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that Bush may have been counting on for deliverables to his corporate masters, in a country where a big leftist movement is in-progress (led by the highly popular bishop of Paraguay, an advocate for the poor, who recently resigned his priestly office to run for president), would, a) see the benefits of South American self-determination and regional cooperation (part of the Bolivarian revolution), and b) have the moxy to break from US domination (which uses tools like the World Bank to bleed the poor of Latin America), really demonstrates the power of what Hugo Chavez's government has done. The benefits of Bolivarianism in Argentina, Bolivia and Ecuador are obvious. All three have elected leftist (majorityist) governments that represent the true interests of the people. Argentina is on a fast track to recovery--from devastation by the World Bank/IMF--because of Venezuela's aid in easy term loans. Venezuela thus helps to create a healthy trading partner for Brazil, Venezuela and others, and promotes social programs, stability and prosperity in the region. This, in turn, has inspired the populations of Bolivia and Ecuador to also elect leftist (majorityist) governments--with socialist Evo Morales already re-negotiating corporate use of Bolivia's oil, gas and other resources, to benefit Bolivians--and Ecuador heading that way with the more recently elected, leftist economist Rafael Correa.
Against these developments, Bush offered dreadful "free trade" (global corporate piracy) agreements, and billions in military aid to a country like Colombia (where rightwing paramilitary groups--one of the big beneficiaries of US military aid--were plotting to assassinate Chavez, and engaged in other bloody schemes and drug trafficking). He also tried his best to break up Mercosur, the South American trade group that is the likely precursor to a South American "Common Market." The Bushite "Plan" for killing and plundering in South America had some tentative success in Peru, but then quickly suffered catastrophes in the election of Correa in Ecuador and Uruguay's recent rejection of Bush's "divide and conquer" tactics on Mercosur. It also appears that Latin American leaders placed a condition on Bush's visit that there would be no trashing of Hugo Chavez. From Brazil to Mexico, he was greeted with lectures on Latin American sovereignty. Mexico's rightwing president Felipe Calderon even mentioned Venezuela in this context. I was amazed by this. I doubt think Calderon is sincere--in fact, I suspect he was colluding with Bush to privatize Mexico's oil--but still, that he felt obliged to say it is remarkable.
Which brings me to Paraguay, and Duarte's more concrete action in support of the new fund. He must really be running scared of the enormous leftist movement in South America--or maybe even is inspired by it, to act in his peoples' interest. I don't know much about him. I've heard his government described as a "weak rightwing government"--in the context of the Bush Cartel's rumored purchase of 300,000 acres in Paraguay--a possible launching pad for a paramilitary war against the Andean democracies (Venezuela, Bolivia, Ecuador). Now it appears that he is not so weak after all, and is JOINING the Boliviarian revolution. Perhaps the Bush Cartel purchase, and their dark schemes, pissed him off. Hard to say. In Colombia, there is evidence that even Colombian President Uribe feels compelled to distance himself from the rightwing paramilitary assassination plot against Chavez, and their other dirty dealings (no known connection to the Bush Junta, but it wouldn't surprise me at all; where there are dirty dealings against leftists in South America, there are bound to be Bushites). This seems to be the new paradigm: Killing peasants and leftists, and allying yourself with the hated Bush regime, is UN-South American!
And, of course, it isn't just a feeling--a wave of regional patriotism. There are huge benefits to Latin American self-determination. And it is there, in South America, that the dream of independence, of self-determination, of democracy and of social justice--once the dream of our own country--is being reborn.
Viva la revolución!
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