisted by
deeper, historical beliefs. The first institution to blossom under perestroika
was the Russian Orthodox Church. In 1989, I walked into a church near Boris
Pasternak’s dacha and heard priests and babushkas reciting the litany with
perfect recall as if 72 years of repression had never happened. Culture
provides the slow template of change within which family, community, and
religion prosper. Culture provides identity and in a fast-changing world
of displacement and rootlessness, becomes ever more important. In between
culture and business is governance, faster than culture, slower than commerce.
At the heart, the
third and slowest chronology is Earth, nature, the web of life. As ephemeral
as it may seem, it is the slowest clock ticking, always there, responding
to long, ancient evolutionary cycles that are beyond civilization.
These three chronologies
often conflict. As Stewart Brand points out, business unchecked becomes
crime. Look at Russia. Look at Microsoft. Look at history. What makes life
worthy and allows civilizations to endure are all the things that have
"bad" payback under commercial rules: infrastructure, universities, temples,
poetry, choirs, literature, language, museums, terraced fields, long marriages,
line dancing, and art. Most everything we hold valuable is slow to develop,
slow to learn, and slow to change. Commerce requires the governance of
politics, art, culture, and nature, to slow it down, to make it heedful,
to make it pay attention to people and place. It has never done this on
its own. The extirpation of languages, cultures, forests, and fisheries
is occurring worldwide in the name of speeding up business. The rate of
change is unnerving to all, even to those who are supposedly benefiting.
To those who are not, it is devastating.
What marched in the
streets of Seattle? Slower time strode into the WTO. Ancient identity emerged.
The cloaks of the forgotten paraded on the backs of our children. What
appeared in Seattle were the details, dramas, stories, and peoples that
had been ignored by the bankers, the diplomats, and the rich. Corporate
leaders believe they have discovered a treasure of immeasurable value,
a trove so great that surely we will all benefit: the treasure of unimpeded
commerce flowing everywhere as fast as is possible. But in Seattle, quick
time met slow time. The turtles, farmers, workers, and priests came uninvited.
They are the shadow world that cannot be overlooked, that will tail and
haunt the WTO, and all its successors, for as long as it exists. They will
be there even in totalitarian countries where free speech is criminalized.
They will be there in dreams of delegates high in the Four Seasons Hotel.
They will haunt the public relations flacks who solemnly insist that putting
the genes of scorpions into our food is a good thing. What gathered around
the Convention Center and hotels was everything the WTO left behind.
In the Inuit tradition,
there is a story of a fisherman who trolls an inlet. When a heavy pull
on the fisherman’s line drags his kayak to sea, he thinks he has caught
the "big one," a fish so large he can eat for weeks, a fish so fat that
he will prosper ever after. As he daydreams about his coming ease, what
he reels up is Skeleton Woman, a woman flung from a cliff long ago, her
fish-eaten carcass left to rot at the bottom of the sea. Skeleton Woman
is so snarled in his fishing line that she is dragged behind the fisherman
wherever he goes. She is pulled across the water, over the beach, and into
his house, where he collapses in terror.
In the retelling
of this story by Clarissa Pinkola Estes, the fisherman has brought up a
woman who represents life and death, a specter who reminds us that with
every beginning there is an ending, for all that is taken, something must
be given in return, that the earth is cyclical and requires respect. The
fisherman, feeling pity for her, slowly disentangles her, straightens her
bony carcass, and finally falls asleep. During the night, Skeleton Woman
scratches and crawls her way across the floor, drinks the tears of the
dreaming fisherman, and grows anew her flesh and heart and body.
This myth applies
to business as much as it does to a fisherman. The apologists for the WTO
want sleeker planes, engineered food, computers everywhere, golf courses
that are preternaturally green. They see no limits; they know of no downside.
But Life always comes with Death, with a tab, a reckoning. They are each
other’s consorts, inseparable and fast. The expansive dreams of the world’s
future wealth were met with perfect symmetry by Bill Gates III, the world’s
richest man and co-chair of the Seattle Host Committee. But Skeleton Woman
also showed up in Seattle, the uninvited guest, and the illusion of wealth,
the imaginings of unfettered growth and expansion, became small and barren.
Dancing, drumming, ululating, marching in black with a symbolic coffin
for the world, she wove through the sulfurous rainy streets of the night.
She couldn’t be killed or destroyed, no matter how much gas or pepper spray
or how many rubber bullets were used. She kept coming back and sitting
in front of the police and raising her hands in the peace sign, and was
kicked and trod upon, and it didn’t make any difference. Skeleton Woman
told corporate delegates and rich nations that they could not have the
world. It is not for sale. The illusions of world domination have to die,
as do all illusions. Skeleton Woman was there to say that if business is
going to trade with the world, it has to recognize and honor the world,
her life, and her people. Skeleton Woman was telling the WTO that it has
to grow up and be brave enough to listen, strong enough to yield, courageous
enough to give. Skeleton Woman has been brought up from the depths. She
has regained her eyes, voice, and spirit. She is about in the world and
her dreams are different. She believes that the right to self-sufficiency
is a human right; she imagines a world where the means to kill people is
not a business but a crime, where families do not starve, where fathers
can work, where children are never sold, where women cannot be impoverished
because they choose to be mothers and not whores. She cannot see in any
dream a time when a man holds a patent on a living seed, or animals are
factories, or people are enslaved by money, or water belongs to a stockholder.
Hers are deep dreams from slow time. She is patient. She will not be quiet
or flung to sea any time soon.
© Paul Hawken, Sausalito,
January 6, 2000
Natural
Capital Institute
3B Gate Five Road
Sausalito, CA 94965
415 332 6990
hawken@well.com
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