April 13, 2013
Venezuelan Government Foils Destabilisation Plans

Merida, April 12th 2013 (Venezuelanalysis.com) – Venezuelan security forces have foiled a plot to violently destabilise the country, Vice-president  Jorge Arreaza announced this afternoon.

“The Bolivarian National Armed Forces and state security agencies have dismantled a plan that would affect the election or post-election,” Arreaza told Venezuelan media.

He further stated that the plot involved Salvadorian mercenaries who “wanted, but could not, intervene to disrupt the peace of the republic at the last minute”.

The government first announced the presence of two groups of Salvadorian mercenaries operating in Venezuela on April 6.

Internal Affairs and Justice Minister Nestor Reverol warned that the groups were funded by drug trafficking, and have links to far right terrorists including Luis Posada Carriles. Currently living in Miami, Carriles has been convicted in Panama of a number of terrorist attacks, including the 1976 bombing of a Cuban airline that claimed 73 lives.

Arreaza also stated that a group of students have been arrested after attempting to “storm” the Generalisimo Francisco de Miranda Airbase in Caracas. The same group previously tried to enter the National Guard headquarters in Paradise, near the capital, according to Arreaza.

Yesterday, security forces  also arrested Colombian paramilitaries operating in Venezuela, interim President Nicolas Maduro announced last night.

In a series of early morning raids, authorities reported finding the paramilitaries in possession of Venezuelan military uniforms, C4 explosives and other military materiel.

Among the confiscated materiel, the Bolivarian Guard seized 50 high capacity assault rifle magazines, Defence Minister Diego Molero Bellavia said today.

Maduro has stated the paramilitaries “came to kill”, and urged Venezuelans to be vigilant, “without falling into provocations” of violence.

Within hours of Maduro’s announcement last night, an employee of the state run oil company Petroleos de Venezuela SA (PDVSA) died in a Caracas hospital from gunshot wounds.

According to VTV, the employee was gunned down outside PDVSA’s La Campina offices, where a number of workers were engaging in a pro-Maduro celebration. VTV reported that witnesses believe the attack was politically motivated.

Mining and Oil Minister Rafael Ramirez warned earlier this week that the oil sector is a potential target for destabilising forces.

“We are aware of destabilisation and chaos attempts, and we are committed to maintaining peace and stability,” AVN reported Ramirez as stating on Tuesday.

Today, however, Arreaza praised the work of security forces, stating that a peaceful vote on Sunday is “guaranteed”.

-By Ryan Mallett-Outtrim

March 5, 2013
The Achievements of Hugo Chavez

by CARLES MUNTANER, JOAN BENACH, MARIA PAEZ VICTOR

While Venezuela’s president Hugo Chávez is fighting for his life in Cuba, the liberal press of both sides of the Atlantic (e.g., El Pais”) has not stopped  trashing his government. The significance of his victory (12 points ahead of his contender) has yet to be analysed properly, with evidence. It is remarkable that Chávez would win, sick with cancer, outgunned by the local and international media (think of Syriza’s Greece election) and, rarely acknowledged, an electoral map extremely biased towards the middle and upper classes, with geographical barriers and difficult access to Ids for members of the working classes.

One of the main factors for the popularity of the Chávez Government and its landslide victory in this re-election results of October 2012, is the reduction of poverty, made possible because the government took back control of the national petroleum company PDVSA, and has used the abundant oil revenues, not for benefit of a small class of renters as previous governments had done, but to build needed infrastructure and invest in the social services that Venezuelans so sorely needed.  During the last ten years, the government has increased social spending by 60.6%, a total of $772 billion [i].

Poverty is not defined solely by lack of income nor is health defined as the lack of illness. Both are correlated and both are multi-factorial, that is, determined by a series of social processes. To make a more objective assessment of the real progress achieved by the Bolivarian Revolution in Venezuela during the last 13 years it is essential to review some of the key available data on the social determinants of health and poverty: education, inequality, jobs and income, health care, food security and social support and services.

