THE PEOPLE’S MOVEMENT HAS BEEN HIJACKED
ED Noor: As pointed out in previous articles, all of the above agencies are involved in the hijacking activities below to some extent. As also stated previously, the majority of the people involved in these organizations are decent dedicated folk who work with love and purpose. They are simply unaware of the truth of the matter.
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The 4th media
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The 4th media
March 10, 2014
ED Noor: As situations heat up in one area or another, lately we hear of NGO's being ousted from various countries. It is time people understood the true roles these people play in the scheme of things. Many NGO's are indeed well meaning individuals caught up in circumstances beyond their expectations, but these honest brokers are fewer and farther between. We know vested interests own our media and control the information flow; for years we have pointed out the results of these interests working through various international humanitarian organizations. Although Dr. Chussodovsky does not name any group in particular, my regular readers know full well who is behind these criminal shenanigans. These tactics are right in line with various precepts of infiltration, deception and domination as described in the Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion.
This article was first published in 2010. The author’s introductory quote was first formulated in 2001 in the context of the Summit of the Americas in Quebec City which was held a few months before 9/11.
“Everything the [Ford] Foundation did could be regarded as “making the World safe for capitalism”, reducing social tensions by helping to comfort the afflicted, provide safety valves for the angry, and improve the functioning of government.“ ~ (McGeorge Bundy, National Security Advisor to Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson (1961-1966), President of the Ford Foundation, (1966-1979))
“By providing the funding and the policy framework to many concerned and dedicated people working within the non-profit sector, the ruling class is able to co-opt leadership from grassroots communities, … and is able to make the funding, accounting, and evaluation components of the work so time consuming and onerous that social justice work is virtually impossible under these conditions” ~ (Paul Kivel, You Call this Democracy, Who Benefits, Who Pays and Who Really Decides, 2004, p. 122)
“Under the New World Order, the ritual of inviting “civil society” leaders into the inner circles of power ~ while simultaneously repressing the rank and file ~ serves several important functions. First, it says to the World that the critics of globalization “must make concessions” to earn the right to mingle. Second, it conveys the illusion that while the global elites should ~ under what is euphemistically called democracy ~ be subject to criticism, they nonetheless rule legitimately. And third, it says “there is no alternative” to globalization: fundamental change is not possible and the most we can hope is to engage with these rulers in an ineffective “give and take”.
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While the “Globalizers” may adopt a few progressive phrases to demonstrate they have good intentions, their fundamental goals are not challenged. And what this “civil society mingling” does is to reinforce the clutch of the corporate establishment while weakening and dividing the protest movement. An understanding of this process of co-optation is important, because tens of thousands of the most principled young people in Seattle, Prague and Quebec City [1999-2001] are involved in the anti-globalization protests because they reject the notion that money is everything, because they reject the impoverishment of millions and the destruction of fragile Earth so that a few may get richer.
.This rank and file and some of their leaders as well, are to be applauded. But we need to go further. We need to challenge the right of the “Globalizers” to rule. This requires that we rethink the strategy of protest. Can we move to a higher plane, by launching mass movements in our respective countries, movements that bring the message of what globalization is doing, to ordinary people? For they are the force that must be mobilized to challenge those who plunder the Globe.” ~ (Michel Chossudovsky, The Quebec Wall, April 2001)
ED Noor: Pretty fancy words. Someone was paid the big bucks to come up with such a slogan that can have so many double entrendres leading to such diverse interpretations depending upon agenda or level of naivete.
“MANUFACTURED CONSENT” VS. “MANUFACTURED DISSENT”
“MANUFACTURED CONSENT” VS. “MANUFACTURED DISSENT”
The term
“manufacturing consent” was initially coined by Edward S Herman and Noam
Chomsky.
