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Slavoj Zizek on Greece's 'No', and Greece's idealism vs EU's technocrats

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  • Slavoj Zizek on Greece's 'No', and Greece's idealism vs EU's technocrats

    Slavoj Zizek (15 min Youtube interview), in case you've been hiding under a rock, is a Slovenian rock-star philosopher popular at least on Youtube (well, unless you count his 75 published books), and is a self-admitted "Communist" (not exactly in the traditional sense). He tours the world and lectures at length on the contemporary topics with great insights, making batman (and other) movie analogies, has a great sense of humour, and nearly always goes on 20 minute long tangent rants from the main topic of discussion. Lastly, he is easily recognized by his relatively despicable appearance (which he publicly admits) and even worse mannerisms.

    In written form, as per below, the immensely distracting saliva spitting lisp and questionable (cocaine addiction? heavy allergies?) nose swiping/sniffing are removed, and we're left only with insightful analysis, much of which I found enlightening and right on.

    Enjoy...
    Adeptus


    Source: http://www.newstatesman.com/politics...-europe-awaken
    Slavoj Žižek on Greece: This is a chance for Europe to awaken
    The Greeks are correct: Brussels' denial that this is an ideological question is ideology at its purest - and symptomatic of our whole political process.

    BY SLAVOJ ZIZEK PUBLISHED


    Varoufakis during negotiations. Pretending the Greek question is administrative, rather than ideological, is tantamount to bullying. Photo: Milos Bicanski/Getty Images





    The unexpectedly strong No in the Greek referendum was a historical vote, cast in a desperate situation. In my work I often use the well-known joke from the last decade of the Soviet Union about Rabinovitch, a Jew who wants to emigrate. The bureaucrat at the emigration office asks him why, and Rabinovitch answers: “There are two reasons why. The first is that I’m afraid that in the Soviet Union the Communists will lose power, and the new power will put all the blame for the Communist crimes on us, Jews – there will again be anti-Jewish pogroms . . .”
    “But,” the bureaucrat interrupts him, “this is pure nonsense. Nothing can change in the Soviet Union, the power of the Communists will last for ever!”
    “Well,” responds Rabinovitch calmly, “that’s my second reason.”
    I was informed that a new version of this joke is now circulating in Athens. A young Greek man visits the Australian consulate in Athens and asks for a work visa. “Why do you want to leave Greece?” asks the official.
    “For two reasons,” replies the Greek. “First, I am worried that Greece will leave the EU, which will lead to new poverty and chaos in the country . . .”
    “But,” interrupts the official, “this is pure nonsense: Greece will remain in the EU and submit to financial discipline!”
    “Well,” responds the Greek calmly, “this is my second reason.”
    Are then both choices worse, to paraphrase Stalin?

    The moment has come to move beyond the irrelevant debates about the possible mistakes and misjudgments of the Greek government. The stakes are now much too high.
    That a compromise formula always eludes in the last moment in the ongoing negotiations between Greece and the EU administrators is in itself deeply symptomatic, since it doesn’t really concern actual financial issues – at this level, the difference is minimal. The EU usually accuse Greeks of talking only in general terms, making vague promises without specific details, while Greeks accuse the EU of trying to control even the tiniest details and imposing on Greece conditions that are more harsh than those imposed on the previous government. But what lurks behind these reproaches is another, much deeper conflict. The Greek prime minister, Alexis Tsipras, recently remarked that if he were to meet alone with Angela Merkel for dinner, they would have found a formula in two hours. His point was that he and Merkel, the two politicians, would treat the disagreement as a political one, in contrast to technocratic administrators such as the Eurogroup president, Jeroen Dijsselbloem. If there is an emblematic bad guy in this whole story, it is Dijsselbloem whose motto is: “If I get into the ideological side of things, I won’t achieve anything.”