With regard to these social determinants of health indicators, Venezuela is now the country in the region with the lowest inequality level (measured by the Gini Coefficient) having reduced inequality by 54%, poverty by 44%. Poverty has been reduced from 70.8% (1996) to 21% (2010). And extreme poverty reduced from 40% (1996) to a very low level of 7.3% (2010). About 20 million people have benefited from anti-poverty programs, called “Misiones” (Up to now, 2.1 million elderly people have received old-age pensions – that is 66% of the population while only 387,000 received pensions before the current government.

Education is a key determinant of both health and poverty and the Bolivarian government has placed a particular emphasis on education allotting it more than 6% of GDP. UNESCO has recognized that illiteracy been eliminated furthermore, Venezuela is the 3rd county in the region whose population reads the most. There is tuition free education from daycare to university; 72% of children attend public daycares and 85% of school age children attend school. There are thousands of new or refurbished schools, including 10 new universities. The country places 2nd in Latin America and 5th in the world with the greatest proportions of university students. In fact, 1 out of every 3 Venezuelans are enrolled in some educational  program.[ii] . It is also a great achievement that Venezuela is now tied with Finland as the 5th country with the happiest population in the world.[iii] .

Before the Chavez government in 1998, 21% of the population was malnourished. Venezuela now has established a network of subsidized food distribution including grocery stores and supermarkets. While 90% of the food was imported in 1980, today this is less than 30%.  Misión Agro-Venezuela has given out 454,238 credits to rural producers and 39,000 rural producers have received credit in 2012 alone.  Five million Venezuelan receive free food, four million of them are children in schools and 6,000 food kitchens feed 900,000 people.  The agrarian reform and policies to help agricultural producers have increased domestic food supply. The results of all these food security measures is that  today  malnourishment  is only 5%, and child malnutrition  which was  7.7% in 1990 today is at 2.9%. This is an impressive health achievement by any standards.

Some of the most important available data on health care and public health are as following [iv],[v],[vi]:

*infant mortality dropped from 25 per 1000 (1990) to only 13/1000 (2010);

*An outstanding 96% of the population has now access to clean water (one of the goals of the revolution);

*In 1998, there were 18 doctors per 10,000 inhabitants, currently there are  58, and the public health system has about 95,000 physicians;

*It took four decades for previous governments to build 5,081 clinics, but in just 13 years the Bolivarian government built 13,721 (a 169.6% increase);

*Barrio Adentro (i.e., primary care program with the help of more than 8,300 Cuban doctors) has approximately saved 1,4 million lives in 7,000 clinics and has given 500 million consultations;

*In 2011 alone, 67,000 Venezuelans received free high cost medicines for 139 pathologies conditions including cancer, hepatitis, osteoporosis, schizophrenia, and others; there are now 34 centres for addictions,

*In 6 years 19,840 homeless have been attended through a special program; and there are practically no children living on the streets.

*Venezuela now has the largest intensive care unit in the region.

*A network of public drugstores sell subsidized medicines in  127 stores with savings of 34-40%.

*51,000 people have been treated in Cuba for specialized eye treatment and the eye care program “Mision Milagro”; has restored sight to 1.5 million Venezuelans

An example of how the government has tried to respond in a timely fashion to the real needs of its people is the situation that occurred in 2011 when heavy tropical rains left 100,000 people homeless. They were right away sheltered temporarily in all manner of public buildings and hotels and, in one and a half years, the government built 250,000 houses. The government has obviously not eradicated all social ills, but its people do recognize that, despite any shortcomings and mistakes, it is a government that is on their side, trying to use its resources to meet their needs. Part of this equation is the intense political participation that the Venezuelan democracy stands for, that includes 30,000 communal councils, which determine local social needs and oversee their satisfaction and allows the people to be protagonists of the changes they demand.[vii]

The Venezuelan economy has low debts, high petroleum reserves and high savings, yet Western economists that oppose President Chávez repeat ad nauseam that the Venezuelan economy is not “sustainable” and predict its demise when the oil revenues stop. Ironically they do not hurl these dire predictions to other oil economies such as Canada or Saudi Arabia. They conveniently ignore that Venezuela’s oil reservoir of 500 billion barrels of oil is the largest in the world and consider the social investment of oil revenues a waste or futile endeavour. However these past 13 years, the Bolivarian government has been building up an industrial and agricultural infrastructure that 40 years of previous governments had neglected and its economy continues to get stronger even in the face of a global financial crisis.