“Manufacturing
consent” describes a propaganda model used by the corporate media to sway
public opinion and “inculcate individuals with values and beliefs…”:
The mass media serve as a system for communicating messages and symbols to the general populace. It is their function to amuse, entertain, and inform, and to inculcate individuals with the values, beliefs, and codes of behaviour that will integrate them into the institutional structures of the larger society. In a world of concentrated wealth and major conflicts of class interest, to fulfill this role requires systematic propaganda. ~ (Manufacturing Consent by Edward S. Herman and Noam Chomsky)
“Manufacturing
consent” implies manipulating and shaping public opinion. It establishes
conformity and acceptance to authority and social hierarchy. It seeks
compliance to an established social order. “Manufacturing consent” describes
the submission of public opinion to the mainstream media narrative, to its lies
and fabrications.
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ED
Noor: At this point, dear Reader, remember the work of Edward Bernays, nephew
of Freud, creator of modern social psychological manipulation, and the
Frankfurt School. Might I also suggest that, if you have not yet seen it, The Century of the Self, would be worth watching.
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In this article, we focus on a related concept, namely the subtle process of “manufacturing dissent” (rather than “consent”), which plays a decisive role in serving the interests of the ruling class.
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In this article, we focus on a related concept, namely the subtle process of “manufacturing dissent” (rather than “consent”), which plays a decisive role in serving the interests of the ruling class.
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Under
contemporary capitalism, the illusion of democracy must prevail. It is in the
interest of the corporate elites to accept dissent and protest as a feature of
the system inasmuch as they do not threaten the established social order.
The purpose is not to repress dissent, but, on the contrary, to shape and mould
the protest movement, to set the outer limits of dissent.
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To maintain
their legitimacy, the economic elites favor limited and controlled forms of
opposition, with a view to preventing the development of radical forms of
protest, which might shake the very foundations and institutions of global
capitalism. In other words, “manufacturing dissent” acts as a “safety valve”,
which protects and sustains the New World Order.
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To be
effective, however, the process of “manufacturing dissent” must be carefully
regulated and monitored by those who are the object of the protest movement.
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“FUNDING DISSENT”
How is the
process of manufacturing dissent achieved?
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Essentially
by “funding dissent”, namely by channelling financial resources from those who
are the object of the protest movement to those who are involved in organizing
the protest movement.
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Co-optation
is not limited to buying the favours of politicians. The economic elites ~ which
control major foundations ~ also oversee
the funding of numerous NGOs and civil society organizations, which
historically have been involved in the protest movement against the established
economic and social order. The programs of many NGOs and people’s movements
rely heavily on funding from both public as well as private foundations
including the Ford, Rockefeller, McCarthy foundations, among others.
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The anti-globalization
movement is opposed to Wall Street and the Texas oil giants controlled by
Rockefeller, et al. Yet
the foundations and charities of Rockefeller et al will generously fund progressive anti-capitalist
networks as well as environmentalists (opposed to Big Oil) with a view to
ultimately overseeing and shaping their various activities.
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The
mechanisms of “manufacturing dissent” require a manipulative environment, a
process of arm-twisting and subtle cooptation of individuals within progressive
organizations, including anti-war coalitions, environmentalists and the
anti-globalization movement.
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Whereas the
mainstream media “manufactures consent”, the complex network of NGOs (including
segments of the alternative media) are used by the corporate elites to mould
and manipulate the protest movement.
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Following
the deregulation of the global financial system in the 1990s and the rapid
enrichment of the financial establishment, funding through foundations and
charities has skyrocketed.
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In a bitter
irony, part of the fraudulent financial gains on Wall Street in recent years
have been recycled to the elites’ tax exempt foundations and charities. These
windfall financial gains have not only been used to buy out politicians, they
have also been channelled to NGOs, research institutes, community centres,
church groups, environmentalists, alternative media, human rights groups, etc.
“Manufactured dissent” also applies to the “corporate left” and “progressive”
media, funded by NGOs or directly by the foundations.
The inner objective is to “manufacture dissent” and establish the boundaries of a “politically correct” opposition.
In turn,
many NGOs are infiltrated by informants often acting on behalf of western
intelligence agencies. Moreover, an increasingly large segment of the
progressive alternative news media on the internet has become dependent on
funding from corporate foundations and charities.
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PIECEMEAL ACTIVISM
Ed
Noor: Another form of divide and conquer in action.
