Guerrilla History - Sanctions as Genocide w/ Ali Kadri
Episode Date: June 27, 2025In this episode of Guerrilla History, we bring back fan favorite Ali Kadri to discuss a very important topic - Sanctions as Genocide! Long time listeners will remember that we previously had a serie...s on Sanctions As War, and this episode is a great accompaniment to those past conversations. Similarly, this goes very well with our other conversations with Ali (Lebanon vs. Zioimperialism and Palestine - War, Occupation, and Proletarianization). We will be really excited to also have Ali back several more times for an upcoming mini-series! Ali Kadri is an esteemed Professor at various institutions around the world, as well as the author of many important books including Arab Development Denied: Dynamics of Accumulation by Wars of Encroachment, The Accumulation of Waste: A Political Economy of Systemic Destruction, and The Unmaking of Arab Socialism. Help support the show by signing up to our patreon, where you also will get bonus content: https://www.patreon.com/guerrillahistory We also have a (free!) newsletter you can sign up for, and please note that Guerrilla History now is uploading on YouTube as well, so do us a favor, subscribe to the show and share some links from there so we can get helped out in the algorithms!! *As mentioned, you will be able to find Tsars and Commissars: From Rus to Modern Russia soon on YouTube.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You don't remember den, Ben, boo?
No.
The same thing happened in Algeria, in Africa.
They didn't have anything but a rank.
The French had all these highly mechanized instruments of warfare.
But they put some guerrilla action on.
Hello and welcome to Gorilla History, the podcast that acts as a reconnaissance report of global proletarian history and aims to use the lessons of history to analyze the present.
I'm one of your co-hosts, Henry Huckimacki, joined by my usual co-host, Professor Adnan Hussein, historian and director of the School of Religion at Queens University in Ontario, Canada.
Hello, Adnan, it's been a while since we've been together.
been on a speaking tour all over the place. But how are you doing today? I'm doing great, Henry. It's
wonderful to be back with you and talking with our listeners about important topics. I have really
missed it, even though I've been doing a lot of interesting things. Maybe we'll do an intelligence
briefing, you know, to update on some of those stopovers and, you know, the Netherlands, Granada,
and now Istanbul. But, you know, we have a great guest today. So we should just get right into it.
Yeah, just to briefly mention that if we have that conversation, it will appear first on Patreon
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The contributions there are the only reason that we can continue doing the show because
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follow us at the top here. I do want to make note that we have our YouTube channel up and running
at this point. So listeners should be aware it's basically still just a podcast. It's not,
you don't have to look at Adnan and myself. Lucky for you. But we do have an animation which was made
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you'll be seeing on the YouTube channel. You can find that at Gorilla History on YouTube.
and, well, our back catalogs about 300 episodes long at this point,
so it'll take a while before it's all up there, but I am working on it.
So with that out of the way, it's my pleasure to reintroduce a returning guest on the show,
my friend and the esteemed scholar, Dr. Ali Kadri.
Hello, Ali.
How are you doing today?
Hi, hi, hi, Andrew.
Hello.
Very well, indeed.
Thank you.
We're all as well.
Hi, all as well, relatively speaking.
you know, the environment here is not all quite well.
Yeah, Ali is in Lebanon right now.
So when he's talking about the environment not necessarily being the best right now,
well, that is fairly obviously the case.
But listeners will remember Ali's been on the show a couple times in the past.
And actually, I'm going to announce right up front here to get the listeners excited that
Ali will also be joining us for a mini series with him as the featured guest over three to five conversations.
in the relatively near future.
So I know that many of our listeners are big fans of your work, Ali,
so I want to make sure that they know that that's coming up.
Today's episode, unfortunately, is not going to be one of our super long ones
because we have some other things that we have to take care of as well.
But we have a fascinating conversation on sanctions as genocide.
Listeners will remember that almost three years ago at this point,
we started running a series Sanctions as War based off of the book,
which was co-edited by our friends Manny Ness and Stuart Davis.
And this conversation, while not coming from that book as all of those other conversations
and sanctions this war did, is very much going to fit within that analytical realm.
So, Ali, I know that you recently spoke on sanctions as genocide in Arabic.
How did this topic come up when it was raised to you?
Like, was that something that you brought up that you wanted to talk about in Arabic or
did the the hosts of that platform that you spoke on bring the topic to you?
Actually, I've written a piece on an Arabic which was called Who's Being Sanctioned?
And the host read it and he contacted me and asked me to do a session on the sanctions and the impact of the sanctions.
And that's what we did, really.
I mean, the piece was written a wide back, and it says basically the United States is sanctioning so many,
is sanctioning so many countries and entities, business entities, people, persons and so on and so forth,
that it's almost sanctioning half the world if one thinks about it.
and it's limiting the scope in which it can do business with the rest of the world and so on.
There is, I mean, sanctions have been always there historically.
You know, there's an empire sanctions and one state and then pulverizes that state.
But the way sanctions have developed recently in recent history is that.
that, you know, it's sort of a blanket statement.
If I don't like you, I'm going to sanction you.
And because I provide the currency for the world, I provide the dollar, I provide the
world reserve currency, you won't be able to do much without submitting to my demands.
