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Brazil Needs a General Strike to Demand Good Education for All PDF Print E-mail
2007 - May 2007
Written by Cristovam Buarque   
Wednesday, 09 May 2007 15:09

Workers' protest in Brazil May Day is no longer commemorated as it once was. The crisis in socialist alternatives, the overpowering force of global capitalism and the division of the workers into the included and the excluded have all contributed to lessening the ideology of Labor Day.

Yellowing with age, May Day has lost its red vigor. This is because the proletariat has neither redesigned its Utopia nor reoriented its revolution. Losing its transformative vigor, it channeled demands without proposing revolutionary transformation.

In an epoch of robotics, the proletariat's power has been weakened by the "inutility" of work; the world of work has lost strength. A mere gentle pressing of buttons by specialists has replaced the strength of hands. The proletariat has lost its sense that equality is possible.

All are born equal; the brain of the rich capitalist's child has the same potential as that of the poor, unemployed person's child. Day by day, inequality is systematically constructed by the difference in schools.

Equality will not come from the economy. It is no longer capital that is accumulated but, rather, knowledge. The capitalist's child who does not study will not be a successful boss; depending upon his or her talent, persistence and vocation, the proletariat's child who studies will have every chance.

Utopia still exists: the Same Chance is possible for all, be they children of the bosses or of the workers. There is a lottery that awards everyone: the school. There is a lottery ticket with which everyone wins: the diploma in courses that are presented and chosen well.

Once again Labor Day needs to be a day of Utopian dreams and revolutionary vigor for an educational revolution to assure the Same Chance to each person, independently of where a child was born and to which parents. An education that develops the latent potential the child has at birth.

The workers went out on sectorial strikes for salaries and on general strikes for changes and revolutions. The sectorial strikes became weaker and weaker and, wisely, rarer and rarer. The few with work fear the millions of unemployed; and their bosses know that, by negotiating in time, they avoid stoppages by those who still have jobs.

Labor Day makes us think that it is time to return to the dreams and the struggle. Convoke a general strike so that workers and the mass of the people demonstrate that they want the right to the Same Chance, demanding schools for their children equal to those of the boss's children.

A general strike of a mere hour to shout, "Education Now," just as people used to shout "Direct Elections Now" or "Long Live Socialism."

The "Força Sindical" organization took the Environment as the theme of this May Day's event. This proves the Utopia has returned because only ecological equilibrium gives all generations the same chance. But is it necessary to go beyond that, to use education to guarantee all social classes the Same Chance.

And to carry the debate to all the workers of all of Brazil! That is a revolutionary gesture that is possible today. Break with the paralysis and the conservative accommodation of neoliberalism's single way of thinking and with the traditional left's accommodation and paralysis that continues imprisoned by the logic of the revolution for the economy.

The new revolution of the Same Chance considers that, in the 21st century, capital and development will come from knowledge. Distribution is no longer accomplished through the concentration of capital in the hands of the State but, rather, through the egalitarian distribution of knowledge to all people starting in early childhood.

Utopia consists in making the school of the poorest worker's child equal to that of the child of the richest boss. That is the struggle that will turn Labor Day red once again but in a different way.

Cristovam Buarque has a Ph.D. in economics. He is a PDT senator for the Federal District and was Governor of the Federal District (1995-98) and Minister of Education (2003-04). He is the current president of the Senate Education Commission. Last year he was a presidential candidate. You can visit his homepage - www.cristovam.com.br - and write to him at mensagem-cristovam@senado.gov.br

Translated from the Portuguese by Linda Jerome - LinJerome@cs.com.



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Comments (16)Add Comment
Communist
written by A brazilian, May 10, 2007
The more I read the more I get disgusted by these communists destroying the minds of other brazilians.
Brazil Needs a General Strike to Demand Good Education for All
written by João da Silva, May 10, 2007
Convoke a general strike so that workers and the mass of the people demonstrate that they want the right to the Same Chance, demanding schools for their children equal to those of the boss's children.

A general strike of a mere hour to shout, "Education Now," just as people used to shout "Direct Elections Now" or "Long Live Socialism."

