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Brazil: While Lula's Revolution Fizzles, Chavez's Star Rises. PDF Print E-mail
2005 - February 2005
Written by Roger Burbach   
Wednesday, 02 February 2005 12:43

Lula dresse in American flag at Brazil's World Social ForumCriticized by some for being little more than a debating society and a “one stop shopping center for the left,” this year’s fifth annual World Social Forum in Porto Alegre, Brazil marked a major breakthrough for the Forum. It served as a pivotal venue for the discussion and critique of progressive political, social and economic strategies to make “another world possible.” 

Three hundred and fifty two proposals and calls for action came out of the more than 2000 panels and workshops held at the forum. At the end of the Forum, a group of 19 comprised of key founders of the WSF and its International Committee issued a manifesto called the Consensus of Porto Alegre, urging the 120,000 who registered at the WSF to sign on to the Manifesto if it reflected their work, ideas and programs for the future.

Perhaps just as importantly political leaders including government ministers and presidents came to the forum to subject their ideas and plans to discussion and debate. President Hugo Chavez of Venezuela, more than any other political leader, reflected the growing importance of the forum in global politics.

Speaking at the Gigantinho a stadium in Porto Alegre, he called the forum “the most important political act in the world ” and proceeded to lay out for the first time the “socialist” trajectory he envisions for the Bolivarian revolution.

At the third World Social Forum in Porto Alegre in 2003 President Luis Ignacio “Lula” da Silva spoke to the forum in Porto Alegre, just weeks after assuming the presidential sash. Hopes ran high that Lula and the Workers Party he founded would carry out deep seated reforms and challenge Washington’s neo-liberal strangle hold on Brazil’s economy.

The crowd cheered wildly as he announced that his number one priority would be the end of hunger in Brazil

At this years Social Form the crowd still seemed fond of Lula, repeatedly chanting an adapted soccer ball chant, “olê, olê, olê, olê, Lula, Lula.” But there was a palpable sense of disillusionment with Lula in the stadium.

While he endorsed progressive international policies such as standing up to Bush on the war in Iraq, his government’s economic policies in the main have followed the neo-liberal policies of his predecessors, appeasing foreign capital and the big banks.

Even the anti-hunger program is in trouble, providing little other than meager welfare handouts while agrarian reform, the real key to ending malnutrition in Brazil, is languishing. His old allies, the Landless Workers Movement, are at odds with Lula pressuring him to keep his old promises.

To up the pressure, 200,000 landless members have camped out on highways to make the public aware of their desperate plight.

When Lula announced that he was flying off to Davos, Switzerland for the World Economic Forum the next day, the gathering of the rich and the powerful, Lula proclaimed he wanted to be “a bridge” between the two forums.

The word “traitor” rippled through the stadium as some people booed. Outside the pavilion where Lula spoke a scuffle broke out between former members of the Workers Party who were protesting. Twenty people were arrested.

Three days later, the crowd at Gigantinho was on its feet as Hugo Chavez gave a militant speech denouncing US “hegemony” and proclaiming “socialism” the goal of his political movement. “Only with socialism can we transcend capitalism.”

Elected to the presidency in 1998 as a populist ex-military officer, Chavez ran up against a corrupt political party system and the local oligarchy backed by the United States. He increased social spending and moved to exert state control over oil industry revenues.

Chavez was briefly ousted by a civilian-military coup in 2002 backed by the Bush administration. But he was restored to power two days later by loyal sectors of the military and a popular uprising.

In the early part of his speech, cries of  “Chavez Si, Lula No” permeated the audience. But Chavez signaled them to stop, calling for a broad “anti-imperialist front.”

Chavez alluding to conditions in Venezuela, declared that “now is the moment” for an assault on neo-liberalism and that socialism is on the agenda. The crowd roared its approval.

Some may argue that those who sing Chavez’s praises today will be quickly disillusioned just as those who chanted for Lula two years before. However the concrete measures taken up by the Bolivarian revolution since the coup d’etat in 2002 indicate that a profound social revolution may be in the making.

Chavez noted that he has already diverted $4 billion from oil revenues to social programs and that more would be forthcoming. (Note that the US only gave $350 million for the Tsunami in Asia.)

Public health and medical programs, educational training for workers, agrarian reform, literacy programs, low incoming housing; these and many others programs are advancing in Venezuela.

