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<nettime> From Venezuelan Writers, Artists and Academics [2+X] |
Table of Contents: Re: <nettime> From Venezuelan Writers, Artists and Academics to their Colleagues [email protected] Re: <nettime> From Venezuelan Writers, Artists and Academics to their Colleagues "[email protected]" <[email protected]> ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 4 Mar 2004 10:02:06 -0500 (EST) From: [email protected] Subject: Re: <nettime> From Venezuelan Writers, Artists and Academics to their Colleagues straight from the CIA Psychological Operations in Guerrilla Warfare? On Wed, 3 Mar 2004, Ricardo Bello wrote: > A message from Venezuelan writers, artists and academics to their > colleagues throughout the world > ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 04 Mar 2004 20:03:15 +0100 From: "[email protected]" <[email protected]> Subject: From Venezuelan Writers, Artists and Academics to their I found this message a little disturbing. I raised it with some colleagues on another list and I thought it appropriate given the propagandist nature of the post to publish their responses here. I also found it personally amusing that after so many years of exploitation and corruption which have hurt such a huge sector of the Venezuelan community that the writer was so concerend about "hurtful" language. Anyway I suspect there s more to the story that Ricardo lets on. Hence in the inteests of trying to fathom this mess below are two responses from the aut-opsy list and some artciles from narconews.com which has always provided a comprehensive alternative source of news for things latino. Beware. Martin Lowe Laclau wrote: >It is very unfortunate, but there is such extreme blatant misinformation here on the news about the situation in Venezuela and I fear that too few of us are able to see a more complex picture of the revolt. On the BBC World they repeatedly showed a woman getting thrown to the ground for confronting some officers and showed another guy with his head very bloodied. The same goes for the situation in Haiti. The news reporting is aweful. Never is there a sufficient history of the conflict explained. It paints a picture like "now that Aristide's" gone all will be milk & honey and if only "communist" Chavez leaves "the people" of Venezuela can go back to their luxurious lives they lead before. We have to be constantly reminded, just in case we forget, that there are no conflicts related to "class" and "oligarchic" socio-political structures in the world. All these really bad conflicts in the South are just because some people want to act like "dictators" or its just simple "corrupt > ion". > >As for Chavez revolution taking place only in his head, reports that I have seen do not support such a claim. The figure cited that 70% of the population supports the opposition also seems pretty much pulled out of someone's rear. The opposition clearly represents a minority of the electorate, its their media presence that gives the contrary perspective. Whereas this guy seems to think that the Bolivarian propaganda machine is corrupting the international left into supporting Chavez (and I have seen a bit of uncritical propaganda), what I see is the complete contrary. The mass medias are all towing the line whether it be in respect to Venezuela or to Haiti. I don't think that the "international community" needs any of my moral support in interfering in the domestic affairs of another demonized state. > ------------------------------ Here is another take on the Venezuela situation from narconews.com Martin * Venezuela, it's official* (3.00 / 2 <http://narcosphere.narconews.com/comments/2004/3/1/21129/96112/3?mode=alone;showrate=1#3>) (#3 <http://narcosphere.narconews.com/comments/2004/3/1/21129/96112/3#3>) by Ron Smith on Wed Mar 3rd, 2004 at 04:13:16 AM EST (User Info <http://narcosphere.narconews.com/user/uid:25>) http://www.activ8media.org On tuesday the 2nd, the CNE reported that 1.8m of the oppositions signatures cannot be verified. There's an article on AFP, but Vheadline reported it many hours before. This means that by the official constitutional rule, a recall referendum is not mandatory. The CNE may still decide to request a referendum. The CNE is also giving a small window for several of the signature writers to come in to verify their identity. <http://narcosphere.narconews.com/story/2004/3/1/21129/96112#5>http://asia.news.yahoo.com/040303/afp/040303002527 int.html <http://asia.news.yahoo.com/040303/afp/040303002527int.html> As predicted, the right (as well as some inscrutable sectors of the left) is protesting in the streets, demanding that a recall