Een anti-fascistisch manifest over de vermoorde Chileense politiek activist en protestzanger Victor Jara

Desiree
Hellegers heeft een uitgebreid artikel geschreven over de door de
VS georganiseerde en geregisseerde coup tegen het socialistische
bewind van Salvador Allende op 11 september 1973 (de eerste 9/11).

Hellegers
begint haar artikel met de vraag op Facebook van haar vriendengroep waar zij zich bevonden
gedurende belangrijke gebeurtenissen als de 9/11 aanvallen op de Twin
Towers en de moord op John F. Kennedy in 1963. Ze vraagt zich af of
ze later op de huidige tijd zal terugkijken als een korte pauze in
het afzakken van de VS naar een ‘full blown’ fascistische staat (het
aantreden van Biden als VS president ziet ze dan als pauze*). Als dat gebeurt
zal ook de klimaatverandering verder worden aangejaagd door de VS,
wat overigens ook gebeurde onder Obama, die zelfs toestemming gaf
voor de bouw van een enorme kolencentrale aan de rand van een uiterst
belangrijk natuurgebied de Sundarbans dit over de grens met India in dit natuurgebied, op de kant behorend tot Bangladesh……… 

Onder Obama werd de
VS de op één na grootste steenkoolexporteur, de absolute nummer 1 is het als de VS zo
door de klimaatverandering geteisterde Australië dat nu nog 1
miljoen ton steenkool per dag exporteert en daar binnenkort nog een
fikse schep bovenop doet, als de nieuwste en grootste
steenkoolterminal ter wereld wordt geopend, waarvoor een zeekanaal dwars door het Groot
Barrièrerif werd gegraven…… Het is maar de vraag of Biden inderdaad een andere koers zal inslaan, immers ook hij is een marionet van de oliemaatschappijen, het militair-industrieel complex en de financiële maffia…….*

Ook
besteedt Hellegers aandacht aan de illegale oorlog van de VS tegen
het Noord-Vietnamese volk en bijvoorbeeld de rol van Henry Kissinger,
een uitermate smerige oorlogsmisdadiger die al lang in Scheveningen
gevangen had moeten zitten (na te zijn berecht door het
Internationaal Strafhof >> ICC)… Echter deze schoft, die
schunnig genoeg ook de Nobelprijs voor de Vrede kreeg, zal gewoon in
een bed buiten de gevangenis sterven, zoals zoveel witte
oorlogsmisdadigers……   

Hellegers wijst o.a. op de triomf van het huidige Chileense volk dat in een
referendum eiste dat de grondwet die door Pinochet in 1980 werd
opgesteld wordt vervangen door een nieuwe grondwet en waarmee men nu
bezig is deze op te stellen.

‘Terug
naar Chili van 1973’ en de bloedige coup van fascist,
massamoordenaar, verkrachter en martelbeul Pinochet, die zoals gezegd
werd gesteund door de VS (ofwel de CIA, zonder deze hulp was de coup mislukt!!).
Hellegers spreekt veel over de politiek activist, protestzanger en
schrijver Victor Jara, die eveneens werd vermoord na de bloedige
staatsgreep in 1973, samen met minstens 3.000 anderen, o.a. bestaande
uit intellectuelen, studenten, professoren, advocaten en politiek activisten.

Lees
het uitgebreide artikel van Hellegers en zegt het voort, de reguliere
media hebben amper aandacht voor de enorme invloed van de VS die
zoals gezegd ook de grondslag was voor de coup in het Chili van
1973….. (overigens heeft de VS voor en na die coup nog meer staatsgrepen
met wapens, organisatie en regie gesteund in Latijns Amerika, zoals
die in Guatemala, Honduras, Brazilië en die tegen de socialistische president
Morales van Bolivia….) In het artikel verder een vergelijking van Victor Jara met Martiun Luther King en een korte beschuwing over het ijskoude inhumane neoliberalisme, geïntroduceerd door de duivels Margareth Thatcher, de Britse ex-premier en C-acteur en VS president Ronald Reagan, een politieke ideologie die de meeste westerse landen schunnig genoeg nog steeds volgen….. (‘onze’ huidige valse premier Rutte stelt wel dat hij het neoliberalisme niet meer als leidraad neemt, echter dat is de zoveelste leugen van deze aartsleugenaar!!)

CounterPunch

January
1, 2021

Victor
Jara’s Hands: An Anti-Fascist Memoir-festo and Brief Personal
History of Neoliberalism

by Desiree
Hellegers

You can easily carbon
date your friends on Facebook based on where they were during any
major milestone in U.S. history. As a university professor teaching
now for decades at what we euphemistically call a “land grant”
university, many of my students these days were born after 9-11–into
the U.S.’s seemingly endless “War on Terror.” It’s a war that
some of their family members died in, but one that few of them seem
to know much about.

Last month, older
friends on Facebook who came of age in the 1960s were busy reflecting
on what they were doing when they heard the news that JFK had been
assassinated. Personally, I had only recently graduated from diapers
to plastic pants and was likely occupied with important matters like
trying to do the twist in front of the TV while my grandmother
clapped and sloshed Scotch all over her TV table. But like most
Americans who have not washed down decades of Rush Limbaugh with
great swigs of QAnon Kool-Aid, I can’t help but wonder how we will
look back at this moment in history. Is this the moment we turn the
tide, or is it a brief respite from the country’s descent into
full-blown fascism? The latter scenario would mean, of course, full
speed ahead into climate collapse, given that the U.S. military is
hands down the single largest carbon emissions machine on the planet,
and our collective dust speck is already close to the boiling point.

May you live in
interesting times. You got that right. These times are so interesting
that we’ve had a lame duck president holed up in the White House
consulting with his legal team from the Island of Malevolent Misfit
Toys about the possibilities for declaring martial law to overturn
the results of the election and it’s not the top story.

That stands to reason,
I guess, when you’ve got a pandemic death count equivalent of a
hundred 9-11s, and across the country bodies stacking up like
cordwood in overstuffed mobile morgue units.

It’s hard to sustain
the level of national alert so many of us felt during the run up to
the election and the vote count, when Trump’s
automatic-weapon-waving goon squads were busy battering on windows at
voting precincts or sky-writing “Surrender Gretchen” over the
Michigan State House. A meme was making the rounds at the time on
Facebook: American politics as Night of the Living Dead. Personally,
I was starting to feel like an insomnia-addled Lady Macbeth who’d
been mainlining Halloween candy or days, and as in all things, I
blamed my lovely spouse, who had shopped for Halloween candy like he
was stocking up for Y2K.

Like me, my spouse
knows how to brace for the worst, a skill we bonded over when we met
organizing against the second Gulf War. One of the biggest
misconceptions about the anti-war “movement,” if such a thing
exists right now, is that peace activists somehow hate veterans.
Since well before the war in Vietnam, the U.S. military has given
veterans critical insight into the American war machine, along with
heavy helpings of trauma and self-loathing. Some of my favorite peace
activists are veterans, my spouse chief and foremost among them. We
bonded organizing protests and staging a die-in in front of the
Portland federal building. It was one of those “what are you doing
after the die-in?” kinds of courtships.

I don’t remember
exactly when I began thinking of Victor Jara’s hands and how they’d
been crushed by Chilean soldiers in the early days of the
U.S.-sponsored Chilean coup in 1973. I do know, though, that as my
spouse and I took a left turn to drop our ballots off at our local
library, Victor Jara had been on both our minds. It wasn’t a total
coincidence, given that only a day or two before, on October 25,
Chileans had voted overwhelmingly in favor of drafting a new
constitution.

The referendum was a
concession wrenched from President Sebastian Piñera following a year
of street protests and civil unrest. The vote was a definitive
kiss-off
to the Chilean constitution of 1980
, enacted under the regime of
General Augusto Pinochet.

Living in the U.S.,
you’d never know that Chile had had its own national disaster on
September 11, nearly three decades before the U.S.

Not many Americans can
define neoliberalism, let alone know that on September 11, 1973, it
was ushered into Chile by U.S.-made tanks and at the butt of
U.S.-made guns—automatic weapons of the sort Trump’s “very
fine” friends never seem to tire of waving. And not at all unlike
the militarized Portland Police, and the BORTAC and Homeland Security
armies that spent all summer pounding and traumatizing friends of
mine in the streets of Portland, and spraying them with chemical
weapons
long ago judged too dangerous to use in war, the health
effects being so severe and long term.

It was on September
11, 1973, that Richard Nixon and his henchman Henry Kissinger swept
Pinochet to power as the front man for the U.S.-sponsored
“experiment” in neoliberalism. A folksinger-songwriter, often
referred to as “Chile’s Bob Dylan,” Victor Jara would be the
most visible of more than 3,000 Chileans executed by Pinochet’s
death squads in September, as the coup began. You can get a quick
overview of the horrors that the U.S. helped unleash on Chileans in
the 1970s by watching the 2019 Netflix documentary
Massacre
at the Stadium.

Shortly after
Pinochet’s reign of terror began, an estimated five thousand were
detained at a Santiago stadium—then named Estadio Chile, and since
renamed Estadio Victor Jara—and another twenty thousand at the
Estadio Nacional across town. Professors, students, musicians, farm
and factory workers were crowded shoulder to shoulder and sorted into
lines to live or die, to be interrogated, beaten, tortured, and/or
murdered. At Estadio Chile, more than seventy were executed on site,
while others were “disappeared.” Today a quote painted on the
back of the Estadio Nacional reads: “Un
pueblo sin memoria es un pueblo sin futuro
” – “A people
without memory are a people without a future.”

Jara grew up poor, in
a family of farmworkers, but went on to become a theater director and
teacher, and to achieve international visibility with songs like
“Manifesto,” which speaks to Jara’s understanding of art
as a critical tool in struggles for justice, as an instrument of
decolonizing resistance, of spiritual, material, and ecological
liberation.

I don’t sing for
the love of singing, /or because I have a good voice,” sang
Jara
, “I sing because my guitar/has both feeling and reason. It
has a heart of earth/and the wings of a dove….”

Jara’s music was
inspired by his mother Amanda Martínez’s love of folk music rooted
in her Indigenous Mapuche heritage; his music was also shaped by a
Catholic education that included a brief period in the seminary.
Jara’s music was embraced in the 1960s and ‘70s by American folk
heavies like Pete Seeger and Joan Baez. Arlo Guthrie and Holly Near
are among the American songwriters who have since written tribute
songs. In the run-up to the election of Allende, Jara’s version of
the song “Venceremos” or “We Will Overcome,” became the
anthem of Allende’s Popular Unity Coalition, and also figured
centrally in eyewitness accounts of Jara’s death. Pinochet’s
U.S.-supported forces beat and tortured him, smashing his wrists.

At
some point in the stadium, Jara reportedly sang to the other
prisoners “Venceremos,” a song he’d adapted with new lyrics
that had egged Allende on to victory. Before he was executed, shot
more than 40 times by Pinochet’s U.S.-funded forces, Jara wrote his
final song: “What horror the face of fascism creates!/They carry
out their plans with knife-like precision./Nothing matters to
them./To them, blood equals medals,/slaughter is an act of
heroism./Oh God, is this the world that you created?” 

 

No human cost was too
high to pay to usher in neoliberalism, to eviscerate the gains that
labor had made under Allende’s Popular Unity Coalition, and to
maintain a steady flow of cheap copper, fruit and fish to the U.S.
under the auspices of “trade liberalization.” The new
constitution passed under Pinochet’s dictatorship rolled back the
reforms instituted under Allende. It expanded the power of the
presidency and enshrined private property and corporate profits over
social needs; Pinochet rolled back taxes on corporations and the
wealthy, and eliminated a host of government services. State-owned
companies, public housing, education, health care, and pensions were
all privatized, turned into profit centers for corporations and the
wealthy. The constitution written under Pinochet limited reforms,
and the gap today between rich and poor in Chile is one of the
highest in Latin America.

Jara may be
technically dead, but if you do a bit of digging around on the
internet, you’ll see evidence of his long afterlife; hence the
title of a documentary about his impact on musicians in particular:
The
Resurrection of Victor Jara
.
Tens of thousands of hands have gone on playing Jara’s songs in the
nearly fifty years since his torture and murder in the stadium. Jara,
says Chilean musician Horacio Salinas, in the documentary, “could
create a ceremonial effect with his music.” On youtube, you can
find countless videos of musicians playing Jara’s songs, and songs
written in tribute to him, including my personal favorite, “Victor
Jara’s Hands,” by Joey Burns of the Tucson-based indie-rock
band Calexico, sung alternately in Spanish and English: “Songs of
the birds like hands/ call the earth to witness/ Sever from fear
before taking flight.”

And for the past year,
as across the streets of the U.S. Black Lives Matter activists have
demanded justice for George Floyd and the defunding of police
departments that consume the lion’s share of city budgets across
the country, Jara has been resurrected again and again–in an
all-star Chilean studio recording
–and on the streets of Chile.
At an October 25, 2019 march in Santiago with a crowd estimated at
more than a million, people sang together Jara’s anti-war anthem
“El Derecho De Vivir En Paz,” or “The Right to Live in Peace,”
while countless
people played along on the guitar
.

This past year,
workers in Chile have risen up again to demand a world in which
workers do more than just struggle to survive, one in which everyone
has a right to not just bread, but roses, music, and art.

Over the past year,
Chilean women have created their own distinctive, woman-centered
actions on the streets of Chile, with thousands collectively
performing the song “Un
Violador en Tu Camino,
” or “A Rapist in Your Path,” in a
public rite of resistance to rape culture and femicide.

The song was inspired
by the work of the renowned Argentinian-Brazilian feminist
anthropologist/bioethicist Rita
Laura Segato
. The song calls out the role of police and the
courts in perpetrating and perpetuating sexual violence that repeats,
on a smaller scale, the systemic rape and torture of women that
happened under Pinochet, and that is a central feature of fascism.

If the goal in
Chile—as it would be later in Iraq—was, as Naomi
Klein has argued
–to disorient or “shock” the country into
submitting to a radically different and patently exploitative
economic system, the system that was imposed was also more rigidly
patriarchal.  Sexual violence and degradation were integral
parts of Pinochet’s fascist playbook. But as Chileans battle the
legacy of Pinochet, this rite of feminist resistance, together with
other longstanding organizing, is propelling Chile to break new
ground internationally: Chile will be the first country in the world
with a constitutional assembly comprised equally
of women and men
.

I turned twelve the
month that Pinochet came to power, and I have no memory whatsoever of
hearing about the murder of Jara, the mutilation of his hands, or the
thousands of Chileans who were tortured or disappeared. Looking back,
I find this fact stranger for the fact that I grew up within miles of
the White House. And when I look back on growing up in two very white
suburbs on the edge of Washington D.C., it might as well have been
Apartheid South Africa, the lines of demarcation between the Black
inner city; Georgetown, where my father was a professor; and the
white suburbs, were so clear and stark.

My first inklings of
the Chilean coup came in 1976, when the political violence of the
Pinochet regime erupted in Washington, D.C. I was fifteen, and a
friend of my older sister was dating Pablo Letelier, the son of
Orlando Letelier, when the latter was blown to pieces in a
car bombing
, along with his co-worker Ronni Karpen Moffett.
Orlando Letelier had been a close associate of Allende and remained
until his death an outspoken critic of Pinochet, who was eventually
pegged for the bombing, though a fat lot of good that did.

By the age of fifteen
in 1976, I was not a complete newbie when it came to assassinations.
Just months before the Chilean Coup, in July of 1973, Colonel
Yosef Alon
, a 42-year-old an Israeli Air Force pilot and military
attaché, whose daughter Yael rode the bus with us to school in the
morning, was assassinated in their driveway.

But Alon’s
assassination was not the first to have entered the sphere of my
privileged white childhood. My guess is that would have been the
Yablonski murders on New Year’s Eve, 1969.

We attended a
parochial school at the time called The Little Flower School, which
made the news not too long ago as the grade school alma mater of
Brett Kavanaugh. I was eight and my sister was seven when we learned
that the in-laws of one of the teachers at Little Flower—“Mrs.
Yablonski”—had all
been mowed down
in their Pennsylvania home: Chip Yablonski, the
President of the United Mine Workers Union, his wife Margaret, and
their daughter Charlotte Yablonski.

