2020 hindsight

Published January 1, 2020
Mahir Ali
Mahir Ali

EIGHTY years ago, at the beginning of World War II, W.H. Auden famously condemned the 1930s as a “low dishonest decade”. In some ways that description fits the 2010s, yet it feels inadequate. While the past 10 years have provided numerous occasions for despair, they were peppered throughout with signs of hope. Inevitably, much of the good, the bad and the ugly will carry over into the 2020s.

Large parts of the world erupted in protests in the early years of the last decade, following the shock of the global financial crisis and the subsequent use of public funds by all too many Western governments to rescue private enterprises. The Occupy Wall Street movement inspired copycat protests in several countries.

The US was also the breeding ground for various other manifestations of rage against the established order, from Black Lives Matter to the pussyhat protests, Me Too and the articulate anger of the Parkland students, who challenged the right to bear arms after a devastating mass shooting at their school. But the US also threw up the Tea Party. And Donald Trump.

Halfway across the world, mass youth unemployment and WikiLeaks revelations about corruption combined with a self-immolation of a desperate Tunisian street vendor sparked an Arab Spring that was largely nipped in the bud. A few tyrants fell, only to be replaced in short order by others — or by anarchy. The occupation of Iraq earlier in the century and then the unrestrained brutality of the Syrian regime led to the terrorist Islamic State’s ‘caliphate’.

The 2010s are likely to be viewed as the decade of dumb regimes.

More recently, a half-hearted reshuffle on the top deck has failed to placate Lebanese protesters. A desperate, brutal response to protests in Iraq and Iran has sowed the seeds of future rebellions. The war in Yemen drags on, with the Saudi-led coalition facilitated by the US and Britain. Israel, meanwhile, goes into its third election within a year with absolutely no hope of relief from the pattern of occupational hazards reinforced by Benjamin Netanyahu, again bolstered by the West.

The previous decade began with broadly left-wing revolts against the established order in various parts of the world, and a few instances of popularly propelled regime change, but ended with the widest panoply in living memory of far right or authoritarian (and often both) regimes, from Egypt and Turkey to India, Sri Lanka, China, Russia, the Philippines, Britain, Poland, Hungary, the US, Brazil and Bolivia. If, borrowing last century’s popular nomenclature, the decade ahead is dubbed the Roaring 20s, the reference will probably be to the incessant yelling of demagogues and the terminal gasps of dinosaurs.

The counterpoints are not irrelevant. Ethiopia may yet succeed in establishing a model of reconciliation in strife-torn Africa. New Zealand under Jacinda Ardern puts Australia to shame. Finland lately boasts not only the world’s youngest prime minister in 34-year-old Sanna Marin, but her coalition partners are also all women. In Britain, had the vote been restricted to under-40s, Jeremy Corbyn’s Labour Party would have won a landslide. Likewise in the US, Bernie Sanders’ popularity is highest among the youth.

Young women, in particular, have been sparkling repositories of hope in recent years — from Malala Yousafzai and Ahed Tamimi to Emma Gonzalez, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Ilhan Omar and Greta Thunberg, among so many others. Thunberg’s cause is overwhelmingly significant in the decade ahead; unless man-made climate change is ameliorated in the next 10 years, most other nightmares (and dreams) are pretty much academic.

The 2010s are likely to be remembered as the decade of smartphones and dumb re­­gimes, the proliferation of social media alongside anti-social attitudes, seismic rebellions and ruthless rep­­ression, working-class indignados and ruling-class insouciance, monumental technological advances and their misanthropic misuse, profoundly damaging austerity combined with a disregard for posterity, insidious inequality and erroneous ethno-nationalism, a resurgence in religious fanaticism and racist fantasies, rude awakenings and sleepwalking into catastrophe.

Notwithstanding all the warnings about its potential abuse, perhaps artificial intelligence ought to be welcomed, given that the natural variety seems to have been devastatingly depleted in the past 30 years, during what was half-wittedly hailed as ‘the end of history’.

Thunberg recently summed up in five words the times we live: “Our house is on fire”. It’s particularly easy to appreciate that sentiment in Sydney, where the sun seldom blazes yellow but instead casts a red glow. That, in turn, serves as a reminder of the choice Rosa Luxemburg pinpointed a century ago between a regression into barbarism and a transition to socialism.

A better world remains implausible but not impossible. There is, as Leonard Cohen put it, a crack in everything — that’s how the light gets in. Here’s wishing all readers, and everyone else, a cracking new year.

mahir.dawn@gmail.com

Published in Dawn, January 1st, 2020

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