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And the U.S. government LISTENED!
I'm just sitting here with my jaw on the floor, trying to get used to this.
:wow:
I know it's not wise to become so wildly happy at a bit of evidence of good government, good foreign policy and SANITY at the State Department. And it IS wise to be highly skeptical, and to worry about our secret government and what IT might be up to, in flat contradiction of our government's stated policy, or what the Bushwhacks might be up to with our stolen billions and private armies. We have good reason to be skeptical, vigilant, disbelieving, onery citizens and activists for social justice. But, heck, I'm still in a state of shock at the simple civility of this State Dept. Q&A. Somebody really gave this guy an earful, too. You can hear it in his repeated phrases--
--a fully democratic process --fully consistent with democratic practice --the process was held consistent with democratic principles --their democratic processes need to be taken into account on our part --a positive relationship with Venezuela --to maintain a positive relationship with Venezuela --a positive democratic result.
Duguid really, really, REALLY wants to get these points across in a POSITIVE manner. But some of the old bullshit is just beneath the surface, for instance, he is saying that Chavez needs to "govern in the interest of all of the people of the diverse interests that are present in Venezuela." I think he means the rich people--those are the only ones whose immediate, short-term, greed-oriented interests might not be served by the Chavez government--although the financial and political stability that the Chavez government has created is in their long term interest. All other "diverse" people--minorities, the indigenous, women, the poor, the middle class, workers, small business people, farmers, students--the interests of the vast majority--are obviously being served by the Chavez government. The State Dept.'s assumption is that Chavez might start becoming unfair to rich people. It has a slight ominous tone. Really, that's the only sense I can make of it. They've got a bunch of loudmouth, lying, rich Venezuelans in Miami, in cahoots with the anti-Castro mafia, yelling at them--using their USAID welfare to lobby for a hostile policy on Venezuela. So maybe Obama's people felt they had to throw them that bone.
And then he says: "...we look for governments who have achieved a positive democratic result to use that in a positive manner." I mean, you want to say: 'Duh, how can someone use "a positive democratic result" in any other way but "a positive manner"?' But you have to understand that this is an echo of the old Bushwhack meme that Chavez intends to become a "dictator"--no evidence for it so far but that's what they said--or he is "increasingly authoritarian" (a rightwing Catholic cardinal's phrase). Duguid is saying, 'okay, okay, Venezuela is democratic--now the test is governing democratically.' But the truth is that Chavez has governed democratically all along. He's been in office ten years--as the result of one honest and aboveboard election after another, and free and fair debate in between (and lots of it!). But this underlayer--or residue--of Bushwhackism is overwhelmed by this spokesman's desire to stress the words "democratic" and "positive" over and over again. It's as if he'd been strenuously rehearsed on these points.
And you gotta wonder what has gone down behind closed doors at the State Dept., after that weird thing Obama did two days before his inauguration--making anti-Chavez remarks on a Univision (rightwing, anti-Chavez) TV news broadcast. It feels to me like somebody mis-advised Obama--or maybe this was the last gasp effort to try to influence Venezuelan voters against the referendum. I don't know--it was just SO undiplomatic, so ill-timed, such a bad way to start things off. My own reaction was utter dismay. How could our new president be saying such stupid, uninformed things--repeating Bushwhack lies? How did that happen? Was it a mistake? He said, for instance, that Chavez was "exporting terrorism"--and I wondered, doesn't he KNOW that that Bushwhack lie is being laughed at all over South America? And this was Obama's inauguration week! Two wars and economic meltdown to deal with, and he's spending time throwing darts at Chavez?! Now this--an effort by the State Dept. to be civil, and to acknowledge the facts.
Whatever went wrong during Obama's inauguration week, it has been corrected--rather dramatically. My guess is that Lula da Silva talked to Obama, and clued him in. I have no idea where Hillary Clinton fits into this series of events. But I know that da Silva publicly stated that he wanted to talk to Obama specifically about Venezuela and Bolivia--whose leaders have been unfairly demonized by the Bushwhacks.
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