A few weeks ago I wrote an impassioned post about Hugo Chavez’s death, making some sweeping statements about what he contributed to both Venezuelan society and Latin American society without backing them up with facts. Well luckily other people do their research before they express their opinion publicly, and below I have reposted a very intelligent account of Chavez’ legacy and why North American governments and mainstream media are slobbering to take him down, even post-mortem. So please read on, and be assured that although Chavez is no longer with us, he has inspired many, many revolutionaries in his wake…
Chavez and the Latin American Spring: This is what democracy could look like
By Murray Dobbin via Rabble.ca
One of the many things that Hugo Chavez, the charismatic and revolutionary president of Venezuela contributed to the world, was his demonstration for people everywhere the difference between democracy and liberal democracy. Chavez’s hyperbolic style, his tweaking the tail of the Imperial tiger and his willingness to be just as ruthless as his U.S.-backed opponents, gave Western leaders and journalists lots of ammunition to demonize him.
But what really made them all crazy was precisely the fact that he took liberal democracy — the term applied to a political system designed to manage capitalism in the interests of the wealthy and corporations — and turned it into genuine democracy. It highlighted for those struggling for social justice that liberal democracy is an oxymoron — liberalism being the principle that capitalism (inequality) rules and democracy being its opposite: equality. As witnessed by the outrageous levels of inequality now characterizing Canada, you can have one or the other but not both.
Nothing threatens leaders of the Western powers — especially the U.S. — like good examples of real democracy and they will do anything to destroy them, demonize them or threaten any other country that dares think about emulating them. No example is too small to destroy as was witnessed by the 1983 U.S. invasion of Grenada (population 110,000).
The strategy was called “destroy the dream” — which explains, perhaps, why U.S. troops totally destroyed a rural, all-women jam-making co-operative. In the 1980s it was Nicaragua. There they forced the Sandinista government to change its system of electoral democracy from a constituent assembly (made up of elected representatives from all sectors of society) to a multi-party system that the elites could control. The result: the Sandinistas lost.
The U.S. and its imperial junior partners like Canada have always had some excuse, however transparent, to crush good examples in the past. But Chavez shamed them at their own game, winning more democratic elections than any Western leader in the past century: Since coming to power in 1999, he won 15 of 16 elections and referenda defeating his opponents by a margin of 10-20 percentage points, landslides by our own standards. And he did it through elections that were determined by Western observer groups to be perhaps the most fair on the planet. Former US President Jimmy Carter, representing one of the most respected observer groups, claimed that Venezuela’s electoral system was “the best in the world.”
None of this matters to politicians dedicated to global corporate dominance. Henry Kissinger’s infamous justification of U.S. support of the fascist coup in Chile was brutal and unapologetic: “I don’t see why we need to stand by and watch a country go communist because of theirresponsibility of its own people.” It is only the most chilling expression of capitalist elite’s contempt for any democracy that takes equality seriously.
Stephen Harper has the identical mentality. As a result of Chavez’s death, said Harper, “… I hope the people of Venezuela can now build for themselves a better, brighter future based on the principles of freedom, democracy, the rule of law and respect for human rights.” This would be laughable if weren’t sinister. Harper no doubt knows all about the incredible social progress achieved under Chavez’s government. But for Harper democracy is clearly not about the substance of what it delivers. When he talks about freedom it is freedom of the wealthy to do as they please; and the rule of law means the laws that protect corporate privileges. As for democracy it is risible that Harper has the gall to even utter the word given his record.
Just what did Chavez accomplish in his fourteen years in power? There are far too many examples to list here but according to Latin American researcher and journalist Salim Lamrani in “50 Truths about Hugo Chavez and the Bolivarian Revolution”
Here are some of the more notable:
-In December 2005, UNESCO said that Venezuela had eradicated illiteracy.
-The number of children attending school increased from 6 million in 1998 to 13 million in 2011 and the enrollment rate is now 93.2 per cent.
-The rate of secondary school enrollment rose from 53.6 per cent in 2000 to 73.3 per cent in 2011; the number of tertiary students increased from 895,000 in 2000 to 2.3 million in 2011, assisted by the creation of new universities.
