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To repeat (and emphasize some points)...
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The ongoing vitality of democracy in Latin America exists despite, not because, of US policy. It is not just rooted in constitutional proceduralism, in electoral rotations and checks on government power but (it is rooted) in mobilized protest for a better world. And it is driven by an abiding faith in social democracy, a belief that for a society to be democratic it also has to be just—both in terms of welfare and enforcement of human rights. It is the heroic activists on the ground, from peasants in Honduras to the MST in Brazil and the Mapuches in southern Chile, who refuse to sit still as international corporations seek to turn the continent into a giant warehouse of primary material, water, gas, oil, soy, what have you, to serve the unsustainable needs of a globalized economy. It is the real human-rights activists, people like Berta Oliva, the besieged director of the Honduran Committee of the Families of the Detained and Disappeared, who refuse to keep quiet as they are lectured about letting bygones be bygones—that make the region democratic.
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It is the million Venezuelans who poured out of their hovels and surrounded Miraflores Palace in Caracas in 2002, to demand restoration of constitutional government and return of their kidnapped president--the PIONEERS of democracy in Latin America in this era. It is the thousands of coca leaf farmers led by Evo Morales, who resisted DEA fascism and U.S. toxic "war on drugs" pesticide spraying, and the thousands of water rights activists in Cochabomba who drove Bechtel corp. out of Bolivia. It is the awesome grass roots political activists in these and other Latin American countries--and also the awesome work of international groups like the Carter Center in setting up honest, transparent election systems--something we don't have here. It is the poor--the urban poor, the campesinos, the Indigenous--and those who have kept faith with the poor--students, teachers, artists, doctors, priests, nuns, soldiers, small business people and others--the great majority working to elect good governments in so many places--Venezuela, Bolivia, Brazil, Ecuador, Paraguay, Uruguay, Nicaragua, El Salvador, Guatemala.
Countries that have not successfully resisted U.S. interference have done poorly on the related issues of democracy and poverty alleviation. Colombia, recipient of $7 BILLION in U.S. military aid, is the worst mess of all--with rampant official military and related paramilitary murder of trade unionists, teachers, community activists, human rights workers and peasant farmers, and displacement of peasant farmers (5 million) the worst in the world. Needless to say, Colombia's rich/poor discrepancy is one of the worst in Latin America. (Venezuela was just designated THE best, according to the UN Economic Commission on Latin America and the Caribbean--i.e., the more a country distances itself from the U.S., the better life becomes for most people.) Hard to choose between Honduras and Mexico, for next worst U.S. influence. They are both on their way to becoming Colombia--blood-drenched, fascist-run, U.S. client states, where the trillion-plus dollar cocaine revenue stream never stops flowing to U.S. banksters, the Bush Cartel, the CIA, local oligarchies and other beneficiaries of the U.S. "war on drugs" and its goal of consolidation of the drug trade in fewer hands--ripe ground for U.S./multinational corporate exploitation and the war profiteering.
U.S. policy is sickening, and it is only by keeping the people of the U.S. ignorant of it and by depriving us of representation anywhere in government, with the 'TRADE SECRET' voting machines (the corporate coup d'etat), that it can go on like this, serving the war machine and the uber-rich.
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