An indication of the increasing diversification of the economy is the fact that the State now obtains almost as much revenue from tax collection as from the sale of oil, since it strengthened its capacity for tax collection and wealth redistribution. In just one decade, the State obtained US$ 251,694 million in taxes, more than its petroleum income per annum. Economic milestones these last ten years include reduction in unemployment from 11.3% to 7.7%; doubling the amount of people receiving social insurance benefits, and the public debt has been reduced from 20.7% to 14.3% of GNP and the flourishing of cooperatives has strengthen local endogenous economies.  In general, the Venezuelan economy has grown 47.4% in ten years, that is, 4.3% per annum. [viii]. Today many European countries would look jealously at these figures. Economists who studied in detail the Venezuelan economy for years indicate that, “The predictions of economic collapse, balance of payments or debt crises and other gloomy prognostications, as well as many economic forecasts along the way, have repeatedly proven wrong… Venezuela’s current economic growth is sustainable and could continue at the current pace or higher for many years.”[ix] .

According to Global Finance and the CIA World Factbook ,the Venezuelan economy presents the following indicators.[x]: unemployment rate of  8%; 45,5% government (public) debt as a percent of GDP (by contrast  the European Union debt/GDP is 82.5%); and a real GDP growth: GDP per capita is $13,070. In 2011, the Venezuelan economy defied most forecasts by growing 4.2 percent, and was up 5.6 percent in the first half of 2012. It has a debt-to-GDP ratio comfortably below the U.S. and the UK, and stronger than European countries; an inflation rate,  an endemic  problem during many decades,  that has fallen to a four-year low, or 13.7%, over the most recent 2012 quarter. Even The Wall Street Journal reports that Venezuela’s stock exchange is by far the best-performing stock market in the world, reaching an all-time high in October 2012, and Venezuela’s bonds are some of the best performers in emerging markets.

Hugo Chavez’s victory had an impact around the world as he is recognized as having spearheaded radical change not only in his own country but in all Latin America where progressive governments have also been elected, thereby reshaping the global order. The victory was even more significant considering the enormous financial and strategic help that the USA agencies and allies gave to the opposition parties and media.  Since 2002, Washington channeled $100 million to opposition groups in Venezuela and this election year alone, distributed US$ 40-50 million there. [xi]  But the Venezuelan people disregarded the barrage of propaganda unleashed against the president by the media that is 95% privately owned and anti-Chavez. [xii]. The tide of progressive change in the region has started to build the infrastructure for the first truly independent South America with political integration organizations such as Bank of the South, CELAC, ALBA, PETROSUR, PETROCARIBE, UNASUR, MERCOSUR, TELESUR and thus have demonstrated to the rest of the world that there are, after all, economic and social alternatives in the 21st century.[xiii] . Following a different model of development from that of global capitalism in sharp contrast to Europe, debt levels across Latin America are low and falling.

The changes in Venezuela are not abstract. The government of President Chávez has significantly improved the living conditions of Venezuelans and engaged them in dynamic political participation to achieve it [xiv]. This new model of socialist development has had a phenomenal impact all over Latin America, including Colombia of late, and the progressive left of centre governments that are now the majority in the region see in Venezuela the catalyst that that has brought more democracy, national sovereignty and economic and social progress to the region.[xv] . No amount of neoliberal rhetoric can dispute these facts.  Dozens of opinionated experts can go on forever on whether the Bolivarian Revolution is or is not socialist, whether it is revolutionary or reformist (it is  likely  to be both ), yet at the end  of the day these substantial achievements remain. This is what infuriates its opponents the most both inside Venezuela and most notable, from neocolonialist countries. The “objective” and “empiricist” The Economist will not publicize this data, preferring to predict once again the imminent collapse of the Venezuelan economy and El Pais, in Spain, would rather have one of the architects of the Caracazo (the slaughter of 3000 people in Caracas protesting the austerity measures of 1989), the minister of finance of the former government Moises Naim, go on with his anti-Chávez obsession. But none of them can dispute that the UN Human Development Index situates Venezuela in place #61 out of 176 countries having increased 7 places in 10 years.

