THE GIST of Editorial for UPSC Exams : 22 APRIL 2019 (Workers and refugees are not criminals (The Hindu))

Workers and refugees are not criminals (The Hindu)

Mains Paper 2: International
Prelims level: Not much
Mains level: U.S. Border Patrol crisis

Context

  •  The Mexican border was closed for hours on November 25, 2018 at the San Ysidro Port of Entry to the U.S., after a group of migrants, including children and women, in Tijuana reportedly stormed the area.
  •  This prompted the U.S. Border Patrol to fire tear gas at the group. Among the hand-made placards carried by the migrants was this one: “We are international workers. We are not criminals.”
    Xenophobic assertion
  •  It was a revealing placard, and one that commented on a major change in global economic and political thinking: since the 1990s, not just international but even interregional workers have slowly been pushed into the rubric of ‘criminals’.
  •  U.S. President Donald Trump is a prime example of this: his victory was largely founded on his ability to depict international workers, particularly those crossing the U.S.-Mexico border, as ‘criminals’.
  •  With elections coming up in the U.S. once again, he has returned, with renewed vigour, to this discourse.
  •  The fact that such a sweeping xenophobic assertion though often it was in the form of pointed innuendoes does not make him a ‘loser’ (in his language) highlights the fact that many voters now think of certain kinds of workers as basically criminals.
  • What is it that enables many to characterise international and even interregional workers as criminals, even as we know that most of them are crossing a border simply to seek work?
  •  No, the answer is not that there are more ‘criminals’ crossing over in the guise of workers now than there were in the past.
  •  There has been no difference in this regard. Most immigrants crossing a border are law-abiding and industrious workers, not ‘criminals’ — this remains the case today, as it was in the past.
  •  The answer lies not with the workers crossing over or even with those citizens who brand them ‘criminals’.
  •  The answer lies in the nature of capitalism, which no longer needs workers as much as it did in the past.
  •  Financial speculation has increasingly dwarfed international trade from the 1990s onwards. More than that, much of financial speculation is based on factors other than the productivity of a sector.
  •  When market speculators bend over their computer screens watching numbers flash by, they are not looking at the performance graphs of industries: they are just speculating with numbers.
  •  A world dominated by financial speculation does not need workers in two ways: financial speculators are not workers, no matter what they think of their ‘work’, and financial speculation does not depend on the production of workers.
  •  Capital transactions are no longer tied predominantly to industry, productivity or trade of goods — and hence, to workers.

Post-human future

  •  There are other aspects to this snowballing change. In academia, for instance, there is the trend to talk about ‘post-humanism’.
  •  Post-humanism has a respectable heritage. In fields like animal studies, it is often meant to suggest a world in which human beings do not occupy the centre.
  •  This is an interesting and necessary concept, for the earth has suffered much from our narcissism as a species and our inability to think of other animals as having biological rights too.
  •  But ‘post-humanism’ is mostly used in other ways: it is used to suggest a world after human beings, a world run by artificial intelligence.
  •  Inevitably, for those in power either in terms of a monopoly on wealth or a monopoly on knowledge a world of financial speculation leads to a ‘post-human’ world run by artificial intelligence.
  •  Once workers become redundant and numbers are sufficient, then, inevitably, one can think complacently of replacing human intelligence with artificial intelligence.
  •  In some ways, of course, much of financial speculation depends on exactly this: a kind of artificial intelligence, not human labour.

Way forward

  •  The reduction of workers to criminals is part of this change, and interestingly the solution is not just to insist on the right to work locally or even nationally.
  •  The insistence has to be ‘universal’ and global. Global political action is needed to ensure international working rights, linked to human status and not the caprice of state or capital.
  •  Otherwise, as the right to work can currently be ensured only by national governments, it will always be used to define other ‘foreign’ workers as actual or potential criminals, as Mr. Trump and his putative wall have set out to do.
  •  The right to work has become a selective right; today it is controlled by governments in tandem with corporations. Soon it might well become the monopoly of corporations.
  •  It is basically being used to criminalise those workers who are not allowed by nation-states or neoliberal capitalism or both the legitimate identity of a worker.

    Online Coaching for UPSC PRE Exam

    General Studies Pre. Cum Mains Study Materials

Prelims Questions:

Q.1) With reference to Janani Suraksha Yojana, onsider the following statements.
1. It aims to reduce maternal mortality by promoting institutional delivery.
2. Pregnant women are entitled for cash assistance under the scheme.
Which of the statements given above is/arecorrect?
(a) 1 only
(b) 2 only
(c) Both 1 and 2
(d) Neither 1 nor 2

Answer: C
Mains Questions:
Q.1) Global political action is required to reinforce the legitimate identity of a worker. Comment.