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ears. It was like a Faux News show. And I've noticed this particular bias--against the Latin American Left--in other BBC news reporting.
I don't know the whole story of what's happened to the BBC, but I suspect that their decline started when the Blair government went for their throats over the Iraq War and the interview of government bio/chem expert David Kelly who anonymously questioned their evidence for WMDs in Iraq (and was later found dead in highly questionable circumstances). Soon after, there was news of downsizing at the BBC, and drastic cuts in staff. Though the group that was running the BBC when the Blairites attacked it refused to give up David Kelly's name as the source of the criticism, I think that plans were put in motion at that time to disempower the BBC as an independent news source--and the utter crap that we're seeing now, about the Latin American Left (a news story that I follow closely) is the result.
I think we need to understand that British and European banksters, as well as U.S. banksters--really the transnational, "western" bankster establishment--and allied corporate powers and super-rich investors--were making tons of money off the ruination of economies in Latin America, along with gross exploitation of Latin American natural resources and workers. It was a major looting expedition. And one of the reasons that these same money moguls and their toady press hate Hugo Chavez and his closest allies--such as Nestor Kirchner and Evo Morales--is that they put a stop to it, and rallied the region to establish its independence. One of the very first things that happened, after the Venezuelan people peacefully defeated the U.S.-supported coup d'etat against Chavez, was that the Chavez government loaned Argentina part of the money they needed to get out from under onerous World Bank/IMF debt and did so on easy terms, as well as negotiating some barter trade deals (oil for beef). The conditions for World Bank/IMF loans were killing Argentina, literally destroying the fabric of society. This is when the Bank of the South was formed--as an alternative to the World Bank/IMF--in order to keep development financing and loans and debts within the control of the Latin American community in order to promote social justice and real development of the region, rather than vicious multinational corporate development aimed at looting the region. The loans and trade deals may be south-south, or multi-lateral across the Global South including, for instance, China, but the rules are written by Latin Americans and their leaders.
A typical early example of this was the Chavez government's re-negotiation of Venezuela's oil contracts. Prior to the Chavez administration, while the oil was already nationalized, the "neo-liberal" governments had been basically giving away the oil profits, in a 10/90 split, favoring the multinational oil companies, who ruled the industry and set their own conditions for developing the resource, and while skimming off the top for Venezuela's rich, urban, oil elite, and utterly neglecting their own country and people--an extremely irresponsible, lazy, greedy, coup-prone elite who think they are "born to rule." The Chavez government were skillful and very strong negotiators. They required a 50/50 split of the oil profits, favoring Venezuela's social programs. This sent Exxon walking out of the talks, and opened the market to smaller oil companies from multiple countries, including Italy, Spain, France and Norway. Brazil's Lula da Silva later followed up on this precedent, set by Venezuela, and insisted that Brazil's big new oil find be similarly set up, with benefit to the poor.
The transglobal corporations who are running things here and in Europe--including the World Bank/IMF--hate Chavez for setting precedents like these, and for the biggie, the creation of institutions like UNASUR (all South American countries) and CELAC (all Latin American countries), which exclude the U.S. and act in the interests of Latin Americans. Chavez has been very inspiring as to pulling Latin American countries together to act cooperatively among themselves and to act as an economic/political block in Latin America's interest in world forums and in regard to world trade. The World Bank's usurious loan portfolio in Latin America fell of by about 95% during this period.
Since the British government has become a junior partner in U.S. oil wars and other exploitative ventures, it was probably inevitable that the BBC would be corrupted--downsized, corporatized, made a tool of the rich--like every other news and opinion source in the western world. Reuters has also been thoroughly corrupted, if their coverage of Latin American is any guide. I call them Rotters now. And I call the BBC the BBCons. Sad but true.
It's all about neo-colonialism, wealth and power, and a kind of desperation on the part of the very rich to have it all--all the power, all the money, all the resources. They can't have the BBC questioning their oil wars. They can't have Latin American upstarts questioning their "freedom" to loot everybody and everything, and actually effectively challenging them. Lula da Silva called them "the blue-eyed wonders of Wall Street"--those who were trying to dictate economic policy to Latin America, while they themselves crashed the world economy, and though he apologized for making a racial remark, that criticism was pointed and sincere--that these wealthy, greedy northerners who were preaching de-regulation and all the rest of the neo-liberal bullshit, couldn't even keep their own house in order. He broke from them, on many of these policies, and allied with Chavez and the rest of the Latin American Left--that's something else they hate Chavez for. They wanted to make the more business-friendly da Silva their ikon. But he's a former steelworker--and spent time in jail for being a labor organizer during the Brazilian fascist dictatorship--so he could smell a bosses' con and it didn't take that much encouragement for him to see the advantages of solidarity, for one thing, and of the "raise all boats" philosophy that he and Chavez developed in many meetings.
The U.S. is STILL pursuing a "divide and conquer" strategy in Latin America, though it is well past its "sell by" date and is smelling up the kitchen. And the British (and the Canadians in this hemisphere) are trotting right along, hoping...I don't know...that the U.S. can pull off another Iraq maybe? a new oil war? a couple of coup d'etats like that rotten stinking thing they did in Honduras? more resources to loot? more slave labor to exploit? It's pretty ugly what these countries are doing, and it's pretty ugly what they've done to the BBC.
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