By Workers World
Popular, massive
anti-government demonstrations and strikes have been challenging the corrupt
and anti-popular regimes ruling various Latin America countries, starting at
different times over the past six months. These countries include Puerto Rico,
Haiti, Ecuador, Chile and Colombia.
How the local
regimes and their backers in Washington reacted to these revolts — and to
similar struggles in other countries in the region — contain lessons also for
progressives and revolutionaries in the United States who want to support these
popular revolts against neoliberal regimes.
While each of
these countries has its own specific issues, their governments have all imposed
neoliberal policies in order to wage war on the working class and all poor
people. They have imposed rampant capitalism, privatized state-owned property,
cut social programs and in general used government and state power to increase
the rate of exploitation of the working class and the pillage of natural
resources, often targeting Indigenous peoples. These neoliberal policies have
served both transnational corporations and the local oligarchy.
U.S. imperialism
puts its political, diplomatic, economic, media, and military and intelligence
apparatus behind keeping these regimes in power. The regimes, in turn, serve U.S.-based
corporate and banking interests. The recent conflicts have shown that the local
as well as the imperialist ruling class will use all their advantages and
employ the most ruthless and brutal tactics to remain in and expand their
power.
Ruling class
tactics and the case of Bolivia
What are those
advantages? First of all, control of the state apparatus — the rich ruling
class has a monopoly on violence. Second, control of the capitalist media,
which are owned by the rich and lie incessantly to expand the interests of the
rich, while spreading reactionary and often racist ideology. Third, access to
the worldwide imperialist economy and the U.S. dollar.
All these
advantages were used during the recent struggle in Bolivia — which is not yet
over.
The progressive
and first Indigenous President Evo Morales won the Oct. 20 election that should
have made him legally president until 2025. Bolivia’s racist oligarchy spread
the Big Lie that there was electoral fraud, for which there was no evidence.
The U.S.-controlled Organization of American States backed this lie, as did the
U.S. State Department, and it was repeated in all the local and imperialist
corporate media.
Bolivia’s ruling
class mobilized a fascist movement based on anti-Indigenous racism and religious
bigotry. In the end, the rich used their control of the state — that is, the
national police and the Armed Forces — to force Morales and his governmental
supporters to leave Bolivia or face death.
Bolivia’s state
power, now fully serving a de-facto coup regime with no constitutional
standing, then opened fire with live ammunition on mass demonstrations of
Indigenous people and workers in El Alto and Cochabamba. The people continue
mass resistance under difficult conditions.
Lessons of
solidarity during capitalist crisis
The brutality and
ruthlessness of the ruling class, especially since its world capitalist system
went into crisis mode in 2008, are clear. The lesson for progressives is that
we must continue to protest and expose the crimes of U.S. imperialism and its
lackeys in the Latin American oligarchy in their use of state power.
That means to
protest the Chilean government’s firing at the eyes of the young protesters,
the brutality of the Colombian regime and paramilitaries, the murders of
Ecuadorian demonstrators in October, and the shooting of Haitians throughout
the last year.
Countering media
lies is one task that North American progressives should take on with energy.
Our default position can be that anything most leading U.S. politicians — of both
big bourgeois parties — say about these developments in Latin America and
anything the corporate media repeat ad infinitum is an outright lie.
For example, an
overwhelming number of reports appeared in all the corporate media in the U.S.
that gave “electoral fraud” as the reason Morales was overthrown — without one
scintilla of evidence. We should never allow these lies to creep into whatever
progressive media exist.
Regarding state
power, we note that Venezuela’s Bolivarian government has managed throughout
the course of 2019 to defend itself against an all-out imperialist attack and
the attempt to organize a coup. Nicolas Maduro’s government has so far
maintained its support from the Bolivarian Armed Forces and has organized
popular militias of armed workers and farmers.
We should continue
to support the Venezuelan government and its righteous use of state forces
against reactionary gangs backed by U.S. imperialism.
We should also
applaud any attempt by popular movements or governments to break up the ruling-class
monopoly on violence. As the Russian revolutionary leader V.I. Lenin pointed
out over a century ago, this is a difficult but necessary step for the success
of any revolution that intends to put an oppressed and exploited class in
power.
Venezuela’s
organizing of popular militias is an example of such an attempt. We should give
political support to all such attempts.
The Latin American
class struggle is in a new phase. The oppressed masses in the Americas who
continue to battle against their ruthless ruling-class enemies, with whatever
means they are able to employ, deserve our support.
No hay comentarios.:
Publicar un comentario