*#GobiernoDeCalleRevolucionPopular*<https://twitter.com/search?q=%23GobiernoDeCalleRevolucionPopular&src=hash>

Hands Off Venezuela @*HOVcampaign* <https://twitter.com/HOVcampaign>

*National Ezequiel Zamora Peasants Front @fncez
<https://twitter.com/FNCEZ>demands "Zero conciliation with the
bourgeoisie"
http://bit.ly/12eG4IV <http://t.co/HN5et9Ngew>*


Hands Off Venezuela @*HOVcampaign* <https://twitter.com/HOVcampaign>

50 tons of basic food products hoarded seized in Zulia PICS and VIDEO
http://www.panorama.com.ve/portal/app/ <http://t.co/nGXJKlJ262>


Hands Off Venezuela @*HOVcampaign* <https://twitter.com/HOVcampaign>

80 tones of basic products about to be smuggled seized in Maracaibo http://
aporrea.org/contraloria/n228950.html … <http://t.co/DG9Fu95A3e> via @*
aporrea* <https://twitter.com/aporrea>




*Venezuelan opposition leader sued in Colombia* http://
colombiareports.com/venezuela-opposition-leader-sued-in-colombia/
…<http://t.co/meSlRvNX2H>

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=ayL_Sflcaig

Venezuelan opposition leader Henrique Capriles and Colombian former
President Alvaro Uribe <http://colombiareports.com/alvaro-uribe/> have been
sued for trying to disrupt exports to Venezuela and destabilize their
governments.

According to the plaintiff, Colombian lawyer Aurelio Jimenez, Capriles met
with Uribe and the former president’s adviser Jose Obdulio Gaviria in
November 2011 to plan a disruption of exports to Venezuela with the aim of
destabilizing the government of Colombia’s neighbor to the east.

The Colombian and Venezuelan politicians subsequently approached Colombian
exporters and Venezuelan importers to convince them to suspend trade and
intentionally cause scarcity in supermarkets in Caracas, according to
Jimenez.

The attorney’s claim has been supported by audio that was leaked to
Colombian newscast CM& who published an article about the meeting on its
website. The article and audio later disappeared from the news website.
Venezuelan television station TeleSur does still have a copy of the audio
made during the meeting.

In the audio, Uribe instructs Venezuelan opposition leader on how to deal
with an upcoming visit to Caracas of current President Juan Manuel
Santos<http://colombiareports.com/profile-juan-manuel-santos/>
.

According to the filed lawsuit, Uribe, Gaviria and Capriles are guilty of
endangering Colombia’s national integrity, conspiracy and obstruction of
justice. Uribe faces additional charges of treason.

Colombia’s former president, an ideological opponent of the leftist
Venezuelan government and its late President Hugo Chavez, has previously
been accused by Venezuela of trying to meddle in domestic affairs.

---------------------

We’ve Definitely Arrived at the Inevitable

May 16th 2013, by Roland Denis - Aporrea

Looking for elements which at this time allow us to establish criteria so
that we can have a clear idea of the situation, we identify three
principles that can be sources of debate and above all, of organisation and
action in the current situation:

1. The “squalid ones” (that is, the same protagonists and
political-economic interests involved in the 2002 coup attempt, the
liberal-oligarchic project) can retake power.

It’s not an issue of the number of voters in favour of Capriles, although
the internal crisis of the official Bolivarian leadership is revealed by
that vote. Actually, since 2006 the voting in Venezuela has always been
quite close, only the figure of Chavez as a candidate broke with that
pattern. The problem is that in the middle of steps backwards of the
revolutionary ethics and spirit within the official process, a
political-cultural environment that is adjusted to world and national media
strategies, is being re-born. The media directs the patterns of
consciousness and understanding of reality of a huge section of the
population that is inclined towards “counterrevolutionary hate” and
mobilisation. In other words, the large discontent that is perfectly
justifiable within the bureaucratic and mercantilist order that dominates
us hasn’t converted into a decision to radicalise the revolution,
especially if we’re talking about the working and poor community sectors.
Just the opposite, it comes out of a desire for submission and blind faith
in the figure of the enraged boss who threatens to openly confront the
“red” government, which has lost strength. It re-establishes the
traditional order, expels values and those who deny them, guaranteeing
demagogic progress in full obedience of the global and institutional order:
the democracy of the bosses.