In a meeting with the MST in the countryside at one of their cooperatives in the morning before the Gigantinho speech, Chavez proclaimed that “while capitalism exists it is impossible to eliminate poverty.”

Lula in his presentation on the first day at Gigantinho called for the “institutionalization” of the forum in Brazil. The forum’s International Committee ignored his proposal, preferring a more internationalist bent for the WSF.

In 2006 the forum will be decentralized, with regional forums taking place around the world. The site chosen for the regional “Forum of the Americas” is Caracas, Venezuela.

With the conflict between Chavez and Bush becoming more confrontational and the occupation of Iraq continuing, the forum in Caracas promises to mark an advance for the World Social Forum as it takes on the world’s critical issues and becomes a platform for the leaders who are shaking the world with new and profound alternatives to neo-liberalism and the US empire.

Special thanks to Hector Mondragon, and to Maria Elena Martinez and Peter Rosset, CENSA Associates.

Roger Burbach, Director of the Center for the Study of the Americas, (CENSA). He is co-author with Jim Tarbel of:Imperial Overstretch: George W. Bush: Hubris of Empire. To order see: www.globalalternatives.org



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Comments (9)Add Comment
Next step: Jail dissidents
written by Guest, February 02, 2005
A mayor in Venezuela spends 20 days in jail for speaking against Chavez. Speaking against Castro can mean extradition to Cuba. Dissident beating in Venezuela can no longer be televised. I hope I never have to live in this "other world"

Leia no link abaixo: Encontro de imbecis

http://www.midiasemmascara.org/artigo.php?sid=3287
Mais sobre Chavez
written by Guest, February 02, 2005
Jail dissidents
written by Guest, February 03, 2005
To "A mayor in Venezuela spends 20 days in jail for speaking against Chavez"
An Australian citizen "Mamdum Habib"spent 3years in guantanabo concentration camp in Cuba for doing nothing wrong not even speaking against anybody. 12year old children in the US are behind bar for petty crimes.Millions of poltical dissidents are in jails around the world because they speak out against US policies around the world. The concentration camps are controlled by the US Govt. and they are in such places like pakistan Egypt Jordan Cuba Israel and many other undemocratic countries that the US props up
stupid people
written by Guest, February 03, 2005
Globalisation trashed in Brazil

Feb 1st 2001 | SAO PAULO
From The Economist print edition



“BOVÉ is my friend—mess with him and you mess with me!” activists chanted this week at the World Social Forum, held in Porto Alegre, in southern Brazil, as an anti-globalisation counterpoint to the World Economic Forum’s traditional gathering of fatcats in the Swiss resort of Davos. José Bové, a French farmer famed for wrecking his local McDonald’s, was the star turn at “anti-Davos”, especially after he joined leaders of Brazil’s Landless Movement on an excursion to destroy a plantation of genetically modified soya owned by Monsanto, an American company. He was briefly arrested and threatened with deportation, but was later allowed to stay. Protesters trashed a nearby McDonald’s in his honour.

No matter that many Brazilians might ask why a gathering supposedly dedicated to ending poverty and inequality should champion a defender of Europe’s farm protectionism, which hinders exports from Brazil and other poor countries. The forum had other priorities. These were to promote alternatives to the “neoliberal” orthodoxy of free trade, free markets and privatisation: a familiar wish-list, such as cancelling third-world debt, a worldwide tax on financial transactions, workers’ rights and more care for the environment in trade accords.

In the lecture halls, an international cast of leftish intellectuals trotted out phrases like “cultural Fordism” and “social fascism”, while outside protest groups—feminists, anti-racists, gays—threw tantrums at not getting enough space on the agenda.

The meeting also agreed that big protests should be organised at the 34-country Summit of the Americas in Quebec in April, in opposition to the proposed Free-Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA). That should challenge governments, such as Brazil’s, which say they favour regional free trade, but have done little to persuade their voters that it will bring higher growth and thus less poverty.

The forum was the brainchild of Bernard Cassen, the editor of Le Monde Diplomatique, a French journal. It was co-sponsored (at taxpayers’ expense) by Olivio Dutra, the local state governor, from the left-wing Workers’ Party (PT). Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, the party’s leader and likely candidate in next year’s presidential election, was a guest of honour.