-Between 2005 and 2012, 7873 new medical centers were created in Venezuela. The number of doctors increased from 20 per 100,000 population in 1999 to 80 per 100,000 in 2010.
-Infant mortality rate fell from 19.1 per thousand in 1999 to 10 per thousand in 2012, a reduction of 49 per cent.
-From 1999 to 2011, the poverty rate decreased from 42.8 per cent to 26.5 per cent and the rate of extreme poverty fell from 16.6 per cent in 1999 to 7 per cent in 2011.
-In the rankings of the Human Development Index (HDI) of the United Nations Program for Development (UNDP), Venezuela jumped from 83 in 2000 to 73 in 2011, and entered into the category of Nations with ‘High HDI’.
-Since 1999, 700,000 homes have been built in Venezuela.
-Since 1999, the government provided/returned more than one million hectares of land to Aboriginal people. Land reform enabled tens of thousands of farmers to own their land. In total, Venezuela distributed more than 3 million hectares.
-Five million children now receive free meals through the School Feeding Programme. The figure was 250,000 in 1999. The malnutrition rate fell from 21 per cent in 1998 to less than 3 per cent in 2012.”
-The unemployment rate fell from 15.2 per cent in 1998 to 6.4 per cent in 2012, with the creation of more than 4 million jobs.
As for that core meaning of democracy — equality — acccording to the UNDP “…Venezuela is the country in the region with the least inequality.” Equality apparently matters as, according to the 2012 World Happiness Report put out by the Earth Institute at Columbia University, Venezuela is the second happiest country in Latin America, after Costa Rica, and the nineteenth in the world beating out Germany, France, Italy, Japan and Spain.
Harper and other Western leaders’ reaction to Chavez and his legacy is an important revelation regarding their visceral hostility to using state power in the interests of the poor. They cannot hide their contempt and their media cheerleaders go along with them — with the term “dictator” and “strongman” still being used routinely to describe Chavez (while no such term was ever used to describe George Bush who took power illegally).
But if they simply ignore the stunning social progress made under Chavez it is his other accomplishments that have them worried. Chavez’s foreign policy has severely weakened the grip that the U.S. and institutions like the IMF and World Bank had on the region. This legacy goes well beyond Venezuela’s borders and threatens the centuries-long domination of giant corporations and finance capital.
In 2011 Chavez was instrumental in creating of the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC) which brings together the 33 nations of the region making the Organization of American States, the decades-old tool of U.S. political domination, almost irrelevant. On the trade front, in 2004 Chavez created the Bolivarian Alliance for the Americas (ALBA) with Cuba establishing the basis for an alliance (now with eight members) based on cooperation and reciprocity. Its explicit aim is “combating poverty and social exclusion” and again challenges the historic domination of the region by the U.S.
The question remains what effect Chavez’s death will have both on the future of Venezuela and the region. Now that the U.S. has extricated itself from two Middle East wars it will turn its attention once again to its “back yard.”
The empire will strike back. But the “good examples” (and there are many in Latin America including Bolivia and Ecuador) are robust and inspiring. Short of a return to concerted covert action or military intervention the Latin American spring seems secure. Viva Chavez!
Murray Dobbin is a guest senior contributing editor for rabble.ca, and has been a journalist, broadcaster, author and social activist for 40 years. He writes rabble’s bi-weekly State of the Nation column, which is also found at The Tyee.
Starlyng Carpio
October 7, 2013 at 8:40 pm
What a piece of shit
Daniel M.
March 26, 2013 at 7:21 am
Listen here:
You’re NOT Venezuelan, your other article was full of inconsistencies which can only be explained by your staggering ignorance on the subject, and this one has the same problems because it comes from people who have no idea about how Chavez’s policies really affected people in this country. Yes, I am actually Venezuelan.
It’s frankly telling how an article like this one is published on this site, because it just goes to show how many pretenders are in this scene, supporting any ideology that goes against whatever policies are enacted in your country. Yes, I suppose North America has fucked their own people over with all the talk about drones, Patriot Act, wars here and there, but you have NO idea how privileged you are, and how disqualified you are to support someone who rightfully brought a class awareness in this country while dividing it against itself.