The reappearance of this subjective hate and obedience of a master force
creates fascism as a reactionary, murderous practice, which goes directly
against the body of disobedient, hated people, creating all the political
and media conditions for it. That, at the same time, helps to sicken an
important segment of the population that keeps quiet, and even feels
pleasure with the appearance of these forms of hate and blood, creating
space for a new conspiratorial cycle that has already begun.

In any case, it’s impossible that this single circumstance could have
political success if it doesn’t count on solid internal support within the
state. Without any doubt this situation is already taking place and
evolving within the official labyrinths, which are in this case plagued by
economic interests concentrated around corruption, the boli- bourgeoisie,
and the bureaucratic hegemony of openly right wing or conservative people
who are direct inheritors of the anticommunist school begun in the fourth
republic. Some examples would be [state electricity company] Corpoelec, the
health and education management, gangster-ised unions (eg those in the
construction sector in Bolivar, protected by governor Rangel), the huge
corporate technocracy of the state, a large part of the armed forces
officials, the plague of these bosses [capitalist class] within the
judicial power and the police, agents without any of their own principles
that are already embedded within the political apparatus of Chavismo, the
place of honour that the PSUV holds, and so on.

It’s a picture that is already well known, but that is born again,
producing the conditions for an effective conspiracy that could, depending
on the circumstances, become more violent, or legal, the channelling of the
so called “soft coup”. In any case, we’ll see soon what comes out of the
High Court and [Capriles’] petition to annul the elections. There, it is
perfectly possible that we’ll be surprised and new elections will be called.

Further, we have an economic model, let’s call it “Giordani” [former
finance minister] for his evident authorship within the fantasies of the
bureaucratic-corporate scheme of vertical distribution of the petroleum
income, which hasn’t done much except subsidise the earnings of financial
capital, the parasitic importers, and the mafia of fleeing capital, which
has put the national economy and social justice at breakdown point.

In any case, from the broadened behaviour of hate and obedience, to the
directly or indirectly conspiratorial and counterrevolutionary internal
aspects, altogether this “squalid” block led by the hysterical, spoilt, and
repugnant Capriles, once again could retake power.

2. The response to this can be found in the people who struggle, and that
is something that should definitely be constituted outside the state.

Within the situation portrayed by day to day events, a debate is being had
which has already called for the formation of various blocs and debate
fronts and the political regrouping of the left of Chavismo.  Interventions
and documents are starting to show the critical crossroads that we find
ourselves in and that the process as a whole finally has nothing left to do
but reveal truths that Chavez himself started to recognise with his “Golpe
de Timon” speech.

The error, it seems to us, in the initiatives arising from the inevitable
anguish, is that they pressure for a radicalisation of the process but they
don’t break with the discourse of “for the government”. They don’t name the
castrating knots within the process- the monetary policy, the management of
PDVSA, agricultural management, the model of dependent industrialisation,
corporative bureaucracy, the tragedy of self censorship etc – something
which it is essential that it be explained with numbers and directly
contested.

Generic criticism is starting to prevail again, the grassroots protagonist
continues to be a discourse based metaphor and radicalised state capitalism
(bank nationalisations, commercial trade under the monopoly of the state,
among other measures) seems to be the step in the manual that we can’t move
on from. We fall again into the dream of a government that brings out
decree after decree about capitalism as if it were a system external to
ourselves and not a social mode of production that totally dominates.

Among these scenarios and the struggles of popular resistance that do
denounce realities and officials of oppression (a model case would the
Yukpa resistance and the legacy of chief Sabino) a political vacuum is
forged which continues to tie us to the bourgeoisie democracy, its
institutions, laws, and above all its own models of law-abiding reforms,
which in our case sound very pretty – for example when they talk about
social missions- but when one sinks into the management and bureaucratic
cooptation, its transformed into a revolutionary mirage that has been
depoliticised and turned off the will for struggle of the enormous social
block on which this process is sustained. It’s there that fascism is
reborn, huge strips of the population who argue that the popular bases of
Chavismo don’t respond to their demands, and they prefer the hateful,
suicidal, and reactionary pole as support to their denunciations.