And that is one more reason why Chavez’s Bolivarian Revolution will survive Venezuela’s Socialist leader.

Carles Muntaner is Professor of Nursing, Public Health and Psychiatry at the University of Toronto. He has been working on the public health aspects of the Bolivarian Revolution for more than a decade including Muntaner C, Chung H, Mahmood Q and Armada F. “History Is Not Over. The Bolivarian Revolution, Barrio Adentro and Health Care in Venezuela.” In T Ponniah and J Eastwood The Revolution in Venezuela. Harvard: HUP, 2011

María Páez Victor is a Venezuelan sociologist, specializing in health and medicine.

Joan Benach is a professor of Public Health at the Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona. He has collaborated in a number of studies on the public health policies of the Bolivarian Revolution.


[i] Páez Victor, Maria. “Why Do Venezuelan Women Vote for Chavez?” Counterpunch, 24 April 2012

http://www.counterpunch.org/2012/04/24/why-do-venezuelan-women-vote-for-chavez/print

[ii] Venezuela en Noticias, Venezuela en Noticias <venezuelaennoticias@minci.gob.ve> Venezuela en Noticias, Venezuela en Noticias venezuelaennoticias@minci.gob.ve

[iii] Gallup Poll 2010

[iv] Muntaner C, Chung H, Mahmood Q and Armada F. “History Is Not Over. The Bolivarian Revolution, Barrio Adentro and Health Care in Venezuela.” In T Ponniah and J Eastwood The Revolution in Venezuela. Harvard: HUP, 2011 pp 225-256; see also 4, Muntaner et al 2011, 5, Armada et al 2009; 6, Zakrison et al 2012

[v] Armada, F., Muntaner, C., & Navarro, V. (2001). “Health and social security reforms in latin america: The convergence of the world health organization, the world bank, and transnational corporations.” International Journal of Health Services, 31(4), 729-768.

[vi] Zakrison TL, Armada F, Rai N, Muntaner C. ”The politics of avoidable blindnessin Latin America–surgery, solidarity, and solutions: the case of Misión Milagro.”Int J Health Serv. 2012;42(3):425-37.

[vii] Ismi, Asad. “The Bolivarian Revolution Gives Real Power to the People.” The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives Monitor , December 2009/January.http://www.policyalternatives.ca/publications/monitor/latin-american-revolution-part-iv

[viii] Carmona, Adrián. “Algunos datos sobre Venezuela”, Rebelión, March 2012

[ix] . Weisbrot, Mark and Johnston, Jake.  “Venezuela’s Economic Recovery: Is It Sustainable?”  Center for Economic and Policy Research, Washington, D.C., September 2012.

[x] Hunziker , Robert. “Venezuela and the Wonders of Equality”.  October 15th, 2012

[xi] Golinger, Eva. “US$20 million for the Venezuelan Opposition in 2012”, http://www.chavezcode.com/2011/08/us-20-million-for-venezuelan-opposition.html

[xii] Páez Victor, Maria. “Chavez wins Over Powerful Foreign Conglomerate Against Him”, Periódico América Latina, 11 October, 2012

[xiii] Milne,Seumas.  “The Chávez Victory Will be Felt Far Beyond Latin America” , Associate Editor, The Guardian, October 9, 2012:

[xiv] Alvarado, Carlos, César Arismendi, Francisco Armada, Gustavo Bergonzoli, Radamés Borroto, Pedro Luis Castellanos, Arachu Castro, Pablo Feal, José Manuel García, Renato d´A. Gusmão, Silvino Hernández, María Esperanza Martínez, Edgar Medina, Wolfram Metzger, Carles Muntaner, Aldo Muñoz, Standard Núñez, Juan Carlos Pérez, and Sarai Vivas. 2006. “Mission Barrio Adentro: The Right to Health and Social Inclusion in Venezuela”. Caracas: PAHO/Venezuela.