I imagine this was
around the time I came home one day from school to find myself locked
out of the house, and when I banged on the window and peered inside,
I found my two older siblings had staged their own murder, knives
lying on the floor, a theatrical flourish of ketchup here and there.
Perhaps I’ve coped with my third-grade trauma by picturing myself
as a stony-faced critic who found the scene unconvincing, their
characters lacking in development.

The field of
Epigenetics assumes that stress is genetically transmitted. I don’t
need to know that my genetic fibers are somehow entangled in my
parents’ to understand that I’ve carried some of their trauma
into my own life. I grew up listening to—and, at times taking notes
on—my parents’ stories of trauma. My mother’s stories were
about growing up the child of a working-class single mother too poor
to raise her. She told stories about kids who accidentally jumped off
trains onto chainsaws, and about her experience dressing dead bodies
as a young student nurse on a deserted ward.

My father’s trauma
centered around the May 10, 1940, Nazi invasion of the Netherlands.
Barely a month short of his fourteenth birthday, he ended up lying in
a ditch next to his eighty-year-old grandmother, mortars flying,
trees bursting into flames overhead. His family narrowly made it
across the border before it closed. My father had four brothers,
including twins, one of whom, my Uncle Pierre, had suffered brain
damage from oxygen deprivation during delivery. My father lived with
the knowledge throughout his life that something as small as a hand
visibly shaking as a man pockets his papers, and they might have
landed in Westerbork or Auschwitz rather than in England, and his
brothers might have been medically tortured and dissected.

I know exactly where I
was when my father’s life ended on May 8, V.E. Day, 1979, just
outside Amsterdam. I was accompanying him on his lecture tour, the
chance to see Europe a high school graduation present. I was at my
uncle’s house, my father’s body still warm on the couch before
me, where he’d reclined after diagnosing his own heart attack. He
died just two days before the thirty-ninth anniversary of the Nazi
invasion of the Netherlands in 1940. The last destination I visited
with my father was Anne Frank’s “Secret Annex.” War, as I
learned on that trip, throws out shockwaves and unexploded
ordinance—both physical and emotional—that explode across
generations, and can shave decades off a single life.

While the “Neoliberal
Experiment” began in Chile in 1973 with tanks and guns—and on a
smaller scale in New York City with the manufactured financial crisis
of 1975—Reagan would become its American figurehead, its
presidential mad social scientist. I was in my second year at
Georgetown when Reagan was inaugurated, and I can remember exactly
where I was when Reagan was elected 40 years ago, on November 4,
1980. I was at the Republican election watch party at some tony D.C.
hotel, the details documented somewhere in a newspaper article buried
deep in my office closet.

In the fall of 1980, I
was in my second-year writing for the more liberal of Georgetown’s
two student newspapers,
The
Voice
.
Whether the story was assigned to me or I chose it out of some
perverse curiosity or out of an unshakeable conviction that
Republicans had better hors d’oeuvres, I can’t quite remember.
While I wasn’t the most savvy reporter at the time, I can say that
voting for Reagan was as unthinkable to me then as now. And if memory
serves, I covered the election party with all the rhetorical
gravitas
of a monkey throwing shit at their new zookeepers.

I would go on to
attend the inauguration in D.C., again out of the kind of curiosity
that one might feel toward newly
landed
Martians walking the red carpet from their space capsule. I was a
sophomore and busy running from one panicked deadline to the other,
but Reagan’s inaugural speech got my attention. “[A]mong all the
nations of the earth,” as Reagan
would have it
, “[The U.S. was] special…The freedom and the
dignity of the individual have been more available and assured” in
the U.S. “than in any other place on Earth,” Reagan claimed.

What I missed the
first time around, though, was his distillation of neoliberal
principles: The one barrier to the “individual liberty” of
citizen/workers in a country “without ethnic or racial divisions”
was government itself. “It is time,” Reagan proclaimed, “to
check and reverse the growth of government which shows signs of
having grown beyond the consent of the governed.” While Reagan
deftly tipped his hat to working people—to “men and women who
raise our food, patrol our streets, man our mines and our factories,
teach our children,” and on and on—for Reagan, as for Trump, the
joke was on working people.

The years I spent at
Georgetown in the wake of my father’s death provided a crash course
in the importance of the social safety net that Ronald Reagan was
hell bent on gutting. At the time, if I was somewhat oblivious to the
nuances of Reagan’s political agenda, it was likely because I was
occupied a good bit of the time with trying not to have a nervous
breakdown. My personal social safety net at the time consisted of
Social Security Survivor’s Benefits, four years of free tuition to
Georgetown–where my father had taught for more than a decade–and
something I never thought very much about having: white skin. My
father’s death sent my mother off her fragile rails, and within six
months of Reagan’s inauguration, during the summer of 1981, my
sister and I were homeless.

My sister and I
learned that summer that with white skin, student I.D.’s, and a
keen eye out for security guards, there are ways of getting by on a
college campus rent-free. At the time, I didn’t think much about
the role that whiteness played in stopping us from falling any
further. I was oblivious to the fact that the safety net we found in
sleeping in vacant dorms would not have been available to us had we
been Black or brown. As it was, there would be no cops, no Karens
staring skeptically at our student I.D.’s, no guns pointed in our
faces, no one asking if we were enrolled or if we’d paid summer
rent for the dorm rooms. That experience, together with my father’s
death, would radically remap my life for decades to come.

+++

When neoliberalism
arrived in Chile, Victor Jara and working class supporters of
Socialist President Salvador Allende were under no illusions about
whose benefits the coup would serve.

If neoliberalism was
brought into Chile with guns and tanks, in the U.S., it was done with
smoke and mirrors. Reagan was inaugurated forty years ago this
January on a platform based on the self-interested lies and
deceptions crafted by the so-called “Chicago Boys”­­­­­––the
architects of neoliberalism. Reagan greased his personal path to the
White House on the neoliberal snake oil of “Trickle Down Economics”
and Free
Market Fundamentalism
. And while Jimmy
Carter
had already gotten the ball rolling, Reagan would jump
start the neoliberal bait and switch transfer of funds from public
housing, education, and welfare, to policing, prisons, and endless
war.

Ronald Reagan was as
eager to shill for trickle-down economics and gutting
the social safety net
as he’d been for the House Unamerican
Activities Committee and the warmongers at General Electric.
Meanwhile, in the UK, Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher was happily
breaking the glass ceiling for women intent on dropping bombs on
babies and exploiting working families. On opposite sides of the
pond, Thatcher
and Reagan
were simultaneously slashing corporate taxes,
deregulating the financial industry—and setting the stage for waves
of future financial crises. And both of them were intent on breaking
labor
.

Though my siblings and
I were all given four years of free tuition, in the 1980s, you didn’t
have to have a scholarship—or a parent who was a professor—to
walk away from a four-year degree debt-free or close to it. In 1983,
the year I graduated, tuition at a public university barely topped a
thousand
a year
.But public universities had already been on Reagan’s hit
list in the 1960s when he was governor of California, and students at
Berkeley were busy mobilizing for free speech, civil rights, and an
end to the Vietnam War.

To Reagan, Berkeley
students were nothing more than unruly “welfare bums”; free
tuition was their dole, and Reagan was hell bent on sending them
back
to work
.”

Defunding higher
education and slapping students with debt was, Reagan understood, a
path to reign in “beatniks, radicals and filthy speech advocates….”
Today California spends more money incarcerating people than it does
educating them—from K-12 through university. In the U.S.
today, tuition at public universities is ten
times higher
than it was when I graduated in 1983. Inflation
counts for less
than a third
of the increase.

Over the past forty
years, public universities have been steadily transformed into
student debt delivery machines operated on the backs of debt-strapped
adjuncts. University presidents, who routinely make five times more
than governors, sell students—as “customers”—on the fiction
that History–along with Literature, Women’s Studies, Comparative
Ethnic Studies, Philosophy, and the Arts–are frivolous luxuries we
can no longer afford to fully fund. The Gipper might be pleased today
to see 18-22-year-olds signing off on documents they’d need MBAs in
finance to understand and then emerging as desperate and pliable
indentured servants for corporations. Even pre-COVID, 48% of
university students in the U.S. were at risk of, or already,
experiencing houselessness.

Historian Howard Zinn
observed, “If you don’t know history, it’s as if you were born
yesterday,” and that lack of knowledge is convenient for corporate
interests intent on red-baiting and enlisting workers to rail against
social programs and benefits that their own grandparents struggled
mightily for. I may have learned nothing while I was at Georgetown
about the U.S.’s role in the Chilean coup that killed Victor Jara,
but I did learn a few things about what can happen to white American
nuns who are labeled Communist sympathizers for getting too cozy with
Indigenous farmworkers in Central America struggling for some very
basic forms of justice.

In 1981, I stumbled
across a talk Daniel Berrigan was giving on campus. Berrigan, I’ve
long since learned was a rock star of the American peace movement. By
the early 1970s, Berrigan,
a Jesuit priest, poet, playwright, and professor, had made the FBI’s
Most Wanted List for burning draft files in the parking lot of the
Catonsville, MD draft board with homemade napalm in 1968, and then
going underground to dodge the charges so he could keep organizing
other actions.

Apologies, good
friends, for the fracture of good order, the burning of paper instead
of children,” Berrigan famously said of the action. The American
banality of evil in a nutshell.

On this particular day
in 1981, though, I knew nothing about Berrigan, who quickly
surrendered the floor anyway to a middle-aged Catholic couple, the
parents of one Jeanne Donovan, a “Maryknoll lay missioner.” And
the story the couple told went something like this: on December 2,
1980, this nice, idealistic young Catholic woman was raped
and murdered
, executed at close range—along with three nuns,
Ita Ford, Maura Clarke, and Dorothy Kazel. And suddenly Donovan’s
parents had a chilling political awakening, as they began to
understand the role that U.S. military advisors and U.S.-funded and
-trained death
squads
played throughout Central–and much of Latin–America in
repressing labor organizing and movements for social justice.
Donovan’s parents were extremely convincing. I couldn’t come up
with any plausible communist plot that would explain these two
straight-laced Catholic squares having to talk about the rape and
murder of their daughter.

If the 1980 crimes
against the nuns and Donovan occurred in the final month of Carter’s
administration, the perpetrators knew that it would be left to Reagan
to answer for it. It would be Reagan’s job to rationalize the rape
and murder of nuns as acceptable collateral damage in the U.S.’s
holy war against Communists. The chief spinner of malevolent tall
tales about Donovan and the nuns would be a professor of political
science at Georgetown, Reagan’s newly appointed ambassador to the
U.N.: Jeane Kirkpatrick. Kirkpatrick is remembered as a “principal
architect
” of the bloodbath the U.S. helped fund and unleash
throughout Central America.

Questioned by
reporters, Kirkpatrick was eager to put the matter to rest, to drive
rhetorical nails into coffins that held the bodies of Donovan and
nuns that had been dragged out of the ground by ropes around their
ankles. The nuns, Kirkpatrick told
TheTampa
Tribune
,
“were not just nuns. The nuns were also political activists.”
They were aligned, she
claimed
, with guerillas of the Farabundo Marti National
Liberation Front—the FMLN.

I have another
somewhat fonder Kirkpatrick-related memory from that same Spring
semester at Georgetown, one in which Kirkpatrick is standing at a
podium delivering a commencement address and, slowly graduating
seniors begin to rise and quietly turn their backs on her. Their
message was clear, impressive, and unapologetic: Kirkpatrick didn’t
deserve an honorary degree, and Georgetown had done them a disservice
by pretending otherwise. What Kirkpatrick did, in fact, deserve–the
student action clearly conveyed
–was to be tried as a war
criminal at the Hague.

There’s a famous
quote from a Brazilian archbishop named Dom Helder Camara that
encapsulates the distinction between charity and social justice:
“When I give food to the poor, they call me a saint; when I ask why
the poor have no food, they call me a Communist.” Union organizing,
demands for the redistribution of stolen Indigenous lands, and
anything else that threatened the profits of U.S. corporations would
be labelled—and battled– under Reagan as part of an international
Communist threat orchestrated by Cuba and the Soviet Union.

By the Fall of ‘81,
having had my own brief and very privileged run-in with
houselessness, I started volunteering at shelters in D.C. That
experience gave me a small window into the

ways in which poverty
served up daily reminders to D.C.’s Black residents of just how
disposable they were to the city’s white elite and any god they
might construct in their own image. Forty years of neoliberalism and
gentrification have only intensified Black poverty in D.C. And
poverty, coupled with the daily toll of racism in the U.S., can shave
years–or decades­­–off a life. Today white privilege in
Washington, D.C. translates into seventeen additional years of
living.
Seventeen
years
.

In 1981, the “Great
Communicator” was busy cranking up his racist propaganda machine to
rally low income white voters against their own best interests.
Reagan managed to sell a sizable portion of the white working class
on the patently obvious lie that the majority of welfare recipients
were not only Black but living as “queens.
It turns out that all kinds of white folks would happily collaborate
in slashing benefits they were desperately going to need in the
future that Reagan’s administration was setting in motion–one in
which jobs would become the U.S’s main global export.

The Gipper”
happily picked up the mantle of Nixon’s War on Drugs and ran with
it. He stoked terror at the prospect of Black crack “fiends”
running amok in inner city war zones, and SWAT teams began invading
and terrorizing Black neighborhoods. As Michelle Alexander explains
in
The
New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Color Blindness
,
Reagan put the U.S. squarely on the path to becoming the global
leader in locking people up. Prisons and militarized policing at home
and abroad would begin sucking up enormous amounts of money that
could have gone to housing, health care, and public education.

As expensive as
in-state college tuition is these days, the annual cost of a prison
bed in most states is equivalent to
four
years of in-state college tuition
.
In 2017 in California, the cost of a
single prison bed
exceeded the cost of a year’s tuition and
living expenses at Harvard.

Prisons and immigrant
detention facilities generate huge profits for a tiny elite, while
brutalizing everyone else, including the people
who work there
.  But Nixon, Kissinger, and Pinochet were all
well aware that once people caught on to the swindle, the bait and
switch trickle-down-free-market government-for-the-corporations game,
there was a good chance they would need guns, tanks, and plenty of
tear gas to hold back the rebellion.

Predictably one of the
first casualties of the “neoliberal Experiment” would be people
living in public housing. They would increasingly land on city
streets and sidewalks, and the lucky ones in shelters like the ones I
worked at in Seattle in the mid ‘80s. Between 1978–midway through
the Carter administration–and 1983, midway through Reagan’s first
term, the HUD budget was slashed by nearly three quarters. It went
from
“$83
billion

to a little more than
$18
billion

(in 2004 constant dollars) and shelters opened throughout the United
States.”

No administration to
date­–Democrat or Republican–has made a serious move to
restore the budget to its level in 1978, which is why today,
prisons—along with military bases—are now by far the country’s
largest supplier of public housing.

And so, decades into
the U.S.’s “neoliberal experiment,” it’s not unusual in
Portland, LA. or Seattle to see walkers and wheelchairs next to tents
on the street. And the real human misery—the economic and housing
fallout–from COVID-19 has yet to fully register. In 2019, 117
people
shuffled off their mortal coils on the streets and
sidewalks of D.C.  In L.A., 1039
died on the street
, no bed to cushion their aching bones, no roof
overhead, no privacy, no sanitation, no dignity.

If speeches by Martin
Luther King, Jr. were high school seniors, hands down, the one voted
least likely to be read by American school children would be his 1967
sermon “Beyond
Vietnam: A Time to Break the Silence
.”

As radical as the
“military industrial complex” might sound the first time
Americans hear it, the term wasn’t the demon spawn of Karl Marx, or
the Weather Underground. President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s speech
writer coined the term in the
farewell speech
he wrote for him.

This was in 1961, back
when the orderly succession of putatively democratically elected
presidents was a given in the U.S., no matter how many coups
Eisenhower and the
Dulles Brother
s had busied themselves orchestrating in Guatemala,
Iran, Indonesia, the Philippines, and God–and historians–only
know where else.  Jack and Jackie and their Camelot myth-making
press machine were about to sweep into the White House, followed by
more military advisors and troops into Vietnam.

