Spreading "Democracy" and the Resistance of Real Democracies - Page 2

Lula and Chavez better watch out. Chavez especially: Chavez Calls Bush 'Asshole' as Foes Fight Troops:

    Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez called President Bush an "asshole" on Sunday for meddling, and vowed never to quit office like his Haitian counterpart as troops battled with opposition protesters demanding a recall referendum against him.
    Chavez, who often says the U.S. is backing opposition efforts to topple his leftist government, accused Bush of heeding advice from "imperialist" aides to support a brief 2002 coup against him.
    "He was an asshole to believe them," Chavez roared at a huge rally of supporters in Caracas.
    The Venezuelan leader's comments came as fresh violence broke out on the streets of the capital, where National Guard troops clashed with opposition protesters pressing for a vote to end his five-year rule.
And so our democracy spreads.

Perhaps Aristide's problems are making me too pessimistic. Not in Our Back Yard: The Decline and Failure of American-Imposed Capitalism and the Rise of Social Democracy/Leftist Ideology in Latin America leaves a more optimistic impression:

    Through democratic elections the people have spoken, rejecting US imposed economic and financial policies. They have elected leftist leaders who are slowly changing society for the better. The masses must confront their oligarchs, intent on keeping power, much the same way they must confront the mighty bullying tactics of the US behemoth. The end result sought by the Leviathan is complete control of resources, both human and natural, along with a global government of the corporations, by the corporations and for the corporations. In the United Corporations of America, it already has the means needed to acquire it sinister ends.
    The first battle between the masses and the Leviathan is being waged in Latin America. In this war lies the future of humanity as we know it, and we should all be wishing our comrades down south the best of luck in making of their societies examples we can all one day emulate. We must keep an eye on Latin America because the next few years will be critically important for us all. Latin American leaders have voiced their opinion that the region is no longer the United States’ backyard. In so doing, they are making known that US policies are not welcome in their backyard. The once-subservient dog with no bite has suddenly grown a mighty sharp set of canines: 507 million of them.
    The Revolution the Zapatistas initiated ten years ago has lifted the fog of fatalism and awakened an entire region into taking back the lives they once enjoyed and making real the dreams they once had for their children. With one united shout Latin America has spoken: "Not in our Backyard."
Isn't it odd that while Cheney and pals preach the spreading of democracy, the countries that the US has oppressed are seeing true democracy as a way to resist this oppression?

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  • 1 - Hal Pawluk

    Mar 02, 2004 at 3:24 pm

    Excellent!

    And the Edwards quote: "Decades of public investments and policy manipulation by the World Bank, the IMF, and the US government have deliberately created an environment where the exploitation of workers is.." has much broader applicability.

    It applies to just about anyplace The Three Amigos (IMF, World Bank, government-backed US businesses) have inserted themselves, and especially in South America. In every case, the net outflow of cash and resources has become greater than the inflow, and the countries get poorer and poorer.

    But the spin machine goes on and on ...

  • 2 - Eric Olsen

    Mar 02, 2004 at 3:48 pm

    Dude, you really are socialist! The quote from Dissident Voice sounds like the John Candy lines from Volunteers after he was brainwashed: "masses must confront their oligarchs" "US behemoth" "the Leviathan" "global government of the corporations" "the future of humanity as we know it" "our comrades"

    Did someone miss the last 50 years or so? Socialism doesn't work, it's discredited, it's anti-democratic, it's dictatorial, it's anti-progress, it's contrary to human nature. Yes, we have an example right in our own backyard: Cuba, which sports the dual gifts of being the poorest AND most repressive country in the Western Hemisphere. I guess the dream dies hard.

  • 3 - Hal Pawluk

    Mar 02, 2004 at 4:39 pm

    I didn't see any rants advocating socialism.

    If you read the original post and drop out the emotive words and the biases in the quoted materials, there are still a lot of facts left that could be addressed.

  • 4 - mike

    Mar 02, 2004 at 4:54 pm

    Cuba has been under siege for fifty years, and yet its health care system is admired throughout the Third World. Cuban mortality rates compare very favorably to countries in Latin America that receive generous amounts of U.S. aid.

    A quarter of American children live in poverty, an absolutely unacceptable rate in a society that is much wealthier than say, Canada, which does not have any where near this rate.

