-Caveat Lector-

"Hugo Chavez and Venezuela's poor versus everybody else"
Printed on Thursday, December 26, 2002 @ 11:34:47 EST
http://yt.org/article.php?sid=955

[The news coming out of Venezuela has made it look as if Venezuela's
Hugo Chavez is an evil-tyrant with no support from the people. However,
the reality is different. The media has ignored the many protests
throughout Venezuela in support of Chavez. Matthew Riemer explains the
other side of the story in this relevant article on Venezuela's recent
turmoil.]


By Matthew Riemer
YellowTimes.org Columnist (United States)

(YellowTimes.org) � Remember the coup in Venezuela earlier this year? A
coup, if we need remind ourselves, that was an abortive one that the
Bush administration initially backed with much fanfare, but then
rescinded that jubilance when they discovered it to have crumbled under
the pressures of military powers faithful to President Hugo Chavez and
massive public backing from the impoverished Venezuelan masses.

Is that same pattern about to be repeated now or will it end this time
in an orgy of violence as such South American endeavors so often do? If
we look closely, current events in Venezuela resemble the transparent
machinations of the failed April 2002 coup quite well.

Like the coup in April, this new movement has begun with the promise of
a never-ending strike as the main instrument for removal of Chavez.
Furthermore, the current strike, like the one in April, is being
spearheaded by the same ringleaders: Pedro Carmona's Fedecamaras and the
Venezuelan Confederation of Trade Unions (CTV). While the state run oil
company, Petroleos de Venezuela (PDVSA), is being brought to a halt
against judicial orders to highlight the devastating effects of a
stoppage of the country's oil industry.

Once again we have the upper middle class politicians, military
officers, merchants, and demagogues attempting to bring the country's
economy to a standstill in protest of Chavez's social and geopolitical
strategies; strategies that challenge the U.S.' idea of a model South
American strongman. Chavez sells oil to Cuba and meets with Fidel
Castro. He also openly criticizes the U.S.' "war on terrorism" and
globalization, and that's a Washington no-no.

All the while, the Chavez supporters, the vast and poverty stricken
lower class, are the ones most hurt by the strikes as the elite
Venezuelan oligarchy pursue their selfish agenda and plutocratic
aspirations with the middle class as their tool.

And once again the private, corporate media in both Venezuela and the
United States are answering their paymasters' call by printing and
reporting wildly one-sided affairs that virtually omit reference to the
vast and consistent pro-Chavez rallies around the country.

Of the recent articles published by the New York Times about the
situation in Venezuela one has to read several articles to even find a
one sentence mention of the pro-Chavez movement, let alone an entire
article about them. Moreover, these people, their movement, and what
they represent are half the story, yet are given only 1 percent of the
coverage.

Why? Because then the American people might not so easily grasp the fact
that Hugo Chavez is an evil tyrant, against the people, hell-bent on
destroying Venezuela's economy for his own egotistical purposes as they
do now.

Instead we might see large demonstrations by the rural poor in support
of Chavez while decrying the underhanded tactics of the corporations and
news media attempting to seize control of the country. We might clearly
see a divided country where an empowered oligarchy is trying to wrest
control of the government for its own privatizing purposes in the face
of international law and the Venezuelan constitution.

Chavez is continually called a dictator or a communist or a leftist:
anything to conjure up some good ole Cold War imagery, or of the Iron
Curtain and Marxism, though no one really knows what being a Marxist
means. People just know it's bad.

We should also recall the strange and little known quasi-government
proxy known as NED.

The National Endowment for Democracy describes itself as "A private,
nonprofit organization created in 1983 to strengthen democratic
institutions around the world through nongovernmental efforts. [NED] is
governed by an independent, nonpartisan board of directors."

NED, though billed as a private organization, more accurately functions
as an unofficial government organization that carries out foreign policy
initiatives throughout the world.

By all reasonable accounts, the National Endowment for Democracy (NED)
had more than an oblique and unintentional role in the proceedings in
Venezuela in April.

Just before the April coup, NED had funded a conference where many of
the opposition leaders, and ultimate coup organizers, were set to meet,
including hand-picked, two-day dictator Pedro Carmona, president of the
business group Fedecamaras, who was to speak at the event.

Upon coming to power Carmona immediately issued decrees suspending the
National Assembly and the Supreme Court until elections were to take
place in the indefinite future. Emphasis is put on the word
"immediately" here; remember, Carmona was only "in office" for a matter
of hours. Why suspend such democratic tools as the National Assembly and
the Supreme Court when he and his coup conspirators were supposedly
seizing power to revivify a hijacked Venezuelan democracy? Why would
Washington back such flagrant and anti-democratic political measures?

Now similar proceedings are unfolding once again this December just in
time for a war in Iraq, when suddenly, the need for a strong oil-
producing Venezuela will become paramount to the health of the U.S.
economy.

[Matthew Riemer has written for years about a myriad of topics, such as:
philosophy, religion, psychology, culture, and politics. He studied
Russian language and culture for five years and traveled in the former
Soviet Union in 1990. In the midst of a larger autobiographical/cultural
work, Matthew is the Director of Operations at YellowTimes.org. He lives
in the United States.]

Matthew Riemer encourages your comments: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

YellowTimes.org is an international news and opinion publication.
YellowTimes.org encourages its material to be reproduced, reprinted, or
broadcast provided that any such reproduction identifies the original
source, http://www.YellowTimes.org. Internet web links to
http://www.YellowTimes.org are appreciated.

http://yt.org/article.php?sid=955

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