The objective of the corporate elites has been to fragment the people’s movement into a vast “do it yourself” mosaic.
War and
globalization are no longer in the forefront of civil society
activism. Activism tends to be piecemeal. There is no integrated anti-globalization
anti-war movement. The economic crisis is not seen as having a relationship to
the US led war.
Dissent has been compartmentalized.
Separate
“issue oriented” protest movements (e.g. environment, anti-globalization,
peace, women’s rights, climate change) are encouraged and generously funded as
opposed to a cohesive mass movement. This mosaic was already prevalent in the
counter G7 summits and People’s Summits of the 1990s.
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THE ANTI-GLOBALIZATION MOVEMENT
The Seattle
1999 counter-summit is invariably upheld as a triumph for the
anti-globalization movement: “a historic coalition of activists shut down the
World Trade Organization summit in Seattle, the spark that ignited a global
anti-corporate movement.” (See Naomi Klein, Copenhagen: Seattle Grows Up, The Nation, November 13, 2009).
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Seattle was
an indeed an important crossroads in the history of the mass movement. Over
50,000 people from diverse backgrounds, civil society organizations, human
rights, labour unions, environmentalists had come together in a common pursuit.
Their goal was to forcefully dismantle the neoliberal agenda including its
institutional base.
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But Seattle
also marked a major reversal. With mounting dissent from all sectors of
society, the official WTO Summit desperately needed the token participation of
civil society leaders “on the inside”, to give the appearance of being
“democratic” “on the outside”.
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While
thousands of people had converged on Seattle, what occurred behind the scenes
was a de facto victory for neo-liberalism. A handful of civil society
organizations, formally opposed to the WTO had contributed to legitimizing the
WTO’s global trading architecture. Instead of challenging the WTO as an illegal
intergovernmental body, they agreed to a pre-summit dialogue with the WTO and
Western governments. “Accredited NGO participants were invited to mingle in a
friendly environment with ambassadors, trade ministers and Wall Street tycoons
at several of the official events including the numerous cocktail parties and
receptions.” (Michel Chossudovsky, Seattle and Beyond: Disarming the New
World Order , Covert Action Quarterly, November 1999, See Ten Years Ago: “Manufacturing Dissent”
in Seattle).
The hidden agenda was to weaken and divide the protest movement and orient the anti-globalization movement into areas that would not directly threaten the interests of the business establishment.
Funded by
private foundations (including Ford, Rockefeller, Rockefeller Brothers, Charles
Stewart Mott, The Foundation for Deep Ecology), these “accredited” civil
society organizations had positioned themselves as lobby groups, acting
formally on behalf of the people’s movement. Led by prominent and committed
activists, their hands were tied. They ultimately contributed (unwittingly) to
weakening the anti-globalization movement by accepting the legitimacy of what
was essentially an illegal organization. (The 1994 Marrakech Summit agreement
which led to the creation of the WTO on January 1, 1995). (Ibid)
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The NGO
leaders were fully aware as to where the money was coming from. Yet within the
US and European NGO community, the foundations and charities are considered to
be independent philanthropic bodies, separate from the corporations; namely the
Rockefeller Brothers Foundation, for instance, is considered to be separate and
distinct from the Rockefeller family empire of banks and oil companies.
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With salaries
and operating expenses depending on private foundations, it became an accepted
routine:
In a twisted logic, the battle against corporate capitalism was to be fought using the funds from the tax exempt foundations owned by corporate capitalism.
The NGOs
were caught in a straightjacket; their very existence depended on the
foundations. Their activities were closely monitored. In a twisted logic, the
very nature of anti-capitalist activism was indirectly controlled by the
capitalists through their independent foundations.
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“PROGRESSIVE WATCHDOGS”
In this
evolving saga, the corporate elites ~whose interests are duly served by the
IMF, the World Bank and the WTO– will readily fund (through their various
foundations and charities) organizations which are at the forefront of the
protest movement against the WTO and the Washington based international
financial institutions.
