My friend Kelso understands most of the details surrounding S American politics and the fact that the USA has had a bloody hand in their dealings down there for quite some time. You can read his input here.
In coordination with his writings, I saw this article at A Tiny Revolution that describes the situation as nicely as anyone has done. I have to ask: what happened to our “influence” in South America? Do you think that our murderous activities and Fascist backing of the the last remaining, corrupt governments down there have finally taken its full toll on the people?
Is it possible that these little brown people in the Amazon have fall BIGGER Balls than any US citizen alive?
Latin America, World’s Moral Political Leader
By: Bernard Chazelle
For several years now, the most socially and politically inspiring place on earth has been Latin America. The US establishment loves to hate Venezuela and ignore everyone else. What a blessing it’s been. While the US has been busy transforming the Middle East from hell to absolute hell, all over Latin America a quiet revolution has been taking place. In a few months, for example, Colombia will be the only country south of the border left with a US military presence. Eat your heart out, Europe, Asia, and Africa! Latin America might be the only place on earth where social progress has been visible lately. Latest from Peru, via Johann Hari:
In the depths of the Amazon rainforest, the poorest people in the world have taken on the richest people in the world to defend a part of the ecosystem none of us can live without. They had nothing but wooden spears and moral force to defeat the oil companies – and, for today, they have won.
Responding to intense pressure from the US,
Peru’s right-wing President, Alan Garcia, sold the rights to explore, log and drill 70 per cent of his country’s swathe of the Amazon to a slew of international oil companies. Garcia seems to see rainforest as a waste of good resources, saying of the Amazon’s trees: “There are millions of hectares of timber there lying idle.”
Only flaw in Garcia’s brilliant plan, the indigenous people of the Amazon.
They have no guns. They barely have electricity. The government didn’t bother to consult them: what are a bunch of Indians going to do anyway?
What the bunch did is use their own bodies and wooden weapons to blockade rivers and roads. They captured two valves of Peru’s only pipeline.
Garcia responded by sending in the military. He declared a “state of emergency” in the Amazon, suspending almost all constitutional rights. Army helicopters opened fire on the protesters with live ammunition and stun-grenades. More than a dozen were killed. But the indigenous peoples did not run away. Even though they were risking their lives, they stood their ground. One of their leaders, Davi Yanomami, said simply: “The earth has no price. It cannot be bought, or sold or exchanged. It is very important that white people, black people and indigenous peoples fight together to save the life of the forest and the earth. If we don’t fight together, what will our future be?”
And then something amazing!
The indigenous peoples won. The Peruvian Congress repealed the laws that allowed oil company drilling, by a margin of 82 votes to 12. Garcia was forced to apologise for his “serious errors and exaggerations”. The protesters have celebrated and returned to their homes deep in the Amazon.
Read the whole thing.
— Bernard Chazelle
A Tiny Revolution is a blog that addresses many issues surrounding the US Empire and other prescient and newsworthy articles, hinted with a bit of humor. In this case, there is little funny, but it is quite important to know:
From the Oubliettes of History: the Negligibles
By: Bernard Chazelle
In the early seventies, the US decided to take control of Diego Garcia from the Brits, who naturally said, How high? (By protocol, a US request to the British government is always formulated as “Jump!”)
One ever-so-minor detail was that on that beautiful island lived what’s commonly referred to as “people.” Well, not by everyone. As Jonathan Freedland puts it:
Best of all, the population was such that it could be written off, in CIA-speak, as NEGL: “negligible.”
Once the Negligibles were negliged away, the island became a crucial military outpost for the empire,
both the launch pad for the B-1s, B-2 “stealth” bombers, and B-52s that pounded Afghanistan and Iraq and a crucial node in the CIA’s rendition system, a “black site” through which at least two high-value suspected terrorists were spirited, far from the prying eyes of international law.
Meanwhile, the Negligibles
were forced to board crammed cargo ships for a nightmarish crossing—sleeping on decks slick with urine and vomit— to Mauritius or the Seychelles where they were dumped, with no homes to go to and no compensation to make up for the possessions and livelihoods they had been forced to leave behind. From then until now, they have lived among the corrugated tin shacks of the slums of Port Louis in Mauritius, their lives scarred by extreme poverty, unemployment, drug and alcohol abuse, and diseases unknown in their previous island home.
The US military was at the time busy committing worse atrocities in another part of Asia. But it’s worth pausing over this episode of ethnic cleansing in the proud tradition of the trail of tears (if not the middle passage). With always the same motivation: to steal someone else’s land.
And now a nice touch that will endear our glorious military heroes to all the children gathered around the campfire:
[T]he commissioner of the British Indian Ocean Territory, as it was now renamed, gave the order for the islanders’ pet dogs to be killed; after US soldiers armed with M16 rifles failed to shoot them all, the animals were gassed as their owners looked on.
The gas-vs-bullets thing, that’s one neat trick we got from the Germans in the forties.
From UNDERNEWS:
Winslow Wheeler, Counterpunch – For decades, the media have taken their descriptions of the size of the defense budget straight from the Pentagon’s annual press release – without even rudimentary double-checking. This year, they will cite the top-line dollar amount at $534 billion . . .
That number ignores an additional $6 billion the Pentagon will get in “mandatory” appropriations, mostly for personnel-related expenses. The data are available from the Office of Management and Budget, but its press releases are more complicated.
Some, but not all, of the news articles will also ignore the additional $130 billion sought to finance the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Barring last-minute changes to the numbers by Gates and OMB, the correct amount for the president’s request for the Pentagon in 2010 will be $670 billion.
The articles will also leave out the money being sought by the Department of Energy for nuclear weapons and other appropriations, such as for the Selective Service and the National Defense Stockpile. Again, not in the DOD press release. Add another $22 billion.
Consider the human costs of current and previous wars in the Department of Veterans Affairs – surely, a legitimate defense cost. Add $106 billion.
Also consider the Department of Homeland Security: Add $43 billion.
What about the military and economic aid to Iraq and Afghanistan, gifts and loans to Israel and others, U.N. peacekeeping costs, and all the rest from the State Department? Add $49 billion.
Also, there is an account buried in the Department of the Treasury to help pay for military retirement. Add about $28 billion.
Each year, we pay interest on the national debt. People disagree, sometimes strenuously, on how much is DOD’s share. About 20 percent of federal spending goes to the Pentagon: That’s another $57 billion.
Add it all together, and you get $974 billion – almost $1 trillion.
If you want to know how much we spend for defense in a generic sense, you can about double the $534 billion many articles will report.
h/t Chycho
“Its Fascism, plain and simple: The merger of corporate and government powers.”
“State controlled Capitalism is called Fascism. And Fascism has come to America in broad daylight.”
“If you want to look at a mafia, look at the Democratic and Republican parties.”
“Forget about calling this government, Wall Street has hijacked Washington.”
h/t Dandelion Salad
A People’s History of American Empire
by Howard Zinn
“Empire or Humanity? What the Classroom Didn’t Teach Me about the American Empire by Howard Zinn, Narrated by Viggo Mortensen, Art by Mike Konopacki, Video editing by Eric Wold.”