[xv] Weisbrot, Mark.”Why Chávez Was Re-elected”. New York Times. Oct 10th 2012

source

October 19, 2012

(Source: in-unitatespiritussanctiregnat, via dqwes)

October 2, 2012
Clinton&#8217;s saxaphone isn&#8217;t shit.

Clinton’s saxaphone isn’t shit.

(Source: messiahofmindlessness)

October 2, 2012

In one of the largest concentrations in Merida state’s history, tens of thousands of locals rallied in support of presidential candidate Hugo Chavez on Friday.

“I am convinced that the path to a new, better and possible world is not capitalism, the path is socialism.”
-Hugo Chavez

September 25, 2012
"Marxism taught me what society was. I was like a blindfolded man in a forest, who doesn’t even know where north or south is. If you don’t eventually come to truly understand the history of the class struggle, or at least have a clear idea that society is divided between the rich and the poor, and that some people subjugate and exploit other people, you’re lost in a forest, not knowing anything."

Fidel Castro

On Discovering Marxism, 2009

(Source: theauthoradam, via inkersion)

September 11, 2012
Not even a complete list. What about Columbia?

Not even a complete list. What about Columbia?

(Source: pizzavanguard, via jayaprada)

August 23, 2012
People of Color Organize!: West Keeps Targeting Hugo Chavez



Since taking office in February 1999, Chavez has been Washington’s number one Latin American enemy.

He worries US officials for good reason. He’s a powerful threat. He represents a good example. Venezuela’s social democracy shames America’s. Bolivarianism works.

So does its political system. Elections are open, free and fair. US electoral politics lack legitimacy. Democracy is moribund. Candidates are pre-selected. Big money owns them. Key outcomes are predetermined. Duopoly power runs everything.

On October 7, Venezuelans again head to the polls. Chavez seeks reelection. He remains overwhelmingly popular. Washington dreads the idea of having him around for another six years.

Anti-Chavista rhetoric and accusations are heating up. So far it hasn’t matched former New York Times Caracas correspondent Simon Romero.

On August 22, 2010, he headlined “Venezuela, More Deadly Than Iraq, Wonders Why.” He outrageously reported more 2009 violent deaths under Chavez than in Iraq’s war-torn cities. He claimed “Venezuelans have absorbed such grim statistics for years.”

No respectable publication should run these type columns. Venezuela is no war zone. Until becoming The Times Brazil correspondent, Romero misreported there for years.

After succeeding him in Caracas, so does William Neuman. More on him below.

A Times profile said Chavez replaced Castro as America’s main regional bete noire. He’s Washington’s “leading (Latin American) opponent….”

Spurious accusations followed. Among others they include drug trafficking, collaborating with Colombian “rebels,” human rights violations, alleged electoral fraud, state-sponsored and other forms of violence, authoritarianism, communication “hegemony,” and petro-diplomacy for selling oil to America’s enemies.

Each year, the State Department publishes human rights reports for over 190 countries. Its latest on Venezuela continues America’s war on Chavez.

Spurious accusations include:

• electoral irregularities;

• partisan state-owned media misreporting;

• concentrated executive power;

• economic and property rights restrictions;

• human rights abuses;

• impeding free expression;

• criminalizing dissent;

• harassing and intimidating private media;

• politically motivated killings and summary executions;

• lack of judicial independence;

• failure to provide due process rights;

• torture and other abuses;

• corruption;

• political prisoners;

• violence against women;

• anti-Semitism; and

• human trafficking.

These and similar charges are baseless. They describe America, not Venezuela. They misportray a socially democratic state.

It shames its northern neighbor. They’re constitutional, political, economic, and social worlds apart. Americans can’t imagine rights afforded all Venezuelans.