And so there's too much of a good thing for the United States may turn out to be too much of a bad thing.
And that was the logic of that argument.
And I sort of followed up by saying, you know, the United States benefits from a print.
the dollar over a greater geographic area around the world that have, you know, and if it's, if it is no longer supplying the dollar to the rest of the world, too much of the world, then it is, it's rents, it's imperial rents because the dollar provides the United States with the significant imperial brands. It's a, it's a conveyor belt that draws the wealth, the value that's
been created in the developing world to the center, to the financial centers of the
Western Hemisphere and specifically the United States.
So what has happened in the United States is a sort of strange empire in a sense because
its debts turn out the credit it provides because when it prints dollars and gives it
to the rest of the world, it owes the rest of the world that money, that dollar and that people
can, you know, take that dollar and say, we're going to claim some property in the United States
for that dollar or something like that. But in point of fact, because it prints the dollar
and it has power and control over much of the world's resources, all the dollars recirculate
back to the United States and finds itself in a smug position.
It has drawn the labor and the sweat and tears of much of the world to its coffers.
So its debt, you know, as it's often probably been said,
its debt is its credit, its debt is its wealth.
It is a strange empire in a sense that the more it is indebted to the rest of the world,
the more it is wealthy, with the caveat, of course,
that it has to be powerful enough to control.
Without the control, it cannot be wealth.
So in that sense, what backs the daughter is control,
is hegemony over the rest of the globe.
Control in a sense that when somebody borrows money,
they have to work in the future to repay that money
and you know
when it prints the money
and send it to the rest of the world
and that money is
it loans that money
whether it is debt or debit or credit
and both in the case of the United States
it's credit then the rest of the world
will have to labor
will have to auction its reasons
resources for nothing and start of its population to basically send the people and resources to the Western Hemisphere.
This circular cycle, this cycle of iron richard by printing money for the rest of the world, has a backing.
People say it's, you know, that oil, for instance, as a, you know, the commodity theory of money.
that oil is the substitute for the gold standard.
But it's not only oil, really.
Oil is a thing.
And what matters is the control of all the resources and all the work
and the control of the governments and the control of the masses
in the rest of the world.
That's what really backs the dollar.
So the less hegemony the United States have
over the world, but less it will be able to convert its debit into credit, its debts
into wealth for itself.
And because it sanctions so many countries and so many entities and so on, it is, it is,
it sanctions those that cannot control.
Then the backing of the dollar becomes less efficient.
It can no longer, the latter states can no longer sustain.
the creation of money out of thin air and sending this money out of thin air abroad because
it doesn't the abroad here in this case has been diminished in size China, Russia, many
countries around the world are not under the control of the United States and that's
a huge portion of the world and therefore the currency of the United States.
the dollar status as the senior issue it has becomes smaller it's reduced in potency and that in
itself the sanctions in that cycle of I create debt and I can no longer do that I can no
longer do that. I am now, my deaths are a sort of a burden to me. People are unwilling to
basically work in the future and sell me their wealth. And that sort of situation is new.
So the credit space, in a sense, has been diminished. And although in the United States
depends very much for its accumulation.
you know, since it's at the helm of the world's capitalist system.
And it depends pretty much on maintaining a dual structure in the world.
The broad masses who will starve and sell things that sell their resources and labor cheap
to a sort of affluent consumption class around the world.
world, which is principally based in the Western Hemisphere, that consumes what's being produced.
So it needs the repression, it needs the exploitation, it needs the austerity applied to a
significant swath of the world in order to maintain a cycle of, you know, cheap resources and
cheap labor for higher profits.
But that said, the
crux of the matter is
it could do
that because the system is
expanding exponentially, it's explosive
because the system
is based on finance.
It's the financial plus, not the
industrial class, not I want to sell more of the
things that I produce.
so I need people to
everywhere to make more money
to earn more income
so that I can sell them
because the system is based on profitability
based on the popularization of
broader masses
for the consumption
and the luxury and the wealth
of the few
you have
what we
we have a sort of
a debacle
that's difficult to
to
to
to fathom, because first of all, I am, I am, my repression and my austerity and so on.
My wars and my sanctions are biting.
And that's reducing the negotiating power of the masses in the third world.
That's reducing their living standards.
that is reducing their longevity relative to the times,
because times are qualitative,
which will go back in time, time is social time.
And so what, but we've done so much of this
that much of the world now is seeking independence.
And when it seeks independence,
it affects the, it affects the,
system where I want to
ostracize you,
I want to repress you, I want to exploit you
for the benefit of the few.
There is
still, you have a dual
crisis in the sense.
The first
facet of the crisis is that the
sanctions
have
grown so much. They sanctioned so many
nations and people, so many nations and
people, so on, that
they no longer have control over that
space, they lost the hegemony.
And at the same time, the growth in finance, money growing money, without consideration
of what the industry should do, because money can grow indefinitely.
But in the end, there has to be something produced, and something produced with cheap resources
and cheap costs to meet the competitive needs of capital.
This situation is the first facet, the second, the first facet is this, and the second facet, of course, is the fact that you have a smaller industrial cycle relative to the expansive and immense growth in the financial markets and the financial cycle.
