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October 21, 2006 at 10:37:36

The Man Who Called Out The Devil

by Ron Jacobs     Page 1 of 1 page(s)

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The Man Who Called Out the Devil: A Review of Hugo Chavez: Oil, Politics, and The Challenge to the United States by Nikolas Kozloff

The reaction of most mainstream US politicians to Hugo Chavez's recent rhetorical flourish during his speech at the United Nations where he called George Bush the devil certainly showed the world how much of a threat the Washington powermongers consider his Bolivarian revolution to be. From the liberal Nancy Pelosi of California to the far-right, Chavez's comparison provoked a virtual flood of angry criticism. Interestingly enough, the White House did not issue a denial, leaving it open to speculation as to whether or not Chavez's characterization of Mr. Bush was more accurate than previously acknowledged. At any rate, the point I'm trying to make here is that Hugo Chavez does not really seem to care what the politicians in Washington and their backers in the boardrooms of the US think about him. Furthermore, by adopting this attitude and expressing it at forums like the UN, Mr. Chavez has vocalized the sentiments of millions of people the world over.
Yet, his words matter little when compared to his actions to subvert the neoliberal/neoconservative agenda of Washington and its cohorts. It is these actions that strike at the heart of the Empire and which have drawn the true wrath of those whom interests they attack. Whether it was his campaign to reinvigorate OPEC or his land reform actions in the Venezuelan countryside, Chavez's revolution that he has named after the Latin American liberator Simon Bolivar has angered many a rich landowner and frustrated many corporate hacks used to buying of Third World politicians.
It is this revolution that author Nikolas Kozloff explores in his recently released book, Hugo Chavez, Oil, Politics and the Challenge to the US. A somewhat frequent visitor to the nation as a grad student and researcher, Kozloff intertwines personal observations and experiences in Venezuela with an intelligent analysis of the meaning of Chavismo to the poor and indigenous people of Venezuela and other countries of Latin America. Something of an anti-authoritarian leftist, Kozloff is at first hesitant to give Chavez much credit for the popular movement against the neoliberal governments that ruled Venezuela prior to Chavez. However, as he investigates the changes and as the movement takes root, he writes quite positively about the changes in the Venezuelan political and economic landscape. Never, however, does the prose become a sycophantic apology for anything Chavez.
Kozloff traces the life of Chavez from an impoverished rural region of Venezuela into the military, jail and into electoral politics. While relating Chavez's political development, the author reminds the reader that Chavez's background is not that different from many Venezuelans. It is, however, quite different from the circumstances of those that ruled the country until Chavez's election in 1992. As one reads the book, it becomes clear that Chavez has not forgotten his roots and, as he has developed politically, has discovered some of the fundamental reasons for the poverty he and so many of his countrymen and women live(d) in. Naturally, as his understanding developed, Chavez's politics turned leftward. Also, quite naturally, as his politics turned left, the opposition to the man and the movement he represents has become more vocal and willing to consider extralegal means to rid themselves of him.
One of those attempts was made in 2002, when various members of Venezuela's elite took over the seat of power on April 11. The coup lasted barely twenty-four hours. Soldiers loyal to Chavez refused to follow the orders of those officers who were involved in the coup and took back the Presidential Palace while hundreds of thousands of Chavez supporters rallied in the streets. Kozloff's description of this event and the oil "strike" led by sectors of the oil industry wanting to hold on to industry agreements that opposed to using oil profits for Chavez's plans to help the poor (and not share said profits with foreign companies and their Venezuelan accomplices) provide a clarity to events that have never been adequately explained in the US mainstream press.
Acknowledging Chavez's growing role in world politics, Kozloff examines his government's foreign aid programs that emphasize barter instead of cash and tend towards highlighting the solidarity of those nations and peoples taken advantage of by the US-led neoliberal campaign. In a chapter titled "The Chavez-Morales Axis," Venezuela's campaign to include the indigenous populations of the Americas in the Bolivarian revolution championed by Chavez and Morales is described. According to Kozloff, much of Chavez's interest in the plight of the indigenous stems from his mixed heritage and the consequent empathic understanding he derives from his experiences related to that heritage.
Kozloff's book, which was recently received the wrath of a reviewer in the New York Times Business Section because of its leftist slant, is a worthwhile survey of the current political situation in Venezuela and its relations with the rest of the Americas. The supposedly leftist slant is not a detraction, even for those skeptical individuals who would approach this book with negative preconceptions regarding Mr. Chavez. Indeed, this particular take is the appropriate viewfinder from which his government should be examined. The book's one drawback is its brevity, although it is also that aspect that makes it a good introduction to the politics and the personality that make Hugo Chavez and his supporters the force for change that they are.

