Varieties Of Violence
Terrorists,
serial killers, domestic murderers -- their ghoulish deeds fill our news
and popular entertainment, interspersed with wars, riots, and brutal
repressions. Violence surrounds us.
Where does it come from?
The answer propagated by the mass media is that violence is human nature. It's just the way people are.
This view ignores anthropological
evidence about societies that have lived in relative peace, and it also
contradicts our knowledge of ourselves as human beings. In certain
situations we may feel violent impulses, but we can control them; we
know they are only a small part of our make-up.
The Norwegian peace researcher Johan
Galtung denies that human nature condemns us to violence; instead he
gives another explanation of its etiology based on three interacting
forces: structural, cultural, and direct.
Structural violence is injustice and
exploitation built into a social system that generates wealth for the
few and poverty for the many, stunting everyone's ability to develop
their full humanity. By privileging some classes, ethnicities, genders,
and nationalities over others, it institutionalizes unequal
opportunities for education, resources, and respect. Structural violence
forms the very basis of capitalism, patriarchy, and any dominator
system.
Cultural violence is the prevailing
attitudes and beliefs that justify and legitimize the structural
violence, making it seem natural. Feelings of superiority/inferiority
based on class, race, sex, religion, and nationality are inculcated in
us as children and shape our assumptions about us and the world. They
convince us this is the way things are and they have to be.
Direct violence -- war, murder, rape,
assault, verbal attacks -- is the kind we physically perceive, but it
manifests out of conditions created by the first two invisible forms and
can't be eliminated without eliminating them. Direct violence has its
roots in cultural and structural violence; then it feeds back and
strengthens them. All three forms interact as a triad. Cultural and
structural violence cause direct violence. Direct violence reinforces
structural and cultural violence. We are trapped in a vicious cycle that
is now threatening to destroy life on earth.
Our society with its fixation on the
physical focuses on direct violence and ignores the structural and
cultural. Our leaders know that making changes on those levels would
threaten their whole system. But as radicals we focus on the structural
and cultural because we know that change has to begin at the roots.
Our best chance to break this cycle is
through socialism. Economic democracy and social equality will reduce
the structural and cultural violence, which will reduce the direct
violence. By approaching it from these fundamental levels, socialism can
wind down the syndrome of violence. This may not create utopia, but it
will create a society vastly better than the one we now suffer under. We
really can have peace, but not under capitalism.by William T. Hathaway from here
(please note: this author has no connection to The World Socialist Movement and its companion parties)
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