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What is Nationalism?

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    It's no secret that anarchists
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    don't like states.
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    In fact, we anarchists
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    are generally defined by our rejection of,
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    and opposition to state institutions,
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    such as governments, police, and prisons.
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    But while opposing these
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    physical manifestations of the state
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    is certainly an important part
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    of anarchist practice,
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    anarchist critiques of the state
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    go much further, and include
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    the underlying social relationships
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    and ideologies that have historically
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    been used to create states,
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    and to uphold their authority.
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    One of the most important
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    of these concepts is nationalism.
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    So what is it, exactly?
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    And what do anarchists have against it?
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    Well... basically
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    nationalism is a kind of social glue
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    that holds together people
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    of different ethnic, tribal, linguistic,
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    religious and cultural groupings
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    into a single defined population
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    linked to a specific geographic territory.
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    The problem with nationalism is not
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    necessarily that it it’s a glue -
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    there are plenty of examples
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    of organic nationalism, based on
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    shared culture, language and history,
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    and in fact, many anarchists have been
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    heavily influenced by,
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    and have even participated in
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    struggles motivated by nationalism,
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    such as the resistance waged
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    by Indigenous nations
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    against their colonial oppressors,
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    or the establishment, in 1929,
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    of the Shinmin Autonomous Zone
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    by Chinese, Korean and Japanese anarchists
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    fighting against Japanese imperialism.
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    The problem with nationalism lies in its
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    tendency to mask social contradictions
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    among a population,
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    thereby allowing for the reproduction
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    of hierarchies,
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    which in turn end up producing
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    a new state structure.
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    Which is another way of saying that
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    nationalism is a force
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    that groups people together in a way
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    that tends to maintain the division
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    of the human race into competing states.
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    In countries with strong
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    state institutions,
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    nationalism is more commonly referred to
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    as patriotism
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    and everyone is conditioned
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    from a young age to believe
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    that loving your country is one of the
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    most important, natural things you can do.
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    In school we are forced to stand
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    every morning for the national anthem
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    and taught a heavily sanitized version
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    of our nation's history.
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    We even celebrate its birthday every year.
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    ...with fireworks, no less.
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    Because nationalism is so ingrained
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    into our lives, customs and beliefs,
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    many people would be surprised to learn
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    that it is a relatively new thing.
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    While some countries, such as China,
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    have existed as a more or less
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    unified territory for thousands of years,
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    others, such as Italy,
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    have been around for less than 150.
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    And lots of states are even younger
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    than that.
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    For most of human history
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    nation states simply did not exist.
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    Instead, the world was split up
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    into city-states, ruled by kingdoms
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    and empires, whose borders
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    were in a constant state of flux.
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    Back then, most people lived simple lives
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    as farmers, and had very little contact
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    with what we now understand as the state.
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    And because languages were mostly
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    passed on orally,
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    many different dialects flourished
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    and existed side by side.
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    Although nationalism emerged
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    in different parts of the world
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    at different times,
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    the development of the modern nation-state
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    is often associated with
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    the early development of capitalism
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    and European colonial expansion
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    beginning in the 16th century.
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    The race to plunder the world of its land
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    and resources kicked off
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    an intense competition between
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    kingdoms in Europe,
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    leading to the proliferation
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    and gradual consolidation of states
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    with clearly defined borders.
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    In the so-called “New World”, settlers
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    from a variety of European nations
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    forged new collective national identities
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    born of the shared experience
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    of racial domination over
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    Indigenous nations
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    and enslaved Africans.
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    During the mid-19th century
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    many states first began introducing
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    centralized education systems,
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    further facilitating nationalist
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    indoctrination, and helping to
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    eliminate remaining linguistic
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    and cultural differences.
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    In extreme cases
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    such as the Residential Schools system
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    in so-called Canada,
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    this practice amounted to
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    full fledged genocide.
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    Not content with their pillage
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    of the Americas,
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    European colonialists carved up Africa
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    and the former Ottoman Empire
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    into arbitrarily defined states,
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    which in turn produced
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    nationalist strong-men
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    who brutally massacred linguistic
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    and ethnic minorities, such as
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    the Armenians and the Kurds
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    in the Middle East.
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    Nationalism relies on grand, unifying
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    narratives to bind populations together
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    in pursuit of a common destiny.
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    Whether this assumes the form
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    of the individualistic pursuit
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    of the so-called American Dream,
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    or the Nazis' pursuit of the Third Reich;
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    whether the heavily militarized
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    ethno-religious protectionism of Israel,
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    or the totalitarian self-reliance
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    of North Korea's Juche,
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    nationalism provides
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    an ideological framework
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    for the manipulation and social control
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    of large groups of people.
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    It provides a sense of
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    collective belonging
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    and unity of purpose,
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    while simultaneously helping to justify
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    the massive application of state violence
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    towards perceived “others”.
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    Human history is awash in blood
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    justified in the name of nationalism,
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    from ethnic cleansing and genocide,
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    to aggressive wars
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    launched in defense of abstract,
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    emotion-laden concepts
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    such as freedom
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    or the glory of the fatherland.
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    Rather than limiting ourselves
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    to the narrow perspective of nationalism,
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    anarchists put forward
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    the competing concept of internationalism.
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    This flows from the realization that
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    borders and nations
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    are artificial constructs
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    meant to divide us
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    and that struggles for freedom and dignity
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    waged anywhere in the world
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    are deserving of our solidarity
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    and support.
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    That rather than fighting
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    and dying in wars for the sake
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    of the rich and powerful,
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    oppressed people should unite
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    to wage war against our common oppressors.
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    And finally, that for
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    humanity to reach its full potential
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    and come together to confront the problems
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    that we face as a species
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    ...we require nothing less
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    than a global revolution.
Title:
What is Nationalism?
Video Language:
English
Duration:
06:14
Debianar edited English subtitles for What is Nationalism?
Umut Kara edited English subtitles for What is Nationalism?
Salva Con Nome edited English subtitles for What is Nationalism?
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subMedia-Heatscore edited English subtitles for What is Nationalism?

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