    To me, this proves that American-style capitalism is a failure.

  • 5 - Eric Olsen

    Mar 02, 2004 at 4:57 pm

    I guess my real point is that this is a severe conflcit of values and assumptions: if you assume corporations are bad, that the US government (ane particularly THIS government) is bad, that capitalism is bad, globalization is bad, and socialism is good, you are going to have a vastly different view of the world, and it's very hard to argue with that other than to say "I don't see it that way at all."

  • 6 - mike

    Mar 02, 2004 at 5:10 pm

    "if you assume corporations are bad, that the US government (ane particularly THIS government) is bad, that capitalism is bad, globalization is bad, and socialism is good"

    Who assumes that? It's U.S.-style capitalism that's a failure, not "capitalism" per se.

    Although the U.S. government is indeed quite foul. It is in fact completely without legitimacy, undemocratically elected and a threat to its own people.

    The last time this country faced such a threat was just before the Revolutionary War.

  • 7 - Eric Olsen

    Mar 02, 2004 at 5:17 pm

    mike, that perspective is rather extreme and I just don't see it that way. I think perhaps there have been a few periods in the 230 years since that may qualify as more "threatening": the Civil War, the two world wars, the Vietnam War, and Watergate come immediately to mind.

  • 8 - mike

    Mar 02, 2004 at 5:39 pm

    By more threatening, I mean a scenario in which the U.S. government was more threatening TO ITS OWN PEOPLE. In the Civil War and WWII, the U.S. was protecting its own people. In Vietnam, it was a threat to the Vietnamize people. Watergate was just a break-in.

    Fully 25-30% of the American people, according to polls, do not believe that the Bush Administration is a legitimately elected regime. Sentimen that widespread hasn't been seen--since the Revolutionary War.

  • 9 - Dirtgrain

    Mar 02, 2004 at 10:41 pm

    Eric said, "Socialism doesn't work, it's discredited, it's anti-democratic, it's dictatorial, it's anti-progress, it's contrary to human nature."

    Eric, corporate dominance doesn't work, it's discredited, it's anti-democratic, it's dictatorial, it's anti-progress, it's contrary to human nature.

    I don't think I necessarily implied anything about socialism, anyway. I was mainly commenting on the systems of government that the US spreads throughout the world. We say, "democracy," but we actually export something quite different. I believe that our government does not like to deal with true democracies--they are too independent and unpredictable. Look at how pissed Bush and Rumsfeld were by Turkey and their hesitation to support the war in Iraq. The US would much rather deal with corrupt, undemocratic governments (dictatorships, monarchies, etc.). We prefer to deal with the Saudi Royal Family than deal with a Saudi Arabia that was a true democracy. If the people of Saudi Arabia really had a say in how their resources were allocated, US oil companies would not so easily rip them off. Our corporations are making huge profits off of some of the worst governments in the world, and they like it that way. Have true democracy in China, Burma, and Indonesia, and see if the people there tolerate the crappy money our corporations are paying them to manufacture our stuff. The trouble with some of these governments is that they sometimes do things that draw too much ire from the conscientious people of the world and of the US, or they just make things difficult for our corporations. So, Saddam kills Kurds and the corporate US can handle that, but when Saddam defies OPEC and tries to bully around a country of his own, then we deal with him. These are the workings of the Iron Triangle. War profiteering is rampant. We get control of oil. We destroy and reconstruct, niftily diverting more money from the taxpayers to corporate pockets. We get to make ourselves look good by pointing out these dictators' evils. Errant democracies can be a lot more difficult to deal with and do away with. But it must be worth the effort. Corporate US can have the errant dictators/leaders assassinated, deposed, kidnapped--just as we attempt to do with democratically elected leaders such as Chavez or Lula who don't bow down to our corporations.

    Our own democracy is in jeopardy as Neocons and over-ambitious Republicans are taking politics to a new level. Sean Wilentz, Dayton-Stockton Professor of History at Princeton, lays out well the problems within our own democracy in Democracy in America, 2003(Watch out, this article is from Dissent Magazine). The way he puts the following political events together, I wonder if we even live in a democracy anymore: The Clinton Impeachment, 1998-1999; Florida, 2000; The Iraq War and Disinformation, 2002-2003; 2002 Elections; Redistricting in Colorado and Texas, 2003; and Recall in California, 2003. Read his descriptions of what occurred in each case. Deliberate actions were taken by a lot of people to circumvent democracy.