MLK would paint the
consequences of the military industrial complex in far starker, more
vivid, human and urgent terms than Eisenhower. The U.S., Dr. King
seems to have suggested, was a war junkie–and it was a given that
war and racism went hand in hand. The Vietnam War, King argued, was
poisoning the country with racism and hatred:

This business of
burning human beings with napalm, of filling our nation’s homes
with orphans and widows, of injecting poisonous drugs of hate into
the veins of peoples normally humane, of sending men home from dark
and bloody battlefields physically handicapped and psychologically
deranged, cannot be reconciled with wisdom, justice, and love.

The sniper fire that
cut King down exactly a year later to the day—on April 4, 1968 in
Memphis—likely said as much about his 1967 speech as it did his
support for Memphis Sanitation workers. In his 1967 speech King
famously compared the war in Vietnam to a “Demonic destructive
suction tube” that vacuumed up funds that might have otherwise gone
to LBJ’s “War on Poverty.”

If you want to get a
really good idea of how much war just cost the U.S. in the time it
took you to read this article, check out the National Priorities
Project. The military budget for 2020 alone at $738
billion
, , would be enough to provide “24.6 million [year-long]
Hospital Stays for COVID-19 Patients,” “20.96 million [four year
] Scholarships for University Students,” or “23.65 million People
receiving $600 weekly unemployment insurance payments for 1 Year.”
There’s plenty of money. It’s just helping the super-rich, who
are profiting at all our expenses.

King condemned in no
uncertain terms the massive aerial spraying of the defoliant Agent
Orange as akin to Nazi medical experimentation. “What do [the
Vietnamese] think as we test out our latest weapons on them,” asked
King, “just as Germans tested out new medicine and new tortures in
the concentration camps of Europe?” Today in the U.S., the test
subjects are the kids in Detroit drinking water contaminated
with lead
, while Nestles is pumping, bottling, and profiting to
the tune of 400
gallons a minute
of fresh Michigan water; the Water Protectors at
Standing Rock drenched for months with pepper spray, tear gas, and
reportedly other chemical agents, along with water in freezing
and subzero temperatures
; the Black Lives Matter activists
sprayed—sprayed along with hundreds of houseless people—all
summer on the streets of Portland with chemical
weapons
banned for use in war; the BIPOC, elderly, and people
with disabilities, dying
at vastly higher rates
of COVID-19.

And meanwhile, Vietnam
is witnessing the third generation born with Agent Orange-related
health effects, from missing eyes and limbs to spinal bifida and
severe intellectual disabilities. The Middle East is littered with
depleted uranium, cancer rates are soaring, and babies are born with
a wide range of “congenital
anomalies
.”

By 1967, King had
struck up a friendship with the Vietnamese Buddhist monk Thich Nhat
Hanh. And by ‘67, King, like every other major organizer in the
Civil Rights Movement, had been pegged by the FBI as a Communist.
Make of it what you will, it seems likely to me that given enough
time on earth, King and Jara might have had long talks, written songs
together, formed a fast and deep friendship. In his song “Derecho
De Vivir En Paz”–or “The Right to Live in Peace”–released
on his 1971 album, Jara wrote of “Indochina… the place/beyond the
wide sea,/where they ruin the flower/ with genocide and napalm.”

He and King were
definitely on the same page about the Vietnam War and so much more.

Feminists, in
particular, have aptly spoken of our collective relationship to Trump
as akin to domestic or intimate partner violence, with Trump a
gaslighting batterer. But as metaphors go, battering and gaslighting
are also fitting descriptions of the Chicago Boys’ neoliberal Magic
Trick— brought into Chile, and later the Middle East, with guns and
tanks. It’s the magic trick ordinary Americans have watched this
year, as we’ve been fleeced of taxes that have gone to fatten the
unimaginable wealth of a handful of billionaires, and to endless
weapons and wars that have made the U.S. the hands down leader of the
global arms trade. Martin Luther King, Jr. warned us in 1967 that “A
nation that continues year after year to spend more money on military
defense than on programs of social uplift is approaching spiritual
death.” Fifty years later, at the end of the Trump presidency, we
seem to be rapidly approaching garlic and wooden stake territory.

Still too many
Democrats are breathing a sigh of relief now that the
Batterer-in-Chief has been handed his eviction papers, and they are
looking to Biden as our collective white knight, our national
pater
familias
.
But anyone who knows anything about the dynamics of battering will
tell you that the myth of the White Knight is a racist and
patriarchal set up for repeating the cycle of abuse. We’re sitting
now on the razor’s edge of fascism, and fascism isn’t interested
in electoral cycles. We can’t count on having another four years to
sort the situation out.

The RootsAction “No
Honeymoon for Biden
” campaign, embraced by Nina Turner,
recognizes the urgency of the situation and would go a long way
toward undoing the damage done by fifty years of neoliberalism.  It
would shift funds from militarism and mass incarceration to universal
healthcare and a more inclusive, multi-racial “Green New Deal”
that would fund free higher education. The campaign also calls for a
$15 federal minimum wage and for Biden to cancel student debt across
the board. Research has shown that wiping out existing student debt
would be shot
in the arm
for the economy. We need to pull back from our
domestic and global cycle of battering and make government work for
working people if we are going to stop a free fall into fascism and
climate chaos.

Finally, there are a
lot of lessons the U.S. could draw from the Chilean fight against
fascism and the legacy of Pinochet. The global spark that Las Tesis
set off this past year with street performances that drew thousands
of women to witness collectively to their shared experience of sexual
harassment and assault is a testimony to the power of art to mobilize
resistance and speak truth to power. And the immortal life of Victor
Jara–his presence this past year on the streets of Santiago­,
where thousands of hands fluttered across guitars­­–testifies
to the power of art to preserve history even in the face of guns,
tanks and bullets bent on wiping it out.

Now, more than ever,
we need to demand reinvestment in the arts—from K-12 to higher
education. To paraphrase the quote Woody Guthrie famously scrawled
across his guitar: we need art to kill fascism. What better reminder
than the hollow man in the White House of the frustration life
without art generates? We need art to foster empathy, to remind us of
our collective humanity, to preserve in our national memory records
of those who stood for justice, and those who collaborated to
undermine it. We need art to preserve history, to sustain and
energize us, to give us courage for the long struggle ahead.

Dedicated to the
memory of Roxane Elizabeth Roberts (November 5, 1952-December 24,
2018).

Desiree Hellegers
is a co-founder and affiliated faculty of the Collective for Social
and Environmental Justice at Washington State University Vancouver.
and a member of the Socialist-Feminist Old Mole Variety Hour
Collective on KBOO, Portland, Oregon’s community-supported radio
station.

=====================================

*
‘Beetje dom’ om te geloven dat de situatie in de VS en haar
buitenlandbeleid zal veranderen met oorlogsmisdadiger en
mensenrechtenschender Biden…… Bovendien zit Biden in de zak van
de financiële maffia en daarmee in die van de oliemaatschappijen,
het militair-industrieel complex, de farmaceutische maffia en andere
grote misdadige bedrijven >> hoe kan je ook maar enige
verandering verwachten van zo’n figuur??!!! Toevallig werd vanmorgen op de BBC gemeld dat een aantal grote bedrijven en banken hun steun stoppen aan republikeinen die achter Trump blijven staan, ofwel deze bedrijven kopen de politiek niet alleen voorafgaand aan de verkiezingen, maar doen dat doorlopend, hoe kan je dan nog spreken van een democratie, als de politici volledig in de zak zitten van bedrijven….?? (om nog maar te zwijgen over het belemmeren van de stembusgang voor een groot aantal VS burgers)

Zie ook: ‘Met de winst van Biden is het fascisme in de VS bepaald niet weggestemd‘ (en zie zeker de links in dat bericht over de ‘geweldige’ of beter gezegd gewelddadige oorlogsmisdadiger Joe Biden)

Feest in Chili: fascistische grondwet verdwijnt voor een nieuwe!!

Chili groot aantal (zwaar) gewonden bij voortdurende protesten‘ 

Protesten Chili en Ecuador: geweld tegen demonstranten gesteund door massamedia‘ (en zie de links in dat bericht)

Chili, de protesten en de verslaggeving‘ (en zie de links in dat bericht, o.a. over het Amazonewoud en de strijd van burgers tegen oliemaatschappijen, maar ook over de situatie in Brazilië en Venezuela)

Chili en de gestolen baby’s, alweer met een ‘mooie rol’ van de rk kerk‘ 

Venezuela is nog lang niet verslagen door de VS

Pinochet (ex-dictator Chili) werd 20 jaar geleden gearresteerd in Londen

9/11: de VS heeft niets geleerd……

VS buitenlandbeleid sinds WOII: een lange lijst van staatsgrepen en oorlogen……….

List of wars involving the United States

VS: openlijke militaire oefening met terreurgroep in Syrië……

NAVO gaat VS helpen in Zuid-Amerika terreur uit te oefenen: Colombia lid van de NAVO………

VS commando’s vechten o.a. in Midden- en Zuid-Amerika, aldus het VS ministerie van oorlog………

Chileense fascisten vragen rk kerk om vergeving voor vreselijke misdaden begaan onder Pinochet bewind……

De VS, een duivels imperium, dat achter haar psychopathisch moordende troepen staat??

De war on drugs is veel dodelijker dan over het algemeen gedacht

Chili 11 september 1973

VS vermoordde meer dan 20 miljoen mensen sinds het einde van WOII……..

CIA 70 jaar: 70 jaar moorden, martelen, coups plegen, nazi’s beschermen, media manipulatie enz. enz………

CIA en 70 jaar desinformatie in Europese opiniebladen…………

Voor meer berichten over de steenkoolcentrale in de Sundarbans, vul deze naam in op het zoekvlak rechts bovenin deze pagina. Dat geldt ook voor andere namen en instanties die genoemd woorden in het artikel van Hellegers (de ruimte voor labels is wat mij betreft te klein, t.w. 140 tekens)

Feest in Chili: fascistische grondwet verdwijnt voor een nieuwe!!

Gisteravond was het groot feest in de Chileense hoofdstad Santiago, zo meldde BBC World Service vandaag in het nieuws van 3.00 u. In een referendum stemde maar liefst 79% van de bevolking voor een nieuwe grondwet, daar de bestaande door de fascistische Pinochet junta werd geschreven……

A cardboard figure depicting former Chilean President Salvador Allende is seen on the roof of a car after people voted during a referendum on a new Chilean constitution, in Valparaiso, Chile October 25, 2020 Reuters image caption: The old constitution dates back to the era of Gen Pinochet, who overthrew President Allende, whose cardboard figure was paraded through the streets of Valparaiso*

Men reed gisteravond door de straten o.a. met een afbeelding van de door de fascisten met hulp van de CIA vermoordde democratisch gekozen president Salvador Allende. Deze president werd vermoord door de Pinochet junta, tijdens de machtsovername door die bloedige en zeer wrede junta, e.e.a. op 11 september 1973 (ja een eerdere 9/11 ramp en ook deze werd voorbereid en geregisseerd door de CIA)…….. Bij die coup werden een groot aantal mensen vermoord, opgepakt, verkracht en op andere manieren doodgemarteld……

Nu is het gelukkig feest in Chili!! Hier beelden van gisteravond uit de Chileense hoofdstad Santiago:

De protesten begonnen in 2019 en brachten na 1 maand meer dan 1 miljoen mensen op straat tijdens de grootste demonstratie ooit in Chili, tijdens de protesten kwamen meer dan 30 mensen om het leven…… Veel deelnemers aan het feest gisteravond prezen de dapperheid van de jongeren die de protesten begonnen……

People react to the results of a referendum on a new Chilean constitution in Santiago, Chile, October 25, 2020 Reuters image caption: The referendum was one of the key demands made by protesters

De vraag in het referendum was of de Chilenen een nieuwe grondwet wilden en wie deze zou moeten opstellen.

Met die nieuwe grondwet, die de bevolking van Chili middels grote demonstraties heeft afgedwongen, wil men meer gelijkheid en een betere verdeling van de welvaart voor elkaar krijgen, dit in het nu economisch meest welvarende land van Zuid-Amerika, toegang ook voor de armsten tot de gezondheidszorg, onderwijs en betaalbare goede huisvesting. 

Laten we hopen dat alles zich ten goede zal keren in Chili, immers het (rechtse) Chileense leger is nog steeds een machtsbastion van betekenis….. Maar de eerste enorme stap is gedaan, daarom wil ik bij deze de Chileense bevolking feliciteren met dit geweldige resultaat!! 

* Het commentaar onder deze foto spreekt boekdelen: The old constitution dates back to the era of Gen Pinochet, who overthrew President Allende‘, niets over het feit dat e.e.a. gebeurde met grof geweld en met voorbereiding, regie en hulp van de CIA…… De foto’s heb ik overgenomen van een BBC bericht op de site van die zogenaamde onafhankelijke zendgemachtigde, zegge en schrijven 1 keer wordt er in dit bericht gesteld dat de regering Pinochet een dictatuur was…… Ach ja, ook de BBC deed mee aan het ophemelen van oorlogsmisdadiger en neoliberale hoerenmadam Thatcher, een grote vriend van Pinochet….. Waar de Labourregering Blair deze oorlogsmisdadiger liet ontsnappen naar Chili nadat hij in Groot-Brittannië werd behandeld voor een kwaal……. Ongelofelijk…….. Hier de link naar dat BBC bericht: ‘Jubilation as Chile votes to rewrite constitution‘ Ik heb destijds ‘s nachts (op 3 september 2000) voordat GB Pinochet liet ontsnappen, een bericht gestuurd aan Jack Straw, destijds minister van BuZa in GB, twee dagen later kreeg ik een dik pak papier van hem, waarin een schrijven van zijn hand met o.a. verontschuldigingen, maar verder stelde niet anders te hebben kunnen doen…..

Voor meer berichten over Chili, Salvador Allende, fascisten, Thatcher en/of Pinochet, klik op het betreffende label, direct onder dit bericht.

Protesten Chili en Ecuador: geweld tegen demonstranten gesteund door massamedia

Bij
de protesten in Chili zijn intussen meer dan 1.500 demonstranten
gearresteerd en zijn 19 mensen omgekomen…. Deze protesten kwamen
opgang nadat de regering de tarieven voor de metro verhoogde, echter
dat was de spreekwoordelijke druppel voor de studenten, arbeiders en het arme
deel van het volk, om massaal de straat op te gaan….. 

Afbeeldingsresultaat voor Media Whitewashes Neoliberal Repression in Chile and Ecuador

De regering
zet het leger in tegen demonstranten en dat in een land waar de
fascistische junta onder Pinochet een enorm aantal studenten,
vakbondsleiders en politici van links heeft gemarteld, verkracht en vermoord, dit nadat een coup
een eind maakte aan het democratisch gekozen bewind van Salvador Allende, een coup
georganiseerd en geregisseerd door de CIA, dit tijdens de eerste 9/11
in het Chili van 1973….. Allende werd tijdens de coup vermoord……..

Afbeeldingsresultaat voor Media Whitewashes Neoliberal Repression in Chile and Ecuador

Het leger op straat, alsof martelbeul, verkrachter en massamoordenaar Pinochet nog leeft….

Ondanks
het voorgaande berichtten de massamedia in de VS en de rechts
geregeerde landen in Latijns-Amerika positief op de repressie tegen
de demonstranten, die in die media worden afgeschilderd als links
gewelddadig tuig…. Na de protesten van afgelopen vrijdag waarbij
meer dan een miljoen mensen de straat opgingen, heeft president
Sebastian
Piñera
de regering naar huis gestuurd en
beloofd tegemoet te komen aan de protesten…. Ja nu wel, waar
blijkt dat een overgrote meerderheid van het volk het inhumane en
ijskoude neoliberalisme meer dan zat is en de demonstranten ook het
vertrek van deze Piñera
eisen……

Afbeeldingsresultaat voor Media Whitewashes Neoliberal Repression in Chile and Ecuador

Hetzelfde
geldt voor de protesten in Ecuador, waar de oorspronkelijke volkeren
het land lam legden en een overwinning boekten in de bescherming van
haar gebieden in het oerwoud, waar men verder wilde gaan met de olievervuiling van leefgebieden, door nieuwe olieboringen en
winningen en daarnaast andere commerciële activiteiten te ontwikkelen als bomenkap voor de houtindustrie en landbouw…..