    This brings us to the crux of the matter: Tsipras and Yanis Varoufakis, the former finance minister who resigned on 6 July, talk as if they are part of an open political process where decisions are ultimately “ideological” (based on normative preferences), while the EU technocrats talk as if it is all a matter of detailed regulatory measures. When the Greeks reject this approach and raise more fundamental political issues, they are accused of lying, of avoiding concrete solutions, and so on. And it is clear that the truth here is on the Greek side: the denial of “the ideological side” advocated by Dijsselbloem is ideology at its purest. It masks (falsely presents) as purely expert regulatory measures that are effectively grounded in politico-ideological decisions.
    On account of this asymmetry, the “dialogue” between Tsipras or Varoufakis and their EU partners often appears as a dialogue between a young student who wants a serious debate on basic issues, and an arrogant professor who, in his answers, humiliatingly ignores the issue and scolds the student with technical points (“You didn’t formulate that correctly! You didn’t take into account that regulation!”). Or even as a dialogue between a rape victim who desperately reports on what happened to her and a policeman who continuously interrupts her with requests for administrative details. This passage from politics proper to neutral expert administration characterises our entire political process: strategic decisions based on power are more and more masked as administrative regulations based on neutral expert knowledge, and they are more and more negotiated in secrecy and enforced without democratic consultation. The struggle that goes on is the struggle for the European economic and political Leitkultur (the guiding culture). The EU powers stand for the technocratic status quo that has kept Europe in inertia for decades.

    In his Notes Towards a Definition of Culture, the great conservative T S Eliot remarked that there are moments when the only choice is the one between heresy and non-belief, ie, when the only way to keep a religion alive is to perform a sectarian split from its main corpse. This is our position today with regard to Europe: only a new “heresy” (represented at this moment by Syriza) can save what is worth saving in European legacy: democracy, trust in people, egalitarian solidarity. The Europe that will win if Syriza is outmaneuvered is a “Europe with Asian values” (which, of course, has nothing to do with Asia, but all with the clear and present tendency of contemporary capitalism to suspend democracy).

    ***
    In western Europe we like to look on Greece as if we are detached observers who follow with compassion and sympathy the plight of the impoverished nation. Such a comfortable standpoint relies on a fateful illusion – what has been happening in Greece these last weeks concerns all of us; it is the future of Europe that is at stake. So when we read about Greece, we should always bear in mind that, as the old saying goes, de te fabula narrator (the name changed, the story applies to you).
    An ideal is gradually emerging from the European establishment’s reaction to the Greek referendum, the ideal best rendered by the headline of a recent Gideon Rachman column in the Financial Times: “Eurozone’s weakest link is the voters.”
    In this ideal world, Europe gets rid of this “weakest link” and experts gain the power to directly impose necessary economic measures – if elections take place at all, their function is just to confirm the consensus of experts. The problem is that this policy of experts is based on a fiction, the fiction of “extend and pretend” (extending the payback period, but pretending that all debts will eventually be paid).
    Why is the fiction so stubborn? It is not only that this fiction makes debt extension more acceptable to German voters; it is also not only that the write-off of the Greek debt may trigger similar demands from Portugal, Ireland, Spain. It is that those in power do not really want the debt fully repaid. The debt providers and caretakers of debt accuse the indebted countries of not feeling enough guilt – they are accused of feeling innocent. Their pressure fits perfectly what psychoanalysis calls “superego”: the paradox of the superego is that, as Freud saw it, the more we obey its demands, the more we feel guilty.

    Imagine a vicious teacher who gives to his pupils impossible tasks, and then sadistically jeers when he sees their anxiety and panic. The true goal of lending money to the debtor is not to get the debt reimbursed with a profit, but the indefinite continuation of the debt that keeps the debtor in permanent dependency and subordination. For most of the debtors, for there are debtors and debtors. Not only Greece but also the US will not be able even theoretically to repay its debt, as it is now publicly recognised. So there are debtors who can blackmail their creditors because they cannot be allowed to fail (big banks), debtors who can control the conditions of their repayment (US government), and, finally, debtors who can be pushed around and humiliated (Greece).
    The debt providers and caretakers of debt basically accuse the Syriza government of not feeling enough guilt – they are accused of feeling innocent. That’s what is so disturbing for the EU establishment about the Syriza government: that it admits debt, but without guilt. They got rid of the superego pressure. Varoufakis personified this stance in his dealings with Brussels: he fully acknowledged the weight of the debt, and he argued quite rationally that, since the EU policy obviously didn’t work, another option should be found.