occur regardless of the signature count, and to attempt to bring some stability, the Chavez government may come to a compromise with the opposition. At issue here is a general state of lawlessness, created for the most part by the right, although the Chavez government is not blameless in this regard. Throughout Latin America there is a tradition of impunity for perpetrators of crimes, be they of a personal or political nature. Case in point: no major players in the 2002 coup have served any time in prison. It is perhaps for this reason that I saw a group of Admirals in the CTV headquarters trying to squirm away from my camera when the group I was working with got to meet the Coordinadora Democratica's decision makers. Carmona, the dictator for a day, is living in Bogot�, perhaps waiting for Chavez's ouster to return triumphantly to Venezuela. By failing to enforce a rule of law for those that ignore the constitution and human rights, the Chavez government has failed to weaken the opposition. Not prosecuting the coup participants is a strategy, as has the Chavez's lax interactions with the libelous Venezuelan corporate media. Libel is not a light matter, as I'm sure Al can attest, narconews was the victim of a SLAPP-like libel suit when Al printed the story of citicorp's misdeeds and those of one of it's subsidiaries. However, my own experience watching Venezuelan corporate news media reached lows that are the stuff of Rupert Murdoch's wildest fantasies. I'm no fan of restrictive policies, and I admit that my own injury at the hands of authorities in the United States makes me extremely wary of government's use of force during protests. That said, if a government is trying to address the ills of society in a meaningful way, impunity must be confronted in order to protect any gains made by the society. There's much more than Chavez at stake, especially considering the Bush regime's current stance on Latin American affairs. It's up to us, the independent media to keep a close eye on what happens in Venezuela over the coming months, and be ready to shout when wool is pulled over people's eyes by the mainstream media. But we all know that, since that's why we're here, right? - -- siempre recordamos nuestr@s caid@s, rachel corrie y wilfredo palacios presente *Venezuela: The Squalid Opposition* (3.50 / 2 <http://narcosphere.narconews.com/comments/2004/3/1/21129/96112/5?mode=alone;showrate=1#5>) (#5 <http://narcosphere.narconews.com/comments/2004/3/1/21129/96112/5#5>) by Al Giordano on Thu Mar 4th, 2004 at 12:19:47 AM EST (User Info <http://narcosphere.narconews.com/user/uid:14>) Re: /no major players in the 2002 coup have served any time in prison... Carmona, the dictator for a day, is living in Bogot�, perhaps waiting for Chavez's ouster to return triumphantly to Venezuela. By failing to enforce a rule of law for those that ignore the constitution and human rights, the Chavez government has failed to weaken the opposition. Not prosecuting the coup participants is a strategy, as has the Chavez's lax interactions with the libelous Venezuelan corporate media.../ This has been at the crux of a long debate since April 2002 between many people, among them Ch�vez, who sticks with his non-repressive approach, and Fidel Castro, who is said to have advised Ch�vez to go after the coup plotters with full legal force. (This is very ironic, since the screeching squalid class always yelps about Ch�vez supposedly wanting to govern like Castro, even as they are the main beneficiaries of Ch�vez's kinder, gentler, approach.) I do think that he has succeeded in weakening the "opposition" by giving them enough rope to hang themselves over and over again. I don't subscribe to the view that Venezuela is in any kind of chaos right now: it's just more squawking from the spoiled brats and their corrupt Commercial Media correspondents... read enough of geezers like Gustavo Coronel huffing and puffing from their golf courses about how they're gonna get violent now... of rich kids playing with molotovs and calling in the squalid press to report on the bombs that they don't then go out and throw (someone commented on a squalid blog the other day "hey, it worked for the Weather Underground!" but scualid blogger Francisco Toro, the disgraced former NY Times stringer, censored that comment)... Toro himself is talking all macho about how he's going to stop being a "flower eater" and go fight in the streets... good luck to him... he'll probably get hurt just tripping over his shoelaces... Why suppress them when they're their own worst enemies to begin with? This "opposition" is the gang that couldn't shoot straight. They've been outmaneuvered