For this reason, in order for the revolutionary process to survive, it’s a
requirement that “popular power” stops manifesting itself as one more wing
within a scheme that restricts it to a tamed presence of thousands and
thousands of grassroots organisations which sustain an old, corrupt, and
useless state. It should profile itself as the power above any other
institution, power structure, law, and consequent political culture.

That is, it should start behaving itself like a true power of the people
that is winning space, ability to manage, willingness to run, disposition
to struggle and mobilise, and casting aside or taking over all structures
that still make up the constituted power. It’s a collective power whose
equivalent relationship, at the start, with the state as a bourgeois ruling
machine, should gradually overcome it pacifically until a certain point is
reached (peace as a principle but ready for an inevitable war), eventually
imposing a political and constituent quality, productive capacity, ethical
base, and generating real values and emancipatory developments, which
become superior to the bureaucratic and corrupt order which still dominates
us, helping, in this sense, in the generation of new, non capitalist
productive relationships.

Are there people for this? Of course not, if we see them as a spontaneous
and miraculous creation forged within the enormous labyrinth of
organisational spaces that today make up the popular movement inspired by
the libratory legacy of Chavez. This would be almost impossible, although I
hope I’m mistaken. The true rupture needs, to start off with, two things:
the firm and organic initiative of a collective vanguard that makes this
line of rupture continuous and progressive; that is, a line of training,
broad initiatives of organisation, a willingness to struggle, and
conversion into protagonists of production of material and non-material
goods that start to respond to collective needs, producing their own
economy, communicational network and defence.

And the second thing, although this does sound like asking for a miracle, a
hegemonic pole or at least influential within the government, which for
revolutionary commitment and responsibility for the place they occupy, they
understand that nobody gave them this privilege in order to play with words
and the destiny of the people. That if they don’t want to be the main
people responsible if this thing drowns in fascism and domination by the
most parasitic castes of the bourgeoisie, they need to assume that their
politics beyond global commitments with sectors of national business or
internal balancing between power factions...they need to break from this
situation, if they don’t, they throw in the towel with their “decorous and
populist” management.

However, no process is absolutely conditioned on these needs as that is
decided through events that the process generates, including the
unthought-of events, such as what happened from 27 February to 13 April. It
slices through continuities and opens new horizons and new truths, but
following political logic, organic construction and demands that don’t
contemplate self censorship, are in our consideration, basic premises at
this time. We’ll see...

3. It’s definitely the time to win and to make our American and libertarian
socialism a reality.

What can be deduced according to our current experience within this tense
situation that we find ourselves in, and taking the superiority of people’s
power above any other constituted power (political or economic) as a
premise, the two previous points invite us to locate ourselves beyond mere
critical thought and anti-bureaucratic flights, and instead locate
ourselves positively, and affirmatively in the area of the other politics,
with the science of the people, of the emancipatory and self-governing
order, that is the revolution.

Counter-revolutionary action and the fascist symptoms that always accompany
it, is today sustained fundamentally by the media empire, which hides
imperialism’s horrors and transfers them onto any political work which
manages to socialise the emancipatory desire anywhere in the world. The
horror is imposed on a sovereign world of free and equal people. But this
would be impossible to maintain if there wasn’t a material substratum that
allowed manipulable primary material to be collected.

The problems that we are going through, being immersed in a revolutionary
process, is that within the concrete social spaces, “the revolution” often
shows itself as clear bureaucratic despotism. Nicolas [Maduro] was told off
very clearly recently in Los Teques, and he attacked the complainant, a
phenomenon that largely explains the emerging crisis. But this also has a
reason for being which goes beyond the bureaucracy. The problem is the
concrete relationship between territorial realities and revolutionary
construction as such. Popular power and revolutionary acts will continue
being fiction while within these territories an “other power” isn’t
affirmed. A power that brings about the new world and gets rid of the old
one. It’s not just “a republic” that needs to be re-founded, as we
announced in 1998 (it’s not an issue of constitutions, laws, new government
now), in this case real territories that make up that republic have to be
re-founded. Ones that are able to create hope and collective passion with
the strength to overcome any collective disillusionment and the consequent
reactionary regression. We need, then, a territorial strategy that area by
area, the people’s self governed “other republic” can arise.

