> http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article6704.htm
> 
> Venezuela Floridated
> 
> Will The Gang That Fixed Florida Fix the Vote in Caracas this Sunday?
> 
> by Greg Palast
 
> Tuesday, August 10, 2004"ICH" -- Hugo Chavez drives George Bush 
> crazy. Maybe it's jealousy: Unlike Mr. Bush, Chavez, in Venezuela, 
> won his Presidency by a majority of the vote. 
> 
> Or maybe it's the oil. Venezuela sits atop a reserve rivaling Iraq's. 
> And Hugo thinks the US and British oil companies that pump the crude 
> ought to pay more than a 16% royalty to his nation for the stuff. 
> Hey, sixteen percent isn't even acceptable as a tip at a New York 
> diner. 

 <SNIP> 


 Dick Cheney, Hugo Chavez and Bill Clinton's Band
 Why Venezuela has Voted Again for Their 'Negro e Indio' President
 by Greg Palast
 August 16, 2004 
 http://www.workingforchange.com/article.cfm?itemid=17478 
 http://www.commondreams.org/views04/0816-03.htm 
                
 There's so much BS and baloney thrown around about Venezuela that I may be 
violating some rule of
 US journalism by providing some facts. Let's begin with this:  77% of 
Venezuela's farmland is owned
 by 3% of the population, the 'hacendados.' 

 I met one of these farmlords in Caracas at an anti-Chavez protest march. 
Oddest demonstration I've
 ever seen: frosted blondes in high heels clutching designer bags, screeching, 
"Chavez - dic-ta-dor!"
 The plantation owner griped about the "socialismo" of Chavez, then jumped into 
his Jaguar
 convertible. 

 That week, Chavez himself handed me a copy of the "socialist" manifesto that 
so rattled the man in
 the Jag. It was a new law passed by Venezuela's Congress which gave land to 
the landless. The
 Chavez law transferred only fields from the giant haciendas which had been 
left unused and
 abandoned. 

 This land reform, by the way, was promoted to Venezuela in the 1960s by that 
Lefty radical, John F.
 Kennedy. Venezuela's dictator of the time agreed to hand out land, but forgot 
to give peasants title to
 their property. 

 But Chavez won't forget, because the mirror reminds him. What the affable 
president sees in his
 reflection, beyond the ribbons of office, is a "negro e indio" -- a "Black and 
Indian" man, dark as a cola
 nut, same as the landless and, until now, the hopeless. For the first time in 
Venezuela's history, the
 80% Black-Indian population elected a man with skin darker than the man in the 
Jaguar. 

 So why, with a huge majority of the electorate behind him, twice in elections 
and today in a
 referendum, is Hugo Chavez in hot water with our democracy-promoting White 
House? 

 Maybe it's the oil. Lots of it. Chavez sits atop a reserve of crude that 
rivals Iraq's. And it's not his
 presidency of Venezuela that drives the White House bananas, it was his 
presidency of the
 Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, OPEC. While in control of the 
OPEC secretariat,
 Chavez cut a deal with our maximum leader of the time, Bill Clinton, on the 
price of oil. It was a
 'Goldilocks' plan. The price would not be too low, not too high; just right, 
kept between $20 and $30 a
 barrel. 

 But Dick Cheney does not like Clinton nor Chavez nor their band. To him, the 
oil industry's (and Saudi
 Arabia's) freedom to set oil prices is as sacred as freedom of speech is to 
the ACLU. I got this info, by
 the way, from three top oil industry lobbyists. 

 Why should Chavez worry about what Dick thinks? Because, said one of the oil 
men, the Veep in his
 bunker, not the pretzel-chewer in the White House, "runs energy policy in the 
United States." 

 And what seems to have gotten our Veep's knickers in a twist is not the price 
of oil, but who keeps the
 loot from the current band-busting spurt in prices. Chavez had his Congress 
pass another oil law, the
 "Law of Hydrocarbons," which changes the split. Right now, the oil majors - 
like PhillipsConoco -
 keep 84% of the proceeds of the sale of Venezuela oil; the nation gets only 
16%. 

 Chavez wanted to double his Treasury's take to 30%. And for good reason. 
Landless, hungry
 peasants have, over decades, drifted into Caracas and other cities, building 
million-person ghettos of
 cardboard shacks and open sewers. Chavez promised to do something about that. 

 And he did. "Chavez gives them bread and bricks," one Venezuelan TV reporter 
told me. The blonde
 TV newscaster, in the middle of a publicity shoot, said the words "pan y 
ladrillos" with disdain, making
 it clear that she never touched bricks and certainly never waited in a bread 
line. 

 But to feed and house the darker folk in those bread and brick lines, Chavez 
would need funds, and
 the 16% slice of the oil pie wouldn't do it. So the President of Venezuela 
demanded 30%, leaving Big
 Oil only 70%. Suddenly, Bill Clinton's ally in Caracas became Mr. Cheney's -- 
and therefore, Mr.
 Bush's -- enemy. 

 So began the Bush-Cheney campaign to "Floridate" the will of the Venezuela 
electorate. It didn't
 matter that Chavez had twice won election. Winning most of the votes, said a 
White House
 spokesman, did not make Chavez' government "legitimate." Hmmm. Secret 
contracts were awarded
 by our Homeland Security spooks to steal official Venezuela voter lists. Cash 
passed discreetly from
 the US taxpayer, via the so-called 'Endowment for Democracy,' to the 
Chavez-haters running today's
 "recall" election. 

 A brilliant campaign of placing stories about Chavez' supposed unpopularity 
and "dictatorial" manner
 seized US news and op-ed pages, ranging from the San Francisco Chronicle to 
the New York Times. 

 But some facts just can't be smothered in propaganda ink. While George Bush 
can appoint the
 government of Iraq and call it "sovereign," the government of Venezuela is 
appointed by its people.
 And the fact is that most people in this slum-choked land don't drive Jaguars 
or have their hair tinted
 in Miami. Most look in the mirror and see someone "negro e indio," as dark as 
their President Hugo. 

 The official CIA handbook on Venezuela says that half the nation's farmers own 
only 1% of the land.
 They are the lucky ones, as more peasants owned nothing. That is, until their 
man Chavez took office.
 Even under Chavez, land redistribution remains more a promise than an 
accomplishment. But today,
 the landless and homeless voted their hopes, knowing that their man may not, 
against the armed
 axis of local oligarchs and Dick Cheney, succeed for them. But they are 
convinced he will never forget
 them. 

 And that's a fact. 

 Greg Palast's reports from Venezuela for BBC Television's Newsnight and the 
Guardian papers of
 Britain earned a California State University Journalism School "Project 
Censored" award for 2002.
 View photos and Palast's reports on Venezuela at http://www.GregPalast.com.



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