_____  

From: Ed Pearl [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Wednesday, December 21, 2011 5:54 AM
To: Ed Pearl
Subject: Argentina Shows World How to Beat the Crisis; Uncensored Politics
Meeting


http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2011/12/20-2

Argentina Shows World How to Beat the Crisis

by Marcela Valente  
Inter Press Service <http://ipsnews.net/news.asp> :  December 20, 2011 

BUENOS AIRES - What is happening in the European Union and the United States
today happened a decade ago in Argentina, when it was a hotbed of protest
and the streets of major cities were seething with people telling their
leaders they had had enough. And then a new story began to be written.

 
<https://www.commondreams.org/sites/commondreams.org/files/imagecache/headli
ne_image/article_images/screen_shot_2011-12-20_at_8.56.00_am_0.png> The
historic protests of Dec. 19-20, 2001 in Argentina left 40 people dead and
many injured. They were the consequence of years of recession and public
indebtedness that led to economic collapse and the skyrocketing of
unemployment and poverty to levels never before seen in the country's modern
history. The historic protests of Dec. 19-20, 2001 in Argentina left 40
people dead and many injured. They were the consequence of years of
recession and public indebtedness that led to economic collapse and the
skyrocketing of unemployment and poverty to levels never before seen in the
country's modern history.

"The 2001-2002 crisis was the result of adjustment policies prescribed by
the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in the 1990s, the same policies that
are driving Europe's present situation," sociologist Norma Giarraca told
IPS.

Giarraca, of the Gino Germani Research Institute at the University of Buenos
Aires (UBA), is a co-author of "Tiempos de rebelión: ¡¡Qué se vayan todos!!
(Times of Rebellion: They Must All Go!), a book on the social movement that
arose in the heat of the 2001 economic, social and political meltdown.

The mass protests that broke out after three years of recession, deep
spending cuts and growing indebtedness triggered the December 2001
resignation of centrist president Fernando de la Rúa, half-way through his
four-year term. Over the following 10 days, four interim presidents were
designated in rapid succession.

Meanwhile, the poverty rate soared to over 52 percent of the population, and
unemployment climbed to 24 percent. The airports were crowded with people
leaving the country, especially young people.

The protests crossed social class barriers: middle and upper-income groups
demanded access to their savings, trapped in bank accounts by government
restrictions on cash withdrawals known as the "corralito", while the poor
looted supermarkets in order to survive.

Argentina then defaulted on a large part of its foreign debt, to the
consternation of financial operators at home and abroad, and the president
designated by Congress, Eduardo Duhalde, dismantled the "convertibility"
regime that had pegged the peso to the dollar for nearly a decade.

Currency devaluation and debt restructuring, along with a highly successful
treasury bond swap with large capital discounts and longer terms, paved the
way for the recovery of the country from 2003, when president Néstor
Kirchner took office for four years. The leader of the centre-left sector of
the Justicialista (Peronist) Party, he died in October 2010.

Since that time the Argentine economy has grown steadily at between seven
and 10 percent of GDP a year, except in 2009 when economic growth was only
0.9 percent, due to the impact of the global economic and financial crisis
that broke out in 2008 in the United States.

The country's economic performance and a range of social programmes
implemented by Kirchner, and from 2007 by his wife and successor, President
Cristina Fernández, have brought down poverty and unemployment rates to
below 10 percent.

Giarraca told IPS that Argentina "is better off because the economic
variables were managed correctly" and has benefited from high international
prices for commodities, the country's main export.

But in her view, there was little progress on the political front. "People
were fed up and disillusioned with politicians, and expressed this on the
street with the slogan 'they must all go'. They were demanding a renovation,
which has not happened," she said.

Today there is stability, many young people are politically active, and the
majority of voters are satisfied with the status quo as demonstrated by the
October re-election <http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=105564>  of
President Fernández, with 54 percent of the vote. But the demands for direct
democracy and greater participation have gone unheeded, Giarraca said.

The undercurrent of rebellion persists, she said, and finds expression in
local neighbourhood assemblies in the country's provinces, held to protest
the activities of the mining industry, which pollutes the environment
without benefiting local communities.

