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The Case For Tibet

By Bill Weinberg, AlterNet. Posted May 14, 2008.


Indigenous people around the world see in the struggle for Tibet their own struggles for recovery of land and autonomy. We must not remain silent.

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With the crisis in Tibet, the left in the U.S. finds itself once again at risk of losing precious moral credibility with the American people by apologizing for atrocities. If "Free Tibet" has become an unthinking bandwagon for many, so too has a kneejerk reaction from sectors of the radical left against the Tibetan struggle.

Over the past two months since the March 10th uprising, the Chinese security forces have carried out sweeps and "disappearances," occupied monasteries and villages, and opened fire on unarmed protesters. When such actions are carried out by U.S. allies such as Israel or Colombia -- or in occupied Iraq and Afghanistan -- we don't have to ask ourselves whose side we are on. Like the Palestinians, the Tibetans have been pushed into exile, denied self-government in their homeland, and overwhelmed with settlers sent by the occupying power. We have a greater responsibility of solidarity to the Palestinians, because our government funds their oppression. But the fact that U.S. imperialism is attempting to exploit their struggle does not mean we have no responsibilities to the Tibetans.

Tibet will especially need solidarity from anti-imperialists in the West if it is to avoid becoming a pawn in the Great Game for control of Asia. The U.S. exploits the Tibetan movement for moral leverage against China (which has as its ultimate aims market penetration and military domestication, not Tibetan freedom), but is not going to risk a complete break with Beijing by supporting Tibet to the ultimate consequences. The CIA backed a small Tibetan insurgency in the '50s -- then did nothing as it was brutally crushed. The worst of the repression was in 1956 -- the same year the Hungarian workers learned a similarly bitter lesson. The Iraqi Kurds would also learn it in the aftermath of Desert Storm.

Today, the National Endowment for Democracy provides funds for Tibetan human-rights groups in exile, and the Dalai Lama has met with Bush and received the Congressional Medal of Honor. It pains us to see the Dalai Lama cozying up to Washington -- just as it should pain us to see Evo Morales and Hugo Chávez cozying up to Beijing. However, there are reasons behind such alliances. Bolivia and Venezuela need a non-U.S. market for their hydrocarbons if they are to break free of the U.S. orbit. The Tibetans perceive that they need powerful allies if they are to recover their homeland and right of self-determination. Leftist betrayal of the Tibetan struggle will only entrench whatever illusions the Tibetan exile leadership harbor about U.S. intentions.

The Dalai Lama is not demanding independence for Tibet. He wants autonomy for Tibet within a unified People's Republic of China. His demand is essentially the same as that of the Zapatistas, who demand local Maya autonomy within Mexico. He calls for coexistence with Han Chinese. Hardliners in the exile community in India -- especially in the Tibetan Youth Congress -- are rapidly losing patience with such tolerant positions, as Beijing remains intransigent. Again, a betrayal of Tibetan solidarity by progressives in the West will only validate the hardline stance.

We must also realize that the U.S.-China tensions are about imperial rivalry only (and especially the scramble for Africa's oil) -- not ideology. China is not communist in anything other than name. Some of the most savage capitalism on earth prevails in the so-called "People's Republic." The lands of peasants are expropriated in sleazy deals for industrial projects and the vulgar mansions of the nouveau riche -- leading to a wave of harsh repression against peasant communities over the past few years. Especially in the industrial heartland around Fujian, peasants have taken up farm implements against police in militant protests over the enclosure and pollution of their village lands. The state has struck back with sweeps, "disappearances" and programs of forced sterilization -- the same tactics U.S. client states use in Latin America. In "illegal" factories -- which do not exist on paper but are encouraged by corrupt authorities -- workers don't even have the minimum social security or wages, and labor in virtual servitude. Shantytowns have sprung up around the industrial cities of the northeast. The fruits of this hyper-exploitation are sold to U.S. consumers at WalMart.

Despite the recent tensions, the Beijing bureaucracy has embraced the methods and ideology of the U.S. "war on terror," and joined Washington in demonizing the Uighur self-determination struggle in China's far western Xinjiang province, known to the Muslim Uighurs as East Turkestan. The U.S. added the East Turkestan Islamic Movement to the "Foreign Terrorist Organizations" list in a bid to win China's connivance with military action against Iraq at the UN in 2002. In March of this year, with the world's eyes on Tibet, China also put down a wave of Uighur protests in Xinjiang -- while the U.S. holds Uighur militants at Guantanamo.

Whatever we thought about Chinese communism, it is long gone. Mao is being de-emphasized in the school textbooks -- and he is chiefly celebrated for giving China the nuclear bomb, not for leading a peasants' revolution. The Beijing bureaucracy may rule in the name of a Chinese Communist Party, but it arguably has more in common with Pinochet's model than Mao's. If under Mao, Han chauvinism was linked to an ultra-left ideology, today it is linked to ultra-capitalism. Tibet is turned into a Disney-fied Tibetland for the international tourism trade -- even as journalists are barred, and the inhabitants are relocated into government-controlled (and Orwellianly-named) "socialist villages."