Now I am totally confused. The slogan shoutings of the past were to end the Military government. Now we are a democracy and many of those people who were shouting the solgan "Direct Elections Now" have been elected to hold offices where they are in a position to implement several programs to better the education in the country. Especially, Mr.Cristovam who was the Minister of Education and now the President of the Senate Education Commission. He should be able to intiate a debate among his colleagues in the congress about this issue and negotiate with the government to implement projects that would provide good education to all. Instead he is instigating one hour General Strike of the proletariat to demand good education for all!

I am unable to understand what good a general strike would do except stopping the public transport and the business activities.
...
written by aes, May 10, 2007
A strike of the proletariate, brilliant. The museums are all going to be on strike for the Pan Am Games, what brilliance. An intellectual vapidity. The solution is to provide the funding that exists in the coffers in billions of dollars. If you are unwilling to act, of what use is the Ministry of Education. The monies are allocated pay them. 'What would Jesus do?'
A GENTI FALAMO TUDO ERRADU
written by POBREZINHA DA ROCINHA, May 10, 2007
AI KEIN MI DERA UMA EDUKASSAUN MILIÓ PRA EU PUDE FALÁ UM PORTUGUEIS CORRETO
IGUAU AU DOS PORTUGA smilies/shocked.gif
POBREZINHA DA ROCINHA,
written by João da Silva, May 10, 2007
IGUAU AU DOS PORTUGA ?


NUNKA
To:AES
written by João da Silva, May 11, 2007
A strike of the proletariate, brilliant. The museums are all going to be on strike for the Pan Am Games, what brilliance. An intellectual vapidity.


Do you know something? I thought the translation from Cristovam´s article into Portuguese was not transmitting his real thoughts.So I decided to research in his site and discovered that he means what he says! Couldnt believe it.Further, he has been going around all the states promoting this idea of a general strike!!

Then this evening I commented to my wife (who is in the Educational field) about the remarks made by both you and A Brazilian. She agrees with you about the intellectual vapidit and she thought A Brazilian was extremely blunt and didnt mince words.

Some people like to be in the opposition all the time and are not comfortable while in the seat of power. Unfortunately, Cristovam seems to be one of them.I must confess that I am disappointed with his posture.
That´ll Learn ém, Dern ém.
written by Ric, May 11, 2007
Right, go ahead and shut ér down. There used to be a phrase much used, not by me, I was just listening, "É por isso que o Brasil não vai para frente."
To:Ric
written by João da Silva, May 11, 2007
"É por isso que o Brasil não vai para frente."


I dont use this phrase either,because I consider it as defeatist and apologetic.The ones who often use this expression are justifying their inaction in front of their elected leaders.
...
written by Ric, May 11, 2007
As a foreigner, not only have I not said it, I would not express agreement with the speaker. As a national, the Brazilian has the right to say whatever he wants to. Not so the guest.
To:Ric
written by João da Silva, May 11, 2007
As a foreigner, not only have I not said it, I would not express agreement with the speaker


Good that you didnt express your agreement with the speaker. But you should have given a thorough dressing down and called him/her a commie and a defeatist smilies/grin.gif
To:Ric
written by João da Silva, May 11, 2007
Anyway, I am happy to inform you that Christopher Buarque cant do much today about his campaign on education in our state. It is raining cats and dogs and cold too.His plane is not to supposed to land until 4.30 P.M. By then it is already Cachaça time for all of us.No general strike today.
...
written by edd, May 12, 2007
Your are ideas about education are correct. The problem is you cloak them in the word revolution. That word is revolting too many. Try change, try equality, words and ideas of this new world. We are past revolutions or at least the negative connotations that word invokes.
To:Edd
written by João da Silva, May 12, 2007
The problem is you cloak them in the word revolution.That word is revolting too many.


You are right. The parrot like repetition of this word irritates many people, especially when they know that the so called revolutionaries are very good while in the opposition and when they come to power, they do not have guts to change their ideology according to the fast changing world.
Words that Irritate
written by Ric, May 19, 2007
Devolution, Evolution, Revolution. Fortunately our parrots don´t use these words. They say things like, "I like Ric."
Words that Irritate
written by João da Silva, May 20, 2007
Ric, You are fortunate to have such wonderful parrots.
Elite Colleges Open New Door to Low-Income Youths .
written by aes, May 26, 2007

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