    Paradoxically, the point Varoufakis and Tsipras are making repeatedly is that the Syriza government is the only chance for the debt providers to get at least part of their money back. Varoufakis himself wonders about the enigma of why banks were pouring money into Greece and collaborating with a clientelist state while knowing very well how things stood – Greece would never have got so heavily indebted without the connivance of the western establishment. The Syriza government is well aware that the main threat does not come from Brussels – it resides in Greece itself, a clientelist corrupted state if there ever was one. What the EU bureaucracy should be blamed for is that, while it criticized Greece for its corruption and inefficiency, it supported the very political force (the New Democracy party) that embodied this corruption and inefficiency.

    The Syriza government aims precisely at breaking this deadlock – see Varoufakis’s programmatic declaration (published in the Guardian) which renders the ultimate strategic goal of the Syriza government:
    A Greek or a Portuguese or an Italian exit from the eurozone would soon lead to a fragmentation of European capitalism, yielding a seriously recessionary surplus region east of the Rhine and north of the Alps, while the rest of Europe would be in the grip of vicious stagflation. Who do you think would benefit from this development? A progressive left, that will rise Phoenix-like from the ashes of Europe’s public institutions? Or the Golden Dawn Nazis, the assorted neofascists, the xenophobes and the spivs? I have absolutely no doubt as to which of the two will do best from a disintegration of the eurozone. I, for one, am not prepared to blow fresh wind into the sails of this postmodern version of the 1930s. If this means that it is we, the suitably erratic Marxists, who must try to save European capitalism from itself, so be it. Not out of love for European capitalism, for the eurozone, for Brussels, or for the European Central Bank, but just because we want to minimise the unnecessary human toll from this crisis.


    The financial politics of the Syriza government followed closely these guidelines: no deficit, tight discipline, more money raised through taxes. Some German media recently characterised Varoufakis as a psychotic who lives in his own universe different from ours – but is he so radical?What is so enervating about Varoufakis is not his radicalism but his rational pragmatic modesty – if one looks closely at the proposals offered by Syriza, one cannot help noticing that they were once part of the standard moderate social democratic agenda (in Sweden of the 1960s, the programme of the government was much more radical). It is a sad sign of our times that today you have to belong to a “radical” left to advocate these same measures – a sign of dark times but also a chance for the left to occupy the space which, decades ago, was that of moderate centre left.

    But, perhaps, the endlessly repeated point about how modest Syriza’s politics are, just good old social democracy, somehow misses its target – as if, if we repeat it often enough, the eurocrats will finally realise we’re not really dangerous and will help us. Syriza effectively is dangerous, it does pose a threat to the present orientation of the EU – today’s global capitalism cannot afford a return to the old welfare state.

    So there is something hypocritical in the reassurances of the modesty of what Syriza wants: it effectively wants something that is not possible within the coordinates of the existing global system. A serious strategic choice will have to be made: what if the moment has come to drop the mask of modesty and openly advocate a much more radical change that is needed to secure even a modest gain?
    Many critics of the Greek referendum claimed that it was a case of pure demagogic posturing, mockingly pointing out that it was not clear what the referendum was about. If anything, the referendum was not about the euro or drachma, about Greece in EU or outside it: the Greek government repeatedly emphasised its desire to remain in the EU and in the eurozone. Again, the critics automatically translated the key political question raised by the referendum into an administrative decision about particular economic measures.

    ***
    In an interview with Bloomberg on 2 July, Varoufakis made clear the true stakes of the referendum. The choice was between the continuation of the EU politics of the last years that brought Greece to the edge of ruin – the fiction of “extend and pretend” (extending the payback period, but pretending that all debts will eventually be paid) – and a new realist beginning that would no longer rely on such fictions, and would provide a concrete plan about how to start the actual recovery of the Greek economy.Without such a plan, the crisis would just reproduce itself again and again. On the same day, even the IMF conceded that Greece needs a large-scale debt relief to create “a breathing space” and get the economy moving (it proposes a 20-year moratorium on debt payments).