So these contradictions are piring up, have become intractable in time.
And the United States finds itself more and more in a position that it must regain the hegemony.
Without regaining the hegemony, it's going to reinstate the old cycle,
the old cycle where I can sanction a few, I can exploit a few,
and then I let the money grow by creating debts and creating dollars,
then I, you know, that money is
created, is growing and there are financial rents.
It's growing all the time, but it's not meant by a growth in the industrial sector
because the very fact that I'm selling to, I don't decide,
I know what production does, capital knows what production does,
but doesn't know who's going to buy, how much money is there to buy.
the buying market is shrinking as well.
So there is a complex order of contradictions between the financial sphere, the industrial sphere,
and the sphere of the developing world, the ones subjected to the immiseration of capital.
These together make us face a new situation, a new situation where the United States
will have to regain its ceremony, as I said, and it does this through flexing its economic
and political muscles and military muscle.
It's doing that as we speak, you know, with the tariffs and the threats of war here
and there.
But at the same time, it is no longer as efficient as it used to be.
It's not gaining much grounds against China.
It's not gaining much grounds against Russia and the BRICs, the other countries,
have grown somewhat into independence from the yoke of dollar imperialism.
And this altogether makes the debts of the United States more like, not necessarily perfectly like third world debts, but they've become something that they have to address.
They didn't care about the debts before because if I control and own the world, I can issue debt indefinitely.
They no longer have that.
And because they no longer have that, they're running.
into problems
that not only the national
debt is grown over the GDP
but also the corporate debt in some
estimates is
several times greater than
the debt
of the nation state
and the other
debts as well, private sector
consumers' debts and so
revolving door debts. These
are altogether
immense
immense in the book
quantity relative to the decline in hegemony.
And so it has to redress more seriously.
It has to take more seriously addressing the debt
because the dollar loses its status as a non-risk instrument.
And as the dollar loses the status,
so the world enters into a new stage.
We are in the labor of history now.
We don't know what the future will look like.
But it's the United States unless it wins by genocide everywhere.
That's actually, Ali, where I wanted to ask you before we get further into the consequences of the contradictions that you just mentioned about how the sanction system works.
and the fact that the attempt to sanction, you know, half the world basically is one that isn't
sustainable over the long term in exactly the ways you've been articulating. The weakness of the
U.S. hegemony has to be dealt with in some fashion. And that's where the title that you gave
is very suggestive. And I wanted to ask a little bit more, because as Henry alluded to at
the start, we have had a series that talked about sanctions as war to, and the book basically
and the different discussions that we had, you know, were meant to address the fact that
very often sanctions are seen as some kind of alternative to war that many people in liberal
and internationalist regimes thought was more acceptable than actual invasion, but there's
clearly a relationship between the two and the purpose of that series and that work was to
undermine the idea that sanctions were any kind of alternative. They were just war by any other
means. But you have sort of suggested in your piece by, you know, analytically comparing
sanctions to genocide when we're facing at this moment, you know, the obvious genocide had
taking place in Gaza. You're, you know, making a suggestive and provocative point there that
the redress, perhaps, of U.S. hegemony is having to be taken to a different level.
And so I'd like to ask you, what is it that you think this comparison reveals and why compare
it to genocide? And what is the role of genocide in attempting to redress U.S. hegemony's
reaching various kinds of limits of the sanctions regime?
Right. Things can do put bluntly.
In a way, capital exploits to make profits.
I mean, when we go to the store to buy something, you know, it's not, we bought something for $10 and it costs $5, so the profits are $10.
The real reason why we have profits, it's not because we bought it for $5, it's because somebody was beaten into submission.
And, you know, instead of asking for $7, you know, for the input that he provided to the capitalist,
He's so weak, he's hungry, he's devastated, he asks for five dollars.
So the exploitative process is a process of outright wars and sanctions.
Sanctions are a form of war as well.
The genocide is always undercut.
Let's just bring things into focus here.
There isn't, I mean, just as I was, you know, working the other day,
somebody's published an article where it says there are 700 or 800 million people who are hungry,
whereas we produce food for, you know, 11 billion people.
So we have a situation where the structural genesis,
what Friedrich Engels said when we discussed the working classes in Britain,
said there's something called the structural genocide.
That means people become sick and so poor.
that they die before their time.
And I was talking to a medical doctor the other day.
He lives somewhere in north of England or Scotland.
And he says there's where he lives across the street.
There's a poor area where the life expectancy is 15 years for the poor,
shorter than that of the rich.
So making people die early because of poverty
is also a process of killing, but it's killing slowly.
The structural genocide is there all the time.
And if we think that society altogether works over its lifetime and the work of society is what produces things,
then what we're seeing is a reduction in the life of society and economizing, as Mark says, to economize the life of labor.
We're seeing that reduction.
and that's going to
that society
where social reproduction costs of society
is going to be less
or less and less
relative to the times
and which means that
the rate of
exploitation is going to be higher and higher
so the rate of exploitation which
translates into the rate of profit
is determined
by how
badly society is going to live
Relative to the time, always relative to the time, because time is quality and qualitative.
And so that sort of genocide is always present with us.
