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Thursday, February 09, 2006
The real reason the U.S. hates Chávez

from Akira

This is simple, and easy to understand.
-Zap             

____________________
The real reason the U.S. hates Chávez
By Lance Selfa | February 10, 2006

VENEZUELAN PRESIDENT Hugo Chávez has been on the U.S.'s target list since he survived a U.S.-sponsored coup in 2002 and a 2003-2004 bosses' strike aimed at sabotaging the oil industry.

Now comes the latest blast from Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, who said of Chávez: "He's a person who was elected legally--just as Adolf Hitler was elected legally--and then consolidated power and now is, of course, working closely with [Cuban President] Fidel Castro and [newly elected Bolivian President] Mr. Morales and others."

Less headline-grabbing, but perhaps more ominous, was the congressional testimony of Intelligence Czar John Negroponte, who said, "President Chavez, if he wins reelection later this year, appears ready to use his control of the legislature and other institutions to continue to stifle the opposition, reduce press freedom and entrench himself through measures that are technically legal, but which nonetheless constrict democracy."

The rhetoric from Rumsfeld and Negroponte hit the airwaves at the same time that Venezuela accused a U.S. military attaché of spying and expelled him from the country. The U.S. expelled a senior Venezuelan diplomat in response.

When U.S. officials start to compare foreign leaders to Hitler and liken their countries to dictatorships, that's a sign of their attempt to soften U.S. public opinion for increased U.S. meddling in their affairs.

But is there any truth to these charges? About five minutes of research would show that the opposite is the case.

No one--except the discredited elite opposition that the U.S. backs--disputes that Chávez was freely elected, and that he overwhelming defeated a 2004 attempt to recall him. Independent election monitors from the Carter Center and the Organization of American States verified both elections.

Ironically, one of the opposition's chief complaints with the elections was that the use of electronic voting machines made them prone to tampering--a complaint that the Republican Party in Florida, Ohio and Georgia usually dismisses.

The opposition, knowing that it would lose overwhelmingly in a fair vote, and with prodding from the U.S., pulled out of December's parliamentary elections.

Moreover, it has to be a strange dictatorship where the opposition owns the majority of the media and uses it to campaign against the government.

The opposition organizes openly, despite the fact that many of its leading figures were associated with the 2002 military coup that abolished democracy in Venezuela before it was defeated and Chávez was returned to power. On the weekend before more than 80,000 arrived in Caracas for the World Social Forum, the opposition staged a demonstration that some estimated to involve up to 100,000 people.

If Chávez has become an irritant to the U.S., it's because he has attempted to direct the country's oil wealth to programs for health, economic development and literacy that serve millions of poor people. This is a challenge to the so-called Washington Consensus that has led many governments to abandon these kinds of programs. The U.S. also does not like the fact that its third-largest supplier of oil and gas is not willing to knuckle under to Washington's dictates.

Chávez calls his economic and social programs "21st century socialism," but socialists in Venezuela note that the government is actually quite cautious.

Its land reform program has distributed only a small amount of land that its owners abandoned. And Chávez has said, "We're not proposing to eliminate private property, as the communists do. No. We're not going there."

Chávez and his political supporters handpick candidates for parliament. They have maneuvered to support a moderate leadership in the new trade union federation, the National Workers Union. A circuit court judge recently imposed a gag order barring the press from reporting particular details about a high-profile investigation into the 2004 assassination of a state prosecutor.

The important point about these breaches of democracy is that Venezuelan human rights and trade union activists are taking them on.

The millions of ordinary people who have been mobilized in new trade unions and community organizations are the real source of democracy in Venezuela. They deserve our solidarity--not lectures from the likes of Rumsfeld and Negroponte.


Posted at 01:34 pm by chicahua
Comment (1)  

Sunday, January 29, 2006
Pounding

We use to pound the corn
making flavorful masa
to make such foods as
tamales and tortillas

We would pound the straw
to weave the baskets
colorful and beautiful
works of art

We would pound the silver
to make beautiful jewelry
wearing them for fashion
as well as ceremony

We would pound animal hides
to make clothing and blankets
to warm and adorn
our families and loved ones

We would pound the drums
sending out music
sending out messages
sending out healing

We even pounded Mother Earth
dancing upon her gently
in our ceremonies
to praise and heal

Now in this new age
this culture-less land
we pound our children
bringing forth blood and tears

Our children in turn pound
they pound out their beats
throwing up gang signs
bringing forth more blood and tears

Our men once mighty warriors
now pound their wives and lovers
made to feel useless and unloved
bringing forth more blood and tears

Judges pound their mallets
sentencing us to life in prisons
where we are pounded
bringing forth more blood and tears

We pound our computer keys
pounding out senseless messages
instead of talking face to face
bringing forth heartache and tears

We've become deaf to the beating
the pounding the bleeding
of our very own
heartbeat

Old ways need to return
those days does my soul yearn
to pound and bring forth
something meaningful and beautiful ...


Posted at 12:39 pm by chicahua
Comment (1)  

Saturday, January 28, 2006
Who I Am

Chicahua Necahual

Zaniyo
yollococihuatl
yollochicahuac
nonotzale


nonequixtil
nonotzale
nezcaliliztlatolli
nezcalilizcali
nohquetza
nohuiampa
nontlatoa
yohualcuauhtli

Chicahua Necahual
Nican Tlaca Mexica Anahuac
niccochitlehua

nicma
nichuica
nicmelahuaz
nimitscaquitia
niquitoa

To understand this poem you will need a good understanding of the Nahualt language.

Peace


Posted at 04:43 pm by chicahua
Comment (1)  


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