Ridiculous statement in The Economist:
According to The
Economist, polygamy is a key factor in civil wars and conflict. How convenient
to blame it all on ‘the natives’ and their ‘backward’ customs, obscuring the
role of the US and its allies in destabilizing regions.
In the 1930 Marx
Brothers comedy ‘Animal Crackers’ Groucho Marx proposes to two women at the
same time. One protests: “But that's bigamy!” Groucho replies: “Yes and that's
big-a-me, too. It's big of all of us. Let's be big for a change. I'm sick of
these conventional marriages!”
We know the
Economist isn’t a great fan of Karl Marx, and it’s doubtful it would approve of
Groucho much either – or at least the idea of him taking two wives. You see, it
would probably lead to armed conflict.
Forget the illegal invasion
of Iraq, which led to 1 million deaths and turned the Middle East into a
cauldron. Forget too the mass casualties of two World Wars. It’s polygamy that
we should be focusing on to explain violence in the world. Run for your wives?
More like run for your lives.
It’s fair to say
that The Economist, the weekly Bible of Western neoliberal capitalism, is very
keen that we get the Polygamy = Wars thesis.
“Polygamy is still
common in Africa, the Islamic world and parts of Asia. It makes civil war more
likely,” we were told on Twitter.
This follows
an article entitled ‘Why Polygamy breeds civil war,’ published on March
19, 2018, a piece by The Economist’s Foreign Editor Robert Guest entitled
‘Big Love and Big War,’ on January 12, 2018, which cited a 2009 study by
Satoshi Kanazawa of the LSE, and another piece entitled ‘The link
between polygamy and war,’ published in the 2017 Christmas edition.
“Wherever it is
widely practised, polygamy (specifically polygyny, the taking of multiple
wives) destabilizes society, largely because it is a form of inequality which
creates an urgent distress in the hearts, and loins, of young men,” the last
piece states.
The neo-liberal
Economist, which has championed all the Thatcherite reforms of the past 40
years, concerned with inequality? Why, you could have knocked me down with a
feather!
The article also
says polygamy “is one of the reasons why the Arab Spring erupted, why the
jihadists of Boko Haram and Islamic State were able to conquer swathes of
Nigeria, Iraq and Syria, and why the polygamous parts of Indonesia and Haiti
are so turbulent.” It adds: “Polygamous societies are bloodier, more likely to
invade their neighbours and more prone to collapse than others.”
The Economist
doesn’t blame polygamy for the recent heat-wave, but that’s probably coming up
in next week’s edition.
By way of evidence
the magazine states that: “The taking of multiple wives is a feature of life in
all of the 20 most unstable countries on the Fragile States Index compiled by
the Fund for Peace, an NGO.”
But if we look at
said Index we see that a large number of the ‘top 20’ have been affected
directly or indirectly by Western de-stabilization campaigns, or even –
in case of Yemen (4), Iraq (10), Syria (6), Afghanistan (9) – by Western
alliance invasion/bombing.
This is the ‘link’
that The Economist won’t mention because it has largely been in favor of these
‘interventions.’ Who can ever forget the way the magazine whitewashed the Iraq
invasion with its ‘Sincere Deceivers’ cover featuring the warmongers Bush
and Blair?
South Sudan and
Sudan feature heavily in The Economist’s arguments – but again, the US role in
sponsoring oil-rich South Sudan’s secession and creating instability in the
region is not mentioned.
As for the
‘conquering’ by Boko Haram and Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS) of ‘vast
swathes’ of Nigeria, Iraq and Syria, who do we blame for that?
Here’s my
fellow OpEd contributor Dan Glazebrook, writing about global famines: “The
situation in Nigeria is also a result of war, in this case the Boko Haram insurgency
– an insurgency which owes its massive spread in recent years directly to the
NATO destruction of Libya, which opened up the country’s weapons dumps to Boko
Haram and its partners.”
A destruction of
Libya which The Economist described as “a modest win for liberal
internationalism.” The Iraq War – also backed by The Economist, led
directly to the rise of IS, while Syria whose polygamy rates are ‘N/A’ in the
index, became a ’fragile state’ only because of the regime change operations of
the West and its regional allies. The more we analyse
the global situation a very clear pattern emerges. The US and its allies have
targeted a succession of independently-minded resource-rich countries in
strategically important parts of the world and, where they haven’t been able to
directly invade, they’ve fomented civil wars to further their own economic and
geopolitical interests. A classic example was the break-up of Yugoslavia in the 1990s. Unilateral
secessions were encouraged from the republic, in contravention of Article 5 of
the Yugoslav constitution.
By Neil Clark
https://www.rt.com/op-ed/434639-polygamy-war-economist-west/

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