And it's been if one thinks that relative to the capacities that we have,
the technological capacities and the development and the productive forces,
people should be living a lot more and better, but they are not.
So that sort of difference determines the rate of exploitation, which will determine the rate of profit.
But there is also the direct genocide, the obvious genocide, so the one ongoing in Gaza now.
This genocide serves many purposes.
It's war and war-inflicted genocide.
And one purpose it serves at the present crisis of capital is it shows.
that capital will go
to any extreme
in order to show that it's
a respective of
and then we have so many
cases in history where
you know in the history of capitalism
that when it is necessary
they'll just
exterminate a population
and so on
so
and so there is a demonstration
effect what's happening in Gaza
is now telling the world
we've had enough
for the human rights talk
you know the
universal declaration
of human rights these things have always been
a sham but now they're completely dead
and what we
have is a situation where
we're willing to teach
the world a lesson what we've done
in Gaza we can do
anywhere else
that's one aspect of things
the other thing and it's also
it branches out
into political
power. You know, the hegemony that we've talked about earlier, it is the fact that you are capable
with new technology and masculine instruments to prove yourself a victor, a victor of sorts,
then that's doing that. That's, you know, we are, you know, we want to, there are people on
the land. We want the land without people. There are too many people abroad that are so,
If we don't have slave, we'll have coolies and we'll bring those in.
And so that, that again is a case in point.
And it's also, you know, I mean, the ramifications are quite significant because it
tells the rest of the world that with the new technical developments that imperialism has its
disposal and AI being used for military purposes and so forth, that no national
liberation movement, of course, national liberation movements are as present and as under
neo-colonialism as they were under colonialism, because neocolonialism sometimes is the
worst form of colonialism than colonialism itself. And so it's telling the rest of the world that
the times have changed and we want to be in control again because we cannot
allow, we want our financial gains, financial rents to grow all the time.
And for that to grow all the time, we need to exploit more and more.
To exploit more and more, it means to basically eradicate people's lives, eradicate nature,
buy people and nature very cheaply, not only cheaply, for negative prices as well.
You know, there is something called negative prices.
These people in the developing world pay with their, with their,
lives and if one considers them how much money they earn over their lifetime over how their
indebtedness, they end up being in the negative quadrant.
So in a sense, that said, that's, that said, there is also a fact of the, that the war and
the genocide itself is an industry as well.
It is an industry that it is, in any industry, there are stages of production, the first initial stage, the second stage, and with this value added across the supply chain.
The first case, the first stage in production is usually the war and the genocide, because in the end, the masses and the working classes are not so ignorant.
as one night thing, because people live, every person has a sort of a existential condition.
He knows he cannot afford the food.
He knows he cannot afford the schooling and the housing and so forth.
And realize that it is the power structure that is condemning him or her to that condition.
But then the society made up of many people who are emiserated.
must adapt to the conditions of defeat, to the conditions of surrender.
They must adapt to the ideologies of the feud of surrender.
They don't, and they adapt by absorbing, interjecting the ideology of capital, the neoliberalism,
that the free market works.
Of course, one needed to say that, that's, I mean, people, everybody knows these are fairer fails.
and but it's the fact that they are accepted on us
means that people have a sort of
I want to live as much as possible by
you know accepting what what they're taking in the rubbish they're telling me
as an ideology to live by but they know this is not the case
they don't arrive at this point of accepting the ideologies of capital
because of the logic, the intrinsic logic or the beauty of the theory that Kakaton poses at the Fremont,
they arrive at this point because they are literally beaten into submission.
They're beaten to submission either directly because they're bombed by drones or what have you.
Or there are military bases that are too powerful for any country to move.
to basically, the world is surrounded by imperialist military bases, and they're there not for sure.
They're there in case something goes wrong.
They're there to basically get involved and do the job that needs to be done.
So violence in this case is not only reminiscent of violence under direct colonialism,
colonialism, when Fanon spoke
that violence has to be
faced off with violence,
violence is still here and still
as strong as it was before
and as effective as it was before.
And
it's this violence,
the use of weaponry or the threat
of war that is always
going to make people
believe the rubbish that capital
throws
on to them.
And so if we have
you know, when looking for a theory
of revolutionary consciousness
that theory is, you know, there are many
ways to describe why people
resolve
to fight back
one way or another, but
the only means to
fight back so appears
as was the case before would be
arm struggle.
Without
without having some form of people's wars.
Again, it is impossible to basically move beyond that watershed moment
where I am a submissive working class into a revolutionary proletarian.
And the conditions for that are maybe not so obvious now.
There are cases where countries which are sanctions, and Gaza is a case in point.
Gaza is presenting a heroic resistance despite the losses.
Because in the end, whether without resistance, they would be annihilated.
With resistance, they may not, they have a chance of winning and not be annihilated.
So the T-Pont always is what sort of people's war and how we define a new people's war
to reshape through the practice of struggle.
By all means, not necessarily only military means, by all means, but definitely the military means is there
because Capital knows that it is through violence that it could form the ideology.
The idea that ideology is related to symbols of power and the post-modernness or something like that.
That's somebody who's been to a psychoanalyst.
He hasn't been to the third world where, you know, the killing is a way of life.
