ZNet Update on the recent Chavez UN Speech and its aftermath.

Chavez, the Devil, Chomsky, and Us
By Michael Albert



What can leftists learn from Chavez's UN speech and its aftermath?
That the U.S. is the world's most egregious rogue state. We already
knew that and, in fact, so does most everyone else. That Bush and Co.
engage in repeated acts of amoral, immoral, and antimoral behavior
such as a devil would enact, if there was such a thing as a devil. We
already knew that too. That the emperor has no morality, integrity,
wisdom, or humanity. We knew that as well.



So is there anything in the episode for us? I think there may be.



I suspect many leftists would have been happier had Chavez torn into
Bush and U.S. institutions by offering more evidence while employing a
less religious spin. Perhaps Chavez could have called Bush Mr. War, or
Mr. Danger as he has in the past, and piled on evidence to show how
U.S. policies in the world, and grotesque domestic imbalances as well,
obstruct desirable income distribution, democratic decision making,
and mutual interpersonal and intercommunity respect. Chavez might have
given evidence how U.S. elites and key institutions impede living and
loving and even survival, from Latin America to Asia and back. He
might have said that George W. Bush, as the current master purveyor of
the most recent violations by the U.S., is, in effect, doing the work
of a devil – because he is the spawn of a devilish system. And I
suspect many leftists would have probably been happier had Chavez
added chapter and verse evidence for his assertions, though I suspect
time limits precluded that.


But, hey, we can't always get exactly what we want. And more, the
dramatic "smelling of sulfur formulation" that Chavez used may have
been exactly what got the sentiment in any form at all in front of
millions of readers and viewers. The pundits wanted to use Chavez's
words to discredit him – but, in doing so, they put his claim before
hundreds of millions of people. Perhaps without the dramatic
formulation, we would have heard nearly nothing.



My guess is that Chavez treated the event as he does pretty much all
his encounters. He said what he thought. He gave it a passionate,
aesthetic, and humorous edge. He calculated that forthrightness would
accomplish more than it cost. Content-wise, the speech was typical
Chavez, even if most hadn't heard him saying such things before, due
to having not heard him say anything before. Here is Chavez commenting
on Bush last March, for example, in a televised Venezuelan address:
"You are an ignoramus, you are a burro, Mr. Danger ... or to say it to
you in my bad English, you are a donkey, Mr. Danger. You are a donkey,
Mr. George W. Bush. You are a coward, a killer, a genocider, an
alcoholic, a drunk, a liar, an immoral person, Mr. Danger. You are the
worst, Mr. Danger. The worst of this planet."



The cost of Chavez's more recent and far more global forthrightness
about Bush is dismissal of Chavez as a crazy lunatic by many people
who already felt that way but were restrained in saying so, and by
some people swayed by media ridicule of him, who had had no prior
opinion.



The gain of Chavez's more recent and far more global forthrightness
about Bush is establishing that one can say the truth about the U.S.
and less importantly about George Bush, and showing that doing so is
in accord not only with truth but also with integrity. It is providing
an example for others to be inspired by and act on. What is poison in
elite eyes can be vitamins for us, and vice versa.



In that respect, what Chavez did reminds me a little of what Abbie
Hoffman and some others did in the U.S. to the House UnAmerican
Activities Committee, known more familiarly as HUAC, decades ago.
Abbie and some others aggressively and dismissively ridiculed HUAC as
beneath contempt and unworthy of respect. They laughed at obeying it
and via their dramatic stance they moved the prevalent attitude toward
HUAC from being primarily fear and trembling to being primarily
disdain and dissent. Chavez tried something similar, I think. He
voiced what others, even others in the room at the UN, also knew but
kept quiet about. He hoped, I assume, that others would take strength
and begin to voice their needs and insights too.



Bush is a vengeful, greedy, violent, but even more so, obedient thug.
Yes, obedient, as in Bush obeys the dictates of the system he has
climbed and now administers for the rich and powerful. Bush perfectly
exemplifies the adage that in capitalism "garbage rises." My guess is
that Chavez felt that the benefits of standing up to the U.S. and its
most elite garbage outweighs the costs of seeming to many people to be
an extremist from Mars. So was Chavez right? Did the benefits outweigh
the debits?



My country, the United States, exists beneath a blanket of
disorienting and misleading media madness. It endures a climate of
paralyzing and pervasive fear. It encompasses a deeply inculcated
hopelessness born of educational and cultural institutions that snuff
out communication of dissenting beliefs elevating instead pap and
pablum. It suffers a life-draining anti-sociality produced by markets
that reward callousness and punish solidarity. Garbage rises in the
U.S. because nice guys finish last. And amidst all this, for anyone to
tell the full truth, and even more so for anyone to display the
appropriate levels of passionate anger that the full truth warrants,
makes that person appear to be Martian, appear to be psychotic, appear
to be irrelevant, and Chavez wants to reverse that context.



Did Chavez fall short of what could be accomplished on that score with
one speech? I am not at all sure he did. But if he did, if the price
of Chavez's speech in delegitimating his own credibility in certain
circles was greater than the gain in delegitimating greed and violence
and in freeing people in very different circles from blind and
uncritical obedience and fear, whose fault would that be?



Should we blame the one messenger who spoke up? Or should we blame the
millions of messengers who know the same substance as Chavez, but hold
their tongues?



There is a world class bully, Bush. He represents a class of rich and
powerful "masters of the universe." He administers their system of
gross inequality. He expands the competitive market hostility they
thrive on. He fosters the mental passivity they rely on. He abets the
lifelong coercion they utilize. He epitomizes the ubiquitous crassness
and commercialism they profit off. He lies to shield their true
purposes. He throws bombs far and wide to defend and enlarge their
empire. Of course irritating the bully and the system he shills for
can unleash nasty behavior. Of course, for a time, in the ensuing
onslaught, verbally assaulting the bully can diminish the dissident's
credibility, at least in some circles. It might even boost the bully a
bit, in some quarters.