Supported by foundation money, various “watchdogs” were set up by the NGOs to monitor the implementation of neoliberal policies, without however raising the broader issue of how the Bretton Woods twins and the WTO, through their policies, had contributed to the impoverishment of millions of people.
The
Structural Adjustment Participatory Review Network (SAPRIN) was established by
Development Gap, a USAID and World Bank funded NGO based in Washington DC.
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Amply
documented, the imposition of the IMF-World Bank Structural Adjustment Program
(SAP) on developing countries constitutes a blatant form of interference in the
internal affairs of sovereign states on behalf of creditor institutions.
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Instead of
challenging the legitimacy of the IMF-World Bank’s “deadly economic medicine”,
SAPRIN’s core organization sought to establish a participatory role for the
NGOs, working hand in glove with USAID and the World Bank. The objective was to
give a “human face” to the neoliberal policy agenda, rather than reject the
IMF-World Bank policy framework outright:
“SAPRIN is the global civil-society network that took its name from the Structural Adjustment Participatory Review Initiative (SAPRI), which it launched with the World Bank and its president, Jim Wolfensohn, in 1997.
.SAPRI is designed as a tripartite exercise to bring together organizations of civil society, their governments and the World Bank in a joint review of structural adjustment programs (SAPs) and an exploration of new policy options. It is legitimizing an active role for civil society in economic decision-making, as it is designed to indicate areas in which changes in economic policies and in the economic-policymaking process are required. (http://www.saprin.org/overview.htm SAPRIN website, emphasis added)
Similarly,
The Trade Observatory (formerly WTO Watch), operating out of Geneva, is a
project of the Minneapolis based Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy
(IATP), which is generously funded by Ford, Rockefeller, Charles Stewart Mott
among others. (See Table 1 below).
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The Trade
Observatory has a mandate to monitor the World Trade Organization (WTO), the
North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA and the proposed Free Trade Area of
the Americas (FTAA). (IATP, About Trade Observatory, accessed September 2010).
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The Trade
Observatory is also to develop data and information as well as foster
“governance” and “accountability”. Do we refer to accountability to the victims
of WTO policies or accountability to the protagonists of neoliberal reforms?
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The Trade
Observatory watchdog functions does not in any way threaten the WTO. Quite the
opposite: the legitimacy of the trade organizations and agreements are never
questioned.
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Table
1 Minneapolis Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy (IATP) largest donors
(for complete list click here)
Ford Foundation
$2,612,500.00
1994 – 2006Rockefeller Brothers Fund
$2,320,000.00
1995 – 2005Charles Stewart Mott Foundation
$1,391,000.00
1994 – 2005McKnight Foundation
$1,056,600.00
1995 – 2005Joyce Foundation
$748,000.00
1996 – 2004Bush Foundation
$610,000.00
2001 – 2006Bauman Family Foundation
$600,000.00
1994 – 2006Great Lakes Protection Fund
$580,000.00
1995 – 2000John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation
$554,100.00
1991 – 2003John Merck Fund
$490,000.00
1992 – 2003Harold K. Hochschild Foundation
$486,600.00
1997 – 2005Foundation for Deep Ecology
$417,500.00
1991 – 2001Jennifer Altman Foundation
$366,500.00
1992 – 2001Rockefeller Foundation
$344,134.00
2000 – 2004
THE WORLD ECONOMIC FORUM. “ALL ROADS LEAD TO DAVOS”
The people’s
movement has been hijacked. Selected intellectuals, trade union executives, and
the leaders of civil society organizations (including Oxfam, Amnesty International,
Greenpeace) are routinely invited to the Davos World Economic Forum, where
they mingle with the World’s most powerful economic and political actors. This
mingling of the World’s corporate elites with hand-picked “progressives” is
part of the ritual underlying the process of “manufacturing dissent”.