    Back to the comment about socialism, it is too general a term to throw around. Our system of highways is socialist in its creation and maintenance. I like it. I like the idea of public schools and nationalized health care, too. But there are certainly things that I don't like about some of the socialist systems that I have seen in the world. I have a point to make: I think that our corporate-dominated government presents us with everything that we did not like about the USSR. Most of the negatives that I learned about the USSR as a kid stemmed from central control. Our corporatocracy is central control. They dictate everything. Our culture is disappearing and being cloned as Max and Erma's, Damon's, Friday's, Applebees, Chili's and other indistinct chains suffocate and crush independent restaurants (what the hell is the difference between the five restaurants that I just mentioned? They are all starting to taste the same to me. The Matrix? Chicken?). Consider the decorations in these restaurants. From where do they come? There are plaques and memorabilia strewn across the walls, but I am losing touch with their origins and their meaning in our culture. It's like some Hal 2001: A Space Odyssey computer decided what our culture should be and splattered it all over the walls of the corporate restaurants. Starbucks?

    What about stores? I can see Hal (the computer, not Pawluk) manufacturing our culture at Walmart, too. Walmart drives small, unique stores out of business (so does the Target/Mervyns/Marshal Fields conglomerate). Go to a high school and look at what the kids are wearing. They are becoming corporate clones. Kids are wearing Abercrombie shirts with odd dates or slogans on them, and they have no idea what they mean--nor do I. Culture?

    Consider this excerpt from a previous blog in which I compared
    The USSR and Our Corporate-Dominated America:

      Has the corporatocracy transformed the US into the new Soviet Union? I remember fragments of my elementary school education from the late 1970's and early 1980's that stressed how bad the Soviet Union was and how great the democratic, capitalist United States of America was. Here is a string of what I remember was bad about the USSR: everyone was poor and unhappy; jobs were hard to come by; one had to work the job that one was told to work; there was no variety; drab, boring clothes; everybody drove the same style of car; neighborhoods all looked the same; apartment buildings all looked the same; there was a single censoring source as a news and media organization; one had to stand in line all the time, sometimes for hours and hours; if one said the wrong thing, then one got in big trouble--or one might even disappear (vaporized); spies were everywhere (like the East German Stasi); central planning; propaganda and misinformation; no free will; etc.
      Isn’t this America today under the momentous roll of corporatization and conglomeration? To be sure, the above listed traits are broad and open--maybe every government in the history of the world exhibited some degree of each of them. But I remember being taught that these things were undesirable and evil and against everything that is natural and humane. Yet we see it all around.
      On my last (oh, and I guess only) trip to Denver about seven years ago, I felt revulsion as I looked at the suburb of Aurora. Every mile-block seemed exactly the same. Every corner seemed to have the same strip mall. And thousands and thousands of people streamed by in their isolating automobiles (pods in The Matrix). I had a similar feeling when I was just out of high school working as a delivery driver. I found out that Westland, Novi, Northville, Wayne, Romulus, Canton (all Detroit suburbs) and many other exact-same places existed beyond the borders of Ann Arbor. It shocked me that there were so many people living in cloned environments.
    Add to this recent attacks on our privacy (ARDA, TIPS, TIA, the Patriot Act) and the corporate take-over of the media, and we are the USSR (except that we have more money, and so, more of the same, cloned things. We won't have more money for long if jobs keep disappearing and moving elsewhere). Corporate power and control has gotten way out of hand, and it is an immediate threat to our democracy. It's also a threat to the rest of the world.

  • 10 - Shark

    Mar 03, 2004 at 12:22 am

    Shark is bowing prostrate on the floor in honor of Dirtgrain's rant; sound of printer hums in the background; he regains breath after extreme bout of joyful/angry hyperventilation before exclaiming:

    THE MAN'S GOTTA POINT.