Wat
een verschil met de berichtgeving in die media als het om Venezuela
gaat, terwijl de demonstranten daar wel degelijk zwaar geweld
gebruikten tegen de politie en de ambtenarij….. Deze demonstranten
werden en worden verheerlijkt als waren het helden uit onze 80 Jarige Oorlog,
sterker nog: het aangewende geweld werd toegeschreven aan de politie
en het leger, terwijl het leger niet eens aanwezig was… Ook nadat
de waarheid uitkwam en bleek dat gewelddadige elementen zelfs vanuit
het buitenland werden aangevoerd, hoogstwaarschijnlijk door de CIA,
een terreurorganisatie die al zo vaak heeft gehakt met dezelfde bijl,
heeft men geen rectificaties geplaatst, nee men houdt de leugen
gewoon overeind….. Een situatie verdacht veel lijkt op de zaken
die plaatsvonden en vinden in Syrië en Oekraïne……

Het
volgende artikel werd geschreven door Lucas Koerner, waar hij m.n. ingaat op de verschillende manieren van verslaggeving, werd eerder
geplaatst op
Fairness
and Accuracy in Reporting

en door mij overgenomen van Geopolitic Alerts:

Media
Whitewashes Neoliberal Repression in Chile and Ecuador

By: Lucas
Koerner
 On: October
14, 2019
4,
2019

Afbeeldingsresultaat voor Media Whitewashes Neoliberal Repression in Chile and Ecuador

Paarden (en honden) inzetten tegen mensen, meer dan schunnig en alleen thuishorend in een fascistische dictatuur…
Santiago (FAIR)
– Throughout Latin America and the Caribbean, people are rising up
against right-wing, US-backed governments and their neoliberal
austerity policies.

Currently
in Chile, the government of billionaire Sebastian Piñera has
deployed the army to crush nationwide demonstrations against
inequality sparked by a subway fare hike.

In
Ecuador, indigenous peoples, workers, and students recently brought
the country to a standstill during 11 days of protests against the
gutting of fuel subsidies by President Lenin Moreno as part of an 
IMF
austerity package
.

One
might expect these popular rebellions to receive unreservedly
sympathetic coverage from international media that claim to be on the
side of democracy and the common people. On the contrary, corporate
journalists frequently describe these uprisings as dangerous
alterations of “law and order,” laden with “violence,”
“chaos” and “unrest.”

This
portrait contrasts remarkably with coverage of anti-government
protests in Venezuela, where generally the only violence highlighted
is that allegedly perpetrated by the state. In the eyes of
Western elite opinion, Venezuela’s middle-class opposition have
long been leaders of a legitimate popular protest against an
authoritarian, anti-American regime. Poor people rebelling against
repressive US client states are considered an unacceptable deviation
from this script.

Crackdown’
in Venezuela

Corporate
journalists have never been able to contain their enthusiasm for the
right-wing Venezuelan opposition’s repeated coup attempts, which
are regularly cast as a “pro-democracy” movement
(
FAIR.org5/10/19).

In
2017, Venezuela’s opposition-led four months of violent,
insurrectionary protests demanding early presidential elections,
resulting in 
over
125 dead

including protesters, government supporters, and bystanders. It was
the opposition’s fifth major effort to oust the government by force
since 2002.

Despite
the demonstrations featuring attacks on journalists, lynchings and
assassinations of government supporters, they were depicted as a
“uprising” against “authoritarianism” (
New
York  Times
6/22/17),
a “rebellion” in the face of “the government’s crackdown”
(
Bloomberg5/18/17)
and a David-like movement of “young firebrands” facing down a
sinister regime (
Guardian5/25/17).
Reporters frequently attributed the mounting death toll to state
security forces (
France
24
7/21/17;
Newsweek,
 6/20/17Washington
Post
6/3/17),
while generally ignoring opposition political violence reported to be
responsible for 
over
30 deaths
.

The
pattern was repeated in January when deadly clashes broke out across
the country in the days before and after opposition leader Juan
Guaidó declared himself “interim president” with the US’s
encouragement. Corporate outlets described the events as a “violent
crackdown” (
Independent1/24/19),
with security forces “spreading terror…to target critics”
(
Reuters2/3/19)
and “soldiers and paramilitary gunmen…hunting opposition
activists” (
Miami
Herald
, 1/27/19). 

International journalists based their accounts largely on
pro-opposition sources, suppressing inconvenient details that
complicated their Manichean narrative, such as the 
fact that
some 38% of protests were violent and at least 28% featured armed
confrontations with authorities.

Unlike
in Chile and Ecuador, corporate outlets have consistently vilified
Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro—who won 6.2 million votes, or
31% of the electorate last year—as an “authoritarian”
(
FAIR.org4/11/198/5/19)
or a “dictator” (
FAIR.org4/11/19),
justifying the latest coup effort.

Chile
‘Riots’


In
recent days, Chileans have taken to the streets in mass
demonstrations against the Piñera administration, following a
further increase in Santiago’s exorbitant subway fare.

Beginning
as high school student-led protests, the movement has escalated into
a full-scale rebellion against the 
savagely
unequal neoliberal order
,
prompting the government to militarize the streets and impose a
curfew for the first time since the Western-backed Pinochet
dictatorship (1973–90).

Despite
the largest protests since the return of democracy, the international
corporate media have largely referred to them in pejorative terms
such as “riots” (
CNN10/19/19CNBC10/21/19),
“violent unrest” (
New
York Times
10/19/19)
and “chaos” (
NPR10/19/19Vice10/21/19),
providing a moral casus belli for war against the people.

Revealingly,
no major outlets have described the government’s brutal repression
as a “crackdown,” nor called into question the legitimacy of
Piñera, who was elected in 2017 with the backing of 26% of
registered voters.

It’s
true that international journalists are beginning to reference
allegations of human rights violations reported by Chile’s 
National
Human Rights Institute
,
including, as of October 23, 173 people shot and 18 dead, among them
at least 
five presumably
at the hands of authorities.

However,
the victims of state violence in Chile have not received anywhere
near the amount of attention international outlets have dedicated to
protester deaths in Venezuela, where the dead have been movingly
profiled (
New
York Times
6/10/17BBC5/14/17)—provided
they were not 
lynched
by the opposition
.

In
two emblematic cases, Manuel Rebolledo, 23, died on October 21 after
being 
run
over
 by
a navy vehicle near Concepción, while Ecuadorian national Romario
Veloz, 26, was shot dead the day before at a protest in La Serena.
Neither men have been mentioned by name in Western press reports.

It
would appear that the only worthy victims, in the eyes of US
corporate journalists, are those that have propaganda value from the
standpoint of Western foreign policy interests. Reporters
spontaneously empathize with neoliberal technocrats like Piñera,
even as they occasionally chide them for “excesses.”

Mr.
Piñera said that he is mindful of the broader grievances that fueled
the unrest… But he seemed to have difficulty coming to grips with
the real source of the population’s frustrations,” the 
New
York Times 
(10/21/19)
sympathetically observed, before going on to note that the president
has declared “war” against his own people.

The
paper of record suggested that Chileans might find the imposition of
martial law “jarring,” given that “the military had killed and
tortured thousands of people just decades ago in the name of
restoring order.” But despite the article being headlined “What
You Need to Know About the Unrest in Chile,” the 
Times did
not find it relevant to mention anywhere that state security forces
were currently maiming and killing demonstrators in the streets, and
allegedly
 torturing
detainees
.

The
dominant narrative fed to the public is that Piñera’s government
has been “inept” in responding to the protests
(
Economist10/20/19Reuters10/21/19New
York Times
10/21/19),
but never criminal or cruel.

No
Western newspapers have published scathing op-eds calling Piñera a
“dictator” and demanding their government take action to “restore
democracy,” as they have done regularly in the case of Venezuela
(
FAIR.org, 4/11/19).
Rather, they counsel the billionaire president to address
“inequality,” barring any reference to what is increasingly
coming to resemble 
state
terror
 (New
York Times
10/22/19Guardian10/23/19Bloomberg10/23/19).

Corporate
journalists continue  to whitewash Piñera, describing him as
“center-right”
(
Guardian10/21/19CNBC10/19/19Reuters10/21/19)
and concealing his personal 
ties to
murderous dictator Augusto Pinochet and those of his 
top
cabinet members
.

Police
in Chile blast protesters. Flickr | Carlos Andrés Gamero Esparza
(leondeurgel)

Ecuador
‘Violence’

Corporate
journalists have shown only marginally more sympathy to Ecuador’s
recent indigenous-led uprising against IMF-imposed austerity
measures, frequently described in headlines as “violent protests”
(
CNN10/8/19Guardian10/8/19USA
Today
10/9/19Financial
Times
10/8/19).

President
Moreno has yet to be labeled by the international media as
“authoritarian,” despite ordering soldiers to repress
demonstrators in the streets, imposing a curfew, suspending basic
civil liberties and arresting rival politicians.

Since
betraying his campaign promise to continue his predecessor Rafael
Correa’s left-wing policies. and embracing the oligarchy he ran
against, Moreno has become the darling of Western elite opinion
(
FAIR.org2/4/18).

Like
in Chile, corporate outlets have whitewashed Moreno’s
vicious 
crackdown,
which left seven dead, around a thousand arrested and a similar
figure wounded. However, corporate outlets have been even more
nefarious in obfuscating the origins of the crisis in Ecuador.

As
Joe Emersberger has recently exposed for FAIR (
10/23/19),
Western journalists’ favorite lie is that Moreno “inherited a
debt crisis that ballooned as his predecessor and one-time mentor,
former President Rafael Correa, 
took
out loans for a major dam
,
highways, schools, clinics and other projects” (
New
York Times
10/8/19).
In fact, the country’s debt-to-GDP level remains low, though it has
increased slightly under Moreno, due not to public works but to his
pro-elite policies.

Corporate
outlets have for the most part admitted that Moreno has presented no
evidence to back his ludicrous claims of Correa and Maduro supporters
orchestrating the protests; nonetheless, they have, with few
exceptions (
DW10/14/19Reuters10/12/19),
shamefully ignored Moreno’s draconian persecution of Correaist
politicians (including elected representatives), which he justifies
on the basis of the very same conspiracy theory. This coverage
contrasts sharply with the red carpet treatment regularly provided to
Venezuela’s US-friendly opposition politicians, regardless of how
many coups they perpetrate (
Reuters4/30/19LA
Times
4/30/19Guardian2/6/19).

Western
Media Gendarmerie

It
is not coincidental that Western journalists stand aghast at the
violence of the excluded and exploited in Chile and Ecuador while
rationalizing that spearheaded by Washington-backed opposition elites
in Venezuela.

This
bias has nothing to do with any actual amount of looting or arson.
Rather, it is the eruption of the racialized poor into polite
bourgeois society’s technocratic body politic that is viscerally
violent to local neocolonial elites and their Western
professional-class backers.

Ecuador’s
protests are the latest in a long line of anti-neoliberal uprisings,
which brought down three presidents between 1997 and 2005.

The
rebellion exploding in Chile is the largest in over a generation,
evidencing the terminal legitimacy crisis of the “low-intensity
democracy” crafted by Pinochet to maintain the neoliberal model
imposed at gunpoint. The Chilean uprising has genuinely terrified
elites, leading the right-wing president to wage war on his own
people. At stake is not just the stability of a key Western ally, but
more crucially, neoliberalism’s ideological narrative that has
upheld Chile as a “
success
story
.”

Corporate
journalists will most likely continue to muffle themselves vis-a-vis
repressive US client states, in the same way that they systematically
conceal the impact of Washington’s sanctions on Venezuela
(
FAIR.org6/26/19),
which are estimated to have already 
killed
40,000 Venezuelans
 since
2017.

If
the first casualty of war is truth, its self-anointed purveyors in
the international media have much blood on their hands indeed.

This
post originally ran on 
Fairness
and Accuracy in Reporting
.
Featured photo: Flickr | Carlos Andrés Gamero Esparza (leondeurgel)

Lucas
Koerner

Lucas
Koerner is an editor and political analyst at Venezuelanalysis.com.

RELATED: Chile
Demonstrations: State Violence Leads to 1,420 Arrests & 11 Deaths

=======================================

Zie ook:

Chili, de protesten en de verslaggeving

Waorani volk heeft 500.000 handtekeningen nodig voor het redden van hun woud en manier van leven vs. oliewinning

Het beschermen van de planeet is verworden tot een misdaad, veelal bestraft met moord

BlackRock investeert in vernieling Amazonewoud, BlackRock ook verantwoordelijk voor suïcides door microkredietnemers

Stop olieboringen in het Amazonegebied van het Waorani volk

Britse oliemaatschappij Amerisur bedreigt het bestaan van het Siona volk in het Colombiaanse oerwoud

Bolsonaro 8 maanden president: nu al 84% meer bosbranden in het Amazonewoud……

Mensenrechten- en milieuactivisten worden massaal vermoord in Brazilië en Colombia, waar het laatste land NAVO bases heeft…….

VS heeft Hondurese speciale eenheden getraind die protesten tegen een waterkrachtcentrale gewelddadig hebben neergeslagen……

Berta Cáceres voorvechter gelijke rechten en milieuactivist vermoord in Honduras

Hondurese activiste ontvoerd en vermoord (alweer…), met instemming van de VS………

Hillary Clinton mede verantwoordelijk voor moord op Berta Cáceres………..

Door VS gesteunde bewind in Honduras heeft de staat van beleg afgekondigd……..

Zie wat betreft Venezuela:

Venezuela is nog lang niet verslagen door de VS

VS heeft beslag gelegd op 5 miljard dollar van Venezuela voor medicijnaankopen

Venezuela: ultieme couppoging van Guaidó mislukt

Trump vermoordde al 40.000 Venezolaanse burgers

VS dreigt Rusland, China en Iran met geweld vanwege hulp aan Venezolaanse volk……

The Monroe Doctrine is Back, and as the Latest US Attack on Cuba Shows, Its Purpose is to Serve the Neoliberal Order‘ (een artikel van CounterPunch)

Venezuela: in geheime zitting in Washington is gesproken over een militaire inval

VS legt nog meer sancties op aan de bevolking van Venezuela, Cuba en Nicaragua

Venezolaanse regering treft nieuwe regeling voor hulpgoederen van het Rode Kruis, ‘onafhankelijk NOS’ brengt alweer fake news

Venezuela: onafhankelijke journalisten ontmaskeren leugens over dit land bij presentatie voor de VN

Beste bezoeker, dat was het voor deze dag, morgen meer berichten. Maak er zo mogelijk een mooie dag van.

Chili, de protesten en de verslaggeving

Sinds een paar weken is het hommeles in Chili (BBC World Service sprak vanmorgen over een paar dagen…), dit na verhoging van de prijs voor het metro gebruik.

Afbeeldingsresultaat voor demonstrations Chile

Echter er is veel meer aan de hand in Chili dan de reguliere media je vertellen, zo is er een steeds grotere verontwaardiging over het minimumloon, van omgerekend rond de € 400,– per maand, terwijl Chili een duur land is te noemen, zeker in Zuid-Amerikaanse verhoudingen….. Ook de grote ongelijkheid is een doorn in het oog van de demonstranten, die aanvankelijk vooral uit studenten en scholieren bestonden, maar die intussen ook arbeiders en werklozen tot de gelederen kan rekenen…..

Zoals gezegd Chili is een duur land, waar Chili ook een rijk land genoemd kan worden (zeker en alweer in Zuid-Amerikaanse verhoudingen), waar de prijzen voor levensonderhoud hoog zijn en je snapt het al, met een inkomen van € 400,– per maand kan je simpelweg niet rondkomen in Chili……. Verder moeten daar nog de (te) hoge prijzen voor de gezondheidszorg en studie bij genoemd worden, prijzen die voor de gewone Chileen niet te betalen zijn (opvallend, hetzelfde is in Nederland aan de hand)………

Afbeeldingsresultaat voor demonstrations Chile

Je kan wel raden dat ook de pensioenen voor het grootste deel van de bevolking veel te laag zijn, zo laag dat veel ouderen in schulden zitten en afhankelijk zijn van kerk en/of familie om nog enigszins rond te kunnen komen…..