They’re constitutionally guaranteed. More on them below.

Heated Anti-Chavez Rhetoric

Donald Rumsfeld once compared him to Hitler. Diplomatic terrorism continues. Washington funds opposition groups and candidates. Destabilizing Venezuela and ousting Chavez is policy.

He’s accused of not cooperating with America’s war on terror. He’s vilified for opposing its imperium. Obama criticizes his human rights record and relations with US enemies. Iran, Cuba and others are named.

Chavez said Obama turned America “into a disaster.” He called him a “clown.” He once referred to Bush as “the devil.”

Some US officials call Chavez a threat to American security. He’s labeled a dictator, strongman, commandante, and anti-American tyrant. Media scoundrels target him often.

William Neuman’s latest article headlined “Venezuela Is Cocaine Hub Despite Its Claims,” saying:

“Colombian guerrilla(s)” turned “Venezuela’s vast western plains….into one of the world’s busiest transit hubs for the movement of cocaine to the United States….”

It shows “the government’s triumphant claims are vastly overstated.” Colombian traffickers operate “with surprising latitude….”

“For years, (Washington) has been working with ‘friendly governments’ in Colombia, Mexico, Honduras, Guatemala, and (elsewhere) in Latin America, spending billions of dollars to disrupt the flow of drugs northward.”

Fact check

These countries facilitate drug trafficking. Colombia and Mexico especially are heavily involved. Chavez impressively fights back. An Anti-Drug Fund spends millions of dollars annually. Community prevention projects were established. Eradicating illicit drugs is policy.

Venezuela signed numerous international cooperation agreements. Accusations about facilitating the transit of drugs are spurious. Venezuelan officials call it a form of US aggression.

Combatting drugs includes “the widest policy of international cooperation….”

In contrast, Venezuelan authorities call the US Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) “an international drug trafficking cartel” for good reason.

For decades, the CIA trafficked heavily in drugs. It still does, perhaps more than ever. In his book “Dark Alliance,” Gary Webb exposed it. So did Peter Dale Scott in his books. They include “Drugs, Oil and War.” Earlier he wrote:

“Since at least 1950 there has been a global CIA-drug connection operating more or less continuously.”

It relates to numerous “deep events” like JFK’s assassination, the 1964 Gulf of Tonkin incident, Iran-Contra, and CIA’s involvement with the mob.

“The global drug connection is not just a lateral connection between CIA field operatives and their drug-trafficking contacts. It is more significantly a global financial complex of hot money uniting prominent business, financial and government as well as underworld figures.”

It’s “indirect empire (subverts) existing government.” Wall Street and other major banks launder drug profits. Amounts involved are enormous. Estimates exceed $500 billion annually.

Venezuela spends millions annually fighting trafficking. Washington facilitates it.

NYT contributor Francisco Toro often vilifies Chavez. On July 19, he headlined “Chavez, Communication Hegemon,” saying:

He targets private media with “extremist propaganda…” He “use(s) the power of the state to keep dissenting voices off the air for good.”

Dominant Venezuelan media operate freely. They criticize Chavez harshly. Free expression is constitutionally guaranteed. In America, it’s fast eroding.

On July 12, Toro headlined “The Contradictions of Chavez’s Politics,” saying:

In October, “Chavez faces his most serious (electoral) test.” In fact, he holds an overwhelming near two-to-one lead in recent polls. He’s virtually sure to be reelected. Venezuelans won’t tolerate returning to the bad old days.

Toro claims the election “is a dead heat.” He called Chavez “autocrat(ic and) jittery.” He “disdain(s),” democracy, he said.

His opponent Henrique Capriles Radonski is Washington’s man in Caracas. He represents money power, neoliberal extremism, and pre-Chavez harshness.

Toro called him “an energetic, young governor who’s worked hard to establish himself as a post-ideological solutions guy.”

Venezuelans overwhelmingly reject him for good reason. They want no part of extremist right-wing governance. They want Bolivarianism preserved. They value constitutional provisions mandating it.

