Matteo Martini
Banned
- Joined
- Dec 6, 2004
- Messages
- 4,561
The elections were free and fair.
Chavez has won them.
That is the only point that matters, IMHO
Chavez has won them.
That is the only point that matters, IMHO
To be honest, a lot of things they write about deserve outrage - but it can cause one to lose their rational, detached perspective on things.
The real issue here is those rationalizations: their history, their promotion, the degree to which they are shared by leadership. They coincide quite nicely with the crass needs of the nation-state such as access to resources, profit and maintenance of a sphere of influence. This perhaps explains their success, since worldviews and politics that negatively affect those interests never really seem to rise to dominance.
Likely not. While I share your sentiment Randfan that most of the American leadership were not so crass and hearltless as alleged, the results of their decisions were certainly horrendous and sometimes even contrary to the self-interest they were protecting (such as the installation of the Shah).
The main problem is not the "evilness" of the individuals making the decisions, but the ideas in their heads that cause them to make decisions with evil outcomes.
What do I think of his funding the FARC? Classic power politics, and in the self-interest of Venezuela after all, who shares a border with a country replete with well-armed ideologically opposed paramilitaries (or paras in the local parlance) and a government funded heavily by a hostile power (America).
What I think would be strange is if he DIDN'T have links to the FARC - it would be a strange exception to the history of power politics and the way countries seek to protect their self-interest.
Does the FARC do bad things? Of course. Are they responsible for atrocities? No doubt. But its not as if they exist in a vaccuum - they are a natural product of a decades long civil war and larger ideological conflict - involving apalling atrocities committed on both sides.
This may be caricatured as "moral relativism" by the 101 Keyboard Brigade but to the rational it comes off as more as a reality-based analysis of the situation at hand, instead of what I would call "selective moral blindness" in the case of individuals who whitewash the crimes of the Columbian government and their links to brutal and heartless right-wing paramilities because FARC fits nicely into a classic binary Cold War formulation wherein the crimes of socialist/communist entities are given priority for outraged condemnation while the crimes of entities aligned against the "reds" are whitewashed and/or rationalized away.
The elections were free and fair.
Chavez has won them.
That is the only point that matters, IMHO
Given that he threatened people that if they voted against him he would send the army in against them the election was hardly free or fair.
That said, if you think that winning an election renders the government immune to criticism why have you spent so long criticising the US government? Surely the only point that matters is that Bush twice won free and fair elections?
Ooops.....Surely the only point that matters is that Bush twice won free and fair elections?
edit: @dudalb
Wrong.
Now explain to us how Chavez, who is president of a country which happens to have the thirteenth national vote under his rule today, is a dictator, dudalb. I'm listening.
Heck, they had "votes" under Saddam Hussein in Iraq. He always got between 99% and 100%, but there were "votes."
I have read your claims to be a "Socialist" before and never been able to match your rhetoric with any socialism I know of.
In what way was Chavez UNFAIRLY elected?
Bush twice won free and fair elections
In this post your are condemning American actions.
In this post you are condoning similar (if not worse) Venezualan actions.
I find that hard to reconcile.
That is how I took your post.Not really. Especially if I believe that the Venezuelan actions stem from similar ideas of protecting national self-interest, and of being a force for the best kind of political solution for the Venezuelan people and South America generally. I have no doubt that nearly all Venezuelan decision makers responsible for linking up with the FARC believe those things.
Bear in mind that I was attempting to explain how America could come to make decisions that deleteriously affected so many without being the caricature of evil asserted by the outraged. Seems to me my posts have been consistent in that my "defense of Chavez" rested on a similar approach.
edit: I was indeed mistaken when i said that the license ran for six years. It was a twenty year license issued in 1987.
No reason to justify closing them down.
El Presidente said:"That Chavez threatened to bring out the tanks! You saw it, Patricia, right?" ... "CNN said it?" ... "You said it, but taking it out of context, which is one of the problems with you all! It was totally taken out of context." ... "I think that you are a good journalist, and I believe that you are an honest woman, but I think that you are a victim of the speed that you all have there, of talking to the world and telling them things." ... "But you must take responsibility. In order to say something so serious as that, you should say ‘wait a minute, find the complete declaration for me'...you committed the serious error of decontextualization and of manipulation" ... "What I said was that, in a situation where the opposition won state governor positions and tried to convert states into bases for coup plotting, violence and (separatism), well I would have to bring tanks into the street. I said it like that, Patricia, I ask it of you, in honour of the truth and morality. But I never threatened to bring out tanks if we lost."
For the umpteenth time I don't give a damn about a semantic quible.I've corrected a mistake i've made. What is wrong with that? And for the umptiest time, the station was not closed.
CE said:Now explain to us how Chavez, who is president of a country which happens to have the thirteenth national vote under his rule today, is a dictator, dudalb. I'm listening.
Puppycow said:Heck, they had "votes" under Saddam Hussein in Iraq. He always got between 99% and 100%, but there were "votes."
MM said:What has this to do with Venezuela and the US?
And with the discussion of this thread?
Do the JREF Chavez supporters think it is acceptable for your name to made public on a list that shows all those that voted against the govt and then that list stops you getting credit at the bank or leads to you being discriminated against for employment?
A simple yes or no will do.
Do you think it is fair that if you work hard all your life to provide a house and land for your family and future generations that Chavez can come and take half of it and move in people from the slums?
Again, a simple yes or no.
I get my news from people who live in Venezuela and also people who have moved out but still have family there. I do not get my info from "western biased media". How can I be being mislead?
IMO if he spent less time trying to antagonise the US and more time actually helping his people there would not be such a brouhaha about him.
Do the JREF Chavez supporters think it is acceptable for your name to made public on a list that shows all those that voted against the govt and then that list stops you getting credit at the bank or leads to you being discriminated against for employment?
A simple yes or no will do.
Do you think it is fair that if you work hard all your life to provide a house and land for your family and future generations that Chavez can come and take half of it and move in people from the slums?
Again, a simple yes or no.
I get my news from people who live in Venezuela and also people who have moved out but still have family there. I do not get my info from "western biased media". How can I be being mislead?
IMO if he spent less time trying to antagonise the US and more time actually helping his people there would not be such a brouhaha about him.