Overigens is ook de socialistische partij van Chili verantwoordelijk voor deze onlusten, daar de vorige president, Michelle Bachelet, niets heeft gedaan aan de zaken die hiervoor zijn genoemd, exclusief de prijsverhoging voor de metro natuurlijk (Bachelet was president van 2006 tot 2010 en van 2014 tot 2018).

Salvador Allende, de socialistische president (democratisch gekozen), die op 11 september 1973 werd vermoord door het Chileense leger en de CIA, draait zich om in zijn graf…… 11 september 1963, de eerste 9/11 waarin de CIA de hand had….

Gisteravond zijn er 3 mensen omgekomen bij de rellen in Santiago en de regering heeft de noodtoestand uitgeroepen in Santiago en nog een paar grote steden….. Zo was er gisteravond al een avondklok ingesteld in Santiago, echter dat weerhield de demonstranten niet de straat op te gaan.

De Volkskrant wist vanmorgen te melden dat de prijsverhoging voor de metro niet zullen worden teruggedraaid. terwijl BBC World Service vanmorgen om 7.30 uur (CET) al wist te melden dat president Sebastián Piñera heeft aangekondigd dat die prijsverhoging niet door zal gaan…… Ach ja, de reguliere media……

Zie ook:

Protesten Chili en Ecuador: geweld tegen demonstranten gesteund door massamedia‘ (en zie de links in dat bericht)

Beste bezoeker, dit was het voor vandaag, morgen meer berichten. Maak er al het even mogelijk is een mooie dag van.

9/11: de VS heeft niets geleerd……

Jon
Jeter schreef op MintPress News een opiniestuk, waarin hij niet
alleen de ‘aanslagen’ op de Twin Towers in 2001 aanhaalt, maar zich
vooral richt op de andere 9/11, die van 1973 in Chili…. Chili waar de CIA
met hulp van massamoordenaar, oorlogsmisdadiger en Nobelprijswinnaar
voor de Vrede* (ha! ha! ha!) Henry Kissinger, de fascist, moordenaar,
verkrachter en martelbeul Pinochet middels een bloedige staatsgreep
aan het bewind hielpen…….. De democratisch gekozen** president Salvador Allende werd vermoord en daarmee begon
de grote ellende voor de Chilenen……

30.000
mensen werden gevangen gehouden en gemarteld, naar schatting 5.000
mensen werden vermoord door het fascistische Pinochet regime…..

Lees
in het volgende artikel hoe Pinochet de economie vakkundig naar de
kloten hielp, zodat in 1982 de buitenlandse schuld van Chili was
opgelopen tot 16 miljard dollar, in hedendaags waarde gaat het om een
bedrag 42 miljard (‘billion’) dollar….. Tegen 1989 was het
gemiddelde loon sinds 1973 met 40% gedaald……. In diezelfde tijd
verdubbelde de armoede tot 40% van de bevolking….. Het aantal
mensen met slechte huisvesting was tegen die tijd ook 40% van de
bevolking, een stijging met 13% sinds het laatste jaar dat
Allende regeerde…… Het aantal calorieën dat arme mensen dagelijks
gebruikten liep vanaf 1973 terug van 2.019 naar 1.629 in 1989…….

‘Gelukkig’
beeft Nederland nadat Joop de Uyl weg was, goede zaken gedaan in
Chili; ‘waar een klein land al niet groot in kan zijn………’ 

Inderdaad de VS heeft niets geleerd van de nasleep die 9/11 liet zien, integendeel deze grootste terreurentiteit op aarde is ‘voortvarend’ doorgegaan met het op grote schaal uitoefenen van terreur in landen waar het niets te zoeken heeft, e.e.a. heeft intussen aan fiks mer dan 2 miljoen mensen het leven gekost……. (al moet nog wel opgemerkt worden dat de aanslagen van 9/11 door de VS zelf zijn geregisseerd >> zie o.a. de links onderaan dit bericht….) 

A
Tale of Two 9/11s and the Lessons America Chooses Never to Learn

After
9/11, Bush famously asked “Why do they hate us?” The answers
might have been found on another 9/11, 28 years before, when the U.S.
in Chile took a decisive step down the road to empire.

by Jon
Jeter

Sept. 11

NEW
YORK —
 Of apartheid South Africa’s myriad atrocities,
one of the most medieval was a system in which white settlers plied
their farmworkers with alcohol in lieu of wages. Known by the
Afrikaans word for tot, or drink, the 
dop not only
kept workers docile — and wages low — but, in fostering
widespread and chronic dependency, the practice bordered on
enslavement, manacling workers to their addictions and hence their
oppression.

A
progressive white South African lawyer told me that shortly after
voters of all races went to the polls to repeal apartheid in 1994, he
managed to purchase a Cape Town vineyard as part of his lifelong
ambition to create award-winning wines. His first order of business
was to professionalize the operations; so, soon after he closed the
deal to buy the vineyard, he gathered up all 15 farmworkers and
announced that he would end the dop and pay their
wages, in full.

Seven
walked off in disgust, he said.

This
story is the perfect metaphor for America in the aftermath of the
terrorist attack that occurred 17 years ago today. An entire nation
stared into the abyss on 9-11 and, like a sloppy drunk waking up in a
pool of his own vomit, saw its image reflected in the wreckage as
though for the first time. But rather than facing our demons, owning
our failures, and acknowledging the outsized role we’ve played in
the suffering of others, we simply sidled up to the bar for another
drink. Like the inebriates who walked off a South African farm, ours
is an Empire in denial and poor health, doubling down on our most
self-destructive impulses, stumbling towards an inevitable, ugly end.

In
an interview months after 9-11, Osama bin Laden warned:

The
U.S. government will lead the American people — and the West in
general — into an unbearable hell and a choking life.”

 A
9/11 less remembered

Ironically,
if we could pinpoint the date that United States took its first drink
it would almost certainly be September 11, 1973, as General Augusto
Pinochet’s troops stormed Chile’s presidential palace. Organized
by Henry Kissinger and the CIA, the coup targeted Chile’s popular
socialist President Salvador Allende, who the Nixon administration
feared was another Fidel Castro in-the-making. As the attack
unfolded, workers in the basement of a Santiago publishing house shop
were hard at work printing what was to be the military junta’s
500-page economic plan.

Believing
himself to be a messianic figure, Pinochet put his faith in a coterie
of young Chilean advisers who had trained under Milton Friedman at
the University of Chicago’s School of Economics, the academic
vanguard of neo-classical economics. With his bloody crackdown on
dissidents, artists, college students and union leaders, Pinochet’s
repressive regime censored the press, banned labor unions and
political opposition parties, murdered an estimated 5,000 leftists,
tortured another 30,000 and handed the “Chicago Boys” – as they
came to be known – a blank check to remake Allende’s nationalized
economy, and return the country at South America’s southwestern
edge into the Empire’s orbit.

Nearly
15 years before economists coined the phrase “Washington
consensus,” and a decade before Reagan’s trickle-down policies
began dismantling the New Deal in the U.S., Chile was the guinea pig
for anti-Keynesian macroeconomic policies designed to fatten
corporations’ share of global wealth. Pinochet slashed duties on
imports, from an average tariff rate of 94 percent in 1973 to 10
percent by 1979. He privatized all but two dozen of Chile’s 300
state-owned banks, as well as utilities and entitlements such as
social security. By 1979, he had cut public spending almost in half
and public investment by nearly 14 percent. He lowered taxes,
restricted union activities and returned more than a third of the
land seized under Allende’s land-reform program.

      Chile Coup Anniversary 

A
woman with a tattoo of Chile’s late Salvador Allende places a
candle in front of Allende’s statue in Santiago, Chile, Sept. 11,
2018. Esteban Felix | AP

Monetary
policy was liberalized on two important fronts. First, Pinochet
allowed “hot money” — speculation on the currency market — to
flow in and out of the country without obstacle. And in 1979 he fixed
the exchange rate for Chile’s peso, requiring the central bank to
keep $1 in reserve for every 39 pesos printed. This kept the bank
from merely printing money to pay bills and curbed an inflation rate
that had soared to nearly 400 percent annually under Allende.

Pinochet’s
reforms worked like a fast-acting virus. A recession in 1975 caused
Chile’s economy to shrink by 13 percent, its greatest decline since
the Great Depression. The recovery that followed was fueled largely
by foreign cash, which poured into the country as investors gobbled
up utilities and stashed money in Chile’s currency markets. The
prices of imports fell sharply; between 1975 and 1982 the number of
foreign cars sold in Chile tripled. Domestic manufacturing shriveled
by 30 percent. Domestic savings plummeted. Wages fell, and the income
gap between rich and poor widened by a factor of 50.

By
1982, Chile had accumulated $16 billion in foreign debt — nearly
$42 billion in today’s dollars — and foreign investment
represented a quarter of the country’s gross domestic product. The
money flowing into the country flowed out just as easily, to pay
debts and bills for imported goods and through capital flight as
investors soured on Chile’s currency market. The economy had
overheated and was now in a meltdown.

With
a third of the workforce unemployed and unrest growing, by 1984
Pinochet began to “reform the reforms,” the Chilean economist
Ricardo Ffrench-Davis said in a 2003 interview.

Pinochet
allowed the peso to float and reinstated restrictions on the movement
of capital in and out of the country. He introduced banking
legislation, and ratcheted up spending on research and development
efforts through quasi-governmental institutions and other
collaborations between the public and private sectors — creating,
as one example, the billion-dollar salmon farming industry out of
whole cloth.

Still,
Chile’s economic woes persisted. By 1989, real wages had declined
by 40 percent from 1973, and the percentage of the population living
in poverty had doubled to 40 percent. The number of Chileans without
adequate housing had also climbed to 40 percent, up 13 percentage
points from Allende’s final year in office. The country’s poor
consumed 1,629 calories per-day-on average, compared to 2,019 in
1973.

Ill-fed,
and ill-housed, Chileans began to refer to the cadre of advisers not
as the Chicago Boys but as Si, Cago; Voy — which
translates to “Yes, I shit; I go.”

A
plebiscite in 1989 ended Pinochet’s rule and Chileans gradually
began to reorganize their economy. Since 1990, it has consistently
been Latin America’s strongest performer. But in its violent,
fascist crackdown on the left and its fealty to Wall Street bankers,
Chile under Pinochet presaged the entirety of the United States’
global class war against workers — in Argentina and Zambia; Flint
and Venezuela; Philadelphia to Greece; Haiti, Iraq, Ukraine,
Honduras; Russia in its post-Cold war transitional period, and South
Africa after the collapse of apartheid.

The
two 9/11s 28 years apart bracket the United States’ descent into
madness. Much like the vintner’s abolition of the dop,
the downing of the Twin Towers should’ve triggered some
soul-searching in the United States, and an examination of our
accumulation of stuff through the dispossession of
other human beings. As we mourn the losses on that Indian-summer day
in 2001, what we need to contemplate is redemption, not revenge —
and how we might begin to rejoin a human community that we’ve
wronged, again and again and again.

God
Bless America. . . . and everyone else too.

Top
Photo | Chrissy Bortz of Latrobe, Pa., pays her respects at the Wall
of Names at the Flight 93 National Memorial in Shanksville, Pa. after
a Service of Remembrance, Sept. 11, 2018, as the nation marks the
17th anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks. Gene J. Puskar | AP

Jon
Jeter
 is
a published book author and two-time Pulitzer Prize finalist with
more than 20 years of journalistic experience. He is a former
Washington Post bureau chief and award-winning foreign correspondent
on two continents, as well as a former radio and television producer
for Chicago Public Media’s “This American Life.”

Republish
our stories! 
MintPress
News is licensed under a Creative Commons
Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 International License.

==============================

*   Kissinger kreeg die prijs godbetert in 1973, het jaar van de coup in Chili….


** In feite werd Allende vermoord door de VS, het land dat altijd de bek vol heeft met democratie brengen……..

Zie
ook:

9/11 forum geblokkeerd, de waarheid mag niet gezegd worden……..

9/11: de leugens over smeltend staal van de Twin Towers

9/11 getuigen totaal genegeerd door media (en overheid)

9/11 Israël nogmaals aangewezen als hulp- bij het neerhalen van de Twin Towers en gebouw 7 van het WTC

9/11: Al Qaida tjokvol agenten van Saoedi-Arabië, VS, Israël en Egypte

9/11 voorafgegaan door CIA visa fraude…..

9/11: Palestijnen hebben niet gejuicht voor de aanslagen op de Twin Towers

9/11 eerst de explosie waarna de ‘vliegtuigen’ de Twin Towers raken

9/11: professor stelt dat WTC-gebouwen gecontroleerd zijn gesloopt, de bewijzen daarvoor zijn overweldigend

Pearl Harbor (7 december 1941) en de aanslagen van 9/11 hebben veel overeenkomsten………

9/11 de verklaring van de VS overheid aangaande het instorten van WTC gebouw 7 is vals……….

911 samenzweringstheorie wint nog meer aan geloofwaardigheid……

911, de beurs en geschiedvervalsing…….

9/11, WikiLeaks, Prism en ‘complottheorieën’

911, een ‘leuk’ feit

Wat betreft de agressie van de VS en de staatsgreep in Chili, zie:

VS buitenlandbeleid sinds WOII: een lange lijst van staatsgrepen en oorlogen……….

List of wars involving the United States

VS: openlijke militaire oefening met terreurgroep in Syrië……

NAVO gaat VS helpen in Zuid-Amerika terreur uit te oefenen: Colombia lid van de NAVO………

VS commando’s vechten o.a. in Midden- en Zuid-Amerika, aldus het VS ministerie van oorlog………

Chileense fascisten vragen rk kerk om vergeving voor vreselijke misdaden begaan onder Pinochet bewind……

De VS, een duivels imperium, dat achter haar psychopathisch moordende troepen staat??

De war on drugs is veel dodelijker dan over het algemeen gedacht

Chili 11 september 1973

VS vermoordde meer dan 20 miljoen mensen sinds het einde van WOII……..

CIA 70 jaar: 70 jaar moorden, martelen, coups plegen, nazi’s beschermen, media manipulatie enz. enz………

CIA en 70 jaar desinformatie in Europese opiniebladen…………

NAVO gaat VS helpen in Zuid-Amerika terreur uit te oefenen: Colombia lid van de NAVO………

Hoorde afgelopen zaterdag op VRT 1 dat de NAVO officieel Colombia als partner laat toetreden tot haar organisatie…… De NAVO was al enige tijd aanwezig in Colombia, maar blijkbaar was dit niet genoeg voor deze uiterst agressieve, om niet te zeggen terroristische organisatie…….

De VS speelt al dik meer dan 100 jaar een uiterst smerige rol in Zuid- en Midden-Amerika, blijkbaar moet de NAVO, die in feite onder direct bevel van de VS staat, ook meehelpen de neoliberale status quo (en daarmee het neokolonialistisch stelen van o.a. grondstoffen door de VS) te bewaren en te promoten met geweld……

Uiteraard zal de NAVO meewerken met de VS als deze grootste terreurentiteit op aarde zal besluiten dat Maduro van Venezuela met geweld moet worden afgezet, ofwel meedoen aan één van de grootste oorlogsmisdaden die bestaan: een soeverein land met een democratisch gekozen regering aanvallen….. Waar de VS al jaren een economische oorlog voert tegen Venezuela, de oorzaak dat er zo weinig te krijgen is in dit land, zoals een enorm tekort aan medicijnen….. Dit is een vorm van ongelofelijke terreur, immers de gewone bevolking blijft hierdoor verstoken van belangrijke medicijnen, zoals die tegen kanker…… De VS wil met deze boycot de bevolking dwingen zich te verzetten tegen de eigen regering, anders gezegd een smerig staaltje chantage waar je ijskoud van wordt……

Met de NAVO eenmaal in Columbia, is de stap richting Bolivia snel gezet, zeker omdat daar de democratisch gekozen socialistische president Evo Morales aan de macht is en zoals je weet: daar heeft de VS een enorme hekel aan, aan het socialisme…… Immers veronderstel dat de grote onderlaag in de VS wakker wordt, ziet hoe het ook kan, haar kont tegen de krib gooit en zich niet langer als derderangs burgers, of beter gezegd als uitschot laat behandelen………. Vandaar dat de VS elk succesvol socialistisch regime in Zuid- en Midden-Amerika met zoveel geweld bestrijdt, neem de bloedige staatsgreep op 11 september 1973 in Chili, tegen de socialistische regering Allende, een coup georganiseerd en geregisseerd door de CIA……. (al voerde de VS ook daaraan voorafgaand een economische oorlog tegen Chili…)

Je snap dat wij daarmee niet alleen via de belasting opdraaien voor de illegale oorlogen die de VS in het Midden-Oosten voert (en waarvan de gevolgen de kiem van toekomstige ellende al in zich dragen, zie Libië en Malie, of terreur op de straten in de EU), maar we vanaf nu ook zullen bijdragen aan het onderdrukken van de grote onderlaag in Latijns-Amerikaanse landen……. Latijns-Amerika daar de bemoeienis van de VS en daarmee de NAVO zich ook zal uitstrekken naar Midden-Amerika, waar de VS al zolang de beest heeft uitgehangen……

Hoelang laten wij nog toe, dat onze opvolgende regeringen ons leger inzetten om grootschalige terreur uit te oefenen, of deze te steunen?? Dan durft men gvd nog te zeggen dat we meer moeten bijdragen aan defensie in het belang van terreurorganisatie NAVO! Een organisatie waarvan de landen gezamenlijk meer uitgeven aan defensie, uh oorlogvoering dan Rusland en China samen uitgeven aan defensie en dat meer dan één keer…….