Its Preamble “establish(ed) a democratic, participatory and self-reliant, multiethnic and multicultural society in a just, federal and decentralized State that embodies the values of freedom, independence, peace, solidarity, the common good, the nation’s territorial integrity, comity and the rule of law for this and future generations.”

It also “guarantees the right to life, work, learning, education, social justice and equality, without discrimination or subordination of any kind; promotes peaceful cooperation among nations and further strengthens Latin American integration in accordance with the principle of nonintervention and national self-determination of the people, the universal and indivisible guarantee of human rights, the democratization of imitational society, nuclear disarmament, ecological balance and environmental resources as the common and inalienable heritage of humanity….”

Before Chavez, Venezuela was authoritarian, neoliberal and harsh. Poverty and deprivation were extreme. Previous governments paid lip service to fundamental rights and needs. Now they’re mandated by law.

They’re impressive by any standard. They include free healthcare, education, and other essential services. State resources provide them. America’s go largely for militarism, imperial wars, banker handouts, and other benefits for corporate favorites.

Imperial priorities and profiteering come at the expense of growing poverty, unemployment, homelessness, hunger, and other unmet needs.

Police state harshness enforces the message on non-believers. Scoundrel media substitute misinformation for real news, information, commentary and analysis.

Venezuela’s Constitution Article 58 mandates “timely, true, and impartial” information “without censorship, in accordance with the principles of this constitution.”

All Venezuelans are enfranchised equally from birth. Article 56 states they “have the right to be registered free of charge with the Civil Registry Office after birth, and to obtain public documents constituting evidence of the biological identity, in accordance with law.”

In America, voting rights vary by state. Millions of citizens are wrongly declared ineligible. Others are fraudulently stricken from polls. Black and Latino voters are marginalized.

Electoral fraud is rampant. Free, fair, and open elections don’t exist. Corporate owned/programmed electronic voting machines control the process. Ordinary people are shut out.

Venezuela established participatory democracy. Citizen assemblies were created. Constitutional provisions mandate fundamental freedoms, prohibit discrimination, and guarantee indigenous rights.

Four types of direct democracy national referenda were established. Americans have none outside occasional largely non-binding state and local ones. Venezuela’s include:

(1) consultative: for popular, non-binding votes on “national transcendent” issues like trade agreements.

(2) recall: binding on all elected officials up to the president.

(3) approving: binding to approve laws, constitutional amendments, and treaties relating to national sovereignty.

(4) rescinding: to rescind or change existing laws.

Referenda can be initiated by the National Assembly, the President, or by petition from 10 – 20% of registered voters. Different procedural requirements apply for each.

Other mandated rights include social, family, cultural, educational, economic, environmental, and Citizen Power organs.

They’re charged with “preventing, investigating and punishing actions that undermine public ethics and administrative morals, to assure lawful sound management of public property….(to help) create citizenship, together with solidarity, freedom, democracy, social responsibility, work” and more.

Other provisions cover issues important to all Venezuelans. They’re directly involved in how their government is run.

Americans have no say whatever. The contrast is stark and dramatic. Both nations are constitutional worlds apart. Daily life shows it.

Venezuelans won’t tolerate US-style government. Why should anyone have to put up with it?

August 13, 2012
Happy 86th Birthday to Comrade Fidel!


Another year, and another slap in the face to the pathetic sods of the CIA. It is such a pleasure to know Castro is alive, smoking a cigar, and enjoying his 86th year. Congradulations to Fidel, and a thank you for inspiring and fighting for the working class and oppressed people the world over.

“The ever more sophisticated weapons piling up in the arsenals of the wealthiest and the mightiest can kill the illiterate, the ill, the poor and the hungry but they cannot kill ignorance, illnesses, poverty or hunger.” - Fidel Castro

July 4, 2012
Five Myths and Facts about Immigration: Responding to Misconceptions and Racist Propaganda

Myth #1: Immigrants are responsible for the unemployment crisis.

