The Subject Supposed to Loot and Rape. Reality and fantasy in New Orleans
Slavoj Zizek
According to a well-known
anecdote, anthropologists studying “primitives” who supposedly
held certain superstitious beliefs (that they descend from a fish or from
a bird, for example) asked them directly whether they “really”
believed such things. They answered: “Of course not—we ‘re
not stupid! But I was told that some of our ancestors actually did believe
that.” In short, they transferred their belief onto another.
We do the same thing with our children by going through the ritual of
Santa Claus. Since our children (are supposed to) believe in him and we
do not want to disappoint them, they pretend to believe so as not to disappoint
us by puncturing our belief in their naivety (and to get the presents,
of course). Isn’t this also the usual excuse of the mythical crooked
politician who turns honest? “I cannot disappoint the ordinary people
who believe in me.” Furthermore, this need to find another who “really
believes” is also what propels us to stigmatize the Other as a (religious
or ethnic) “fundamentalist.” In an uncanny way, some beliefs
always seem to function “at a distance.” In order for the
belief to function, there has to be some ultimate guarantor of it, and
yet this guarantor is always deferred, displaced, never present in persona.
The point, of course, is that this other subject who directly believes
does not need to actually exist for the belief to be operative: It is
enough precisely to presuppose his existence, i.e. to believe in it, either
in the guise of the primitive Other or in the guise of the impersonal
“one” (“one believes…”).
The events in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina struck the city provide
a new addition to this series of “subjects supposed to…”—the
subject supposed to loot and rape. We all remember the reports on the
disintegration of public order, the explosion of black violence, rape
and looting. However, later inquiries demonstrated that, in the large
majority of cases, these alleged orgies of violence did not occur: Non-verified
rumors were simply reported as facts by the media. For example, on September
3, the Superintendent of the New Orleans Police Department told the New
York Times about conditions at the Convention Center: “The tourists
are walking around there, and as soon as these individuals see them, they
‘re being preyed upon. They are beating, they are raping them in
the streets.” In an interview just weeks later, he conceded that
some of his most shocking statements turned out to be untrue: “We
have no official reports to document any murder. Not one official report
of rape or sexual assault.”
The reality of poor blacks, abandoned and left without means to survive,
was thus transformed into the specter of blacks exploding violently, of
tourists robbed and killed on streets that had slid into anarchy, of the
Superdome ruled by gangs that were raping women and children. These reports
were not merely words, they were words that had precise material effects:
They generated fears that caused some police officers to quit and led
the authorities to change troop deployments, delay medical evacuations
and ground helicopters. Acadian Ambulance Company, for example, locked
down its cars after word came that armed robbers had looted all of the
water from a firehouse in Covington—a report that proved totally
untrue.
Of course, the sense of menace had been ignited by genuine disorder and
violence: Looting, ranging from base thievery to foraging for the necessities
of life, did occur after the storm passed over New Orleans. However, the
(limited) reality of crimes in no way exonerates “reports”
on the total breakdown of law and order—not because these reports
were “exaggerated,” but for a much more radical reason. Jacques
Lacan claimed that, even if the patient’s wife is really sleeping
around with other men, the patient ‘s jealousy is still to be treated
as a pathological condition. In a homologous way, even if rich Jews in
early 1930s Germany “really” had exploited German workers,
seduced their daughters and dominated the popular press, the Nazis ’
anti-Semitism would still have been an emphatically “untrue,”
pathological ideological condition. Why? Because the causes of all social
antagonisms were projected onto the “Jew”—an object
of perverted love-hatred, a spectral figure of mixed fascination and disgust.
And exactly the same goes for the looting in New Orleans: Even if all
the reports on violence and rapes had proven to be factually true, the
stories circulating about them would still be “pathological”
and racist, since what motivated these stories were not facts, but racist
prejudices, the satisfaction felt by those who would be able to say: “You
see, Blacks really are like that, violent barbarians under the thin layer
of civilization!” In other words, we would be dealing with what
could be called lying in the guise of truth: Even if what I am saying
is factually true, the motives that make me say it are false.