A March 18th AP shot by photographer Ng Han Guan said it all: Wen Jiabao's giant face spews forth anti-Tibet invective from a screen overlooking a Beijing mall -- directly above a McDonald's golden-arches symbol.

Tibet could explode again during the Beijing Olympics, and progressives in the West will have to determine whose side they are on. It is important that we not be drawn into an ethnic divide-and-conquer strategy. One reason China's rulers are so intransigent on Tibet could be the potential for an alliance between the Tibetans and Han Chinese workers and peasants against the Beijing bureaucracy.

Indigenous peoples around the world instinctively understand the Tibetan struggle. They see in Tibet their own struggles for recovery of land and autonomy. When Chilean president Michelle Bachelet opposed a measure by her congress in support of Tibet, a solidarity website for Chile's Mapuche people commented: "The government of Bachelet … know that they have their own Mapcuhe Tibet." First Nations leaders in Canada have threatened to launch a Tibet-style protest campaign around the 2010 Vancouver Olympics. "We find the Tibetan situation compelling," said Phil Fontaine, chief of Canada's Assembly of First Nations.

If we are going to speak up on these and other such struggles in our own hemisphere, tactical considerations as well as moral imperatives demand that we not remain silent now about Tibet -- or loan comfort to its oppressors and occupiers.

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See more stories tagged with: china, human rights, tibet

Bill Weinberg is editor of the online journal World War 4 Report and author of Homage to Chiapas: The New Indigenous Struggles in Mexico (Verso 2000).

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View:
Self-Sufficiency is the Greatest Political Control
Posted by: ktrammel on May 14, 2008 1:09 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'd like to suggest that until we Americans, as individuals, learn to be self-sufficient as much as possible with regard to energy, food, health care, etc., our country will continue be duplicitous with every regime with which there are significant economic co-dependencies. So, learning to live "off the grid," so to speak, would be the greatest political movement we as citizens could undertake. It is our very dependence on designer clothing, state-of-the-art electronics and other consumer gear, as well as oil, electricity, food imports, out-sourced cheap labor, that empowers our corrupt political leadership to continue to support corruption elsewhere. We have to get out of our individual dependency in order to disarm the existing power structure that allows our own energies as citizens to support bad behavior here and abroad. Until that happens, our country will continue, by virtue of our economic dependencies, to support (covertly or overtly) corrupt governments and corporations. We have the power.

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China! FREE TIBET!
Posted by: johnbradleycopeland on May 14, 2008 2:15 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
America! STOP buying Chinese products! Look on the label and if "made in china" put it back!!
This will help not only Tibet but our own country! Buy "Made in America" or do without!
China is a terrorist nation! Boycott the Olympics! Congress pass a law prohibiting American based corporations from opening factories and owining property in China! Stop Walmarting!

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Tibet's case for Independence
Posted by: victoryone on May 14, 2008 7:17 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As long as the Han Chinese Communist cabal in Beijing is in power there is little hope that any sense, or even some semblance of accepted standards will prevail.
Little hope of a let up of the oppression, racist subjugation and exploitation of Tibet and its hapless people.
They will continue to plough their inane, by now well and truly hackneyed line, that Tibet was and always will be a part of China.
It appears utterly impossible to elicit any reaction or response from this depraved cabal, which would resemble even just slightly a human trait.
So calls for a dialogue, appeals for common sense, or restraint are falling, not on death ears, but will never even enter a mind that could possibly comprehend such rational behaviour.
Of course there is never any mention of the fact that Tibet was exclusively populated by a completely distinct race with a unique culture and its own sovereign government before the Han Chinese Communist hordes invaded the country.
The uprising must be seen in context of the most barbaric repression and subjugation of a people that were independent for millennia and have endured this tyranny for over 50 years without any letup.
Nor has the world stood up for the victimized Tibetan people, or shown any sympathy, but in fact has tacitly approved of this heinous crime in order to pursue lucrative trade with the most populous nation on the planet.
Every government has prostituted itself so as not to offend the tyrants in Beijing, for trade and the mighty $ is all that matters in this ‘modern day’ world.
Forget about principals, ethics or morals, the suffering and genocide is someone else’s, and there is no oil there anyway.
Realpolitik = Prostitution
This is the 21st century and the year this regime is allowed to host the Olympics, an event that is supposed to be in the spirit of freedom, cooperation, friendship and harmony.
But events all around China and particularly Tibet belie this illusion and the games must be a defining event for the oppressed people of Tibet.
If only the so called “free press” would live up to this nomer and report the truth and facts about the Chinese atrocities in all its starkness.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xhjad2MJsT0

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6a2ory5hr4g

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» RE: Tibet's case for Independence Posted by: Woodpecker
syed salamah ali mahdi
Posted by: salamah on May 15, 2008 12:22 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When I saw the name of the author of this opinion piece, Weisman,I immediately exclaimed, here we go again,YET ANOTHER ZIONIST. However, after reading his opinion, I was pleasantly surprised to find he still remembered Palestinians, East Turkestanis and the 'native' Indians in South America. Thank you Mr. Weisman, whoever you are and whatever you are! Unfortunately, my mood soon changed into frustration and anger. Why? Because, Dubya popped up on my TV Screen tuned to BBC Middle East. He was addressing the Knesset! With a President like this, Americans, because they voted him in to the White House TWICE, should take FULL RESPONSIBILITY for what they should seriously begin to consider and prepare for a future, which will surely not be very pleasant for them, all of them!

