One ‘No’, Many ‘Yesses’ in Venezuela-What’s Behind all the Drama Jumping Off?

Venezuela protestsA lot of drama jumping off in Venezuela right now and sadly our corporate media is doing what it always does when events like this take place, deliberately misleading folks and playing to our collective tendency to react to 30 second sound bites and ‘fast moving footage filled with rock throwing, fires and marches.

Corporate media manipulation is able to work in this country because many of are grossly unaware of what goes on outside our borders. Many who are jumping on the bandwagon about Venezuela would be hard pressed to point it out on a map.

Below is an insightful article about whats going on right now along with a couple of interviews with folks who are well versed in Venezuelan politics…  G1 of the group Rebel Diaz. The late Hugo Chavez was supportive of their Bronx based organization RBDAC, Professor George Ciccariello-Maher author of the book  ‘We Created Chávez: A People’s History of the Venezuelan Revolution’ and William Camacaro of the Boliverian Circles. All this is happening in the backdrop of the US expelling Venezuelian diplomats in what is being described as a tit for tat move.

G1 of Rebel Diaz speaks on the protests in Venezuela

Long time artist/ activist G1 of the group Rebel Diaz offers up some keen insight as to what is going on Venezuela. It’s a follow up to his insightful article ‘One No, Many Yesses in Venezuela

In our interview G1 draw the comparisons to what has taken place in his native country of Chile and the role that multi-national corporations have played in both shaping policy in Latin American countries and in some cases bringing about regime change. He also speaks about how Chavez supported local Bronx based groups including RBDAC who are trying top bring about transformation.

George Ciccariello-Maher speaks on Venezeula protests

Long time activist/ professor and author George Ciccariello-Maher drops serious science about the on going protests Venezuela and politics behind them.  He gives keen insight into all the major players and stakeholders. He also gives insight into the various anarchist communities who are on the ground and some stark contradictions some of them are playing in recent days.

William Camacaro of the Boliverian Circle speaks on protests in Venezuela

We spoke with William Camacaro who is part of the Boliverian Circle who talked about the important role his organization plays and what we should be watching for as the recent protest unfold in the streets of Venezuela.

One No, Many Yesses in Venezuela

by G1 of Rebel Diaz

G1 of Rebel Diaz

G1 of Rebel Diaz

We’ve read with concern the vaguely humanitarian and dangerously ‘impartial’ opinion pieces by the likes of prominent musicians who, although honest in their emotional responses, fail to accurately assess the social and geopolitical realities happening today in Venezuela.

We all can agree that US foreign policy towards Venezuela since 1999 has been economic sabotage and attempts at regime change in order to protect vested oil interests. We also can agree that the corporate media distorts the reality on the ground in Venezuela to manipulate public opinion towards the interests of US multinationals and their cronies in the Venezuelan oligarch. Facts only.

From here we can begin to understand the nature of the protests in Venezuela.

We recently returned from Chile, where a student protest movement eight years strong has raised important questions about the fundamental human right of high quality, accessible public education. So imagine our surprise when we read about these ‘student’ protests occurring in Venezuela, a country where the constitution enshrines the right to free K-College public education. So, if not the question of access to education, what are their concerns exactly?

We’ve heard of the shortages in toothpaste and toilet paper but this is hardly the Toiletry Revolution. There is also the supposed concern about public safety but it seems counterintuitive to organize violent flash mob protests for safer streets. CNN and Univision paint the picture that there is massive opposition to the Bolivarian Revolution, despite the fact that it has won over 16 internationally-recognized local and national elections since 1999. Moreover, despite the claims of silenced dissent, the majority of press in Venezuela is in the hands of private media companies that operate with open hostilies and lies to destabilize the social fabric. So who is this ‘opposition’ really and why have they mobilized all of their disinformation channels now?

The protests began surfacing on February 12th of this year. On February 10th, The Law for the Control of Fare Costs, Prices, and Profits went into regulation. This law puts a cap on grotesque profit margins to ensure companies doing business in Venezuela are not simply pimping the resources of the national economy at the expense of its people. It seeks to address the economic warfare being waged by multinational corporations, who are hoarding goods to create artificial shortages, raise consumer prices, and foment social unrest. The law seeks to avoid what occurred in Chile during the presidency of Salvador Allende, where the CIA, and the US/Chilean oligarchy initially attempted to instigate a ‘soft coup’ by hoarding warehouses full of everyday necesities like rice, cooking oil, and flour in order to fabricate popular discontent. We need only to look back at this history and other imperial US interventions in Latin America to know that when the power of the global elite is threatened, as is happening in Venezuela today, the empire will respond with unmitigated violence, manipulation, and deceit in order to protect their profits.

Hugo Chavez

Hugo Chavez

Since receiving Hugo Chavez here in the South Bronx in 2005, we have been inspired to create safe, liberated cultural spaces for young people in the poorest congressional district of the United States through the RDACBX.

Recently, we held a concert to commemorate the 20 years of the Zapatista uprising in Chiapas, Mexico, where the indigenous community has waged a 3 decades-long struggle to protect their land and culture from the same tentacles of predatory multinational ‘development’ companies that threaten Venezuela today; the same entities that spur gentrification and racist police brutality here in the South Bronx.

Although different in context and process, our struggle for survival in the Bronx, the Zapatista uprising, and the Bolivarian Revolution face the same foe; a violently imposed socioeconomic model that threatens our very existence as a human race; a system that values profits over people and the planet. Perhaps we can all take a cue from the ancient wisdom of the Zapatista struggle; that of Leading by Following; For Everyone, Everything and For Us Nothing; and most importantly, One No, Many Yesses. A defiant, unequivocal, unified NO to imperial domination, and diverse, inclusive, participatory, creative, multiple YESSES to the wants and needs of the people- to be determined by, and only by, the people.

Abajo el imperio!
No a la violencia y los golpistas!
Que viva el pueblo Venezolano!

G1 of Rebel Diaz
RDACBX
South Bronx 02/21/14

Work Like Chavez (Rebel Diaz video)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rKkveMo-2NA

South of the Border documentary that shows the attempt Coup in 2002 in Venezeula and the role corporate media played

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tvjIwVjJsXc

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m2p_xgL_o9E

 

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Comments

  1. very interest stuff here, i appreciate you sharing. http://ll2.de/RMR/

  2. You can’t keep repeating the media manipulation script, all Venezuelan TV Stations belong to the Govenrment, and if they’re private are threatened by it, forced to not show the consecuences of the debacle that Chavez left, extending totalitarism to control the private sector too, since all the powers obey to the PSUV party. That sir, is not Democracy.

    NTN 24 is a colombian channel, clable only, that was showing the repression to the protests and the government had it out because they don’t venezuelans to know what’s going on in the streets, that’s why we are only communicating by twitter.

    We are suffering from scarcity since Chavez won his last elections, come to Venezuela and try to find basic food like sugar, milk, oil for food, soap, shampoo, razors, flour, try to walk around and take public transportation without getting mugged or killed.

    How easy is to frame a country crisis from pro government friends in Venezuela comments. Maduro and Chavez might have won their elections, using a doubtful electronic system, but by near to 50% of the population, What about the other 50%??? They prefer to turn their back on us and we have been tired of that for 15 years.

    This video describes well why are we protesting, don’t get dragged by everyone that raises a leftist flag, promising utopias, bad governments might come from right or left wing, do some reseach!