Of course, we never openly admit these motives. But from time to time,
they nonetheless pop up in our public space in a censored form, in the
guise of denegation: Once evoked as an option, they are then immediately
discarded. Recall the recent comments by William Bennett, the compulsive
gambler and author of The Book of Virtues, on his call-in program “Morning
in America”: “But I do know that it ‘s true that if
you wanted to reduce crime, you could, if that were your sole purpose,
you could abort every black baby in this country, and your crime rate
would go down. That would be an impossibly ridiculous and morally reprehensible
thing to do, but your crime rate would go down.” The White House
spokesman immediately reacted: “The president believes the comments
were not appropriate.” Two days later, Bennett qualified his statement:
“I was putting a hypothetical proposition … and then said
about it, it was morally reprehensible to recommend abortion of an entire
group of people. But this is what happens when you argue that ends can
justify the means.” This is exactly what Freud meant when he wrote
that the Unconscious knows no negation: The official (Christian, democratic
… ) discourse is accompanied and sustained by a whole nest of obscene,
brutal racist and sexist fantasies, which can only be admitted in a censored
form.
But we are not dealing here only with good old racism. Something more
is at stake, a fundamental feature of the emerging “global”
society. On September 11, 2001, the Twin Towers were hit. Twelve years
earlier, on November 9, 1989, the Berlin Wall fell. November 9 announced
the “happy ’90s,” the Francis Fukuyama dream of the
“end of history”: the belief that liberal democracy had, in
principle, won, that the search is over, that the advent of a global,
liberal world community lurks just around the corner, that the obstacles
to this ultra-Hollywood happy ending are merely empirical and contingent
(local pockets of resistance where the leaders did not yet grasp that
their time is over). In contrast, 9/11 is the main symbol of the end of
the Clintonite happy ’90s, of the forthcoming era in which new walls
are emerging everywhere, between Israel and the West Bank, around the
European Union, on the U.S.-Mexico border. The rise of the populist New
Right is just the most prominent example of the urge to raise new walls.
A couple of years ago, an ominous decision of the European Union passed
almost unnoticed: a plan to establish an all-European border police force
to secure the isolation of the Union territory, so as to prevent the influx
of the immigrants. This is the truth of globalization: the construction
of new walls safeguarding the prosperous Europe from a flood of immigrants.
One is tempted to resuscitate here the old Marxist “humanist”
opposition of “relations between things” and “relations
between persons”: In the much celebrated free circulation opened
up by the global capitalism, it is “things” (commodities)
which freely circulate, while the circulation of “persons”
is more and more controlled. We are thus not dealing with “globalization
as an unfinished project,” but with a true “dialectics of
globalization.” The segregation of the people is the reality of
economic globalization. This new racism of the developed world is in a
way much more brutal than the previous one: Its implicit legitimization
is neither naturalist (the “natural” superiority of the developed
West) nor culturalist (we in the West also want to preserve our cultural
identity). Rather, it ‘s an unabashed economic egotism—the
fundamental divide is the one between those included into the sphere of
(relative) economic prosperity and those excluded from it.
In the beginning of October 2005, the Spanish police, who have dealt with
the problem of desperate African migrants trying to penetrate the small
Spanish territory across Gibraltar with lethal force, displayed their
plans to build a wall between the Spanish and Moroccan border. The images
presented—a complex structure with all the latest electronic equipment—bore
an uncanny resemblance to those of the Berlin Wall, only with the opposite
motive, designed to prevent people from coming in, not getting out. The
cruel irony is that it is the government of Zapatero, arguably the most
anti-racist and tolerant in Europe, that is forced to adopt these measures
of segregation—a clear sign of the limits of the multiculturalist
“tolerant” approach which preaches open borders and acceptance
of Others. It is thus becoming clear that the solution is not “tear
down the walls and let them all in,” the easy, empty demand often
put forth by soft-hearted liberal “radicals.” Rather, the
real solution is to tear down the true wall, not the police one, but the
social-economic one: To change society so that people will no longer desperately
try to escape their own world.
This brings us back to rumours and “reports” about “subjects
supposed to loot and rape:” New Orleans is one of those cities within
the United States most heavily marked by the internal wall that separates
the affluent from ghettoized blacks. And it is about those on the other
side of the wall that we fantasize: More and more, they live in another
world, in a blank zone that offers itself as a screen for the projection
of our fears, anxieties and secret desires. The “subject supposed
to loot and rape” is on the other side of the Wall—this is
the subject about whom Bennett can afford to make his slips of the tongue
and confess in a censored mode his murderous dreams. More than anything
else, the rumors and fake reports from the aftermath of Katrina bear witness
to the deep class division of American society.