 

http://stillhomeron.blogspot.com/

Ron Jacobs is a writer, library worker and anti-imperialist. He is the author of The Way the Wind Blew:A History of the Weather Underground (Verso 1997) His first novel, Short Order Frame Up, is now available at Amazon, and many other stores.

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Disabled American Woman trying to live on what the government beleives is a liveable amount of money. It is below the poverty level, way below. I will attempt to provide various pieces of info from my life of poverty to help educate the population of what poverty is really like and that , "NO!, We do not like living this way."
Ginger

Ginger McclemonsDisabled American Woman trying to live on what the government beleives is a liveable amount of money. It is below the poverty level, way below. I will attempt to provide various pieces of info from my life of poverty to help educate the population of what poverty is really like and that , "NO!, We do not like living this way."
Ginger

Bush, The Devil You Say?

This is really funny because I have always thought that Bush was the devil or at the very least, the devil's son. And finaly someone has developed the nerve, or balls, to publicly say what they believe about the power crazy, I.Q. limited, sanity questioned, leader of our country. Never in the history of this once great country has the USA been so despised by so many other countries around the world. We, or rather Bush, has been ridiculed, made a laughing stock and our credibility has deminished to the point of nonexistence. It doesn't surprise me. More people need to speak out. What we need is an exorcism. Any takers?

by Ginger Mcclemons (0 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 2 comments) on Saturday, October 21, 2006 at 12:55:57 PM
 


Geery lived off the grid for 15 years in an earth-sheltered, solar heated home, while his kids learned in school that solar energy isn't feasible. NAPTA hosts a page on Geery's foibles in education, and explains how he got his butt fired from a tenured teaching position. Here's a short clip of his most recent solar contraption; for more on that project, and Geery's contention that the Wright Brothers took a wrong turn, please visit his airship page (hyperblimp.com). Apparently, Geery is the only...

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Daniel GeeryGeery lived off the grid for 15 years in an earth-sheltered, solar heated home, while his kids learned in school that solar energy isn't feasible. NAPTA hosts a page on Geery's foibles in education, and explains how he got his butt fired from a tenured teaching position. Here's a short clip of his most recent solar contraption; for more on that project, and Geery's contention that the Wright Brothers took a wrong turn, please visit his airship page (hyperblimp.com). Apparently, Geery is the only...

to see more of bio, click on member name

Exorcism needed

We need an exorcism here, and damn well better get one in the upcoming elections.

I've read probably 40 or 50 articles on Hugo, all very positive, unless from some Wall Street Yahoos. It's always critical to check the source, as right-wingdings have pumped out a lot of negatives.

But I've also heard credible reports about Venezuala's military buildup, deteroriated and deplorable prisons, and I think there is some agreement that HC isn't giving much heed to the environment. Is the military just to protect Hugo's own power base, or to replace an antiquated weaponry? Is the jail situation a result of earlier regimes? And is HC dismantelling democracy to hold onto power?

I'd really like to know these answers, and I think we all should. Here's the latest link I've been looking at, but I can't get a handle on the folks behind it.

Venezuelan analysis

by Daniel Geery (26 articles, 58 quicklinks, 121 diaries, 677 comments) on Wednesday, October 25, 2006 at 6:53:16 AM
 

 

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