Chavez WASN’T a left-wing president in practice, only in name. And this is coming from someone who’s actually a leftist, he was a heavily conservative leader, which can be explained by his military background but mostly from his obvious ignorance on many social subjects. You can quote as many articles you want about how Venezuela is more “equal”, but the truth is that all of these are either skewed or never actually implemented. If you lived here, you wouldn’t think twice to be against him and the people who support him in the government, because they’ve been the ones getting richer year after year with the oil rent while they give small benefits to those who support them to keep their fragile support. They made sure to add as much religious (yes, religious) undertones to Chavez’s death and cancer treatment so the most ignorant sector of the country would actually claim he’s Jesus reincarnated. There’s proof of this. You’d think, “then why was he elected all these times? Shouldn’t people realize this?”, and the answer is, WE DID, at least half of the country, the problem is how Chavez used the media, the Congress, the electoral system and pretty much every power he had to tilt the balance to his favor, and there’s proof of this. Even after his death, those who hold the power at the moment keep doing it, and YES, there are even pages blocked by the main ISP in this country, so there are things we can’t see unless we use proxies.
Basically what I’m saying is: Stop shaming yourself with articles like this one. I refrained of commenting on the previous one because I thought you wouldn’t take it further than that, but this one is just too much. It’s clear how easy it is to support a despotic president from the outside while having no clue about what actually happens in there.
CVLT Nation
March 26, 2013 at 11:40 am
Hi Daniel:
Thanks for your comment.
Aside from your claim to be Venezuelan, I don’t see any references for the information you are putting forth. I am open to seeing some hard evidence of your claims. And making the claim that the private media were “silenced” is not going to fly. Private media and opposition groups in Venezuela have received millions in funding from US government-backed agencies. This site is also run by Venezuelans: http://venezuelanalysis.com/news/351
Chavez’ opposition has been catered to and broadcasted by the world’s most powerful government and media. The US government and mainstream corporate media have broadcasted their anti-Chavez rhetoric around the world since the day he was elected. Not only did Venezuelan private media and opposition have a voice, they went from having a voice in Venezuela to a voice around the world. If they can play their cards right and get the right guy in power, I bet they can turn this new platform into an even bigger fortune than they enjoyed before.
I am not ashamed of posting this article on my blog. I agree with the writer and I find the stats he posted compelling. If I was ashamed of my opinions then I wouldn’t blog for a living! If I allow people who disagree with me to “shame” me as your comment is attempting to do, I wouldn’t be doing this either. Luckily I am a shameless person.
Daniel M.
March 26, 2013 at 3:53 pm
Sure, I could reference every single claim I’ve made (and more), but I won’t do it in here because it would be too long, I’d rather write it in the zine where I collaborate, then link back. I think that’s more efficient. And I will do it, don’t worry (I was going to anyway).
As for the claims made in Venezuelan Analysis, well, not only they´re heavily sponsored by the Venezuelan Government, most of their “facts” are actually propaganda put forth by the same people behind pamphlets like Ciudad CCS and Difunde La Verdad which I’m sure you’d know if you actually lived here, and you’d dismiss them for what they are, 90% rubbish. However, yeah, Súmate and other organizations received funding back during the days of the coup d’etat in 2002 and around the same time of the oil strike in 2003… Your facts are heavily dated, considering that happened a decade ago, and I knew you were going to post them, because that´s ALL the proof you have to talk about US intervention in our country.
It is undeniable said intervention happened. Right now? Not so much. The opposition made several mistakes in the past which I was never okay with, even though I wasn’t a fan of the government either, but since then (I’d say 2007 onwards), the opposition changed and most, if not all, have separated themselves from that anti-democratic attitude. In reality, the US sees more benefits in having Chávez (or his party) in power because we’ve been selling them oil steadily, way more than previous governments, they’re our most important client! If they actually wanted him out, they would have killed him a long time ago, back when they could. Chavez was NEVER a real danger to the US, specially since last year we even bought oil from them (http://www.eluniversal.com/economia/120712/venezuela-elevo-compras-de-gasolina-a-eeuu-desde-2011), which comes from bad policies as well, but that’s another issue. Most of that money was used to support protests, which never actually worked.
