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A Proposal from Brazil: Let's Internationalize California PDF Print E-mail
2003 - November 2003
Saturday, 01 November 2003 08:54


A Proposal from Brazil: Let's Internationalize California

Whenever there is a fire in the Amazonian rainforest, a bunch of phony NGOs start firing their accusations against Brazil alleging crimes against the environment. They want to transform Amazônia into a huge botanical garden as if harvesting nuts were a way of bringing development to the amazônidas, who are also Brazilians.
by: Carlos Chagas

 

The sun always rises again, even when we are dealing with disaster. For the last few days the television has been showing the devastation in southern California due to megafires that burned one thousand and five hundred kilometers of forests, destroyed a thousand homes and left thousands of Americans with no shelter. No matter how hard they try, the firefighters cannot control the flames. FBI investigations suggest the catastrophe may have been started by the action of a crimminal.

If the Fires Were in the Amazon...

What does this news have to do with us, apart from the natural feelings of sympathy towards other human beings? Well, everything, actually, because the idea that the U.S. could not be prepared to keep its sovereignty over the state of California would never occur to anyone in his right mind. No head of state or foreign government has ever come forward to suggest the internationalization of that state. There is no record of any Non Governmental Organization planning to gather all Californians into an independent nation or helping arrange for them to go to Belgium or Holland to pursue degrees in administration or high politics in order to form an autonomous form of government.

When fires devastate the Amazon, however—albeit never as extensively as in this case—the first comment we hear is about the need to internationalize the region, "which belongs to Humanity, as one of its largest lungs". But are not the Californian forests also huge producers of oxygen for the planet? Smaller than the Amazon, for sure, but just as rich.

In less than fifteen minutes following the detection of any fire in the Amazonian rainforest, a bunch of phony NGOs start firing their accusations against the government, the farmers and the tappers of Brazil alleging crimes against the environment. They organize movements to preserve indigenous tribes, specially those that inhabit the region bordering the Guianas, Venezuela and Colombia—and this is not by coincidence.

They want to transform Amazônia into a huge botanical garden ready to welcome their tourists and scientists, the latter more than the former, actually. They stimulate the distorted vision, shared by naive individuals inside our government, that extraction is the sole vocation of the region. As if harvesting nuts were a way of bringing development to the amazônidas, who are as Brazilian as any of us. Maybe the lesson will stick with Californians... From now on, in order to avoid the devastation of its forests and remove the danger of internationalization, how about asking them to stick to bird hunting from now on?

The Last Socialist

The idea of trying to find the last socialist alive is a valid one. In spite of his (late but correct) diagnosis announced at the opening of the Socialist Internationale, we will never conclude that President Lula is that person. Yes, he did state that our national sovereignty is threatened because former administrations (good morning, Fernando Henrique Cardoso) have rendered our country extremely vulnerable to the movements of speculative capital and the political forces that sustain it.

However, on top of the neo-liberal stance with which he has branded our economy, the President also made a statement, weeks ago, that he was never a leftist. Well, it is not easy to find socialists who are not leftists—maybe the only ones are those who marched the goose step of the German nationalist-socialism, and definitely this is not the case.

What we have, then, is a new premise demonstrated: Lula is not a socialist because he is not a leftist, notwithstanding his now very popular statement.

Who, then, will we call `the last socialist'? The only answer is Leonel Brizola, who has been vice-president of the Internationale for the past ten years and has always been coherent in his attempt to give labor relations the socialist context reaffirmed by Getúlio Vargas.

If there is a party still faithful to socialist ideals, that party is the PDT (Partido Democrático Trabalhista—Democratic Labor Party). And if there is a voice who does not keep silent when protesting the lines adopted by the current administration, that voice is Brizola's, the founder and president of PDT. He could very well get comfortable under the shadow of the Planalto Palace, a much more convenient position for him, and concern himself only with enlarging his party's congressional blocs and sharing a small portion of power.

For that, though, he would need to let go of his convictions. Instead, he followed the path imposed by his socialist conscience: he broke up with the government and became its main critic. This without failing to recognize, as he did this week, the relevance of Lula's diagnosis about our economy. The problem, however, is that the practice remains the same, in spite of any presidential theory—our economic model is one that benefits only speculative capital...

 

Carlos Chagas writes for the Rio's daily Tribuna da Imprensa and is a representative of the Brazilian Press Association, in Brasília. He welcomes your comments at carloschagas@hotmail.com

Translated by Tereza Braga. Braga is a freelance Portuguese translator and interpreter based in Dallas. She is an accredited member of the American Translators Association. Contact: terezab@sbcglobal.net



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