Zie ook:

9 ‘ex-FARC rebellen’ vermoord door leger Colombia: FARC-EP opgericht

Mensenrechten- en milieuactivisten worden massaal vermoord in Brazilië en Colombia, waar het laatste land NAVO bases heeft…….

Bolivia coup een ‘CIA job’, aldus anonieme Duitse veiligheidsanalist, met lessen voor de toekomst

Bolivia: misdadigers die vechten voor het kapitalisme

NOS met fake news over Bolivia

Bolivianen eisen hun president terug

Bolivia: staatsgreep maakt eind aan succesvol presidentschap Evo Morales

Bolivia: bewijs op tafel dat VS aanstuurt op een coup

Bolivia’s Evo Morales ‘unhurt’ after helicopter emergency landing

The US EMBASSY in Bolivia continues carrying out covert actions to support the coup d’état against President Evo Morales.

Bolivia Closes 2018 Among The Highest Economic Growth Rates

Bolivia’s Remarkable Socialist Success Story: President Evo Morales has transformed his country’s economy with an unapologetically left-wing agenda.

Koenders heeft vrijlating gegijzelde Spoorloos makers in Colombia bewerkstelligt……. AUW!!!

Paus Franciscus in Colombia om vrede te prediken……

People of Brazil: my sincere condolences with ‘your’ fascistic, psychopathic president Bolsonaro……

VS commando’s vechten o.a. in Midden- en Zuid-Amerika, aldus het VS ministerie van oorlog………

NAVO naar Zuid-Amerika? Weg met dit agressieve, terroristische bondgenootschap, NU!!!

Bolton geeft toe dat de VS een fascistisch beleid voert……

Bolsonaro, de fascistische nieuwe president van Brazilië, werd volgens Avaaz en fake news brengers als de NYT gekozen door manipulatie via WhatsApp

Bolsonaro wint Braziliaanse verkiezingen >> weer zijn we een fascistisch geleid land ‘rijker…’

Braziliaanse verkiezingen: democratie versus (neo-) fascisme, ook een groot gevaar in Europa

Katy Sherriff (Radio1 correspondent Z-Amerika) brandt socialistische partij Brazilië af……

Meer VS terreur:

VS buitenlandbeleid sinds WOII: een lange lijst van staatsgrepen en oorlogen……….

List of wars involving the United States

VS commando’s vechten o.a. in Midden- en Zuid-Amerika, aldus het VS ministerie van oorlog………

De war on drugs is veel dodelijker dan over het algemeen gedacht

Terreuraanslag in Iran moet acties uitlokken die de VS (NAVO bondgenoot) tot een oorlog met Iran ‘dwingen’

Venezuela: VS verandering van regime mislukt >> de Venezolanen wacht een VS invasie

Na
alle moeite die de VS zich al 20 jaar getroost om een eind te maken
aan het democratisch gekozen socialistisch bewind van Venezuela,
wijst alles erop dat de VS bezig is met Peru, Colombia en Brazilië, van wie de laatste twee landen grenzen aan Venezuela, een invasie voor te bereiden in dat land……..

Er
hebben in 2017 al vier grote militaire oefeningen plaats gevonden in Latijns Amerika en
zelfs de NAVO schijnt nu een militaire basis te hebben in
Brazilië, waarschijnlijk dezelfde als de ‘tijdelijke’ militaire VS basis in Brazilië, in de buurt waar Venezuela, Brazilië en Colombia aan elkaar grenzen…… Zoals gezegd: vorig jaar hebben er maar liefst 4 grote militaire oefeningen plaatsgevonden, met deelname van Colombia, Brazilië en Peru, alles o.l.v. de VS….. Eén van die oefeningen, ‘Operation: America United’ was zelfs de grootste militaire oefening ooit gehouden in Midden- en Zuid-Amerika (Latijns Amerika)………

Overigens heeft de VS al militaire bases in Colombia en het Caraïbisch gebied, onderhoudt daarnaast innige banden met andere landen in de buurt van Venezuela, wat dat betreft is Venezuela al omsingeld met VS militaire bases (uiteraard speelt ook Nederland weer ‘een mooie rol’ in deze…)

De
VS is al meer dan 18 jaar bezig met een economische oorlog tegen
Venezuela, al heeft deze tot nu toe weinig of niets opgeleverd wat betreft ‘regime change’. Al
onder ‘vredesduif’ Obama heeft de VS deze oorlog verscherpt en VS
bedrijven ‘dringend aangeraden’ hun supermarktketens in Venezuela
niet langer te bevoorraden. Hetzelfde deed de VS met buitenlandse
investeerders en je weet het waarschijnlijk wel, als de VS dreigt, gehoorzamen de bedrijven en instellingen, daar ze het anders wel
kunnen vergeten als bedrijf of instelling……..

Als gevolg van deze boycot is er niet alleen een groot tekort aan levensmiddelen, maar bijvoorbeeld ook aan medicijnen. Daarmee kan de VS ten overvloede nog eens worden aangewezen als een terreurstaat, die schijt heeft aan ellende onder de gewone bevolking en aan mensenrechten, zoals dit gestolen land al zo vaak elders heeft laten zien, maar zeker in Zuid- en Midden-Amerika…….

De gewelddadige demonstraties in Venezuela van vorig jaar, werden ook al door de VS georganiseerd, waar zelfs gewapende groepen uit het buitenland werden ingezet tegen politie en leger van Venezuela……

In 2002 heeft er al een militaire coup plaatsgevonden in Venezuela, die met hulp van de (arme) bevolking de kop werd ingedrukt, een coup die zoals gewoonlijk werd geregisseerd door de CIA…….

Een
militaire coup nu lijkt zeer onwaarschijnlijk ,daar het leger voor het
overgrote deel achter de socialistische regering Maduro staat.

Lees
het volgend uitstekende en sterk onderbouwde artikel dat duidelijk maakt waar de VS mee bezig is
t.a.v. Venezuela, een artikel van Kevin Zeese en Maragaret Flowers, door
Anti-Media overgenomen van Consortium News:

US
Regime Change Fails in Venezuela: Military Coup or Invasion Next?

February
14, 2018 at 10:27 am

Written
by 
Consortium
News

(CN) — Several
signals point to a possible military strike on Venezuela, with
high-ranking officials and influential politicians making clear that
it is a distinct possibility.

Speaking
at his alma mater, the University of Texas, on February 1, Secretary
of State Tillerson 
suggested a
potential military coup in in the country. Tillerson
then 
visited
allied Latin American countries
 urging
regime change and more economic sanctions on Venezuela. Tillerson is
also reportedly considering banning the processing or sale of
Venezuelan oil in the United States and is discouraging other
countries from buying Venezuelan oil.

In
a series of tweets, Senator 
Marco
Rubio
,
the Republican from Florida, where many Venezuelan oligarchs live,
openly called for a military coup in Venezuela. “The world would
support the Armed Forces in 
#Venezuela if
they decide to protect the people & restore democracy by removing
a dictator,” the former presidential candidate 
tweeted.

How
absurd — remove an elected president with a military coup to
restore democracy? Does that pass the straight face test? This
refrain of Rubio and Tillerson seems to be the nonsensical public
position of U.S. policy.

The
U.S. has been 
seeking
regime change
 in
Venezuela since Hugo Chavez was elected in 1998. Trump 
joined
Presidents Obama and Bush
 before
him in continuing efforts to change the government and put in place a
U.S.-friendly oligarch government.

They
came closest in
 2002
when a military coup removed Chavez.
 The
Commander-in-Chief of the Venezuelan military announced Chavez had
resigned and 
Pedro
Carmona
,
of the Venezuelan Chamber of Commerce, became interim president.
Carmona dissolved the National Assembly and Supreme Court and
declared the Constitution void. The people surrounded the
presidential palace and seized television stations, Carmona resigned
and fled to Colombia. Within 47 hours, civilians and the military
restored Chavez to the presidency. 
The
coup was a turning point
 that
strengthened the Bolivarian Revolution, showed people could defeat a
coup and exposed the US and oligarchs.

U.S.
Regime Change Tactics Have Failed In Venezuela

The
U.S. and oligarchs continue their efforts to reverse the Bolivarian
Revolution. The United States has a long history of regime change
around the world and has tried all of its regime change tools in
Venezuela. So far they have failed.

Economic
War

Destroying
the Venezuelan economy has been an ongoing campaign by the US and
oligarchs. It is 
reminiscent
of the US coup in Chile 
which
ended the presidency of Salvador Allende. To create the environment
for the Chilean coup, President Nixon ordered the CIA to “make
the economy scream.”

Henry
Kissinger devised the coup noting a billion dollars of investment
were at stake. He also feared the “the insidious model effect” of
the example of Chile leading to other countries breaking from the
United States and capitalism. Kissinger’s top deputy at the
National Security Council, Viron Vaky, opposed the coup saying,
“What we propose is patently a violation of our own principles and
policy tenets .… If these principles have any meaning, we normally
depart from them only to meet the gravest threat … our survival.”

These
objections hold true regarding recent US coups, including in
Venezuela and Honduras, Ukraine and Brazil, among others. Allende
died in the coup and 
wrote
his last words to the people of Chile
,
especially the workers, “Long live the people! Long live the
workers!” He was replaced by Augusto Pinochet, 
a
brutal and violent dictator
.

For
decades the 
US
has been fighting an economic war
,
“making the economy scream,” in Venezuela.

Wealthy
Venezuelans have been conducting economic sabotage aided by the US
with sanctions and other tactics. This includes 
hoarding
food, supplies and other necessities
 in
warehouses or in Colombia while Venezuelan markets are bare. The
scarcity is used to fuel protests, e.g. “The March of the Empty
Pots,” a carbon copy of marches in Chile before the September 11,
1973 coup. Economic warfare has escalated 
through
Obama
 and under
Trump
,
with Tillerson now urging economic sanctions on oil.

President
Maduro recognized the economic hardship but also said 
sanctions
open up the opportunity for a new era of independence
 and
“begins the stage of post-domination by the United States, with
Venezuela again at the center of this struggle for dignity and
liberation.” The second-in-command of the Socialist Party, 
Diosdado
Cabello, said,
 “[if
they] apply sanctions, we will apply elections.”

Opposition
Protests

Another
common US regime change tool is supporting opposition protests.
The 
Trump
administration renewed regime change operations
 in
Venezuela and the anti-Maduro protests, which began under Obama, grew
more violent. The opposition protests included barricades,
snipers and murders as well as widespread injuries. When police
arrested those using violence, the US claimed Venezuela opposed free
speech and protests.

The
opposition tried to use the crack down against violence to achieve
the U.S. tactic of  dividing the military. The 
U.S.
and western media ignored opposition violence
 and
blamed the Venezuelan government instead. Violence became so extreme
it looked like the 
opposition
was pushing Venezuela into a Syrian-type civil war
.
Instead, opposition violence backfired on them.

Violent
protests are part of U.S. regime change repertoire. This was
demonstrated in the 
U.S.
coup in Ukraine
,
where the U.S. spent $5 billion to organize government opposition
including 
U.S.
and EU funding violent protesters
.
This tactic was used in early US coups like the 
1953
Iran coup
 of
Prime Minister Mossadegh. 
The
U.S. has admitted
 organizing
this 
coup
that ended Iran’s brief experience with democracy
.
Like Venezuela, a key reason for the Iran coup was control of the
nation’s oil.

Funding
Opposition

There
has been 
massive
U.S. investment in creating opposition to the Venezuelan
government
.
Tens of millions of dollars have been openly spent through USAID, the
National Endowment for Democracy and other related US regime change
agencies. It is unknown how much the CIA has spent from its secret
budget, but the 
CIA
has also been involved in Venezuela.
 Current
CIA director, Mike 
Pompeo,
said

he is “hopeful there can be a transition in Venezuela.”

The United
States has also educated leaders of opposition movements
,
e.g. 
Leopoldo
López
 was
educated at private schools in the US, including the CIA-associated
Kenyon College. He was groomed at the Harvard Kennedy School of
Government and made repeated visits to the regime change agency, the
National Republican Institute.

Elections

While
the US calls Venezuela a dictatorship, it is in fact a strong
democracy with an excellent voting system. Election observers monitor
every election.

In
2016, the economic crisis led to the opposition winning a majority in
the National Assembly. One of their first acts was to 
pass
an amnesty law
.
The law described 17 years of crimes including violent felonies and
terrorism committed by the opposition. It was an admission of crimes
back to the 2002 coup and through 2016. The law demonstrated violent
treason against Venezuela. One month later, the Supreme Court of
Venezuela 
ruled
the amnesty law was unconstitutional
.
U.S. media, regime change advocates and anti-Venezuela human rights
groups 
attacked
the Supreme Court decision
,
showing their alliance with the admitted criminals.

Years
of violent protests and regime change attempts, and then admitting
their crimes in an amnesty bill, have caused those opposed to the
Bolivarian Revolution to lose power and become unpopular.  In
three recent elections Maduro’s party 
won
regional, 
 local and
the 
Constituent
Assembly
 elections.

The
electoral commission announced the 
presidential
election will be held on April 22
.
Maduro will run for re-election with the United Socialist Party.
Opposition leaders such as Henry Ramos and Henri Falcon have
expressed interest in running, but the 
opposition
has not decided whether to participate
Henrique
Capriles, who narrowly lost to Maduro in the last election, was
banned from running for office

because of irregularities in his campaign, including taking foreign
donations. 
Capriles has
been a leader of the violent protests. When his ban was announced he
called for protests to remove Maduro from office. Also banned
was 
Leopoldo
Lopez
,
another leader of the violent protests who is under house
arrest 
serving
a thirteen year sentence for inciting violence
.

Now,
the United States says it will not recognize the presidential
election and urges a military coup. For two years, the opposition
demanded presidential elections, but now it is unclear whether they
will participate. They know they are unpopular and Maduro is likely
to be re-elected.

Is
War Against Venezuela Coming?

A
military coup faces challenges in Venezuela as the people, including
the military, are well educated about US imperialism. Tillerson
openly urging a military coup makes it more difficult.

The
government and opposition recently negotiated a peace settlement
entitled “Democratic Coexistence Agreement for Venezuela.”
They 
agreed
on all of the issues
 including
ending economic sanctions, scheduling elections and more. 
They
agreed on the date of the next presidential election.
 It
was originally planned for March, but in a concession to the
opposition, it was  rescheduled for the end of April. 
Maduro
signed the agreement
 even
though the 
opposition
did not attend
 the
signing ceremony. They backed out after Colombian President Santos,
who was meeting with Secretary Tillerson, called and told them not to
sign. 
Maduro
will now make the agreement a public issue
 by
allowing the people of Venezuela to sign it.

Not
recognizing elections and urging a military coup are bad enough, but
more disconcerting is that 
Admiral
Kurt Tidd, head of Southcom, held a closed door meeting in
Colombia
 after
Tillerson’s visit. The topic was “regional destabilization” and
Venezuela was a focus.