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» RE: syed salamah ali mahdi Posted by: Bill Weinberg
» RE: syed salamah ali mahdi Posted by: Jordonquits
Dignified
Posted by: jeffreytaos on May 17, 2008 6:53 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I feel renewed and dignified after reading your story. You have taken all that we have given and summed it up. You have listened to both sides and enunciated the issues. All I have tried to say for these two months, you have made clear to all readers. Thank-you. We are all on the same page. I wish that Chinese people will come to understand that we are on their side as citizens of this planet and we all must work together for a common future. There will be no more revolutions in silence. A true revolution will be the unification of all people on this earth to save the few remaining resources for the children that come after us, and to dedicate the wealth of this planet to preventing disease, and aiding each other in times of need such as the great earthquake in China, the floods in Myramar, the tornados in the US, and the oil spill in South Korea. So little is being doled out to the poor and yet millions may die this year in North Korea because of hunger. Many more in Africa. Bloodshed by tyrannical leaders and henchnmen plotting and terrorizing one another over wealth and power. It must all be reclaimed, lest we few who remain are prepared to till the soil, if it will grow food after all the destruction mankind has placed upon it. Bill Moyers has written a good story. Look for it. You have written a good story as well. The time is now. There is no doomday but the one we allow our egocentric leaders to claim for themselves, like comic book heros, they want to be known as the ones who saved us all. Save yourselves. Let the leaders go where they will, but it's time they went. Lead yourself. Lead your family, but stay out of my life and my private world of peace. Let this earth breath. Take a break from material consumption. Invest in land, and help each other. Many blessings to all who read and have real concerns. Sustainability is about human beings. The earth once free of us will manage on it's own. What do we know now that we have not known for thirty or fifty or seventy five years. We have been warned since the end of the 18th century, but those voices that cried out in the darkness have been ridiculed and mocked. Yet, one only need to turn to the great arts and literature of the 17th and 18th century to see that people have been begging for mankind to awaken.

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Human life is NOW!
Posted by: jeffreytaos on May 17, 2008 7:03 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You cry about the past. You dream about your future. What about NOW! What about HUNGER, DEATH, and dying? What gives you such joy to claim someones life or land or dignity? AWAKEN! Life, you should know is too precious to waste on squabbles. Turn to your leadership. Ask what have they done for you? How many hours must you toil for the basic substances of life. And with your surplus, you drink, dine, and dance. What of the hungry masses, the dying refugees, the decaying earth, the spoiled rivers and streams, the dust that sweeps through Beijing night and day, the troxic waste that pours into the heavens. Tell me, why do you cry over the past and worry so much about this tiny piece of land? It was never yours, but you attempt to claim it in the name of your people. Tell me, who do you think you are that your people are any different than any other people on this planet. There is but one race my friend, it is called the human race. We live or perish together. I wish you happiness, but I tell you, we are in this storm together, and those leaders are not likely to offer any comforts when food shortages hit home.

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» RE: Human life is NOW! Posted by: Jordonquits
Don't blame Walmart.
Posted by: jeffreytaos on May 17, 2008 7:14 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you must find blame, see it in the leadership of these so called great nations that allow starv ation while opening the doors to cheap goods and low wages. Walmart has done what any beggar would do in the face of opportunity. Fear not Wal-Mart or Cost-Co. Fear the leaders that have suckered you into buying anything at all while the masses are subject to terror and death and hunger around the world. What will keep these demons from America's doorstep. Let's all stop consuming the crap and wake up and build a new country that people in the world will see as wholesome and healthy examples of righ living and right thinking. Give freedom it's chance. It's been choking for two hundred years and our leaders are desperate to end it once and for all. Only the people can stand against tyranny, but first we must be willing to stand for something. So start by stopping. Stop supporting the thugs that import the opium and sell your children into rehabilitation clinics, that make three days of news over school shootings and then resume business as usual selling you everything from whiter teeth and fresh breath to liposuction and hair transplants. Next time you feel like blowing a hundred dollars on clothes, I encourage you to go to Wal-Mart and buy a pair of 12.00 tennis shoes and 9.98 jeans. T-shirts are 3 for 3.98 and so are socks. Perhaps if you simplify your life, Wal-Mart won't be your enemy. Wal-Mart's not the real problem. The real problem is people can't pass up the magazine rack, the candy and chip racks, and the sale racks, and the new flat screen tvs, and the cheap new laptop, or the new navigator, or cheap new tires for he car they won't stop driving. It's time to awaken. If all Wal-Mart could sell was jeans, underwear and toothpaste, afew hardware items and candles, we might all be proud.

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