The reactionary armies that are related to imperialism practice killing on every day, either them or directly imperialism gets involved
and does the massacre
so it is this
aspect of the
of the process
of forming revolutionary consciousness
that is
that is missing in the process
what is
things have become
actually more difficult as well
because
because
Because imperialism has learned two things.
First, it has to pervert revolutionary theory.
It is perverted through Western Marxism,
and you guys talk a lot about the idea.
And that's to abort revolutionary consciousness,
all together to basically write off imperialism
as, you know, imperialism writing off the obvious,
which is, you know, when the Federal Reserves
lowers the interest rate and money flows into the commodity market, bread prices rise,
and people start.
I mean, if that's not a universal order that's slowly integrated and is at the mercy of capital,
I don't know what is.
But the point here is that aside from this, there is also.
the perversion and there is of that and there is the military aspect of things the fact that there
is a military threat and and the use of military threat now what what is so obvious in and it goes
undiscussed is is the idea of mission as civil as at least a civilizing mission this you know that
the Western Hemisphere has developed,
has progressed and has technology and so forth.
So this idea that machines make wealth is ludicrous.
It's making things, do things, reification.
And what really makes wealth is the fact that if they literally have bombed the rest of the world
into disaster conditions for over five centuries,
then the rest of the world won't be able to develop any technologies or any researchers or anything of this sort.
So the subject here, the sub-historical subject of the machine, is this relationship of the destruction, which is the relationship of imperialism.
And that idea, the notion that we can always blame things for doing things is odd.
And what is also obvious is that the Western civilization, I mean, all we hear is that the planet is going to basically be, like, within 50 or 100 years, will not be able, you know, governed by the relationship of capital, which I want to get things cheap to sell dear, and I get things cheap because I can destroy man in nature.
this relationship governs profitability, the law of profits, governs everything.
So if we have to do that all the time, and we're destroying the planet, really, and we're destroying the planet.
So that means what we have now, if we're going to be in a very unhealthy planet within 50 years or something, right,
that means what we have accumulated so far is so many terrible things, you know, not the computers and not
the cars and things like that
are probably of use
but we've accumulated a lot of
environmental and social
destruction and waste
and so we created more bad things
than good things and sense
and so many terrible things
that they're going to basically erode
the basis for the reproduction of
physical life in the future
specific human life
And so as a civilization, a civilization is defined, let's say, broadly, as the material and spiritual wealth that's been accumulated.
Right.
So, you know, the material wealth is all destruction.
Western civilization, which is the civilization of capital.
It's not a civilization of Christianity or Islam or something like that.
That's for the blue.
It's the civilization of capital.
It's a structure that actually leads, it puts into effect.
the dictat of the law of value.
It wants to make things cheap at any cost and so forth.
So what we have is a situation where we have a lot of this.
We've produced, so we produce through labor.
Labor produced those things.
When we produce anything, we produce the plastic that we're going to throw away.
That's taken necessary hours of labor, of social labor, to produce as well.
It is a commodity.
We've produced so many bad commodities that things.
outshine the good things are nothing in comparison especially we know that we have so much
bad things now and also the social the human destruction the waste of the human lives the
premature death we have a trail of death we have so many skulls that you know some some in some
estimates a billion through in the war of colonel wars of
colonialism and imperialism, a billion, nearly a billion or so.
I mean, I don't know the estimates, but the number, I mean, some estimates say it's
900 million, but there are huge numbers.
I mean, so as civilizations, this Western civilization, which is the civilization of capital,
by necessarily, by abiding by the law of value, by the law of profits, it has achieved
none of the material wealth that claims to have achieved, and none of the spiritual wealth
claims to have achieved because it justifies
the killing in order to protect
a way of life, a way of life
for the few. Whereas we know
in reality, this is, you know,
we have a crisis of overproduction.
We have too much food for everyone.
We have enough technologies for everyone
to be treated for
any disease or something like this now.
We're relative to the times, of course.
Right, there's any disease.
But relative to the times.
So we overproduce all the time
And we overproduce way more than what we need.
And yet because capital needs to ration things such that it starts people somewhere
in order to get their resources and their labor for nothing.
And sanctions are, you know, the sort of twin of war.
Sanctions do the same thing.
I mean, if we call the sanctions on Iraq and the death in Iraq, I mean, probably death toll from the sanctions is higher than the death tolls from the war.
So, again, so it is not much of a civilization.
I mean, I know some Gandhi says it's not a good idea, it's a civilization, but it's not much of a civilization.
It's actually a civilization of this search.
and the spiritual aspect of it
is a world supremacist aspect
at core at core value
at core at core
so we have
and this is so
I mean that's the obvious
one hasn't theorized yet
we're just we're looking at the world as it is
and this is not a very healthy world
it's a world that's been based on destruction
it's produced too much destruction
and the future is doesn't fall
So the idea that when one looks at the, you know, the fashions and so on, the glitter of Western civilization beneath the glitter, there is a river blood flowing beneath that glitter.
And it is not because some guy is bad or good or some psychology.
People are born into social relations, which are capital social relations, which necessarily means.
that I need to exploit to survive, to make profits, not to survive, to make profits.
And to exploit means I have to basically crush society, society works.
