http://www.newstatesman.com/politics/2015/07/Slavoj-Zizek-greece-chance-europe-awaken
[…]
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.
[…]
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