Third World: A Stereotype

third world starving child Third World: A Stereotype

When William Wallace, portrayed by Mel Gibson in the film ‘Braveheart,’ screamed “Freedom!” moments before he was decapitated, one can’t help but notice that the cause which the national hero of Scotland fought for is no different from the freedom causes that others likewise died fighting for, and still some are fighting for to this day.

Wallace was executed for treason after a trial on 23 August 1305. He was meted with what in England was a penalty once ordained for the crime of high treason. Wallace was ‘hanged, drawn and quartered.’ He was strangled by hanging ‘while he was still alive, emasculated, eviscerated and his bowels burnt before him.’ He was ‘beheaded, and then cut into four parts. His preserved head was placed on a pike atop London Bridge. His limbs were displayed, separately, in Newcastle upon Tyne, Berwick-upon-Tweed, Stirling, and Aberdeen.’ His crime of ‘high treason’ was uniting the Scots to overthrow English rule.

This is not a digression as much as Scotland is neither a Third World country. This is just another story of resistance and independence, two buzzwords that still buzz to this day so long as there is reason to resist foreign domination and demand national independence.

Politics

Many experts, as well as hangers-on to a semblance of expertise, have been wont to use the term Third World when referring to unrecognized freedom. What they actually mean is the state of political repression and poor recognition of political rights and civil liberties.

In other words, they have strung together the oft-abused term of ‘Third World’ with the concept of ‘freedom.’

The result is a stereotype.

The term Third World is actually and originally a Cold War nomenclature. The Cold War harbingers didn’t know what to do with those countries that neither aligned with the capitalist West (NATO bloc) nor with the Communist Soviet bloc of the East. From day one, Third World already figured out as a stereotype – amidst the other classification stereotypes of ‘West’ (free world) and ‘East’ (Communist bloc).

Other less imaginative but pretentiously creative things happened along the way, and so, Third World, today, is used to describe those developing countries of Africa, Asia, Latin America, and Oceania – which means that those who did not align themselves with the classification categories of the Cold War became known as Third World.

And because ‘West’ and ‘East’ have also become economic classifications, many poorer nations started to use the term Third World to describe themselves.

Today, the ‘Third World’ stereotype has come to mean a land of starving children and savage tribes.

Economics

Third World also means economically underdeveloped or still developing countries. That, we hear a lot about. The benchmark for comparison is the OECD or the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development, an international organization of some 30 countries that practice the principles of representative democracy and free-market economy. This group has christened itself as ‘developed countries’ because of their high-income economies.

Thus, ‘Third World’ countries are former imperialist colonies that didn’t know how to fend for themselves and establish their own nation-building and institution-building.

congolese soldiers Third World: A Stereotype

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