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Western Heart of Darkness: What the IMF Chief's Rape Charge Says About the Ravages of Capitalism

The struggle against violent domination is not a struggle against one demented or corrupt individual, but the authority represented by that individual.
 
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On Sunday morning, I opened my New York Times to find two stories which created a jolting juxtaposition considered together.

First item: A copious report of Dominique Strauss-Kahn’s Saturday arrest for allegedly sexually assaulting a maid at New York’s Sofitel Hotel. A man celebrated for his progressive approach to economics and his consideration of the rights of the world’s poor and vulnerable stood accused of attempting to rape a woman — an African immigrant maid — in the luxurious rooms of a $3,000 a night suite in one of most expensive neighborhoods on Earth. (These are just allegations at the moment, but DSK’s history and nickname as the ‘Great Seducer’, along with the fact that another woman now claims to have been attacked by the former I.M.F. chief, do not look good).

Second item: A brief account concerning one of the world’s poorest countries, the Democratic Republic of Congo, where, according to a report issued by the American Journal of Public Health, a woman is currently raped at the rate of one per minute amidst an ongoing conflict where armed militias fight over lucrative minerals. The accompanying photo depicted a row of stricken women lying in hospital beds, illustrating what it means to live in a culture of generalized sexual violence. The smallish picture, arranged among the many other news items of the day, had the dual effect of condemning the atrocity while distancing me from its horror. It all seemed so far away.

And yet, less than a mile from me in New York City, one of the West’s most powerful men was sitting in a jail cell on suspicion of committing a violent sex crime.

Soon after the story broke, the generalization of our own Western culture of violence became stomach-turningly apparent. European bloggers wasted no time in suggesting that DSK’s arrest was just another example of American “puritanical” attitudes. Blogger Jacques Savary had this to say:

To tell the truth, everybody knows that Dominique Strauss-Kahn is a libertine; what distinguishes him from plenty of others is his propensity not to hide it. In Puritan American, impregnated with rigorous Protestantism, they tolerate infinitely better the sins of money than the pleasures of the flesh.

The “frisky’ Frenchman was just doing what Frenchmen do, wasn’t he? While it’s fine to invoke cultural relativity in attitudes towards liaisons between consenting adults, there can be no gray area in judging the violent crime of rape. Such an act is barbaric, and to suggest otherwise is to capitulate to barbarism of the kind these same bloggers would not hesitate to condemn in a faraway land like the Congo.

In our Western world, the vapors of money and power often intoxicate men like DSK and countless others who advertise their status by treating women as mere objects of consumption, utterly disposable. This pervasive trait comes close the Western Heart of Darkness: our capitalist frenzy of consumer-driven desire; the gaping maw that wants more-more-more and will rape and pillage to get it. In his derision towards America’s Puritan roots, Savary ironically invokes one of the forces of restraint which, at least before the 20th century, would have made a man who sought society’s respect hesitant to flaunt an unbridled appetite for either money or sexual gratification. That these Puritan echoes still reverberate in America, however problematically, at least gives us the sense that there are moral considerations that may serve to check our ravenous, violent capitalistic id. The images of Berlusconi’s  “bunga bunga” parties, where underage women are mere items on the menu along with cocktails and cigars, suggest a European political culture in which women are just a stone’s throw from violence. This is not charming hedonism and liberation, but cruel, money-and-power driven domination.

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