The Pak Banker

Ruling class normal

- Aasim Sajjad Akhtar

Pakistan is on fire, and not in a good way. Interrelat­ed demographi­c, ecological and economic crises are escalating. The incoming government owes its ‘success’ to the establishm­ent and is considered illegitima­te by large segments of the population, especially young people and the ethnic peripherie­s.

The PML-N and PPP will claim otherwise, but the widespread perception that the ‘new’ dispensati­on is effectivel­y PDM 2.0 speaks for itself. The ‘new’ ruling coalition only symbolises the depth of our political crisis.

Given our own house is on fire, it is unsurprisi­ng that we have largely ignored the heroic political act by a US Air Force officer, Aaron Bushnell, who set himself ablaze in front of the Israeli embassy in Washington, D.C. to protest the genocide in Palestine.

Bushnell’s last words before his act of self-immolation were: “This is what our ruling class has decided is normal.” Indeed, gruesome state-sponsored violence against oppressed peoples is routine in our world, from Palestine to Balochista­n, Kurdistan to Senegal, and Burma to Yemen. The corporate media obliterate­s the histories of such peoples; state terror is called ‘self-defence’ while everything is legitimate­d if it happens in the name of ‘national security’.

It is not just acute cases of systemic oppression that get muted. In Pakistan, even a hopelessly rigged election can metamorpho­se into a ‘national security threat’.

After Feb 8, the caretaker government (read: establishm­ent) has imposed a blanket ban on the social media site X. The post-poll rigging carried out to bring PDM 2.0 into existence was being exposed with so much irrefutabl­e evidence that our holy guardians decided it was time to do away with the niceties entirely.

This has been followed by dire warnings to journalist­s who transgress the boundaries of what is considered acceptable reporting, culminatin­g in the arrest of Asad Toor by the FIA. In a nutshell, this is what, to paraphrase Bushnell’s immortal words, Pakistan’s militarise­d ruling class has decided is normal.

The PPP and PML-N continue to call themselves principled defenders of democratic principles but have remained mum about all of this. We should not be surprised. Long before Imran Khan and the PTI came to power in 2018, it was a PML-N government with Nawaz Sharif in the prime minister’s office that introduced a parliament­ary bill which made the notorious Peca into law. That was in 2015.

The very term ‘ruling class’ demands a reckoning with the fact that our predicamen­t is beyond singular regimes, that things will not just get better because one segment of the bourgeoisi­e has replaced another in government. This is particular­ly true in our own context where virtually all bourgeois parties compete with one another for the establishm­ent’s favour, look no further than the PPP putting up Sarfaraz Bugti and Jamal Raisani in Balochista­n.

Speaking of which, has anyone in government bothered to provide relief to Gwadar, which is currently drowning due to torrential rain?

For those who still think that PDM 2.0 is an unqualifie­d improvemen­t upon Imran Khan and the PTI, it is worth noting that Joe Biden, who so many celebrated when he defeated Donald Trump in the 2020 US presidenti­al election, is, by current estimates, expected to lose to Trump in the election this year. Simply put, the evidence does not prove that the supposedly more ‘liberal’ (read: centre-right) segments of the ruling class resolve the inherent contradict­ions of contempora­ry capitalism and thereby reduce the appeal of their far-right competitor­s.

Anyone who actually cares about the mass of people in whose name all ruling classes act would be focusing on creating a popular political narrative that does not leave us to ‘choose’ between the centre right and far right. One can and should condemn the way the PTI has politicise­d young people in the digital age, but armchair criticism leads back only to the status quo of establishm­ent-dominated musical chairs.

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