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The ploy is
to selectively handpick civil society leaders “whom we can trust” and integrate
them into a “dialogue”, cut them off from their rank and file, make them feel
that they are “global citizens” acting on behalf of their fellow workers but
make them act in a way which serves the interests of the corporate
establishment:
“The participation of NGOs in the Annual Meeting in Davos is evidence of the fact that [we] purposely seek to integrate a broad spectrum of the major stakeholders in society in … defining and advancing the global agenda … We believe the [Davos] World Economic Forum provides the business community with the ideal framework for engaging in collaborative efforts with the other principal stakeholders [NGOs] of the global economy to “improve the state of the world,” which is the Forum’s mission. (World Economic Forum, Press Release 5 January 2001)
The WEF does
not represent the broader business community. It is an elitist gathering: Its
members are giant global corporations (with a minimum $5 billion annual
turnover).
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The selected non-governmental organizations (NGOs) are viewed as partner “stakeholders” as well as a convenient “mouthpiece for the voiceless who are often left out of decision-making processes.” (World Economic Forum ~ Non-Governmental Organizations, 2010)
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The selected non-governmental organizations (NGOs) are viewed as partner “stakeholders” as well as a convenient “mouthpiece for the voiceless who are often left out of decision-making processes.” (World Economic Forum ~ Non-Governmental Organizations, 2010)
“They [the NGOs] play a variety of roles in partnering with the Forum to improve the state of the world, including serving as a bridge between business, government and civil society, connecting the policy makers to the grassroots, bringing practical solutions to the table…” (Ibid)
Civil
society “partnering” with global corporations on behalf of “the voiceless”, who
are “left out”?
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Trade union executives are also co-opted to the detriment of workers’
rights.
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The leaders of the International Federation
of Trade Unions (IFTU), the AFL-CIO, the European Trade Union Confederation,
the Canadian Labour Congress (CLC), among others, are routinely invited to
attend both the annual WEF meetings in Davos, Switzerland as well as to the
regional summits. They also participate in the WEF’s Labour Leaders Community
which focuses on mutually acceptable patterns of behaviour for the labour
movement. The WEF “believes that the voice of Labour is important to dynamic
dialogue on issues of globalisation, economic justice, transparency and
accountability, and ensuring a healthy global financial system.”
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ED
Noor: Remember this the next time your region is brought low by union action
that is, to all extents and purposes, quite righteous on behalf of the
aggrieved party. Consider teachers, medical workers ~ off work for causes the
public can identify with. They suffer great deprivation for the duration of the
strike and heavily bombarded with “unbiased” news reports and interviews with
the heads of the parties concerned. Society becomes more polarized around the
issue and finally, finally, amid great fanfare, the impasse is bridged and
waters smoothed. The public feels vaguely let down by the points the union has
settled for but everyone else seems happy and they really just want to get back
to “normal” and so life goes on, usually with the union having taken a few
steps backwards in the long run. This is NOT to slam unions. Heaven knows they
were founded on good intentions and have done great work but they, too, have
been infiltrated.
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“Ensuring a healthy global financial system” wrought by fraud and corruption? The issue of workers’ rights is not mentioned. (World Economic Forum ~ Labour Leaders, 2010).
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“Ensuring a healthy global financial system” wrought by fraud and corruption? The issue of workers’ rights is not mentioned. (World Economic Forum ~ Labour Leaders, 2010).
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THE WORLD SOCIAL FORUM: “ANOTHER WORLD IS POSSIBLE”
The 1999
Seattle counter-summit in many regards laid the foundations for the development
of the World Social Forum.
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The first
gathering of the World Social Forum took place in January 2001, in Porto
Alegre, Brazil. This international gathering involved the participation of tens
of thousands of activists from grass-roots organizations and NGOs.
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The WSF gathering
of NGOs and progressive organizations is held simultaneously with the Davos
World Economic Forum (WEF). It was intended to voice opposition and
dissent to the World Economic Forum of corporate leaders and finance ministers.
