[Mb-civic] FW: Pilger / The Rise Of America's New Enemy / Nov 11
ernesto ciccarelli
chiosceola at hotmail.com
Sun Nov 20 08:22:13 PST 2005
>From: ZNet Commentaries <sysop at zmag.org>
>To: chiosceola at hotmail.com
>Subject: Pilger / The Rise Of America's New Enemy / Nov 11
>Date: Sun, 13 Nov 2005 18:59:26 -0800 (PST)
>
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>Today's commentary:
>http://www.zmag.org/sustainers/content/2005-11/11pilger.cfm
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>==================================
>
>ZNet Commentary
>The Rise Of America's New Enemy November 11, 2005
>By John Pilger
>
>I was dropped at Paradiso, the last middle-class area before barrio La
>Vega, which spills into a ravine as if by the force of gravity. Storms were
>forecast, and people were anxious, remembering the mudslides that took
>20,000 lives. "Why are you here?" asked the man sitting opposite me in the
>packed jeep-bus that chugged up the hill. Like so many in Latin America, he
>appeared old, but wasn't. Without waiting for my answer, he listed why he
>supported President Chavez: schools, clinics, affordable food, "our
>constitution, our democracy" and "for the first time, the oil money is
>going to us." I asked him if he belonged to the MRV, Chavez's party, "No,
>I've never been in a political party; I can only tell you how my life has
>been changed, as I never dreamt."
>
>It is raw witness like this, which I have heard over and over again in
>Venezuela, that smashes the one-way mirror between the west and a continent
>that is rising. By rising, I mean the phenomenon of millions of people
>stirring once again, "like lions after slumber/In unvanquishable number",
>wrote the poet Shelley in The Mask of Anarchy. This is not romantic; an
>epic is unfolding in Latin America that demands our attention beyond the
>stereotypes and clichés that diminish whole societies to their degree of
>exploitation and expendability.
>
>To the man in the bus, and to Beatrice whose children are being immunised
>and taught history, art and music for the first time, and Celedonia, in her
>seventies, reading and writing for the first time, and Jose whose life was
>saved by a doctor in the middle of the night, the first doctor he had ever
>seen, Hugo Chavez is neither a "firebrand" nor an "autocrat" but a
>humanitarian and a democrat who commands almost two thirds of the popular
>vote, accredited by victories in no less than nine elections. Compare that
>with the fifth of the British electorate that re-installed Blair, an
>authentic autocrat.
>
>Chávez and the rise of popular social movements, from Colombia down to
>Argentina, represent bloodless, radical change across the continent,
>inspired by the great independence struggles that began with SimOn
>BolÃvar, born in Venezuela, who brought the ideas of the French Revolution
>to societies cowed by Spanish absolutism. BolÃvar, like Che Guevara in the
>1960s and Chavez today, understood the new colonial master to the north.
>"The USA," he said in 1819, "appears destined by fate to plague America
>with misery in the name of liberty."
>
>At the Summit of the Americas in Quebec City in 2001, George W Bush
>announced the latest misery in the name of liberty in the form of a Free
>Trade Area of the Americas treaty. This would allow the United States to
>impose its ideological "market", neo-liberalism, finally on all of Latin
>America. It was the natural successor to Bill Clinton's North American Free
>Trade Agreement, which has turned Mexico into an American sweatshop. Bush
>boasted it would be law by 2005.
>
>On 5 November, Bush arrived at the 2005 summit in Mar del Plata, Argentina,
>to be told his FTAA was not even on the agenda. Among the 34 heads of state
>were new, uncompliant faces and behind all of them were populations no
>longer willing to accept US-backed business tyrannies. Never before have
>Latin American governments had to consult their people on pseudo-agreements
>of this kind; but now they must.
>
>In Bolivia, in the past five years, social movements have got rid of
>governments and foreign corporations alike, such as the tentacular Bechtel,
>which sought to impose what people call total locura capitalista - total
>capitalist folly - the privatising of almost everything, especially natural
>gas and water. Following Pinochet's Chile, Bolivia was to be a neo-liberal
>laboratory. The poorest of the poor were charged up to two-thirds of their
>pittance-income even for rain-water.
>
>Standing in the bleak, freezing, cobble-stoned streets of El Alto, 14,000
>feet up in the Andes, or sitting in the breeze-block homes of former miners
>and campesinos driven off their land, I have had political discussions of a
>kind seldom ignited in Britain and the US. They are direct and eloquent.
>"Why are we so poor," they say, "when our country is so rich? Why do
>governments lie to us and represent outside powers?" They refer to 500
>years of conquest as if it is a living presence, which it is, tracing a
>journey from the Spanish plunder of Cerro Rico, a hill of silver mined by
>indigenous slave labour and which underwrote the Spanish Empire for three
>centuries. When the silver was gone, there was tin, and when the mines were
>privatised in the 1970s at the behest of the IMF, tin collapsed, along with
>30,000 jobs. When the coca leaf replaced it - in Bolivia, chewing it in
>curbs hunger - the Bolivian army, coerced by the US, began destroying the
>coca crops and filling the prisons.
>
>In 2000, open rebellion burst upon the white business oligarchs and the
>American embassy whose fortress stands like an Andean Vatican in the centre
>of La Paz. There was never anything like it, because it came from the
>majority Indian population "to protect our indigenous soul". Naked racism
>against indigenous peoples all over Latin America is the Spanish legacy.