You know, the labor and minds is a social labor.
That's society that's worth.
Otherwise, we can't say that somebody with a physical invalidity has the right to wage,
although he doesn't work
or a mother at home has the right to wage
although she doesn't work
because that means we know that society
as the totality of social relations
is what works
what works to produce
and the life of society
is the time of work
and the wages that society
earns over its lifetime
are lesser
if that society lives
and spends less
and lives shorter lives
their lives because it doesn't cost as much.
So the social cost of the reproduction of labor
is lower
for capital and it's going to make more profits
because these costs are lower
then surplus labor is going to be high
which is going to
translate into profits.
So they are born
into a system that works like this.
It works like this and
they just
act out the
directives of history in this
case. History is scary.
And so the point is we are now at a point, although this is, you know, a very grim picture,
but also, you know, there is much to be confident about the future that the resistance is,
it is impossible not to have resistance above these conditions because there's a threshold at which people will say enough is enough.
and it's developing with the rise of China
and the independence and the continued
struggle of the Russian people against NATO
that is changing
that is changing and
when the whole changes remember
Lenin and Mao all
speak of the general
determining the particular
so in the dialectic of the general
of the general, not the particular. It's the
whole that's going to tell the
parts, you know, that's going to implicate
and impart to the parts
what to do. And so we have
a holistic structure that's changing
at the level of international relations,
a weakening the United States that's resorting
to a caliphized
genocide in order
to show the world that I'm still in control
through its proxies, its imperial
proxies in Israel, you know, by
concocting some mysterious stories about the right of people from 3,000 years ago because, you know, so on.
So it's, I mean, this, this, this, this doesn't bamboozle anybody.
It's, you know, it doesn't, it's not going to gaslight or, you know, so anybody.
People know that there are, there are people in Iran, people in Iraq, people in Syria, people in Palestine.
Syria, for instance, the fall of Syria is pretty much, you know, could be accounted for through sanction.
I mean, you know, the fall of Syria, Syria was starving.
I mean, it was a cakewalk for a small group of people to take over a whole country because literally it was in a state of starvation.
Iraq was in a state of starvation.
Gaza is in a state of starvation.
Sudan is in a state of starvation.
And if you look at this region, the Iran, the Iranian.
Arabian region in this case, and, you know, the corridor from here to Afghanistan,
and the war on terror, there's some estimates, you know, now the death toll from the wars
and the sanctions in this region are an excess of five million people.
So we are now in this region ahead of the Korean war and the Vietnamese war in terms of direct losses
to worry. And that's, you know, that's great. And then also, if you add also the displaced populations
made refugees, I mean, we're talking about absolute devastation in the region. Yeah. And so you went in
the direction I really wanted to ask you, but maybe you can, you know, further enhance the
discussion here. But because of what you said about the contradictions about U.S. weakness, it's sort
of demonstration effect because of that weakness of open genocide and inventing, as you say,
a kind of political rationale or cause that's so absurd that, you know, the rest of the world
doesn't buy it at all. But I wanted to ask a little bit more about, you know, where you see
those potentials and possibilities for resistance because, of course, you did mention, you know,
the direct attack and the consequence of sanctions has produced.
resistance in places like Gaza, you know, Yemen, we can see despite, you know, years of war and
of blockade that they are continuing to rebel against the international order. And yet,
it also, as you point out, seems to have worked in some ways in a place like Syria. And at the
same time, many of the governments of the region have, you know, basically enlisted.
in a kind of U.S. program, despite the fact that it doesn't, you know,
really benefit their populations. So we have a kind of mixed picture for this region that, as
you pointed out, has suffered as a global war on terrorism, millions of deaths, tens of millions
of displaced people. You know, what do you see as the space where resistance can emerge
outside of the pockets that we've seen
that are under direct sort of attack.
I think it's an important kind of thought,
and since you've been theorizing this,
maybe you have some thoughts about it.
The situation is very difficult
because, as I said, you know,
they contorted a revolutionary thought,
Western Marxism.
Not only in the West. Western Marxism is the producer of revolutionary theory.
We don't have time. People here don't have time to write or think.
For another series, for another episode, for sure. We'll talk about that.
Yeah. So, you know, that's one thing. So the struggle, the war of ideas needs theoretical work.
But theorizes that our success is unfairious. We have.
the war that is ongoing, we have
a great, a small group of people
in South Lebanon, in Yemen,
in Gaza, who
are fighting a much superior
power and are capable to resist
and continue to resist.
So it just adds
credentials, it adds,
corroborates the fact that people's war
wins, definitely wins.
It doesn't. So we have that
at the same time that we have the
demonstration of fact that the Americans and the Zionists are capable of killing, we have
also the demonstration in fact that resistance is capable of resisting and fearing better.
And that's not to say also that we do not have a crisis of revolutionary consciousness.
We have a crisis of ideology.
It started in 1990, one of the Soviet Union, and many of the, you know, communists around
the world, we're just, you know, sort of poppycat in what the Soviet Union was saying
without basically drawing on their organic and cultural history and traditions and so forth.
There isn't a working class without a culture, without tradition, without history,
without symbols, without memories.
And, you know, we don't expect the working class to be the industrial proletariat of Western Europe.