Likewise, when there is a climate of subservient obedience to a bully,
as we now endure in the U.S., when the bully's climate people feel
that to tell the truth about him and his system is uncivil, and when
the bully's climate overwhelmingly castigates honesty and ridicules
passion, then of course being passionately honest will be castigated
and ridiculed and at least in part make the truth teller look deviant.



So, if that's the risk, what is the solution? Should we forego truth
telling? Or should we tell more truth? Should we coddle our likely
enemies. Or should we organize and empower our likely friends?



Chavez needs allies, but not ones who say, hey, Chavez is an okay guy,
even if a little over the top. Chavez needs allies who stand up to
imperialism and injustice in all its forms be counted like him, even
right up over the top, but allies who also bring to Chavez criticisms
and ideas that run contrary to his own thinking and doing. Chavez
embracing Admadinenjad was bad news. His suggestions, in other
contexts, that the Venezuelan constitution be amended to allow him to
rule longer are bad news. Truth to him, too. But at that UN Chavez
wasn't talking mainly to the people sitting in front of him in the UN
with his speech. He was talking to people throughout the U.S. and
throughout the world, saying, in essence, it is okay to rebel. And it
is okay. And we ought to do it.



So that was one lesson. When you revile elites your effectiveness
depends less on your particular words than on how many other people
are willing to do as much or more than you. Chavez thinks in terms of
winning massive change. Most people on the left think in terms of
holding off calamities. The contrast is stark and at the heart of the
recent incidents. We can learn from his attitude, I think.



Chavez waved around Chomsky's book, Hegemony or Survival. I think
there are lessons in that, too, even for us, even though we already
know Chomsky's work. First off, a person, even one that has great
social advantages, can humbly aid others. You can get up and say to
others, hey, this book, video, set of ideas, or organization is worthy
of your time. You can use whatever avenues exist for you, whether it
be access to your family or friends, or to your schoolmates or
workmates, or to your local media, or even to larger mass media, or
even to the whole world, to reach out with advice and pointers that
you think are worthy. And you should do that. We all should do that.
But we generally don't. I suspect we are embarrassed to do it. Chavez
probably wouldn't even comprehend that. Just as he had reviled Bush
before, he had celebrated Chomsky before too, over and over, with
little effect. This guy Chavez tries and tries again. He loses, he
loses, he loses, he wins.



I would guess that Chavez didn't think to himself, they will revile me
in their columns and commentaries, so I better not rip into Bush and
celebrate Chomsky. The ensuing ridicule might reduce my stature, I
better avoid it. To rip Bush and celebrate Chomsky will look strange,
I better avoid it. If I do that I will be giving time to elevating
someone else, and not myself, and I better avoid it. I will be
displaying anger and passion, and that will brand me as uncivil and
improper, it will label me as undignified and even juvenile, and I
better avoid it. How many of us think like that, how often, is a
question worth considering.



Instead, I suspect Chavez thought, Chomsky's work deserves and needs
to be more widely addressed. It affected me. It needs to affect
others. I will try to push it into people's awareness using all the
means at my disposal to do so, which, indeed, he has been doing,
though with much less success, for some time now. Of course, we can't
all push an author, a book, an organization, or an idea, and have it
jump into international, domestic, or local prominence, whether on our
first, fifth, or tenth try. We are not all heads of a dynamic country.
We don't all have a giant stage, or often even a large stage, or even
any stage at all, from which to sing our songs. But we can still do
our part, wherever we may be. And the fact is, we who know so much
often don't do our part. We often don't point out sources of ideas and
discuss them with our workmates, schoolmates, and families at every
opportunity. If we have audiences for our work, again we don't use our
writing, talks, and other products to promote valuable work by others
beyond ourselves. Why is that? Sometimes we are afraid of reprisals.
Sometimes we are afraid of looking silly. Sometimes we just don't want
to do it because it isn't our thing. Cheerleading and recommending,
that's not my thing. I doubt it will work. I won't bother trying. Then
our foretelling of failure is fulfilled. Well, we need to get over all
that.



Again, I think the difference between Chavez and most others even on
the left is that Chavez is seeking to win, and we are instead seeking,
as often as not, to avoid alienating pundits or to even appeal to
them. We are seeking to avoid annoying anyone we like, or anyone we
might like, or who might like us. We are seeking to avoid looking odd
to anyone, or to avoid making a mistake, or to avoid seeming shrill
and angry, or self serving, or passionate. And we need to transcend
all that.



I think what made Chavez seem so peculiar to so many people is that
what he did was, in fact, incredibly peculiar. To stand up to the
classist, racist, sexist, authoritarian leader of the U.S. and to
mince no words reviling his immorality, was indeed incredibly
peculiar. So let's all stand up to power and privilege and take the
stigma out of doing so. It is part of removing the smell of sulfur
from the air.



And, at the opposite pole, Chavez celebrated and openly and
aggressively aided an anti classist, anti racist, anti sexist, and
anti authoritarian set of ideas and their author. And that too was
peculiar. And we all ought to be doing that too, for lots of able
authors and worthy ideas. Indeed, we should do it so much that
solidaritous movement building behavior comes to be typical, rather
than seeming Martian. We should do it so much and so openly that we
move from telling the truth to feeling about the truth the way a
caring and sentient soul ought to feel about it, and finally to acting
on the truth and on our passionate feelings in accord with wide human
interests and in pursuit of compelling and worthy aims. To hell with
the dictates of markets and pundits alike.

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