The opposition has only 3 independent channels in open air, 1 of them already lobbied with the government and outright censors anything related to the opposition’s candidate right now (Henrique Capriles), the other is more open to the criticism against the government but still watches its back most of the times, and the last one, the most critical (Globovision) can only be seen in 4 states out of 21. The rest of the channels (15) are owned by the government, and in most of the cases they use them to broadcast the exact same thing: pro-chavez propaganda. In reality, yeah, the media has been silenced, and it’s funny to see you trying to downplay it because globally they prefer to have Chavez or his successor in power because they aren’t sure if Capriles will sell them as much oil as he did. You’re so focused on the US intervention back in 2002-2003 (because it’s clearly all you know about) but you have no idea about the Chinese and Russian intervention here: they OWN vital companies in here as a payment for the presidential campaigns and a huge amount of expenses that have nothing to do with social measures, just to mention one fact. It’s also hilarious to say the US enjoyed more of “our fortune”, when in reality we’ve been selling them more oil than we used to, and sure, we displaced some US oil companies from drilling here, but we replaced them with Chinese, Russia, Brazil, etc… Here’s the Faja Petrolífera del Orinoco (Google it, you’ll learn something new) and which countries own it now: http://www.soberania.org/Images/faja_del_orinoco_asignaciones_1.jpg. It’s interesting to see how a small country like Cuba, with no money of its own, has such a HUGE piece of the cake, don’t you think?
What I’m trying to tell you is: you’ve been taught to question your own media because you know you’ve been lied in the past, but you don’t hesitate at all when it comes to accept whatever news in english you read from my country. My advice is to learn spanish or to at least have the decency of using Google Translate to read local newspapers because using the very first source to support your claims is kind of misguided (no one reads Venezuelan Analysis in here). Here’s another site in english which comes from independent journalists, http://caracaschronicles.com/, and they write about the other side of the story. I know you won’t read it because for you, the Chavez fairytale and the conspiracy theories about the US pulling the strings behind the opposition are more appealing, but you should ask yourself why, after 14 years of government and prosperity, Chavez went from winning the elections in 2006 with 67% of the votes against 37%, to winning the same elections with only 55% against 45% last year. You could claim it’s still a “wide margin”, but considering the opposition is not a single country but rather a group of different parties and ideologies, I’d say that’s an important margin.
CVLT Nation
March 26, 2013 at 5:10 pm
Here are some interesting links to check for your article, showing how US funded and state backed intelligence firms Stratfor and CANVAS were working to destabilize politics in Venezuela. This link takes you to one email thread: http://wikileaks.org/gifiles/releasedate/2012-06-18-08-canvas-how-a-us-funded-group-trains-opposition.html
but there are a lot more to be found here if you look for mentions of Venezuela:
http://wikileaks.org/gifiles/releases.html
Daniel M.
March 26, 2013 at 8:24 pm
Eh? I already knew about Stratfor and I checked those leaks thoroughly from the first time they were posted, and even used them to check what was said back in the days about Chavez’ state of health, seeing as the government media held back all that information from the people, even up to the last day when he passed away.
And not a SINGLE one of these emails show any “conspiracy” against Venezuela nor any irregular activity, they were doing intelligence work. Not that I condone it, but the word “destabilization” sounds very similar to what the government media was saying when said leaks were posted online (weeks later, seeing as the government media is slow and unreliable), to justify attacking the opposition in our country by claiming its supporters were behind all that. Pure bullshit.
No sir, the only relevant information those emails have is precisely what they were hiding from us during three years, and it’s a display of the kinda things they were doing backstage to support the re-election of a person who needed to rest, by abusing resources and political control across the region. Chavez didn’t treat his cancer properly because he focused on the elections, and now we know the results.
Honestly though, stop using govt media to try to back up your claims, specially since you aren’t even familiar with the kinda lies they spread.
CVLT Nation
March 26, 2013 at 9:11 pm
Cool! You don’t have to write your article any more, just copy and paste these comments!