I mean, that doesn't exist anymore, but there is a working class.
A working class is society in relation to nature, in relation to the productive forces,
working to sustain itself, to produce itself, and it does so in relation to itself,
in relation to nature, in relation to itself, and in relation to other societies or other classes,
other social groups.
But it's ontological.
Every society must work to produce, and it has to be able to.
to enter into relations and search and to relations with others so that's that's the
definition of class and and so there is there is a we are at a point where many people can't
actually ensure the next day and and that situation is that in the indigency and the
The poverty and the disease and the death from wars and sanctions is unbelievable.
And the example of resistance is there to copy.
It's there to emulate.
And that's going to happen.
It is important to basically, but theory has to lead.
Theory has to, you know, from this, we've seen some, we've seen.
resistance winning and one must theorize this or emphasize the necessity of people's war and the
possibility of victory in a people's war and that people's war wins not only with the weapons but
with the consciousness with revolutionary consciousness consciousness consciousness must act
perceived the anything the the necessity of of the of the of the of the of the gun and the
cloud together, that's still there
with different, but
you begun on the cloud not the same
anymore of drones and
social media blows enough.
So we
the same
momentum of history
is still there, the same generator
of history is still there. And people
are not going to be, you know,
people are not
taken aback as much
with the Western examples
of civilization. The
The American example is a travesty.
I mean, it's, you know, it's usually, you know, they used to say Nixon says, you know, you need a madman because I'm what to scare people with nuclear alternatives.
But now we have an idiot and a man, you know, a class of idiots, not necessarily a person who's in it, but a whole mass of people who are idiotic.
who are a personification of capital without the revolutionary potential.
Because the predicate for their survival is the imperialism and the hageny and the exploitation of the third world.
And so there is no working class, homogeneous working class because, you know,
the minorities in the West are something else.
But there isn't a homogeneous working class, an industrial working class in the West that's not benefiting from imperialism.
In fact, it's been the soldiers of imperialism all along, and they know it's not a question of percentage.
We don't get $5 from Africa.
We send them $5.
That's not how it works.
They get a lot from Africa for nothing because they're capable of pricing the lives of Africa and the resources of Africa.
Not for something, but for negative prices.
They're making the Africans pay for.
what they're sending to them.
I mean, if somebody
moves from Africa to the United States to work,
the person has, there's much investment that went into making
a capable person who is going to labor in the United States
for whom the United States has not paid the cost of our bringing and so forth.
So it is negative, you know,
the Africa and the rest of the world, the developing world are losing to,
they're actually,
paying to be exploited
that's
how it is
and
that sort of world
is
is now
coming to a head
because
China is rising
specifically
China is
China as a social
model
as a social
and
industrial model
it's
it's showing
the rest of the world
that a sovereign state can actually develop on its own.
And it's so powerful that it can actually say no to the United States.
It can confront the United States.
And it's just as big and it's better.
As standards of living are improving all the time.
So this imagery, this is now there to see.
And once the aura of the beauty and significance of Western civilization and imperialism falls,
All its ideological constructs are going to flow.
People will no longer believe that the free market
and that America has freedom
and I don't know what.
It has freedom when there are, you know,
so many people who sleep hungry on the streets
and millions who are incarcerated.
So we have a social model, which is a decrepit social,
a decrepit industrial social model,
decrepit human social model.
Also, so people will begin to observe, but this needs to be highlighted because they still own the means of propagation of knowledge.
They still own the means of the production of knowledge and so forth.
They have these buzz names, you know, like he won the Nobel Prize.
Most Nobel Prizes are won by people who are criminals at these prizes.
And most scientists, they've actually developed weapons so capital.
things that are going to treat people who can afford to be believed to do this, and not for the
rest of the humanity. And if they do sheep to the rest of the humanity, they do so relative to
the capacity to labor for a certain lifespan such that they die at the age of retirement and
don't receive any pensions or anything like that. So they cost less.
Ali, I have a... You know, you mentioned
that the Nobel Prize, most of the people who win it are criminals.
I had a project that I made my students do not that long ago.
We were doing a unit on various honorary awards that people have received for different fields.
And one of the examples, of course, that comes up right at the beginning is the Nobel Prize.
And I basically made them do the exact same thing that you just described, which was,
okay, let's take a list of Nobel Prize winners.
and I want you to find what is wrong with each of them.
And if you find nothing wrong with each of them,
well, you got very lucky in this case
because the vast majority of them were war criminals,
were criminals of some other variety,
were just sorted people in general.
And even the ones who weren't committing crimes by legal code
that are codified by, you know,
capitalist imperialist countries,
their breakthroughs were,
in pursuit of imperialist motives for their countries.
But unfortunately, Ali, we're out of time for today.
I know Adnan has a hard out to go to a meeting right now,
but I also, you know, want to, again, remind the listeners that we have you on record
saying that you'll come back for this series, which I was teasing Adnan in the chat that we
had back and forth during this, that I want to title that that series.
the world according to Alicadri because I think that that's a I think you deserve to have a
series titled the world according to Alicadri but Adnan and I were talking about some of the
things that potentially could be in this series surplus populations and political economy of
waste poverty of Western civilization revolutionary theory the future of resistance the model
of China all of these are topics that we would love to talk with you further on and
And hopefully we'll be able to talk with these, each in turn with a devoted episode to each of them where we can do them justice.