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The WSF at
the outset was an initiative of France’s ATTAC and several Brazilian NGOs’:
“… In February 2000, Bernard Cassen, the head of a French NGO platform ATTAC, Oded Grajew, head of a Brazilian employers’ organisation, and Francisco Whitaker, head of an association of Brazilian NGOs, met to discuss a proposal for a “world civil society event”; by March 2000, they formally secured the support of the municipal government of Porto Alegre and the state government of Rio Grande do Sul, both controlled at the time by the Brazilian Workers’ Party (PT)…. A group of French NGOs, including ATTAC, Friends of L’Humanité, and Friends of Le Monde Diplomatique, sponsored an Alternative Social Forum in Paris titled “One Year after Seattle”, in order to prepare an agenda for the protests to be staged at the upcoming European Union summit at Nice. The speakers called for “reorienting certain international institutions such as the IMF, World Bank, WTO… so as to create a globalization from below” and “building an international citizens’ movement, not to destroy the IMF but to reorient its missions.” (Research Unit For Political Economy, The Economics and Politics of the World Social Forum, Global Research, January 20, 2004)
From the
outset in 2001, the WSF was supported by core funding from the Ford Foundation,
which is known to have ties to the CIA going back to the 1950s: “The CIA uses
philanthropic foundations as the most effective conduit to channel large sums
of money to Agency projects without alerting the recipients to their source.”
(James Petras, The Ford Foundation and the CIA, Global
Research, September 18, 2002)
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The same
procedure of donor funded counter-summits or people’s summits which
characterized the 1990s People’s Summits was embodied in the World Social Forum
(WSF):
“… other WSF funders (or `partners’, as they are referred to in WSF terminology) included the Ford Foundation, ~ suffice it to say here that it has always operated in the closest collaboration with the US Central Intelligence Agency and US overall strategic interests; the Heinrich Boll Foundation, which is controlled by the German Greens party, a partner in the present [2003] German government and a supporter of the wars on Yugoslavia and Afghanistan (its leader Joschka Fischer is the [former] German foreign minister); and major funding agencies such as Oxfam (UK), Novib (Netherlands), ActionAid (UK), and so on.
.Remarkably, an International Council member of the WSF reports that the “considerable funds” received from these agencies have “not hitherto awakened any significant debates [in the WSF bodies] on the possible relations of dependence it could generate.” Yet he admits that “in order to get funding from the Ford Foundation, the organisers had to convince the foundation that the Workers Party was not involved in the process.” Two points are worth noting here. First, this establishes that the funders were able to twist arms and determine the role of different forces in the WSF ~ they needed to be `convinced’ of the credentials of those who would be involved. Secondly, if the funders objected to the participation of the thoroughly domesticated Workers Party, they would all the more strenuously object to prominence being given to genuinely anti-imperialist forces. That they did so object will be become clear as we describe who was included and who excluded from the second and third meets of the WSF….
.… The question of funding [of the WSF] does not even figure in the charter of principles of the WSF, adopted in June 2001. Marxists, being materialists, would point out that one should look at the material base of the forum to grasp its nature. (One indeed does not have to be a Marxist to understand that “he who pays the piper calls the tune”.) But the WSF does not agree. It can draw funds from imperialist institutions like Ford Foundation while fighting “domination of the world by capital and any form of imperialism” (Research Unit for Political Economy, The Economics and Politics of the World Social Forum, Global Research, January 20, 2004)
The Ford Foundation provided core support to the
WSF, with indirect contributions to participating “partner organizations” from
the McArthur Foundation, the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation, The Friedrich
Ebert Stiftung, the W. Alton Jones Foundation, the European Commission,
several European governments (including the Labour government of Tony Blair),
the Canadian government, as well as a number of UN bodies (including UNESCO,
UNICEF, UNDP, ILO and the FAO). (Ibid).
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In addition
to initial core support from the Ford Foundation, many of the participating
civil society organizations receive funding from major foundations and
charities.
In turn, the US and European based NGOs often operate as secondary funding agencies channelling Ford and Rockefeller money towards partner organizations in developing countries, including grassroots peasant and human rights movements.
