If you don't read all of this, please, at the very least read the bits about Venezuela at the end. It's very important, IMO. But the whole thing gives a greater context to the struggles. Just research it more, both pros and cons and learn. They are making the world we should be making...

Also, please note that I'm not utopian about all this. I understand there's still tyranny in much of this, and that there's much potential danger for dictatorship in many of these movements and changes. But I believe that the path they are pursuing (especially since it's not so much about state-communism a la Cuba, but empowerment of the masses through co-operatives) is a better approach than they've been on.


If you've not been following the last few years, let me share the recent history/news of political development as I know of them...

This is very important stuff for you to know. I've mentioned briefly names and such, but not everything.

Let me take it back to the very beginning as concerns the modern anti-imperialist movement:

0. Zapatistas: New Years Day, 1994, the EZLN (Zapatista Army of National Liberation, aka: The Zapatistas, in honor of Emiliano Zapata) rose up in Chiapas, Mexico in revolt against the freshly implemented NAFTA (North American Free Trade Agreement), in fact, on the same day it was to go in effect... This group is composed of primarily indigenous Mayan peoples.

http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=04/01/02/150251

1. Cochabamba/Bechtel: In 2000, Bechtel Corporation (and a consortium which it led), had convinced the Bolivian government to privatize it's water systems. This led to hyperinflation in water rates, which the people (70% of the populace is below the poverty line), could ill afford. This led to MASSIVE protests, called the "water war" which eventually led to the removal of foreign elements (Bechtel) and returned water to the people...

"Everyone was protesting, everyone," journalist Luis Bredow tells Finnegan. "I've never seen anything like it in Bolivia. Housewives were throwing stones at the police. It really was a revolt."

http://www.pbs.org/frontlineworld/stories/bolivia/thestory.html

see also: http://www.democracyctr.org/bechtel/waterbills/

Read more... )

(no subject)

Apr. 29th, 2005 01:10 am
symbioidlj: (Default)
Why I like to buy CITGO...

"The company is owned by PDV America, Inc., an indirect, wholly owned subsidiary of Petroleos de Venezuela, S.A., the national oil company of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela."

--

Now.  Currently the President of Venezuala is Hugo Chavez.  He attempted a coup in 1992, and was elected president in 1999.  He has consistently stood up to the bullying tactics of the U.S.  He's reached across to forge ties with Castro.  And they're working on building a Latin American alternative to the Free Trade Agreement of the Americas (FTAA), which essentially pushes NAFTA style deregulation/privatization onto struggling third world countries, being destroyed by multinationals.  If you've followed me all along, you know I'm a socialist, and I strongly and wholeheartedly abhor US Imperialism.  This is why I love to see people standing up to the US like this.  He isn't the best leader in the world.  I don't trust any fucking alpha-male.  But I will spend my money at CITGO, because this goes directly to the State owned oil company of Venezuala, and not to the hands of imperial US Corps...

ref. Wikipedia article about Chavez.


also this text

Pendejo is a vulgar Spanish-language term of abuse. To call a person a pendejo is essentially to call him stupid, although it also carries implications of willful stubbornness and rank ineptitude. The female equivalent is pendeja; either form can be used as a noun or an adjective. The insult is particularly prevalent in the Spanish spoken in North and Central America, where it is considered moderately to highly offensive. In terms of equivalent cultural impact, it ranges somewhere at the level of the British English "wanker" or the U.S. English "asshole". The term is also used in Chile, Argentina and Uruguay, where it also means "immature" (again, in a derogatory sense).

The literal meaning of pendejo is "a strand of pubic hair". Etymologically it comes from the Latin pectiniculus.

In February 2004, reacting to the flight of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide from Haiti during opposition revolts, Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez used the word in reference to U.S. President George W. Bush for the U.S.'s refusal to participate in restoring Aristide to power.

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