    The No in the Greek referendum was thus much more than a simple choice between two different approaches to economic crisis. The Greek people have heroically resisted the despicable campaign of fear that mobilised the lowest instincts of self-preservation. They have seen through the brutal manipulation of their opponents who falsely presented the referendum as a choice between euro and drachma, between Greece in Europe and “Grexit”.
    Their No was a No to the eurocrats who prove daily that they are unable to drag Europe out of its inertia. It was a No to the continuation of business as usual; a desperate cry telling us all that things cannot go on the usual way. It was a decision for authentic political vision against the strange combination of cold technocracy and hot racist clichés about the lazy, free-spending Greeks. It was a rare victory of principles against egotist and ultimately self-destructive opportunism. The No that won was a Yes to full awareness of the crisis in Europe; a Yes to the need to enact a new beginning.

    It is now up to the EU to act. Will it be able to awaken from its self-satisfied inertia and understand the sign of hope delivered by the Greek people? Or will it unleash its wrath on Greece in order to be able to continue its dogmatic dream?
    Slavoj Žižek’s is a senior researcher at the University of Ljubljana in Slovenia. His latest book is “Trouble in Paradise: from the End of History to the End of Capitalism” (Allen Lane)




    Last edited by Adeptus; July 07, 2015, 04:46 PM.
    Warning: Network Engineer talking economics!

  • #2
    Re: Slavoj Zizek on Greece's 'No', and Greece's idealism vs EU's technocrats

    Originally posted by Adeptus View Post
    This passage from politics proper to neutral expert administration characterises our entire political process: strategic decisions based on power are more and more masked as administrative regulations based on neutral expert knowledge, and they are more and more negotiated in secrecy and enforced without democratic consultation.
    Can't say I know this guy, but I really like this quote.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Slavoj Zizek on Greece's 'No', and Greece's idealism vs EU's technocrats

      What we do know is that 6 out of 10 voting Greeks preferred standing on their feet for whatever hell is forthcoming rather than be down on their knees.

      A democratic moment courtesy of a rich history of resistance.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Slavoj Zizek on Greece's 'No', and Greece's idealism vs EU's technocrats

        Originally posted by don View Post
        What we do know is that 6 out of 10 voting Greeks preferred standing on their feet for whatever hell is forthcoming rather than be down on their knees.

        A democratic moment courtesy of a rich history of resistance.
        "Freedom's just another word for nothing left to lose..."

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Slavoj Zizek on Greece's 'No', and Greece's idealism vs EU's technocrats

          It seems like the Greeks have a habit of getting in over their head:

          http://www.businessinsider.in/Heres-...w/47911126.cms

          Let's face the facts. Everyone screwed up!

          The Greeks definitely were living so far out on the entitlement edge that they redefined the word. the European union of course wanted just about anyone European, and the banksters wanted all the customers and nations to lend to into debt oblivion.

          Goldman Sachs with the collusion of the then Greek government fudged the figures. The EU financial guys winked and let them in.

          It certainly not ALL the the Germans fault, as some simplistic viewpoint would suggest.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Slavoj Zizek on Greece's 'No', and Greece's idealism vs EU's technocrats

            Originally posted by vt View Post
            It certainly not ALL the the Germans fault, as some simplistic viewpoint would suggest.
            The German fault is in thinking that austerity can improve the chances of debt payback.

            Imagine you're a loan shark working or a bookie. And a roofer owes you a ton of money. Maybe it was on a rigged fight, maybe not, who knows.

            But you know one thing you know for sure? If you break the roofer's legs, he's not going to pay you back any quicker. He needs his legs to get up on the roof and earn money to pay you back.

            And if, after you broke his legs the first time, you go back a year later when he's just trying to walk again and smash his legs up with a lead pipe, you shouldn't be surprised when he still can't pay you and it takes even longer to get paid back.

            All the austerity cuts and higher taxes Germany insisted on and keeps insisting on has just been breaking legs. It takes the anger out. But it doesn't help you get paid back. They've lost 30% of their income due to this. You can't expect more beatings will get them back up on the roof earning any faster.

            So when he tells you, "Please, I know I welched on a debt, just don't break my legs so I can get back to work and start paying you. I just need a little time to heal," smashing him up yet again isn't going to help anything but satisfy your personal lust for vengeance.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Slavoj Zizek on Greece's 'No', and Greece's idealism vs EU's technocrats

              adjusted for inflation?

              But yeah, who doesn't want a debt writedown. I would like one. But the politics are such that then everyone wants a debt writedown, and no more euro. So... restructuring of debt, low to no interest loans (not available in the markets) are the only recourse. Or a combination...