The International Council (IC) of the WSF is made up of representatives from NGOs, trade unions, alternative
media organizations, research institutes, many of which are heavily funded by
foundations as well as governments. (See Fórum Social Mundial). The same trade unions, which are routinely invited to mingle
with Wall Street CEOs at the Davos World Economic Forum (WSF) including
the AFL-CIO, the European Trade Union Confederation and the Canadian
Labour Congress (CLC) also sit on the WSF’s International Council
(IC). Among NGOs funded by major foundations sitting on the WSF’s IC is
the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy (IATP) (see our analysis above)
which oversees the Geneva based Trade Observatory.
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The Funders Network on Trade and Globalization (FTNG), which has observer status on the WSF International Council plays a key
role. While channelling financial support to the WSF, it acts as a clearing
house for major foundations. The FTNG describes itself as “an alliance of grant
makers committed to building just and sustainable communities around the
world”. Members of this alliance are Ford Foundation, Rockefeller Brothers,
Heinrich Boell, C. S. Mott, Merck Family Foundation, Open Society Institute,
Tides, among others. (For a complete list of FTNG funding agencies see FNTG: Funders). FTNG acts as a fund raising
entity on behalf of the WSF.
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WESTERN GOVERNMENTS FUND THE COUNTER-SUMMITS AND
REPRESS THE PROTEST MOVEMENT
In a bitter
irony, governments including the European Union grant money to fund progressive
groups (including the WSF) involved in organizing protests against the very
same governments which finance their activities:
“Governments, too, have been significant financiers of protest groups. The European Commission, for example, funded two groups who mobilised large numbers of people to protest at EU summits at Gothenburg and Nice. Britain’s national lottery, which is overseen by the government, helped fund a group at the heart of the British contingent at both protests.” (James Harding, Counter-capitalism, FT.com, October 15 2001)
We are dealing with a diabolical process: The host government finances the official summit as well as the NGOs
actively involved in the Counter-Summit. It also funds the multimillion dollar
anti-riot police operation which has a mandate to repress the grassroots
participants of the Counter-Summit, including members of NGOs directly funded
by the government.
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The purpose
of these combined operations, including violent actions of vandalism
committed by undercover cops (Toronto G20, 2010) dressed up as
activists, is to discredit the protest movement and intimidate its
participants.
The broader objective is to transform the counter-summit into a ritual of dissent, which serves to uphold the interests of the official summit and the host government. This logic has prevailed in numerous counter summits since the 1990s.
At the 2001
Summit of the Americas in Quebec City, funding from the Canadian federal
government to mainstream NGOs and trade unions was granted under certain
conditions. A large segment of the protest movement was de facto excluded from
the People’s Summit. This in itself led to the formation of a second parallel
People’s venue, which some observers described as a “a counter-People’s Summit.
In turn, in an agreement with both the provincial and federal
authorities, the organizers directed the protest march towards a remote
location some 10 km out of town, rather than towards the historical downtown
area were the official FTAA summit was being held behind a heavily guarded
“security perimeter”.
“Rather than marching toward the perimeter fence and the Summit of the Americas meetings, march organizers chose a route that marched from the People’s Summit away from the fence, through largely empty residential areas to the parking lot of a stadium in a vacant area several miles away. Henri Masse, the president of the Federation des travailleurs et travailleuses du Quebec (FTQ), explained, “I deplore that we are so far from the center-city…. But it was a question of security.” One thousand marshals from the FTQ kept very tight control over the march. When the march came to the point where some activists planned to split off and go up the hill to the fence, FTQ marshals signalled the Canadian Auto Workers (CAW) contingent walking behind CUPE to sit down and stop the march so that FTQ marshals could lock arms and prevent others from leaving the official march route.” (Katherine Dwyer, Lessons of Quebec City, International Socialist Review, June/July 2001)
SECURITY
PERIMETER, QUEBEC CITY 2001
The Summit
of the Americas was held inside a four kilometer “bunker” made of
concrete and galvanized steel fencing. The 10 feet high “Quebec Wall” encircled
part of the historic city center including the parliamentary compound of the
National Assembly, hotels and shopping areas.
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Quebec
City, April 2001
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NGO LEADERS VERSUS THEIR GRASSROOTS
The
establishment of the World Social Forum (WSF) in 2001 was unquestionably a
historical landmark, bringing together tens of thousands of committed
activists. It was an important venue which allowed for the exchange of ideas
and the establishment of ties of solidarity.