A
military attack on Venezuela from its Colombian and Brazilian borders
is not far fetched. In January, 
the
NY Times asked
,
“Should the US military invade Venezuela?” President 
Trump
said the US is considering US military force
 against
Venezuela. His chief of staff, John Kelly, was formerly the general
in charge of Southcom. 
Tidd
has claimed the crisis
,
created in large part by the economic war against Venezuela, requires
military action for humanitarian reasons.

War
preparations are already underway
 in
Colombia, which plays the role of Israel for the US in Latin America.
The coup government in Brazil, 
increased
its military budget 36 percent
,
and participated in 
Operation:
America United
,
the largest joint military exercise in Latin American history. It
was 
one
of four military exercises by the US
 with
Brazil, Colombia and Peru
 in
Latin America in 2017. The US 
Congress
ordered the Pentagon to develop military contingencies
 for
Venezuela in the 2017 National Defense Authorization Act.

While
there is 
opposition
to US military bases
James
Patrick Jordan explains, on our radio show,
 the
US has military bases in Colombia and the Caribbean and military
agreements with countries in the region; and therefore, Venezuela is
already surrounded.

The
United States is targeting Venezuela because the Bolivarian
Revolution provides an example against U.S. imperialism. An
invasion of Venezuela will become another war-quagmire that kills
innocent Venezuelans, U.S. soldiers and others over control of oil.
People in the United States who support the self-determination of
countries should show solidarity with Venezuelans, expose the U.S.
agenda and publicly denounce regime change. We need to educate people
about what is really happening in Venezuela to overcome the false
media coverage.

Kevin
Zeese and Margaret Flowers co-direct 
Popular
Resistance
.
[This article originally appeared
at 
https://popularresistance.org and
is republished with authors’ permission.]

By Kevin
Zeese and Margaret Flowers
 /
Republished with permission / 
Consortium
News
 / Report
a typo

==================================

Ter herinneren aan de enorme agressie van de VS: ‘VS buitenlandbeleid sinds WOII: een lange lijst van staatsgrepen en oorlogen……….‘ en:  ‘List of wars involving the United States

Zie ook:

Halliburton en Chevron hebben groot belang bij ‘regime change’ in Venezuela

Mike Pence (vicepresident VS) gaf Guaidó, de door de VS gewenste leider, groen licht voor de coup in Venezuela

VS coup tegen Maduro in volle gang……..

VS weer op oorlogspad in Latijns-Amerika: Venezuela het volgende slachtoffer…….

Als de VS stopt met spelen van ‘politieagent’ en het vernielen van de wereld, zullen de slechte krachten winnen……

VS zet Latijns-Amerikaanse landen tegen elkaar op en is bezig met voorbereiding invasie Venezuela

Trump wilde naast de economische oorlogsvoering tegen Venezuela dat land daadwerkelijk militair aanvallen……

Venezolaanse regionale verkiezingen gehekeld door westen, terwijl internationale waarnemers deze als eerlijk beoordeelden……….

Venezuela: ‘studentenprotest’ wordt uitgevoerd door ingehuurde troepen………‘ 

Venezuela: Target of Economic Warfare

Venezuela moet en zal ‘verlost’ worden van Maduro, met ‘oh wonder’ een dikke rol van de VS en de reguliere westerse media

Venezolaanse regering treedt terecht op tegen de uiterst gewelddadige oppositie!!


Venezuela ontwricht, wat de reguliere media u niet vertellen……..

VS steunt rechtse coalitie (MUD) in Venezuela………

Venezuela’s US-Backed Opposition Turns Up The Violence Following Assembly Vote

10 Things You Need to Know About the Terrorist Attack in Venezuela

Venezuelans in the Streets to Support Constituent Assembly

What Mainstream Media Got Wrong About Venezuela’s Constituent Assembly Vote‘ (met mogelijkheid tot directe vertaling)

The Left and Venezuela‘ (met mogelijkheid tot directe vertaling)

Rondje Venezuela schoppen op Radio1………

Karabulut (SP) blij dat ze Maduro eindelijk ook kan schoppen………

EU neemt uiterst hypocriet sancties tegen de Venezolaanse regering Maduro………

Abby Martin Busts Open Myths on Venezuela’s Food Crisis: ‘Shelves Fully Stocked’‘ (zie ook de video in dat artikel!)

Venezuela: de anti-propaganda van John Oliver (en het grootste deel westerse massamedia) feilloos doorgeprikt

De langzame moord op de ideeën van Martin Luther King…………….. Ofwel: Dr. Martin Luther Kings lessen willens en wetens verzwegen….

Het
volgende uitstekende artikel van Paul Street handelt over de lessen
van Martin Luther King (in de VS vaak aangeduid als MLK) waarover men in de VS en de rest van het westen
liever niet spreekt, dit daar in zijn visie o.a. alleen echte gelijkheid kan
ontstaan in een vorm van socialisme………

Het is op 4 april a.s. 50 jaar geleden dat de staat dr. Martin Luther King liet  vermoorden….. Vandaar veel aandacht dit jaar voor deze vrijheid en gelijkheidsstrijder. In de VS is 15 januari, de geboortedag van MLK, een vrije dag: ‘Martin Luther King Day’. Een uiterst hypocriet gebeuren als je het Paul Street vraagt, daar men vooral niet spreekt over de ideeën die King had over de ideale maatschappij en de vorm van bestuur die alle burgers ten goede zou komen, niet alleen de witte midden en hoge inkomens. Een wereld waarin arbeiders niet langer uitgebuit worden door en voor de ondernemers en aandeelhouders (en welgestelden in het algemeen).

Zo is echt socialisme of communisme een oplossing voor veel van de huidige ellende in de wereld. Vergeet niet dat communisme tot nu toe nooit heeft bestaan in onze wereld. Wat betreft socialisme kan je het Chili van Allende, Cuba van Fidel Castro en Venezuela onder Chavez en Maduro aanwijzen als voorbeelden (ook al was en is dit nog niet zoals het zou moeten zijn, echter wel zo goed dat de arme bevolking een veel beter leven kreeg, inclusief gezondheidszorg, een fatsoenlijk dak boven het hoofd en alfabetisering. Vandaar ook dat de VS zo haar best doet daar een eind aan te maken, wat tot nu toe al een aantal keren is gelukt, neem de uiterst bloedige staatsgreep tegen de democratisch gekozen regering van president Salvador Allende op 11 september 1973 in Chili, waarbij Allende strijdend werd vermoord…….. (betaald door- en onder regie en mede verantwoording van de CIA…..)

Momenteel is de VS naast het voeren van illegale oorlogen bezig met een economische oorlog tegen Venezuela, helaas is een heel groot deel van de Venezolaanse bevolking op de hoogte van de smerige streken die de VS het land levert (stop op leveringen van medicijnen en levensmiddelen) dat ze aan de kant van Maduro blijven staan. (dit nog naast de door de CIA georganiseerde gewelddadige protesten in Venezuela….)

De kijk van MLK op de wereld was volgens de schrijver van het volgende artikel, Paul Street, de reden waarom de overheid in de VS King alleen wil herdenken als strijder voor gelijke rechten t.b.v. gekleurde burgers……. Men leidt willens en wetens de aandacht af van de visie die King had op de VS en de wereld in het groot. Street spreekt dan ook (terecht) van een voortdurende morele en intellectuele moord op Martin Luther Kung………. (‘vreemd genoeg’ is er ook in de EU amper of geen aandacht voor de linkse kant van King….)

Zijn visie op de wereld, gecombineerd met zijn charisma is dan ook de reden waarom Martin Luther King ‘een bedreiging was’ voor de overheid en ‘wel vermoord moest worden…..’

Counterpunch
JANUARY 19, 2018

Dr.
King’s Long Assassination

by PAUL
STREET

Photo
by Ron Cogswell | 
CC
BY 2.0

As
the 50th anniversary of Dr. Martin Luther King’s violent death (on
April 4, 1968) grows closer, you can expect to hear more and more in 
U.S. corporate media about the real and alleged details of his
immediate physical assassination (or perhaps execution).  You
will not be told about King’s subsequent and ongoing moral,
intellectual, and ideological assassination.

I
am referring to the conventional, neo-McCarthyite, and whitewashed
narrative of King that is purveyed across the nation every year,
especially during and around the national holiday that bears his
name.  This domesticated, bourgeois airbrushing portrays King as
a mild liberal reformist who wanted little more than a few basic
civil rights adjustments in a supposedly good and decent American
System – a loyal supplicant who was grateful to the nation’s
leaders for finally making noble alterations. This year was no
exception.

The
official commemorations never say anything about the Dr. King who
studied Marx sympathetically at a young age and who said in his last
years that “if we are to achieve real equality, the United States
will have to adopt a modified form of socialism.”  They delete
the King who wrote that “the real issue to be faced” beyond
“superficial” matters was the need for a radical social
revolution.

It
deletes the 
King
who went on the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) in late
1967
 to
reflect on how little the Black freedom struggle had attained beyond
some fractional changes in the South. He deplored “the arresting of
the limited forward progress” Blacks and their allies had attained
“by [a] white resistance [that] revealed the latent racism that was
[still] deeply rooted in U.S. society.”

As
elation and expectations died,” King explained on the CBC, “Negroes
became more sharply aware that the goal of freedom was still distant
and our immediate plight was substantially still an agony of
deprivation. In the past decade, little has been done for Northern
ghettoes. Al the legislation was to remedy Southern conditions –
and even these were only partially improved.” 

Worse
than merely limited, King felt, the gains won by Black Americans
during what he considered just the “first phase” of their freedom
struggle (1955-1965) were dangerous in that they “brought whites a
sense of completion” – a preposterous impression that the
so-called “Negro problem” had been solved and that there was
therefore no more basis or justification for further black activism.
“When Negroes assertively moved on to ascend to the second rung of
the ladder,” King noted, “a firm resistance from the white
community developed…In some quarters it was a courteous rejection,
in others it was a singing white backlash. In all quarters
unmistakably, it was outright resistance.”

Explaining
to his CBC listeners the remarkable wave of race riots that washed
across U.S. cities in the summers of 1966 and 1967, King made no
apologies for Black violence. He blamed “the white power
structure…still seeking to keep the walls of segregation and
inequality intact” for the disturbances. He found the leading cause
of the riots in the reactionary posture of “the white society,
unprepared and unwilling to accept radical structural change,”
which” produc[ed] chaos” by telling Blacks (whose expectations
for substantive change had been aroused) “that they must expect to
remain permanently unequal and permanently poor.”

King
also blamed the riots in part on Washington’s imperialist and
mass-murderous war on Vietnam. Along with the misery it inflicted on
Indochina, King said, the United States’ savage military aggression
against Southeast Asia stole resources from Lyndon Johnson’s
briefly declared and barely fought “War on Poverty.” It sent poor
Blacks to the front killing lines to a disproportionate degree. It
advanced the notion that violence was a reasonable response and even
a solution to social and political problems.

Black
Americans and others sensed what King called “the cruel irony of
watching Negro and white boys on TV screens as they kill and die
together for a nation that has been unable to seat them together in
the same school. We watch them in brutal solidarity burning the huts
of a poor village, but we realize that they would never live on the
same block in Detroit,” King said on the CBC, adding that he “could
not be silent in the face of such cruel manipulation of the poor.”

Racial
hypocrisy aside, King said that “a nation that continues year after
year to spend more money on military defense [here he might better
have said “military empire”] than on programs of social uplift is
approaching spiritual doom.”

Did
the rioters disrespect the law, as their liberal and conservative
critics alike charged? Yes, King said, but added that the rioters’
transgressions were “derivative crimes…born of 
the
greater crimes of the…policy-makers of the white society
,”
who “created discrimination…created slums [and] perpetuate
unemployment, ignorance, and poverty… [
T]he
white man,

King elaborated, “
does
not abide by law 
in
the ghetto. Day in and day out he violates welfare laws to deprive
the poor of their meager allotments; he flagrantly violates building
codes and regulations; 
his
police make a mockery of law
;
he violates laws on equal employment and education and the provision
of public services. The slums are a handiwork of 
a
vicious system 
of
the white society.”

Did
the rioters engage in violence? Yes, King said, but noted that their
aggression was “to a startling degree…focused against property
rather than against people.” He observed that “
property
represents the white power structure
,
which [the rioters] were [quite understandably] attacking and trying
to destroy.” Against those who held property “sacred,” King
argued that “Property is intended to serve life, and no matter how
much we surround with rights and respect, it has no personal being.”

What
to do? King advanced radical changes that went against the grain of
the nation’s corporate state, reflecting his agreement with New
Left militants that “
only
by structural change can current evils be eliminated, because the
roots are in the system rather in man or faulty operations
.” 
King advocated an emergency national program providing either
decent-paying jobs for all or a guaranteed national income “at
levels that sustain life in decent circumstances.” He also called
for the “demolition of slums and rebuilding by the population that
lives in them.”

His
proposals, he said, aimed for more than racial justice alone. Seeking
to abolish poverty for all, including poor whites, he felt that “the
Negro revolt” was properly challenging each of what he called “
the
interrelated triple evils” of racism, economic injustice/poverty
(capitalism) and war (militarism and imperialism)
.
The Black struggle had thankfully “evolve[ed] into more than a
quest for [racial] desegregation and equality,” King said.  It
had become “a challenge to a system that has created miracles of
production and technology” but had failed to “create justice.”

If
humanism is locked outside the [capitalist] system,” King said
on CBC five months before his assassination (or execution), “Negroes
will have revealed its inner core of despotism and a far greater
struggle for liberation will unfold. The United States is
substantially challenged to demonstrate that it can abolish not only
the evils of racism but the scourge of poverty and the horrors of
war….”

There
should be no doubt that King meant capitalism when he referred to
“the system” and its “inner core of despotism.” This is clear
from the best scholarship on King, including David Garrow’s epic,
Pulitzer Prize-winning biography, 
Bearing
the Cross: Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Southern Christian
Leadership Council
 
(HarperCollins,
1986)

No
careful listener to King’s CBC talks could have missed the
radicalism of his vision and tactics. “The dispossessed of this
nation – the poor, both White and Negro – live in 
a
cruelly unjust society
,”
King said. “They must 
organize
a revolution 
against
that injustice,” he added.

Such
a revolution would require “more than a statement to the larger
society,” more than “street marches” King proclaimed. “There
must,” he added, “be 
a
force that interrupts [that society’s] functioning at some key
point.

That force would use “mass civil disobedience” to “transmute
the deep rage of the ghetto into a constructive and creative force”
by “
dislocate[ing]
the functioning of a society
.”

The
storm is rising 
against
the privileged minority
 of
the earth,” King added for good measure. “The storm will not
abate until [there is a] 
just
distribution of the fruits of the earth
…”
The “
massive,
active, nonviolent resistance to the evils of the modern system

that King advocated was “international in scope,” reflecting the
fact that “the poor countries are poor primarily because [rich
Western nations] have exploited them through political or economic
colonialism. Americans in particular must help their nation repent of
her modern economic 
imperialism.

King
was a democratic socialist mass-disobedience-advocating and
anti-imperialist world revolution advocate.  The guardians of
national memory don’t want you to know about that when they purvey
the official, doctrinally imposed memory of King as an at most
liberal and milquetoast reformer. (In a similar vein, our ideological
overlords don’t want us to know that Albert Einstein
[
Time magazine’s 
“Person of the 20th Century”] wrote 
a
brilliant essay making the case for socialism
 in
the first issue of venerable U.S.-Marxist magazine Monthly Review 
– or that Helen Keller was a fan of the Russian Revolution.)

The
threat posed to the official bourgeois memory by King’s CBC
lectures – and by much more that King said and wrote in the last
three years of his life – is not just that they show an officially
iconic gradualist reformer to have been a democratic socialist
opponent of the profits system and its empire. It is also about how
clearly King analyzed the incomplete and unfinished nature of the
nation’s progress against racial and class injustice, around which
all forward developments pretty much ceased in the 1970s, thanks to a
white backlash that was already well underway in the early and
mid-1960s (before the rise of the Black Panthers, who liberal
historians like to blame for the nation’s rightward racial drift
under Nixon and Reagan) and to a top-down corporate war on
working-class Americans that started under Jimmy Carter and then went
ballistic under Ronald Reagan.