Many people have wanted to seize this path with the idea of the “communal
state”. Nothing is more absurd – and please pardon us Kleber Ramirez, late
creator of the idea, and a marvellous revolutionary- than the idea of a
state that organises a communal or communist society. There can be a state
that assists in the transition (to not be totally anarchist about it and
more Marxist), but that at the same time is dissolved by it – the dream of
Lenin or Mao. The commune or the real and territorial power of the people
isn’t small power, the base of a pyramid. It’s neither below nor separate,
but rather it is spread out across the national scene, articulating itself
according to political, productive, communicational, technological, and
defensive potential, and from there it becomes a power that is strictly
rebellious and created from the bottom up.

In the situation we find ourselves in, apparently critical and very
dangerous, is there the possibility of advancing along this route? We might
say that the critical context and the advances over the last 14 years allow
us to say yes, that definitely we have “arrived at the inevitable”. At this
time there are some tasks that we have laid out as follows:

*Determining the territorial corridors (from a geologic, social, and
cultural points of views: continuous spaces, shorter in urban areas and
larger in rural spaces) through which a strategy of organisation,
unification of people struggle, and opening of the popular constituent
process can be established.

*Division of this corridor into territories or socio-productive spaces, and
start a process that creates the political conditions for these spaces.

*Broadest possible meeting of the militant community so that the task of
creating people’s power begins.

*Debating and having knowledge of geological, population, cultural,
structural, political, communicational, and military territories at hand,
it’s possible to put together a “struggle letter” that determines who we
are and what we want, how we’ll achieve it, and how we’ll defend it.

*If the conditions are right for proceeding, then the creation of the
commune or other fundamental organisational form of revolutionary power
which aims to implement the struggle letter. This wouldn’t need to be
dependent on any “commune law”, which is terribly complicated, vertical,
and delegative, but rather on collective legitimacy of its process, and
article 71 of the constitution if one prefers not to break with the
constitutional order, and actually give it substance.

*Within this power, of course the basis of legality, justice, a political
culture of street and direct democracy, a proud notion of who we are should
gradually be formed.

*In order for the sustainability of the process to be guaranteed, the
commune or however it’s called, should have a productive base that exists
and can be developed, and in that way its autonomy in the face of economic
blackmail by bureaucracy and fascist pressure from the bourgeoisie can be
guaranteed. However, in the same way, while there are no reasons for a
definite rupture, meeting with all institutional allies, establishing
negotiations and methods of mutual help where there is an equality of
power, as Chavez asked for so many times, is key.

It’s equally important, if not fundamental, and at least highly necessary,
that this process counts on the macroeconomic conditions and government
policies that allow it to extend across the territory and gradually create
the necessary socialist conditions. We repeat what we’ve already expressed
many times: the generation of self managed markets with direct and
favourable credit, preferential access to foreign currency which multiplies
links with other peoples, technology and knowledge, the complete opening up
of the formal education system as a permanent support of this process, the
transfer of the social missions to direct people’s management, the
advancement towards socialisation of the land, and complete respect for
worker control. But these and other specific measures will have to be
fought for with a lot of insistence as the majority of the government lost
its initial vision of this years ago.

In our opinion, if this process begins to be activated very soon,
definitively overcoming the Manichean opposition/government confrontation
in order to arrive at the essence of the revolutionary process. In no more
than two or three years will be able to at least dare to say that this
revolution which we have had to fight for, definitively left its
irreversible mark.

*Translation by Tamara Pearson for Venezuelanalysis.com. This article has
been very slightly abridged.*
------------------------------
*Source URL (retrieved on 17/05/2013 - 2:38am):*
http://venezuelanalysis.com/analysis/9357


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



------------------------------------

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