Missing the Point: Media Speculations Over Venezuela
Sep 9 2011
Edward Ellis
With the recent revelation that President Hugo Chávez underwent emergency surgery to remove a cancerous tumor during a visit to Cuba in mid June, an explosion in political speculation has been swirling through the streets of Venezuela and catching fire around the world.
International media conglomerates—with conservative anti-Castro groups in Florida in the lead—have jumped on this latest wave of speculation, forecasting the demise of the left-wing leader in the run up to next year’s presidential elections.
With outlandish predictions of a post-Chávez era, based more on their frustration with Fidel Castro’s 85th birthday than on the Venezuelan president’s medical condition, right-wing Miamians continue to direct their unremitting hatred toward any Latin American government that breaks with their free-market mentality.
Perhaps ironically, all of these pretensions and exaggerations have occurred before the backdrop of one of Venezuela’s most important historical celebrations—the bicentennial anniversary of its independence from Spain on July 5.
...Another significant event that was also overlooked was the founding summit of a new organization for regional alliance, the Community of Latin American States (CELAC), which was scheduled to take place on Margarita Island following the bicentennial celebrations.
The first meeting of CELAC was postponed due to Hugo Chávez’s medical recovery and rescheduled for December 9 in Caracas. Preparations for the event are underway with sub-meetings taking place between regional Foreign Ministers and other high officials.
Although CELAC may not be as sexy to mainstream media as Chavez’s chemo-induced baldness, the creation of this alliance represents yet another definitive step away from Washington’s hegemonic influence in the Americas and strengthens multilateralism between countries that share a similar history and present.
In this way, CELAC builds upon the unifying dream of South American independence hero Simon Bolívar, who in his Carta de Jamaica of 1815 famously proposed a single government to unite Hispanoamérica.(SNIP)
The new regional block will expand upon other recent integrationist initiatives including UNASUR, Mercosur, Petrocaribe, and ALBA in constructing an alternative framework for economic, social, and political cooperation between Latin American governments.(Discusses the countries' differing economic strategies and policies.)
Despite these (economic) differences, the important thing is that the door to dialogue is being opened and the United States is being left outside. Such audacity would not have been imagined 20 years ago in a region that has been under the thumb of U.S. dominance for more than a century.
CELAC is therefore not only a testament to the weakening of Washington’s influence in the region, but also to the strengthening of Latin America’s identity and its movement toward a second independence. This is the real significance of Venezuela’s recent bicentennial celebrations—a point predictably missed by a press that prefers to feed the hysteria of speculation rather than report on the realities of contemporary Latin America.https://nacla.org/news/2011/9/9/missing-point-media-speculations-over-venezuela(NACLA is the North American Congress on Latin America)
Also at:
http://venezuelanalysis.com/analysis/6483CREATIVE COMMONS LICENSE
(My emphasis)
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I continue to be astonished at how STUPID corporate 'news' media are! Stupid and stupid-making! How can business people, investors, travelers, academics, students, U.S. political leaders and others who have an interest in Latin America proceed with their activities on the basis of such stupid and vacant reporting and such big black holes in the 'news' where information should be?
I don't understand it. The disservice to the public that the corporate 'news' is committing is enormous.
I have been especially struck by the failure to report on the increasing organization of Latin American countries into a political/economic block committed to independence, cooperation and social justice. Like this writer--Edward Ellis--I am flabbergasted by this failure. Think back to when the EU was formed. There was lots of reporting and commentary here about it at that time. This is happening in
our own hemisphere and has been building up for most of the last decade, with the founding of UNASUR (all South American countries), the founding of various trade groups--including the innovative barter trade group, ALBA, started by Venezuela and Cuba--the founding of the Bank of the South (another Venezuelan idea)--and other new institutions, and the friendship among leaders such as Hugo Chavez, Nestor Kirchner and Lula da Silva, and the election of so many Leftist leaders. The corporate 'news' is like a 4 year old child who covers her ears when she doesn't want to hear something.
Latin America is changing DRAMATICALLY for the better and the U.S. is still stuck in its old pattern of often brutal interference (such as the coup in Honduras) and "free trade for the rich" (such as the proposed trade agreement with Colombia mentioned by Obama in his speech on "jobs"). The unreality is so bad that it increases my worry about a U.S. oil war in South America. Indeed, the Miami mafia contingent in Congress has basically declared war on several Leftist countries. And their a "Queen of Hearts"/"Alice in Wonderland" smugness about their declarations gives me the willies. It's as if they KNOW that Bush Junta II is coming and then they can get their fondest wish for more murder and mayhem in Latin America. They are nuts and they will inflict horror on Latin America--just as they did during the Reagan regime--even if, this time, they very likely cannot succeed in reconquering the region.
Blackholes in the 'news'--where information should be--are as meaningful as corporate/war profiteer lies and disinformation in the 'news.' What they DON'T say is important. And Latin America's formalization of CELAC, and all the developments that have led up to it, is something they are not talking about, though it is a momentous event.