The
“spiritual doom” imposed by U.S. militarism has lived on, with
Washington having directly and indirectly killed untold millions of
Central Americans, South Americans, Africans, Muslims, Arabs, and
Asians in many different ways over the years since Vietnam.
Accounting for roughly 40 percent of the world’s military
expenditure, the U.S. maintains Cold War-level “defense” (empire)
budgets to sustain an historically unmatched global empire (with  
at
least 800 military bases spread across more than 80 foreign
countries
 and
“troops or other military personnel in about 160 foreign
countries and territories”)  even as a near-record 45 million
U.S.-Americans 
remain
stuck
 under
the federal government’s notoriously inadequate poverty level. A
very disproportionate number of the nation’s poor are Black and
Latino/a.

It
is obvious that the racist and white-supremacist real estate baron
Donald J. Trump spoke disingenuously in tongue when he mouthed nice
words about Dr. King last Monday.  But what about his
predecessor, Barack Obama, the nation’s first technically Black
president? It was cruelly ironic that Obama kept a bust of King in
the Oval Office to watch over his regular betrayal of the martyred
peace and justice leader’s ideals. Consistent with Dr. Adolph Reed
Jr.’s early (1996) 
dead-on
description
 of
the future President as “a smooth Harvard lawyer with impeccable
credentials and vacuous to repressive neoliberal politics,” Obama
consistently backed top corporate and financial interests (whose
representatives filled and dominated his administrations, campaigns,
and campaign coffers) over and against those who would undertake
serious programs to end poverty, redistribute wealth (the savage
re-concentration of which since Dr. King’s time has produced a New
Gilded Age in the U.S.), grant free and universal health care,
constrain capital, and save livable ecology as it approached a number
of critical tipping points on the accelerating path to irreversible
catastrophe. Thus is that one of Obama’s supporters (
Ezra
Klein
)
was moved in late 2012 to complain that a president “whose platform
consists of Romney’s health care bill, Newt Gingrich’s
environmental policies, John McCain’s deficit-financed payroll tax
cuts, George W. Bush’s bailouts of filing banks and corporations,
and a mixture of the Bush and Clinton tax rate” was still being
denounced as a “leftist.”

Obama
opposed calls for any special programs or serious federal attention
to the nation’s savage racial inequalities, so vast now that the
median of white households was 20 times that of black households and
18 times that of Hispanic households near the end of his presidency.
He did this while the fact of his ascendency to the White House
deeply reinforced white America’s sense that racism was over as a
barrier to black advancement and generated its own significant white
backlash that only worsened the situation of less privileged black
Americans.

Obama
made it crystal clear in ways that no white president could that what
Dr. King in 1963 called America’s unpaid “promissory note” and
“bad check” to Black America would remain un-cashed. This was all
too sadly consistent with Obama’s preposterous 2007 campaign claim
(at a commemoration of the King-led 1965 Selma Voting Rights March)
to believe that Blacks had already come
 “90
percent”
 of
the way to equality in the U.S.

Completing
the “triple evils” hat trick, Obama – the self-appointed
chief-executioner atop the Special Forces Global War on (of) Terror
Kill List – embraced and expanded upon the vast criminal and
worldwide spying and killing operation he inherited from Dick Cheney,
Donald Rumsfeld, Paul Wolfowitz, and George W. Bush. He tamped down
Bush’s failed ground wars only to ramp up and inflate the role of
unaccountable special force and drone attacks in the spirit of his
dashing and reckless imperial role model John Fitzgerald Kennedy.
Obama’s drone program, Noam Chomsky noted in 
early
2015
,
was “the most extreme terrorist campaign of modern times.” It
“target[ed] people suspected of perhaps intending to harm us some
day, and any unfortunates who happen to be nearby,” Chomsky wrote.

In
waging his deadly and disastrous, nation-wrecking and regionally
destabilizing air war on Libya, Obama (unlike Bush prior to the
invasion of Iraq) did not even bother with the pretense of seeking
Congressional approval.   “It should be a scandal,”
Stansfield Smith 
wrote
on 
CounterPunch one
year ago
,
“that left-liberals paint Trump as a special threat, a war mongerer
– [but] not Obama who is the first president to be at war every day
of his eight years, who is waging seven wars at present, who dropped
three bombs an hour, 24 hours a day, in 2016.” As 
Alan
Nairn told 
Democracy
Now
’s
Amy Goodman in early 2010
,
Obama kept the nation’s giant imperial machinery “set on kill.”

Meanwhile,
Obama far surpassed the Cheney-Bush regime when it came to repressing
antiwar dissenters, not to mention those who opposed the rule of the
1 percent – smashed by a coordinated federal campaign in the fall
of 2011. “As all kinds of journalists have continuously pointed
out,” 
Glenn
Greenwald noted
 in
early 2014, “the Obama administration is more aggressive and more
vindictive when it comes to punishing whistleblowers than any
administration in American history, including the Nixon
administration.”

Furthermore,
and to make matters far worse, Obama helped keep the planet set on
burn.  As Stansfield Smith noted two days before the horrid
Trump’s inauguration:

Obama,
who says he recognizes the threat to humanity posed by climate
change, still invested at least $34 billion to promote fossil fuel
projects in other countries. That is three times as much as George W
Bush spent in his two terms, almost twice that of Ronald Reagan,
George HW Bush and Bill Clinton put together…Obama financed 70
foreign fossil fuel projects. When completed they will release 164
million metric tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere every year
– about the same output as the 95 currently operating coal-fired
power plants in Ohio, Pennsylvania and Oklahoma. He financed two
natural gas plants on an island in the Great Barrier Reef, as well as
two of the largest coalmines on the planet… Moreover, under Obama,
the U.S.  has reversed the steady drop in U.S. oil production
which had continued unchecked since 1971. The U.S. was pumping just
5.1 million barrels per day when Obama took office. By April 2016 it
was up to 8.9 million barrels per day. A 74% increase.

As
Obama proudly said in 2012, in the film 
This
Changes Everything
:

Over
the last three years I’ve directed my administration to open up
millions of acres for gas and oil exploration across 23 different
states. We’re opening up more than 75% of our potential oil
resources offshore. We’ve quadrupled the number of operating rigs
to a record high. We’ve added enough oil and gas pipelines to
encircle the earth and then some. So, we are drilling all over the
place, right now.’

Drill,
baby, drill!”

Perhaps
the dismal neoliberal Obama presidency – a key midwife to the Trump
atrocity – was at least an object lesson on how real progressive
and democratic change is about something bigger than a change in the
party or color of the people in nominal power. That is certainly
something King (who would be 88 today) would have understood very
well had he been able to witness the endless mendacity of the
nation’s first half-white president first-hand.

The
black revolution,” King wrote in 
a
posthumously published 1969 essay
 titled
“A Testament of Hope” (embracing a very different, authentically
progressive sort of hope than that purveyed by Brand Obama in 2008)
“is much more than a struggle for the rights of Negroes. It is
forcing America to face all its interrelated flaws – racism,
poverty, militarism, and materialism. It is exposing evils that are
rooted deeply in the whole structure of our society. It reveals
systemic rather than superficial flaws and suggests that radical
reconstruction society of society itself is the real issue to be
faced.”

Those
words ring as true as ever today, with heightened urgency as it
becomes undeniable that the profits system is 
driving
humanity over an environmental cliff. 
 They
are words we never hear during official King Day commemorations.

King,
it is worth recalling, was recruited by antiwar progressives to run
for the U.S. presidency in 1967. He politely declined, claiming that
he’d have little chance of winning and that he preferred to serve
as a force of moral conscience for all the nation’s political
parties.

The
deeper truth, clear from his late-life writing and speeches, is that
he had no interest in climbing into the power elite: his passion was
directed toward a “revolution” of “the dispossessed” and a
mass grassroots movement for the redistribution of wealth and power –
a “radical reconstruction of society itself” – from the bottom
up. Dr. King was interested in what the late radical U.S.
historian 
Howard
Zinn considered
 the
more urgent politics of “
who’s
sitting in the streets
,”
very different from what Zinn saw as the comparatively superficial
politics of “
who’s
sitting in the White House
.”


King’s
officially deleted radical record and Zinn’s clever and sage
dichotomy are worth bearing in mind in coming months and years as we
watch the nation’s “left” liberals try to call forth and herald
a new Obama (Oprah perhaps?) in 2020.  That is certainly one of
the last things we need.

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Paul Street keep writing 
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More
articles by:
PAUL
STREET

Paul
Street’s
 latest
book is 
They
Rule: The 1% v. Democracy
 (Paradigm,
2014)

Zie ook: ‘Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.: 8 wijze lessen!

        en: ‘Martin Luther King jr. vermoord door de overheid, aldus rechter……..

        en: ‘Martin Luther King misbruikt door Radio1

        en: ‘Martin Luther King: de moord van 50 jaar geleden door de VS overheid uiterst beperkt herdacht

        en: ‘De oorlog tegen het arme deel van de VS bevolking

        en: ‘Nam Kurt Cobain zijn eigen leven? Niet volgens een flink aantal mensen

        en:  ‘Paul Scheffer, het media-orakel met een ‘vlijmscherpe analyse’ over het racistische optreden van de politie in de VS……… AUW!!!

        en: ‘Willem Post over de zegeningen van het zero tolerance beleid in de VS en ach, het is misschien ietsje doorgeschoten…….

Nae Pasaran! ‘Vergeten’ Schots verzet tegen Chileense Pinochet dictatuur

Vanmiddag op BBC Radio Scotland aandacht voor de Schotse arbeiders die in 1974 weigerden straalmotoren van Chileense straaljagers te reviseren.

Arbeiders ontdekten na aankomst van de motoren bij een werkplaats van Rolls-Royce in Schotland, dat het om motoren ging van Chileense straaljagers, die misschien zelfs werden gebruikt bij de door de CIA geleidde coup tegen de democratisch gekozen regering van Salvador Allende…… Daarbij werd o.a. het paleis beschoten waar Allende zich bevond en waar men hem later uiterst laf vermoordde…….. Dit vond trouwens plaats op 11 september 1973, ofwel de eerste 911 aanslag waarvoor de CIA hoofdverantwoordelijk was…..

             The Hawker Hunters of the Chilean Air Force fire rockets into the Moneda Palace.

De motoren werden apart gezet en na 4 jaar werden ze plotseling ‘s nachts weggehaald. en verzonden naar Chili. In 2015 zijn de motoren teruggevonden in Chili en één ervan is teruggestuurd naar Schotland waar deze als monument zal worden geplaatst ter herinnering aan de arbeiders die weigerden te werken voor een fascistische dictatuur en zich in hebben gezet voor (echte) internationale solidariteit.

Nae Pasaran! is een ontroerende film gemaakt door Felipe Bustos Sierra over internationale solidariteit tegen fascisme, hier de link naar een uitgebreid artikel over deze zaak en het maken van de film.

Hier de link naar de film die je gratis kan ‘streamen’, nadat je je (gratis) hebt geregistreerd.

Roemer, Klaver en de hele bups in Den Haag >> zie Bolivia: socialisme is geen vies woord en kan uiterst succesvol zijn!!

Anti-Media bracht gisteren een artikel van de American Herald Tribune over het uitermate succesvolle beleid van de Boliviaanse socialistische president Evo Morales.

Een jaar na het aantreden van Morales waren de uitgaven voor armoede bestrijding, de gezondheidszorg en onderwijs met maar liefst 45% gestegen. Als men hier een dergelijke verhoging van die uitgaven alleen al zou voorstellen, zou het land te klein zijn en zou de pleitbezorger daarvan in de reguliere media en in de politiek zijn neergezet als knettergek en onverantwoord….. Zelfs SP rode kneus Roemer zou zo’n voorstel niet durven doen…….

De laatste 60 jaar is er in Bolivia strijd gevoerd tegen de dictaten van de Wereldbank en het IMF (in beide zitten Nederlandse politici, o.a. van de PvdA…). Een strijd tegen de politiek van privatisatie van publieke werken, waaronder watervoorzieningen, een strijd tegen het verlagen van salarissen en het uitkleden van arbeidsrechten, plus de strijd tegen enorme bezuinigingen…….

‘Ondanks’ het sociale beleid van Morales*, draait de economie als nooit tevoren. Het gaat zelfs zo goed, dat Morales de banden met de dictatoriale Wereldbank en het IMF heeft doorgesneden!!! Het was wat betreft het IMF zo zot, dat dit orgaan een kantoor had in het Boliviaanse regeringsgebouw en zelfs deelnam aan vergaderingen en debatten……….

Ben benieuwd hoe lang het duurt voordat de VS een opstand en coup organiseert tegen het bewind van Morales, immers als een linkse regering succesvol is, ziet de VS dat als gevaar voor het eigen land….. Zo organiseerde de CIA samen met het Chileense leger een staatsgreep tegen het bewind van de socialistische president Allende op 11 september 1973 (ja, dat was de eerste 911 aanslag van de CIA!!)

Linkse politici als Klaver en Asscher moeten zich doodschamen dat ze zich laten gebruiken voor het inhumane ijskoude neoliberale beleid van Rutte 2 en straks Rutte 3. Gelukkig nam Roemer de stap geen regeringsonderhandelingen met misdadigers partij VVD te willen voeren. Dit daar het er voor de verkiezingen op leek dat de SP zich warm liep voor politieke samenwerking met partijen, waarmee de SP haar socialistische idealen alleen maar kon verloochenen. Immers de SP had en heeft al een fiks aantal standpunten, die bepaald niet socialistisch waren en zijn, zo vindt de SP het normaal dat iedereen één derde van zijn/haar inkomen verwoont……….. Bij een netto inkomen van € 1.000,– per maand, blijft er zelfs na aftrek van de huurtoeslag op de huur, veel te weinig over om fatsoenlijk van te kunnen leven….

Het is te hopen dat andere (zogenaamd) linkse politici, als Klaver en Asscher (maar ook Roemer) een voorbeeld nemen aan Morales, het roer drastisch omgooien en daarmee eindelijk een echt socialistische koers gaan varen……..

Leve Morales!

Bolivia’s
President Declares ‘Total Independence’ from World Bank and IMF

July
25, 2017 at 5:34 am

Written
by 
American
Herald Tribune

(AHT) — Bolivia’s
President Evo Morales has been highlighting his government’s
independence from international money lending organizations and their
detrimental impact the nation, 
the
Telesur TV
 reported.

A
day like today in 1944 ended Bretton Woods Economic
Conference (USA), in which the IMF and WB were established,”
Morales tweeted. “These organizations dictated the economic fate of
Bolivia and the world. Today we can say that we have total
independence of them.”

Morales
has said Bolivia’s past dependence on the agencies was so
great that the International Monetary Fund had an office in
government headquarters and even participated in their meetings.

Bolivia
is now in the process of becoming a member of the Southern
Common Market, Mercosur and Morales attended the group’s
summit in Argentina last week.

Bolivia’s
popular uprising known as the The Cochabamba Water War in 2000
against United States-based Bechtel Corporation over water
privatization and the associated World Bank policies shed light on
some of the debt issues facing the region.

Some
of Bolivia’s largest resistance struggles in the last 60 years have
targeted the economic policies carried out by the International
Monetary Fund and the World Bank.

Most
of the protests focused on opposing privatization policies and
austerity measures, including cuts to public services, privatization
decrees, wage reductions, as well the weakening of labor rights.

Since
2006, a year after Morales came to power, social spending on health,
education, and poverty programs has increased by over 45 percent.

The Morales
administration
 made
enormous transformations in the Andean nation. The figures speak for
themselves: the nationalization of hydrocarbons, poverty reduction
from 60% to less than 40%, a decrease in the rate of illiteracy from
13% to 3%, the tripling the GDP with an average growth of 5%
annually, the quadrupling of the minimum wage, the increasing of
state coverage on all fronts, and the development of infrastructure
in communications, transportation, energy and industry. And above
all, stability, an unusual word in the troubled political history
Bolivia, of which today, with the economic slowdown experienced by
many countries in the region, is a real privilege.

By
AHT Staff / 
Creative
Commons
 / American
Herald Tribune
 / Report
a typo

===========================

* Een dergelijk (socialistisch) beleid zou volgens de inhumane neoliberale pleitbezorgers desastreus zijn voor bijvoorbeeld ons land.