    (Shark get up, dials travel agent, and checks availability of one-way tickets to the moon)

  • 11 - Mac Diva

    Mar 03, 2004 at 12:27 am

    Sometimes Eric surprises me. Like hello? Of course there are socialists. Several other people who post at BC are as 'socialistic' as Dirtgrain. I'm surprised he hasn't noticed before. I will let people say for themselves because I don't like to put words in their mouths. And, yes, American socialism still has some impact on public policy, in my opinion. Not so much collective ownership of things as conducting public policy for the collective good -- locally, nationally and internationally.

    And, before anyone asks: Are you a socialist? Sort of. But, it is dififcult for someone who thinks like a (good) lawyer as much as I do to be really a leftist. I've been steeped in the reality of how the American $y$tem works too much. That tends to make one pragmatic about public policy issues. How about the lawyers who like to call themselves 'radicals'? They are pulling people's legs. The American legal system is inherently conservative. When you participate you are playing a conservative game by conservative rules.

  • 12 - Shark

    Mar 03, 2004 at 4:56 pm

    Eric,

    Like hello?

    Helllooo - Earth to Err-ick?

    I mean, Duh!

    Duuuuh!


    (shaking head)


  • 13 - Mac Diva

    Mar 03, 2004 at 5:05 pm

    Well, choke me with a Cuisinart.

  • 14 - Eric Olsen

    Mar 03, 2004 at 5:40 pm

    There are "socialistic" elements everywhere, yes, but you don't run into very many actual "socialists" anymore. Sorry if it strikes me as anachronistic.

    And isn't "conducting public policy for the collective good" the aim of all government?

    And DG, the thing you seem to miss about corporations is that 1) they are in competition with each other 2) most are publicly held, virtually anyone can participate in their profits

  • 15 - mike

    Mar 03, 2004 at 9:25 pm

    "And DG, the thing you seem to miss about corporations is that 2) most are publicly held, virtually anyone can participate in their profits"

    I think I'll take socialist silliness over this. Talk about utopian nonsense.

  • 16 - Eric Olsen

    Mar 03, 2004 at 9:51 pm

    Have you been barred from purchasing stock?

  • 17 - Dirtgrain

    Mar 03, 2004 at 10:47 pm

    Are you saying that there is no corporate control of our government because corporations don't get along with each other? Consider the following that I blogged a few months ago:

      I found several solid websites from the appendices of Thom Hartmann's Unequal Protection that deal with corporate corruption and our government. First is They Rule (requires Flash 5), which is a site that offers you the opportunity to map out the illuminati-like (or Skull and Bones?) inner-workings of the networks of companies' board of directors. They are all working together to make themselves richer and you poorer. Using board member lists from 2002, the site allows you to see which people serve on boards for several companies, mapping out all the connections of the board members. Here is a concise version that I typed of the list that was printed in Unequal Protection (up to date as of early 2002):

        IBM shares a board member with Coca Cola, which shares a board member with AT&T, which shares a board member with Citigroup, and the string goes on through the following companies (in this order) Lucent Technologies, Chevron, Hewlett Packard, Boeing, Sara Lee, Bank One Corporation, Cardinal Health, Freddie Mac (oh yah!), Lehman Brother Holdings, PepsiCo, Bank of America, Motorola, J.P. Morgan Chase, ExxonMobil, SBC Communications, PG&E Corporation, Home Depot, General Electric, Delphi Automotive Systems, Goldman Sachs Group, Ford Motor Company, Sprint, Allstate, AMR (owns American Airlines), Aetna, Dell Computer, Prudential insurance, Dow Chemical, Met Life, Verizon, USX (formerly U.S. Steel), Lockheed Martin (bastards), Enron (bastards), Compaq (Ken Lay was a board member on Enron and Compaq at this time), Dynergy, CVS/Pharmacy, Fannie Mae, Conoco, E.I. du Pont de Nemours, IBM, which shares a board member with Coca Cola.