The protesters’ antics for the cameras will have done Mr da Silva no good. Brazilian voters increasingly like the PT as a party of honest local government. But when it portrays itself as a bunch of radicals with a taste for a punch-up, it does little to convince voters that it can be trusted to run the country.
stupid people
written by Guest, February 03, 2005
Globalisation trashed in Brazil

Feb 1st 2001 | SAO PAULO
From The Economist print edition



“BOVÉ is my friend—mess with him and you mess with me!” activists chanted this week at the World Social Forum, held in Porto Alegre, in southern Brazil, as an anti-globalisation counterpoint to the World Economic Forum’s traditional gathering of fatcats in the Swiss resort of Davos. José Bové, a French farmer famed for wrecking his local McDonald’s, was the star turn at “anti-Davos”, especially after he joined leaders of Brazil’s Landless Movement on an excursion to destroy a plantation of genetically modified soya owned by Monsanto, an American company. He was briefly arrested and threatened with deportation, but was later allowed to stay. Protesters trashed a nearby McDonald’s in his honour.

No matter that many Brazilians might ask why a gathering supposedly dedicated to ending poverty and inequality should champion a defender of Europe’s farm protectionism, which hinders exports from Brazil and other poor countries. The forum had other priorities. These were to promote alternatives to the “neoliberal” orthodoxy of free trade, free markets and privatisation: a familiar wish-list, such as cancelling third-world debt, a worldwide tax on financial transactions, workers’ rights and more care for the environment in trade accords.

In the lecture halls, an international cast of leftish intellectuals trotted out phrases like “cultural Fordism” and “social fascism”, while outside protest groups—feminists, anti-racists, gays—threw tantrums at not getting enough space on the agenda.

The meeting also agreed that big protests should be organised at the 34-country Summit of the Americas in Quebec in April, in opposition to the proposed Free-Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA). That should challenge governments, such as Brazil’s, which say they favour regional free trade, but have done little to persuade their voters that it will bring higher growth and thus less poverty.

The forum was the brainchild of Bernard Cassen, the editor of Le Monde Diplomatique, a French journal. It was co-sponsored (at taxpayers’ expense) by Olivio Dutra, the local state governor, from the left-wing Workers’ Party (PT). Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, the party’s leader and likely candidate in next year’s presidential election, was a guest of honour.

The protesters’ antics for the cameras will have done Mr da Silva no good. Brazilian voters increasingly like the PT as a party of honest local government. But when it portrays itself as a bunch of radicals with a taste for a punch-up, it does little to convince voters that it can be trusted to run the country.
...
written by Guest, February 03, 2005
I was at the WSF, and must admit I was disillusioned. The camps were filled with litter, there were rapes and robberies - even in the press room, everything that wasn´t nailed down was pinched. Most of the 120,000 that registered probably didn´t attend one seminar or symposium - they spent their nights drinking and smoking dope, their days stumbling about brain dead.

Everything there is for sale - capitalism is alive and well with the left (as long is it´s made by a hippy and not a US corporation - of course).

Mixed messeges and missed opportunies should be the official slogan, and not "a better world is possile" because if they are offering what took place at the forum as snap shot of this "better world" I´ll stick to what we have now.

As anyone informed the left about the use of SOAP??????????
Re: 12year old children in the US are be
written by Guest, February 03, 2005
What do you call a "petty" crime? You don't have to worry about being robbed at gunpoint here by a minor like you do in Brazil. Here in Georgia, the seven deadly sins where minors get treated like adults are:

murder, rape, armed robbery (with a firearm), aggravated child molestation, aggravated sodomy, aggravated sexual battery and voluntary manslaughter

These are hardly petty crimes!
Support for Chavez
written by Guest, February 10, 2005
I've recently read about Chavez in national American media. He was denounced as a dictator, and accused of dissolving democracy while consolidating his own power. Despite this, he encourages the redistribution of land and wealth to the lower classes.

Although I am an American, I disagree with my country, and I am a strong believer in socialism. But what do Venezuelans (or other south americans) really think of Chavez?
“while capitalism exists it is impossibl
written by Guest, February 16, 2005
I have a Cuban friend who, since coming to the US, has had to retrain himself not to eat so fast - this habit developed while growing up in a country where food was so scarce that you wolfed down whatever you had.
I'm guessing that we have a bit less poverty here than in Venezuela or Cuba...

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