the systematic, official, political murder, funded by U.S. tax dollars, that is going on in Colombia. $7 BILLION in U.S. military aid to Colombia, and Amnesty International attributes 92% of the murders of trade unionists in Colombia to the Colombian military (about half) and its closely tied rightwing paramilitary death squads (the other half). Thousands of trade unionists, human rights workers, teachers, community activists, peasant farmers, journalists, political leftists and others who dare oppose the fascist government have been murdered by the military and its death squads.
NOTHING like this is going on in Venezuela. Neither the Chavez government nor the Venezuelan military has killed ANYBODY and there are most certainly NO associated death squads killing rightwingers. Not in all the venomous crap concocted by the rightwing opposition in USAID workshops, and promulgated by the State Department, the CIA and the corpo-fascist press, has there ever been any such accusation (not that it would be make it true, if there were). And it is patently NOT true. NO human rights group has said any such thing about Venezuela. And, believe me, we would be hearing about it, 24/7, if they had.
Venezuela does have a crime problem--but it is private crime. The Chavez government has been slow to move against it. Can you imagine the screams of the rightwing if the Chavez government DID get into aggressive policing or taking peoples' guns away? But they did, recently, found a national police academy with the specific purpose of improving police work and overriding the networks of corruption that exist within local police forces.
What is happening in Colombia is extermination of leftist, pro-worker, community leadership--especially in the areas where the rich, the protected drug lords and multinational corporations want the land. Five MILLION peasant farmers have been displaced from their small farms by state terror--the worst human displacement crisis in the world. No such thing is happening in Venezuela, which is going the other way--restoring farmers to their farms, land reform (very well thought-out land reform) and justice for, and help for, the poorest people.
Venezuela was just designated THE most equal country in Latin America, on income distribution, by the UN Economic Commission on Latin America and the Caribbean. I'll bet you didn't hear anything about THAT in the corpo-fascist press! (Colombia is one of the LEAST equal.) Venezuela may have a street crime problem, but their government is making real, substantial, provable and very significant progress toward eliminating poverty. They have cut poverty IN HALF and extreme poverty by over 70%.
As for Iraq, the U.S. bombed and invaded Iraq, for no good reason, slaughtering a hundred thousand people in the first weeks of bombing alone, and proceeded to hack up civil life in Iraq, with numerous extrajudicial killings, induced corruption, promotion of tribal warfare and every other evil imaginable, including allowing at least a billion dollars in US aid to civil society to get 'disappeared.'
No such systematic, murderous, bully force has attacked Venezuela. Except for the border areas with Colombia, where about a quarter of a million poor Colombians have fled across the border into Venezuela--mostly fleeing the Colombian military and its death squads, and also US toxic pesticide spraying--a huge immigrant headache that the Chavez government feels obliged to address with humanitarian aid--and the other border instabilities that have resulted from Colombia's
70 year civil war, and with the exception of U.S.-funded rightwing trouble-makers, no outside force has violently interfered with Venezuela.
The two situations--Iraq and Venezuela--are simply not comparable. Venezuela has a very democratic and stable government. Its people repeatedly express their great satisfaction with their democracy in regional polls. It gets some of the highest marks that any people in Latin America give to their countries. Iraq is still engaged in tribal/religious warfare--ignited by the US invasion and occupation--and will likely be unstable that way for a long time to come.
Venezuela has a street crime problem to solve--and I think they will solve it. They've solved illiteracy and hunger. They have vastly improved educational opportunities and income distribution. They solved the problem of the oil profits bleeding out of the country into the pockets of Exxon Mobil and brethren, and they solved it fairly. They are now solving the displacement of 30,000 to 100,000 people by catastrophic floods. Venezuelans and the Chavez government are good at solving problems, when they determine to do something. Venezuela's police problem--endemic corruption that has been entrenched forever--is the heart of the matter. Many don't do their jobs. They don't enforce the law. And the justice and prison systems also need reform. (They are working on prison reform.)
We have problems, too--in case you hadn't noticed. Not only did a civil political gathering just get shot up, killing and wounding many--including a Congresswoman and a Federal judge, and a child, how many safe places are there, in this country, where you can feel confident that you won't get mugged, robbed, raped, carjacked, shot? With all our prisons and all our billions spent on law enforcement, many areas remain very unsafe and people lived fortressed lives. And that isn't the END of our particular woes. We are engaged in, and paying for, a Forever War around the world--in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Yemen and other places, and we are threatening war against Iran, and bully-talking about Venezuela as well. "We the people" have lost control our government. It does not respond to our needs, our common good, our desire for peace and justice. It is a wholly-owned subsidiary of multinational corporations and war profiteers. And the violence that is done in our name is horrendous--as well as impacting the lives of our soldiers and their families and communities. There have never been so many soldier suicides. PTSS is a huge problem.
Venezuela may have a street crime problem but they are trying to address it. We have a much bigger problem--our war machine--and are we addressing it? Can we? Do we even have that power any more? How easily do you think we could be looking at Bush Junta II in 2012, and yet more war?
Venezuela has transparent elections. We do not. And that vulnerability in our system is very, very, VERY dangerous.
We should be looking to our own problems, and not harking to Associated Pukes' headlines about Venezuela being more violent than Iraq. And, by the way, did you know that it isn't true?
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VENEZUELA: NYT Exploits Own Iraq Death Toll Denial to Trash Venezuela
Saturday, 28 August 2010 18:41 Robert Naiman
Robert Naiman discusses the controversial figures the New York Times used recently to exaggerate the scale of murder rates in Venezuela in comparison to Iraq. After a detailed analysis of the figures, he goes on to discuss possible explanations for a surge in the Venezuelan murder rate.(MORE)
http://www.lab.org.uk/index.php/news/66-analysis/592-venezuela-nyt-exploits-own-iraq-death-toll-denial-to-trash-venezuela