Fact: Unemployment is caused by the capitalist system. The current economic crisis took place largely because of overproduction in the housing market, as well as reckless Wall Street speculation. The capitalists have laid off workers—immigrant and non-immigrant—in order to maximize their rate of profit while the economy contracted.

Even when the economy is booming and competition for jobs decreases, the capitalists aim to add to the pool of unemployed workers to keep wages down.

Studies have shown that there is no correlation between immigration and unemployment, and further that immigrants actually create jobs by participating in the economy. In fact, at the height of the unemployment crisis in 2009, counties with higher levels of immigration tended to have lower unemployment rates.

Myth #2: Immigrants don’t pay taxes and exhaust social services.

Fact: Immigrants pay more than their fair share of taxes. Even undocumented workers pay sales and property taxes in addition to payroll taxes, even though they do not have access to social security and other benefit programs. Most immigrants, documented or not, pay $80,000 more in

taxes than the cost of all social services they receive in their lifetime. A 2007 Congressional Budget Office report estimated that undocumented immigrants consume less than 5 percent of government services. Social services are overburdened because capitalist politicians have slashed the budgets of programs that working people depend on.

The real tax evaders are the bankers and CEOs. Many of the biggest corporations pay no taxes at all, helping to create the so-called budget deficits. Defenders of this unjust system scapegoat immigrants to distract from the assault of the ruling class on all working people.

Myth #3: U.S. labor would be stronger without immigrants.

Fact: Immigrant workers historically have been some of the most militant fighters and organizers in the U.S. labor movement. Immigrants are just as willing to organize and fight as U.S.-born workers, despite their fear of deportation, employer retaliation and other difficulties that come with living in a new country. After 10 to 20 years in the United States, Latino immigrants are in fact more than 10 percent more likely to be union members than U.S.-born workers.

Immigrants have shown their willingness to fight for workplace justice in many recent struggles, including in hotel worker unionization drives in California and efforts to organize janitors in Texas. The mass immigrant rights movement of 2006 showed the vast potential to organize and mobilize undocumented workers.

If undocumented workers are willing to take such bold action when they are most vulnerable, imagine their potential strength once they receive legal status. The labor movement can both grow its membership and fight more effectively through the full legalization of immigrant workers.

Myth #4: Today’s immigrants are ‘different’ from earlier generations.

Fact: In the face of bigotry, economic hardship, family separation and cultural dislocation, immigrants throughout history have attempted to preserve their identities and communities. The claim that certain immigrant communities threaten “American culture” has been used for centuries, especially against those from Asia, Africa, Latin America and the poorer areas of Europe. It is based fundamentally on a racist conception of the “real America” as white Anglo-Saxon.

The reality is that the United States has always been a multilingual and multicultural country, and has been built from the sweat and blood of people from many different nations. Working people must fight this racist notion of cultural uniformity to forcibly assimilate immigrant communities.

To claim, for example, that Latino immigrants “won’t learn English” is pure nonsense. Mexican immigrants and their descendants tend to learn and speak English at a faster rate than any other immigrant group, according to a 2007 American Political Science Association study. Today’s Latino immigrants experience much of the same generational progress in education and employment as did waves of European immigrants before them.

Myth #5: Immigrants are a criminal element in U.S. society.

Fact: Immigrants are less likely to commit crimes than those born in the United States. The myth that greater immigration leads to increased crime defies logic and has been disproven. Why would people who face deportation for even the most trivial offenses risk engaging in criminal behavior, especially when they have gone through tremendous hardship to build new lives in the United States?

During the heightened period of immigration between 1994 and 2004, violent crime and property crime declined 35 percent and 25 percent, respectively. Between 1999 and 2006, the crime rate went down nearly twice as much in the 19 states with the largest immigrant population compared to the rest of the country. Only 0.7 percent of immigrants are in prison, compared to 3.5 percent for the general population.

The real criminals are the Wall Street banks and multinational corporations that have caused such tremendous economic hardship all across the world.

Source: http://www.pslweb.org/liberationnews/newspaper/vol-6-no-7/five-myths-facts-immigration.html

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