But in closing, Alik, in let's say in two minutes, if you wanted to tell the listeners if they, if they were going to go to somebody who is not so politically in tune, you know, they're not, they're not somebody who's absolutely consuming all of this political theory.
They're not following every bit of news the way that we are.
How would you tell them to bring up the subject of sanctions as genocide to those people in, you know, again, if we were talking to our listeners and telling them, go out and tell people who you know and are, you know, genuinely curious people but aren't necessarily completely like we are consumed by politics and history?
Well, I mean, as I said, you know, there's sanctions are also relative in a sense because
there are sanctions are making things scarce, making food scares, making medicine scares, making
income scarce in a very drastic way such that people can.
And the working class all over the world is being subjected to sanctions in a sense.
but by a different degree
and
so sanctions and more are
intrinsic to capital all the time
whereas we have
we produce so much
we have a lot the world can be
easily a much better place
we have the Soviet experience
and we have the Chinese experience
and we have many socialist countries
whose experience shows
that in sovereign countries
not necessarily socialists
but sovereign countries who are more or less just distribution frameworks and so forth,
but they're capitalists with disciplined distribution,
that are doing well in the developing world.
And so we have models that show that whereas everybody is sanctioned,
everybody must rid themselves of the sanctions,
and the sanctions are imposed by the capital relationship,
and the capital relationship is the structure,
the political, the national power of capital represented in this United States and NATO and so forth.
And these are what needs to be dismantled.
Very, yeah, excellent summary, Ali, and like I said, I'm hoping that we can carry on these conversations in the near future.
Listeners again, our guest was Ali Kadri, who has been on the show before a couple of times.
I know that we talked about Lebanon with Ali and Kranjahalik.
And also we had an episode Palestine War Occupation and Proletarianization with Ali.
Ali is author of some incredibly important books, which I highly recommend the listeners pick up.
Arab development denied dynamics of accumulation by war of encroachment,
the accumulation of waste, the political economy of systemic destruction,
and the unmaking of Arab socialism are just a few,
them. But like I said, we'll have you back on again soon, Ali. And you and I have to have
still have to get a phone call, a friendly phone call sometime. Adnan, can you tell the listeners
where they can find you in your other excellent show? Sure, you can follow me on Twitter.
I still call it Twitter at Adnan A. Hussein. And, you know, check out my other show on
YouTube, Adnan Hussein show. Just put it in your search engine. You'll find it.
it's also available as an audio podcast.
And we do some parallel things to what we do here and some other additional things.
And I particularly want people to know about the Palestine in the world, history and the time of genocide denial.
It's a seven-part series that I did in collaboration with my colleague, Dr. Ariel Salzman, who teaches a course on this.
And we thought, well, let's do a version of this.
you know, in reframing the history in such a way that it might be useful for listeners.
So two parts of it are out.
Keep tuning in and you'll get all of them.
You can go to by patreon.com slash adnan.
Hussein, if you're so eager and you want to listen to them all at once, you can do that too.
Yeah, of course, highly recommend that.
And by the time this episode is out, surely at least one more episode of that series should be up on
Adnan's YouTube channel by that point.
As for me, listeners, you can follow me on Twitter at Huck 1995, H-U-C-K-1-995.
I'll also announce because by the time this episode comes out, the other show will be up and running,
that I also will have another show that is going on.
Unlike guerrilla history and the Adnan Hussein show, this other show has a definite
lifespan.
It's a series on Russian history from Pr-Russ Foundation all the way to the present day.
and we've periodized it into 25 parts.
So we are actively recording.
We've already recorded the first three or four episodes.
And the first episode is due to come out this week as of the time of recording.
So by the time this episode comes out, there should be at least two episodes out and more coming.
And also there will be some listener question bonus episodes thrown in periodically with things that are asked over the course of those 20.
episodes that were breaking down Russian history and you'll be able to find that show on
YouTube as well as in podcast apps by searching for Tsars and commissars that's the name of
the show from Rus to modern Russia Tsar T-S-A-R I know that that word has been
transliterated in multiple ways in the past but T-S-A-R Tsars and commissars and of
course if you follow me on Twitter I will also keep you updated on when and where those
episodes will be. As for
Guerrilla History, you can follow the show on
social media, Twitter, at
Gorilla underscore Pod, Instagram,
guerrilla underscore history. And we also
have a Substack newsletter that comes out
maybe once a month to let you know
what is coming down
the pipeline from Adnan, myself,
and the show collectively. You can
get that at GorillaHistory.com.
Just be sure, Gorilla is 2R's, G-U-E-R-I-L-L-A.
And lastly, if you want to help support the show and allow
us to continue making episodes like this, you can help support us by going to patreon.com
forward slash gorilla history. Again, Gorilla with two R's. So with that being said, and looking
forward to not only subsequent episodes of Verily History more generally, but the upcoming episodes
that we have with Alicadri. Until next time, listeners, solidarity.
You know, I'm going to be able to be.
Thank you.