instead of being repressed. I think it's been a brilliant strategy on the part of Ch�vez that helps a lot in the longterm project that he has launched to bring the country forward on democratic terms. We had a very emotional discussion at the February 2003 J-School about whether, and at what point, the Venezuelan government would be justified to take away the licenses of the dishonest Commercial TV stations. My position is yes: Paid speech does not merit the same protections as free speech. Others - particularly some North Americans - felt almost religiously opposed to any intervention even by democratic governments in the media. Different worlds and different world views... But in that discussion an even better idea was raised, that seemed to be acceptable to all sides: to levy a special tax on Commercial Broadcasters that would be used exclusively for funding community-run TV and radio stations, of the kind that Venezuela has pioneered in recent years, and kill them with the thing they claim to support: competition, with a better product. -- /For my opinions on politics, see my personal blog, BigLeftOutside <http://bigleftoutside.com>/ [ Parent <http://narcosphere.narconews.com/comments/2004/3/1/21129/96112/3#3> ] ------------------------------ From: Lautre Nom <[email protected]> >When is a vote a vote? > >One issue that strikes me as interesting coming out of this, is that there seems to be a growing tendency around the world to fight elections retrospectively and extra-democratically (e.g. though statistical and judicial means). Regarding the counting of the Venezuelan signatures, the Canadian foreign affairs department suggested that they should take a statistical sample to determine if fraud took place since counting all he signatures would be too time consuming. I am reminded here of the theft of the US 2000 election. > >I would guess from what I have heard about the Venezuelan opposition that they probably are involved in fraud. However, I am also worried about how these sort of things seem to play into a sort of general postmodern malaise that there is no reality. Maybe a military dictatorship is just as democratic a political system as that provided by representative electoral politics. After all, democracy probably is too time consuming. > >Obviously, everywhere people are fed up with a system that purports to be democratic and yet nowhere are the interests of the greater sections of the population represented. In this situation, all sorts of circumventions of even the nominally democratic institutions that are in place seem possible. The constitutionally regulated coup, posing as popular democracy, is a phenomena worth investigating. Maybe I'll do so, if I have any time left over after fulfilling all those democratic duties. In the meantime... > > Does anyone else have any thoughts about it? Is this a new trend? How can we analyse this from an autonomous perspective? > >My apologies if people find this comment too unrelated or unfocused, I have just been a little disturbed about the whole issue. > >Josh > This seems relevant to the role that many NGO's play. How many "popular uprisings" today are generated by those NGO's who promote democracy in the neo lib sense, democracry tied to good policy frameworks. Georgia, Haiti, Venezuela all come to mind in this regard, even poor old East Timor and here in Mozambique. Those white hats of the Carter Centre and the like. I think this role of NGO's in promoting the "constitutionally regulated coup" is in part what H&N were trying to get at in Empire. Another thing that seems to raise its head here is the incommunicability of struggles. I wonder if there was a lot of confusion about this idea in Empire. One of my Panamanian students led me down a path of considering it as a part of the segementation of the imperial landscape. That is struggles are not at their core incommunicable, but in the spectacle of empire they appear to be. How many viewing the Venezuelan situation through the lens of the spectacle can really feel any affinity with the Bolivarian struggle. They see only another Latino miltaire and this is why the the "democratic opposition"'s struggle is communicable. The struggle that we have a hard time discerning is that that goes on amongst the poor in Venezuela. It is incommunicable because to most people they cannot read it. It seesm so peculiarly Venezuelan. - -- http://www.auskadi.tk/ "the riddle which man must solve, he can only solve in being, in being what he is and not something else...." # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: [email protected] and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: [email protected]