|
Edited on Sun Dec-12-04 06:18 PM by imenja
I support agricultural subsidies for small family farmers. My objection is that the majority of those subsidies go to agri-corporations. As for the Brazilian rain forest, I'll share a story with you. I lived in Salvador da Bahia, Brazil for a year and a half (93-94). One day I stopped in a small shop that sold cokes and snacks. As I left, the owner called to me: "Tell Sting the Amazon is ours." My initial response was irritation: "Sure," I thought, "all of us gringos know each other. I'll give Sting a call tomorrow." As I later thought about it, I realized the man made an important point. The industrialized nations like the US and Britain have destroyed their wilderness, uses the overwhelming majority of oil and other natural resources in the world, and then insists Brazil conserve it's forests for global benefit. Many Brazilians view it as a matter of survival. Developing the Amazon area, they believe, provides essential jobs and income for their great masses of unemployed. Some of the innovations have been in the area of sustainable development--they use Amazon areas in ways that create income but don't level it. Of course, that is not always, or I expect usually, the case. It is a complex issue, however, and is understood in Brazil in the context of Western Imperialism. From your posts, I'm assuming you yourself are a farmer. I respect your frustration, but I would respectfully suggest that the foe of the American farmer are agri-corporations here at home rather than Brazilians. Brazil is trying to compete in the international economy and is starting to have some success. I don't think we should begrudge them that. They need markets badly. I hope Lula will oversee that economic growth in such a way that Brazilians across the income spectrum will benefit from it. As a long-time socialist who has come to accept the realities of globalization and the international capitalist marketplace, he ran for president on a platform promising shared economic development. I believe he is genuinely trying to do that, though he clearly faces great obstacles from the rural oligarchy. There is also a rural movement in Brazil called "Movimento sem terra"--a landless movement that demands rights for agricultural workers and insists on land reform. Lula has begun to address some of those reforms.
|