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What is at
stake is the ambivalent role of the leaders of progressive organizations. Their
cozy and polite relationship to the inner circles of power, to corporate and
government funding, aid agencies, the World Bank, etc, undermines their
relationship and responsibilities to their rank and file. The objective of
manufactured dissent is precisely that: to distance the leaders from their rank
and file as a means to effectively silencing and weakening grassroots actions.
.
.
Funding
dissent is also a means of infiltrating the NGOs as well as acquiring inside
information on strategies of protest and resistance of grass-roots movements.
.
.
Most of the
grassroots participating organizations in the World Social Forum including
peasant, workers’ and student organizations, firmly committed to combating neo-liberalism
were unaware of the WSF International Council’s relationship to corporate
funding, negotiated behind their backs by a handful of NGO leaders with ties to
both official and private funding agencies.
.
.
Funding to
progressive organizations is not unconditional. Its purpose is to “pacify” and
manipulate the protest movement. Precise conditionalities are set by the
funding agencies. If they are not met, the disbursements are discontinued and
the recipient NGO is driven into de facto bankruptcy due to lack of funds.
.
.
The WSF
defines itself as “an open meeting place for reflective thinking,
democratic debate of ideas, formulation of proposals, free exchange of
experiences and inter-linking for effective action, by groups and movements of
civil society that are opposed to neo-liberalism and to domination of the world
by capital and any form of imperialism, and are committed to building a society
centred on the human person”. (See Fórum Social Mundial, accessed 2010).
.
.
The WSF is a
mosaic of individual initiatives which does not directly threaten or challenge
the legitimacy of global capitalism and its institutions. It meets annually. It
is characterised by a multitude of sessions and workshops. In this regard, one
of the features of the WSF was to retain the “do-it-yourself” framework,
characteristic of the donor funded counter G7 People’s Summits of the 1990s.
.
.
This
apparent disorganized structure is deliberate. While favouring debate on a
number of individual topics, the WSF framework is not conducive to the
articulation of a cohesive common platform and plan of action directed against
global capitalism. Moreover, the US led war in the Middle East and Central
Asia, which broke out a few months after the inaugural WSF venue in Porto
Alegre in January 2001, has not been a central issue in forum discussions.
.
.
What prevails
is a vast and intricate network of organizations. The recipient grassroots
organizations in developing countries are invariably unaware that their partner
NGOs in the United States or the European Union, which are providing them with
financial support, are themselves funded by major foundations. The money
trickles down, setting constraints on grassroots actions.
Many of these NGO leaders are committed and well meaning individuals acting within a framework which sets the boundaries of dissent. The leaders of these movements are often co-opted, without even realizing that as a result of corporate funding their hands are tied.
GLOBAL CAPITALISM FINANCES ANTI-CAPITALISM: AN
ABSURD AND CONTRADICTORY RELATIONSHIP.
“Another
World is Possible”, but it cannot be meaningfully achieved under the present
arrangement.
.
.
A shake-up
of the World Social Forum, of its organizational structure, its funding
arrangements and leadership is required.
.
.
There can be no meaningful mass movement when dissent is generously
funded by those same corporate interests which are the target of the protest
movement. In the words of McGeorge Bundy, president of the
Ford Foundation (1966-1979),“Everything
the [Ford] Foundation did could be regarded as ‘making the World safe for
capitalism’”.
.
.
Dr. Michel
Chossudovsky is an award-winning author, Professor of Economics (emeritus) at
the University of Ottawa, Founder and Director of the Centre for Research on
Globalization (CRG), Montreal and Editor of the globalresearch.ca website. He
is the author of The Globalization of Poverty and The New World Order (2003)
and America’s “War on Terrorism”(2005). His most recent book is entitled
Towards a World War III Scenario: The Dangers of Nuclear War (2011). He is also
a contributor to the Encyclopaedia Britannica. His writings have been published
in more than twenty languages. He can be reached at crgeditor@yahoo.com
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