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Slavoj Zizek on Greece's 'No', and Greece's idealism vs EU's technocrats

                Originally posted by don View Post
                What we do know is that 6 out of 10 voting Greeks preferred standing on their feet for whatever hell is forthcoming rather than be down on their knees.

                A democratic moment courtesy of a rich history of resistance.
                I know those 6 out of ten voting Greeks. Do you?

                They want better terms. Duh. Who doesn't? But faced with Grexit or same memorandum as before, the vast majority will take the Memorandum.

                If you speak openly and non-judgementally to any Greek, they will open up and admit that their country is a basketcase that can't go drachma right now.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Slavoj Zizek on Greece's 'No', and Greece's idealism vs EU's technocrats

                  Yes DC to some extent, but you must expect reforms and the Greeks don't seem to want to make changes.

                  You can't blame the Germans for this:

                  "Especially relevant to the Hellenic Republic's current difficulties in paying back its creditors is the fact that, as measured by Reinhart and Rogoff, Greece spent 87 of the 181 years - or 48% - between 1929 and 2010 in a state of external debt crisis. Running into problems paying back foreign debt is nothing new for Greece."

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Slavoj Zizek on Greece's 'No', and Greece's idealism vs EU's technocrats

                    And that's why I'm not surprised to see a lot of SYRIZA supporter fb friends that openly agree with this guy:



                    They may not agree 100% with this guy, but they would love to see Tsipras be the first Greek (real) Reformer PM. I would too.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Slavoj Zizek on Greece's 'No', and Greece's idealism vs EU's technocrats

                      Originally posted by vt View Post
                      ...as some simplistic viewpoint would suggest.
                      Simple? Like pretending it's the Greek people, culture, politicians, or even their resistance to reforms?

                      Certainly, it's simpler than admitting that Greece’s problems are of its creditors making.

                      Hey, for you I'll make it even simpler.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Slavoj Zizek on Greece's 'No', and Greece's idealism vs EU's technocrats

                        "Let's face the facts. Everyone screwed up!

                        The Greeks definitely were living so far out on the entitlement edge that they redefined the word. the European union of course wanted just about anyone European, and the banksters wanted all the customers and nations to lend to into debt oblivion.

                        Goldman Sachs with the collusion of the then Greek government fudged the figures. The EU financial guys winked and let them in.

                        It certainly not ALL the the Germans fault, as some simplistic viewpoint would suggest."

                        It's increasingly becoming evident that you wish to directly attack posters such as gnk and I when we bring up inconvenient facts that go against your dogma. I've clearly placed the blame, as has gnk, on all parties.

                        Grow up and accept differences of opinion.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Slavoj Zizek on Greece's 'No', and Greece's idealism vs EU's technocrats

                          Originally posted by vt View Post
                          ...Grow up and accept differences of opinion.
                          Woodsman the attack dogma. WOOF! Put that pooch out on the porch before he soils the carpet ... AGAIN.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: Slavoj Zizek on Greece's 'No', and Greece's idealism vs EU's technocrats

                            You really, really got to get out of the house more.... and travel!

                            Live abroad! You will see firsthand the difference between what you read, and what actually exists. I have handled business matters here in Greece for others. Have you done that? Well, let me tell you, it's a slimy affair more often than not. And when it's not slimy, the government red tape and incompetence will drive you insane.

                            But hey, thanks for your perceptions of a land thousands of miles away from you.

                            And if it was the fault of just the creditors, why is Greece, by far, and I mean really, really, far, the worst victim of austerity? Why aren't we talking ad nauseum about Ireland or Portugal or Latvia?

                            Because there's more to it. Greece was a failed state, for many reasons, a long, long time ago.

                            And as I said elsewhere, if you speak openly and honestly to Greeks here in Greece, they will be the first to admit it. Banks are low on the list... rarely will they mention the banks. It's funny, but public sector employees will tell you all about private sector tax avoidance, corrupt contracts, and subsidies misallocations, while private sector workers or businesspeople will tell you all about public sector incompetence, clientelism, bribes, sweetheart pensions and other benefits, useless hirings, etc...

                            And eventually, a picture develops of the world around you.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: Slavoj Zizek on Greece's 'No', and Greece's idealism vs EU's technocrats

                              Gnk, gfy.

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