      It's one big, creepy loop. Oligarchs? Plutocrats? These are the people who are running the country. ". . . 86 percent of billion-dollar company boards contain at least one CEO of another company, while 65 percent of outside directors serve on two or more boards" (Robert A. G. Monks paraphrased in Unequal Protection, page 202). Combine this fact with the fact that "the world's largest 200 corporations, which employ fewer than 0.8 percent of the world's workforce, account for over 27 percent of the world's total economic activity, more than all nations in the world combined except the top 10" (Unequal Protection, page 204). You can run from them, but you can't hide from them.
    Corporations are very much in line with each other on a lot of issues as they dictate US policy. Yes there are rifts (e.g., Microsquish lawsuits). I think that Bush represents certain corporations (those in the holdings of the Carlyle Group, maybe--see Libertythink's blog entry on the Carlyle Group) more than others. That is why corporations jilted by Bush are trying to oust him. Billionaire George Soros and some other corporate borg have been supporting Moveon.org. I blogged about this, too:
      It's the battle of the two Georges: Bush takes on Soros. Based on whore MoveOn.org's embracing of Soros, you might see him as our Rocky who will unseat Clubber Lane (okay, so Bush is too wimpy to justify this analogy, but I'm going with it). This is not Rocky vs. Clubber. It's not Rocky vs. the evil USSR boxer Drago. It's Clubber vs. Drago. No matter who wins, one evil bastard will control the world, and democracy will be the seemingly innocent manager, Mick, who gets a fatal, unfortunate blow in the hubbub that precedes the fight.
      The Center for Public Integrity has just put out Who Bankrolls Bush and his Democratic Rivals? In it, we see that corrupt world of campaign financing yet again exposed. Democracy is dead. Our politicians are kicking its dead corpse around as they spout out, "democracy" that, and "our Founding Fathers" this. Over a year ago, when I saw an interview with John McCain, I almost faltered and believed that democracy could be reincarnated. And then we got the Do-Not-Call list that finally has gotten telemarketers off of my back. I thought that this country might actually be serving its people instead of its big-money overlords. Balderdash. For more information, go to the PBS show Now's page on the book, The Buying of the President 2004.
    Sorry again for the crappy analogy.

    Eric said that "virtually anyone can participate in their profits."

    In virtual reality, maybe, but many Americans can't even afford to buy a computer on which to play Sim City. Corporations are of, by and for the rich, which is why they are so at odds with democracy. The Enron fiasco, among many other such cases of corporate fraud, exemplifies what happens to the average person's investments in the stock market. The rich get richer and the poor get poorer (with an exception here or there along the way).

  • 18 - bflaska

    Mar 03, 2004 at 11:07 pm

    Eric,

    Speaking on that "feeling level" you referred to above --

    Having experienced as a young comprehending adult both Viet Nam and Watergate, I can tell you this period of US "history" not only feels worse, but I perceive it as being much, much worse than those two episodes and far more dangerous besides, especially when considering the long run. Things have gone very bad for too many people far too quickly.

    I realize your last remark is intended as a closing remark, but people investing have in essence been "barred" from buying stock -- if only by being "closed out" from sweetheart closing day sales that manipulate the day's results. They're permitted to buy when the gates are opened again. An extreme instance, of course, but it's happened often enough and recently enough to comment on.

    To use economic clout and NOT buy particular stocks, or to BUY particular stocks to secure a vote or voice in the direction that industry might eventually chart, or perhaps just that the stock brokers will accept anyone's money without batting an eye is what I think you were saying in your last remark? You are free to invest where you please?

  • 19 - Mac Diva

    Mar 04, 2004 at 12:05 am

    Well, I went to school with the oligarchy Dirtgrain is talking about. You know, the five percent of the population that controls more than 50 percent of America's wealth -- often through interlocking control of corporations. And, believe me, those people have no illusions about who runs America. They know they do. And, how did they come to exercise all that power? Often through inherited wealth, which is even more indefensible. Yes, any John Doe with $100 to spare can buy a stock in any corporation offering shares publicly. But:

    *The stock he buys will often be inferior.

    *Most of the shares are already in the hands of the very wealthy or their representatives.

    *His pension fund is likely losing more money for him than he is ever going to recoup from individual investments.

    *The stock he buys will likely never generate a profit.

    And, let's not put the buggy before the horse. That John Doe has $100 to spare. A significant part of the population does not, especially not several times over.

    In regard to an earlier post by Dirtgrain, I commented that only about 20 percent of Americans move out of the class they are born into. The mythical aspect of the stock market is part of the reason why. And, let's not forget -- a person is as likely to go down in economic class as up.