In the industrialised countries, the crisis derived from unsustainable
indebtedness is being combated by the political and economic leadership with
deepening cuts in government spending and social benefits, causing growing
social malaise.

Movements like the "Indignant" or May 15 (15-M) movement in Spain
<http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=105333>  or the Occupy movements in the
United States <http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=106206>  and Canada evoke
the late 2001 street protests in Argentina, which were also self-organised
and independent of social and political organisations.

"Something of the profound dissatisfaction that we experienced in 2001 is
being expressed today in Europe. The welfare states of the 1970s have been
eroded, and the culture of neoliberal capitalism impinges on every aspect of
life," Giarraca said.

Economist Julio Gambina, head of the Social and Political Research
Foundation and a member of the Latin American Council of Social Sciences
(CLACSO) and ATTAC Argentina (the Association for the Taxation of Financial
Transactions and Aid to Citizens), concurs.

In Gambina's view, "Europe should look at itself in the mirror of the 2001
crisis... Argentina arrived at an explosive situation because of the same
liberalisation, privatisation and adjustment policies that the IMF and the
European Central Bank are recommending" for European countries today.

According to Gambina, the crisis in Argentina was resolved by "relaunching
capitalism" in two stages: on the one hand, suspending payments on the debt,
and on the other, devaluing the currency, which made exports more
competitive.

"Capitalism in Argentina recovered its capacity to operate and accumulate
profits, and social indicators improved, although not to the levels of the
1960s and 1970s, before the adoption of neoliberal policies or unbridled
capitalism," he told IPS.

This strategy for overcoming the crisis, which is being recommended for
Europe by economists like former head of the World Bank and 2001 Nobel
Prize-winner Joseph Stiglitz, "is not such an easy model to copy," Gambina
said, and not just because of the constraints imposed by having a single
currency, the euro, in many European countries.

"It's not that simple, because even if you could return to the former
national currencies and devalue them, countries like Greece or Spain do not
possess the range of exportable natural resources that we have in Latin
America," Gambina said.

According to his interpretation, Europe should look at the ongoing process
in Latin America, which on the political level is trying to free itself from
the hegemony of the United States through its new integration structures,
like the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC),
officially launched early this month, which does not include the U.S. or
Canada.

"Europe ought to think of a way of reconstructing itself without the
hegemony of Germany and France," which according to Gambina are leading the
region into greater austerity and more suffering for growing sectors of the
population.

© 2011 IPS North America 
 
* * *
 
Hi, Ed

Would you please send out this meeting notice to your list? I would greatly
appreciate it.
Thanks.

John Wenger


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: John Wenger <[email protected]>
Date: Wed, Dec 21, 2011 at 02:40
Subject: Uncensored Politics Meets This Saturday Afternoon, December 24,
2011, Two to Six PM
To: Uncensored Politics <[email protected]>


1. This week we will discuss the NDAA (National Defense Authorization Act)
and its provisions to jail Americans indefinitely if classified as a a
terrroist by some anonymous federal official. What does this mean for us
activists, and how can we defend ourselves?

2. Benjamin Fulford has said some new things that are extremely interesting,
and worth discussing in the context of the economy, and the impending fall
of the EURO, and probable bailout of the EU by our Fed. 

3. Fukushima continues emitting radiation. We will discuss the December 2011
paper that reports that an estimated 14,000 excess deaths in the United
States are linked to the radioactive fallout from the disasterat the
Fukushima nuclear reactors in Japan. We will review the recommended ways to
defend against this ongoing radiation.

4. Occupy LA continues, and we will report on it.

We will meet this Saturday from two to six pm at the Unurban Coffeehouse,
which closes at eight PM Xmas Eve.

What: The Uncensored Politics Discussion Group will meet: 
When: Saturday, December 24, 2011 --- from two to six pm, 
Where: The Unurban Coffeehouse in Santa Monica, 
3301 Pico Boulevard, Santa Monica, CA 90405-2115, 
near the Centinella Exit off the Ten Freeway, just two Exits West of the
405.

John Wenger



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