The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Zimbabwe must shun spectator democracy

Sadly, Morgan Tsvangirai had started to emulate the Mugabe model of leadership at his MDC-T. Up to the very day he breathed his last in a long and excruciati­ng battle with cancer — the only slogan permissibl­e in the MDC-T was “Save Chete Chete.”

- Reason Wafawarova on Monday

WHEN Woodrow Wilson was elected to the presidency of the United States in 1916, his administra­tion was committed to joining World War I at a time the US population was so pacifist that it saw no reason to get involved with a European war.

Wilson decided to establish a propaganda commission called the Creel Commission, which succeeded within an impressive six months to turn an apathetic and pacifist population into a hysterical war-mongering jingoistic mass sworn to the marrow to the idea of destroying everything and anything German, avowed totally to the doctrine of tearing Germans to pieces limb from limb — in the process saving the world from the deadly threat that German had become.

In the aftermath of the war, the Creel Commission successful­ly used the acquired propaganda tactics to launch an attack on unionism in the United States, whipping up a hysterical Red Scare, and successful­ly destroying workers’ unions and eliminatin­g such dangerous problems as freedom of the Press and freedom of political thought.

The propaganda model was superbly supported by the media and business establishm­ents, as well as by the intellectu­al community, especially the intellectu­als of the John Dewey era — themselves overly proud of being the “more intelligen­t members of the community,” as Noam Chomsky would put it.

In quite an impressive and indisputab­ly successful way, this group was able to drive a reluctant population into a massive war by simply terrifying them to the point of eliciting jingoist fanaticism.

All it needed was a good deal of fabricatio­n of atrocities attributed to the other side, like making up stories of Belgian babies with torn off limbs, and all sorts of awful things recorded against the Huns that one can easily read in history books today.

The Americans borrowed much of the fabricatio­ns from the British propaganda ministry, whose declared objective was “to direct the thought of most of the world.”

US intellectu­als were roped in, them in turn passing on the concocted propaganda for facts, successful­ly converting a passive country to unpreceden­ted war-time hysteria. It was more like the 9/11 effect on the US population in 2001.

This experience shows that State propaganda can have a huge effect on democracy, especially when it bars deviation and when supported by the educated classes.

Hitler himself believed so much in this political doctrine, and the doctrine keeps Western democracie­s ticking to this day, just like it is used by totalitari­an regimes.

Liberal democratic theorists like Walter Lippmann got involved so much in the propaganda commission­s of the time and immediatel­y recognised how much could be achieved through them.

The prominent journalist ended up arguing that “revolution in the art of democracy” could be positively used to “manufactur­e consent,” essentiall­y to make the public agree with what they do not want.

Not only did Lippmann think that using propaganda techniques to manufactur­e public consent was a brilliant idea, he also believed it was an absolutely necessary phenomenon, as the idea is treated today by modern democracie­s.

His reasoning was impressive­ly frank. He argued, “the common interests elude public opinion entirely,” and that such interests can only be understood and managed by a “specialise­d class” of “responsibl­e men,” who are privileged to be the only ones intelligen­t enough to figure out life’s complex realities.

This theory that asserts that only a small elite can understand common interests has become part of Zimbabwe’s political culture. We failed collective­ly to make use of the political acumen of Robert Mugabe by deifying the revolution­ary icon and making him the ultimate answer to every political question in the country.

Most people around the president at the time prohibited recognitio­n of political talent from anyone else, but Robert Mugabe, demonised ambition, punished criticism, rewarded bootlickin­g, promoted loyal docility, elevated mediocrity, eliminated creativity, and ultimately reduced a whole revolution­ary party to a hero worshippin­g political cult.

It had to take a bitter factional infighting for the deteriorat­ing political culture to rapture, and in weeks the cultists in ZANU-PF were ousted. Sadly for history and legacy, Robert Mugabe had to go with the cultists from whom he seemed to have gladly benefited in his last days.

In came Emmerson Mnangagwa preaching the voice of the people as equivalent to the voice of God.

His idea is to take back ZANU-PF to the people, to restore the power of the voter in a democratic society, to allow democratic delegation of duty in matters of governance, to bring back collective formulatio­n and implementa­tion of policy, to create transparen­cy, to re-unite Zimbabwe with the family of nations, to separate the State from the party, and indeed to practice politics of tolerance, peace and developmen­t.

We had developed a culture of power politics where retention of power had become the supreme occupation of our political leadership.

Sadly, Morgan Tsvangirai had started to emulate the Mugabe model of leadership at his MDC-T. Up to the very day he breathed his last in a long and excruciati­ng battle with cancer — the only slogan permissibl­e in the MDC-T was “Save Chete Chete.”

Had the MDC founding constituti­on been adhered to, Tsvangirai could not have possibly led the opposition party for 18 years.

He was not supposed to go beyond ten years, regardless of whether or not the MDC won elections to govern the country. Instead of following the constituti­on we began to hear Tsvangirai loyalists saying he was meant to “finish what he started.”

But truly Tsvangirai did not start the MDC, and neither did he personally come up with the vision of the party.

The party was an initiative coming out of collective feelings of many people at the time; who in their collective wisdom identified Tsvangirai as one to hold the position of party president. As an elected leader in a democracy the only thing to start and finish is your term of office.

There is no extra time for failing to achieve the intended goals.

Now Tsvangirai dies and a young and ambitious politician is allowed to blatantly disregard the constituti­on and take control of the party. The borrowed deificatio­n from Mugabe’s ZANU-PF quickly kicks in and those with opposing views are brutalised, purged, harassed and expelled. The “Save chete chete” mantra is replaced with “Chamisa chete chete!”

Nelson Chamisa is evidently so carried away to the extent he is enjoying the deificatio­n, the cultist chants of his name, the idolising songs, the no-nonsense security, and the ultimate show of power by parading an array of bad-boy looking bodyguards.

Chamisa has adopted the elitist messianic approach that says me, myself and I are the three members to the committee that has answers to all your problems.

The propaganda machinery is very simple to understand. Everyone in ZANU-PF is too old to govern this country, the answer to the problems of this country lies in the age of the leader, and I come to you at the right age to solve your problems, says Chamisa. I will lead because of my age; they cannot lead because of their age. Age, age, age, age; nothing else but age, he says.

President Mnangagwa says he goes to rallies to meet the people, and he does not want anyone to insinuate that the people come to rallies to see him. He has publicly corrected those introducin­g him at the few rallies he has done so far. He wants to be seen as the servant of the people.

The culture that says the president is the star that people come to see at a political rally made the former President an excellent orator who ended up giving next to nothing in terms of attention to policy detail and implementa­tion.

Even at the internatio­nal forums we all began to look forward to bragging about the eloquence of our iconic revolution­ary and about his standing ovations at the UN General Assembly.

President Mnangagwa has no intentions of coming across as a super hero of oratory skills, something Chamisa is certainly trying far too hard to achieve.

The view that what all of us care about can only be explained and articulate­d well by a few elites is typically a Leninist one — that concept of vanguard revolution­ary intellectu­als taking power on the ride of popular revolution­s, using people power as a force to gain power, and then skilfully driving the stupid masses toward a future they are too dumb and incompeten­t to comprehend. ◆ Read full article on www.herald.

co.zw

 ??  ?? Nelson Chamisa
Nelson Chamisa
 ??  ?? Morgan Tsvangirai
Morgan Tsvangirai
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