    Before Eric points it out, yes, I went up. But, that doesn't change my opinion that the $y$tem is inherently unfair.

  • 20 - Joe

    Mar 04, 2004 at 1:38 am

    I see your knowledge of the stock market matches your knowledge of circumcisions.

    *The stock he buys will often be inferior.
    Ok, by what measure? A share of Microsoft is a share of Microsoft is a share of Microsoft... Or perhaps you're comparing preferred to common stock, which, in spite of having a snooty name isn't much different aside from not conferring dividends, but in most cases at a certain point transforms to common stock anyway. Or maybe the concept of caveat emptor bothers you. Overall, just a silly statement.

    *Most of the shares are already in the hands of the very wealthy or their representatives.
    Uhuh, you trade stocks much? How many millions of shares trade hands in a given day? And even if it weren't a patently obtuse statement, if poor John Doe were lucky enough to somehow wrest a share from a money grubber or the representative, are you saying he wouldn't be able to collect on the same benefit?

    *His pension fund is likely losing more money for him than he is ever going to recoup from individual investments.
    Sweetie, it's not a zero sum game, he's still ahead whatever he recoups from his investment regardless of the performance of his pension fund.

    *The stock he buys will likely never generate a profit.
    Ok, Ms. Krugman, your slipping in to the realm of speculation here. Yeah, if he tries to fire and forget and buys without knowing what he's buying he's probably going to hurt himself, but explain how buying into an S&P index fund which generally returns somewhere around 11% annually won't generate a profit.

    And, let's not put the buggy before the horse. That John Doe has $100 to spare. A significant part of the population does not, especially not several times over.
    Silly. Saving and investing is not about having money to spare, it's about making a conscious decision to set aside for the future. More importantly, it's a choice. If John Doe makes the determination that it's worth it to him he'll find a way to forego cable or curtail beer and save incrementally.

  • 21 - Mac Diva

    Mar 04, 2004 at 2:48 am

    (Not snickering in the interest of amity.) There are still people who don't realize there are classes of stock?

  • 22 - bflaska

    Mar 04, 2004 at 8:51 am

    Say, Joe -- this is a serious question: why do you feel the need to start wagging dick and talking about lopped dick when you make a counter argument? Is that a way of expressing a form of confidence in the merits of your argument?

  • 23 - Joe

    Mar 04, 2004 at 9:04 am

    blaska - Sorry if my penis talk offends your tender sensibilities, I'll try to refrain, it was was carryover from another thread. Good question. Likewise, do you think that focusing on a smartass remark rather than the gist of my argument somehow detracts from the points which are pretty clearly separated? Thanks for asking.

    Perhaps MD would care to elucidate as to what the barriers are to purchasing different classes of stock and what percentage of stock is actually divided into classes(hint: not many and not much)? Why don't you stick to topics you understand?

  • 24 - Shark

    Mar 04, 2004 at 9:12 am

    MD: "Most of the shares are already in the hands of the very wealthy or their representatives."

    JOE: "...you trade stocks much? How many millions of shares trade hands in a given day?"

    Yes, it's a real level playing field: billion dollar mutual fund managers recommending buys on CNBC in the morning and selling out in the afternoon -vs- Joe Q. Public playing with chump change and pullin' guesses out of his ass .

    re: Corporations competing with each other - You've got to be kidding.
    Just a sample. TV/Media

    BTW: The biggest threat to 'democracy' other than George Bush, campaign finance, and current election laws is the CONSOLIDATION of the media.

    Journalists are supposed to protect and preserve democracy, but these days, they pretty much speak out of one, maybe two sides of the same Janus-headed beast known as *Corporate Advocacy.

    *aka "Marketing"
    aka "Satan's Handmaiden"

  • 25 - Shark

    Mar 04, 2004 at 9:22 am

    re. Socialism - Was Jesus a Socialist?

    - or -

    WSWJB? ("What stocks would Jesus buy?")

    "Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth..."

    "You lack one thing; go, sell what you own, and give the money to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven..." (Mark 10:21)

    "Be on your guard against all kinds of greed; for one's life does not consist in the abundance of possessions." (Luke 12:15)


    Man, I see a GREAT new Constitutional Amendment somewhere in there!



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