>They were despised or invisible, or curios for tourists: the women in their
>bowler hats and colourful skirts. No more. Led by visionaries like Oscar
>Olivera, the women in bowler hats and colourful skirts encircled and shut
>down the country's second city, Cochabamba, until their water was returned
>to public ownership.
>
>Every year since, people have fought a water or gas war: essentially a war
>against privatisation and poverty. Having driven out President Gonzalo
>Sánchez de Lozada in 2003, Bolivians voted in a referendum for real
>democracy. Through the social movements they demanded a constituent
>assembly similar to that which founded ChAvez's Bolivarian revolution in
>Venezuela, together with the rejection of the FTAA and all the other "free
>trade" agreements, the expulsion of the transnational water companies and a
>50 per cent tax on the exploitation of all energy resources.
>
>When the replacement president, Carlos Mesa, refused to implement the
>programme he was forced to resign. Next month, there will be presidential
>elections and the opposition Movement to Socialism (MAS) may well turn out
>the old order. The leader is an indigenous former coca farmer, Evo Morales,
>whom the American ambassador has likened to Osama Bin Laden. In fact, he is
>a social democrat who, for many of those who sealed off Cochabamba and
>marched down the mountain from El Alto, moderates too much.
>
>"This is not going to be easy," Abel Mamani, the indigenous president of
>the El Alto Neighbourhood Committees, told me. "The elections won't be a
>solution even if we win. What we need to guarantee is the constituent
>assembly, from which we build a democracy based not on what the US wants,
>but on social justice." The writer Pablo Solon, son of the great political
>muralist Walter Solon, said, "The story of Bolivia is the story of the
>government behind the government. The US can create a financial crisis; but
>really for them it is ideological; they say they will not accept another
>Chavez."
>
>The people, however, will not accept another Washington quisling. The
>lesson is Ecuador, where a helicopter saved Lucio GutiErrez as he fled the
>presidential palace last April. Having won power in alliance with the
>indigenous Pachakutik movement, he was the "Ecuadorian Chavez", until he
>drowned in a corruption scandal. For ordinary Latin Americans, corruption
>on high is no longer forgivable. That is one of two reasons the Workers'
>Party government of Lula is barely marking time in Brazil; the other is the
>priority he has given to an IMF economic agenda, rather than his own
>people. In Argentina, social movements saw off five pro-Washington
>presidents in 2001 and 2002. Across the water in Uruguay, the Frente
>Amplio, socialist heirs to the Tupamaros, the guerrillas of the 1970s who
>fought one of the CIA's most vicious terror campaigns, formed a popular
>government last year.
>
>The social movements are now a decisive force in every Latin American
>country - even in the state of fear that is the Colombia of Alvaro Uribe
>Velez, Bush's most loyal vassal. Last month, indigenous movements marched
>through every one of Colombia's 32 provinces demanding an end to "an evil
>as great at the gun": neo-liberalism. All over Latin America, Hugo Chavez
>is the modern Bolivar. People admire his political imagination and his
>courage. Only he has had the guts to describe the United States as a source
>of terrorism and Bush as Senor Peligro (Mr Danger). He is very different
>from Fidel Castro, whom he respects. Venezuela is an extraordinarily open
>society with an unfettered opposition - that is rich and still powerful. On
>the left, there are those who oppose the state, in principle, believe its
>reforms have reached their limit, and want power to flow directly from the
>community. They say so vigorously, yet they support Chavez. A fluent young
>arnarchist, Marcel, showed me the clinic where the two Cuban doctors may
>have saved his girlfriend. (In a barter arrangement, Venezuela gives Cuba
>oil in exchange for doctors).
>
>At the entrance to every barrio there is a state supermarket, where
>everything from staple food to washing up liquid costs 40 per cent less
>than in commercial stores. Despite specious accusations that the government
>has instituted censorship, most of the media remains violently anti-Chavez:
>a large part of it in the hands of Gustavo Cisneros, Latin America's
>Murdoch, who backed the failed attempt to depose Chavez. What is striking
>is the proliferation of lively community radio stations, which played a
>critical part in Chavez's rescue in the coup of April 2002 by calling on
>people to march on Caracas.
>
>While the world looks to Iran and Syria for the next Bush attack,
>Venezuelans know they may well be next. On 17 March, the Washington Post
>reported that Feliz RodrÃguez, "a former CIA operative well-connected to
>the Bush family" had taken part in the planning of the assassination of the
>President of Venezuela. On 16 September, Chavez said, "I have evidence that
>there are plans to invade Venezuela. Furthermore, we have documentation:
>how many bombers will over-fly Venezuela on the day of the invasion... the
>US is carrying out manoeuvres on Curacao Island. It is called Operation
>Balboa." Since then, leaked internal Pentagon documents have identified
>Venezuela as a "post-Iraq threat" requiring "full spectrum" planning.
>
>The old-young man in the jeep, Beatrice and her healthy children and
>Celedonia with her "new esteem", are indeed a threat - the threat of an
>alternative, decent world that some lament is no longer possible. Well, it
>is, and it deserves our support.
>
>
>
>
>
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