Venezuela's Choice
- Subject: Venezuela's Choice
- From: "nello margiotta" <nellomargiotta55 at virgilio.it>
- Date: Thu, 30 Sep 2010 19:54:09 +0200
Michael Albert Venezuelan election commentary is still in flux - reactions are
still trickling in. Still, so far available analyses are mostly failing to
address the election's most important
implications. Yes, the Bolivarian Revolution is still in the
saddle. Yes, Chavez is vastly more popular - despite being in office ten
years - than Obama, now in office for two
years. Yes the PSUV has retained more support and influence than, for
example, the Democrats in the U.S. One could continue in that vein, but viewing the election as if it
is a one off experience that is lost or won depending on the ballot count from
electoral district to electoral district measuring assembly seats won by
Chavistas and the opposition, so that the Chavistas can say - hooray, we won -
or viewing it in comparison to what goes on in the U.S. or other typically top
down and politically bankrupt societies, so again the Chavistas can say, hooray,
we are doing better, is highly simplistic. Venezuela is continuing an already decade long incredibly complex
struggle for its future. This means what goes on in Venezuela cannot be usefully
compared to what goes on in simpler settings. In Venezuela, some wish to reassert or preserve old relations -
basically capitalism, political bureaucracy, racial hierarchies, gender
hierarchies - all the old crap. In Venezuela, there is also a drive toward something new - a goal
that is not spelled out and in fact in many respects barely even intimated, but
that is nonetheless also clearly anti racist and anti sexist, clearly for the
poor and weak, and maybe profoundly self
managing. The agents for reaction will do whatever they can to obstruct the
agents for change - and the reactionaries have no scruples and plenty of resolve
or resources for their tasks. If a coup will work, give it a try. Or try a referendum. Or try an
election boycott. They tried, and failed, and failed. Chavez was way too
popular. So they needed another more sophisticated
strategy. What they arrived at was to subvert the Chavez government's
efforts to move forward on behalf of the poor, and then to blame Chavez for
failing to solve problems and better people's lives. As people become tired and
doubtful, the opposition ups the ante. How can a reactionary opposition do all
that? Let's count the ways. 1. Old owners subvert plans to produce for the poor and weak. They
obstruct efforts at building housing and other projects in numerous ways,
including just selling off the needed resources over seas, creating bottle
necks, or even simply not working, or working slowly, or working poorly, on
various projects. This is very effective, especially in
Caracas. 2. Old police don't curb violence and theft - but instead engage
in it. They become the criminal element in order not only to enrich themselves,
but to create an environment of fear and anger. They even kill - to the same
end. It isn't the stolen bounty that is the most important goal. Nor is it the
dead victims. No, the most important goal is the assault on the social
imagination. It is making people wary, fearful, and not willing to talk,
organize, and participate. This is very effective, especially in Caracas, but
throughout the country, as well. 3. Old political bureaucrats - or new ones for that matter - can
obstruct rather than aid (as the Chavez government mandates) the emergence of
new grassroots people's assemblies. The new structures are supposed to become
the new government. It should not be surprising that old mayors and governors
are slow to aid them, or even, very often, quick to subvert them, thus bringing
local government often out of the revolutionary process and into a reactionary
one. The bureaucratically oriented even on the left see popular progress as
personal loss. Their obstructionism, rather than their advocacy, of popular
participation is very effective, all over
Venezuela. 4. Old media - nearly all of Venezuela's media - maintain a never
ending assault on Chavez and the government including blaming them for anything
and everything that causes people pain or worry - from crime to draught, from
continuing poverty to frustration with efforts at local governance - even if, as
is most often the case, it is the owners of the media and their allies who own
other industries and who administrate cities and regions and who "police" the
public, who are actually at fault. 5. The above fourfold strategy to obstruct, disrupt, and blame, it
must be admitted, has been very successful. And it also must be admitted
that the success can extend even unto impacting Chavista agendas. It can not
only distort outcomes in the field in ways that block libertory changes and then
undercut support, it can also infect even Chavista motives, inducing a
defensiveness about and even denial of ills as well as isolation from the public
in turn causing additional problems including, for example, local lethargy of
government branches and resistance to admitting and thus dealing sufficiently
with crime issues. "But the Chavistas won still another showdown. How can you claim
the opposition has had great success" - I can hear some reply, or demand, on
hearing the above. Well, if you look at seats in the parliament, and if you simply
count the final tally of who won those, then these critics of my stance are
absolutely right. There have been some losses, sure, but overall the election
marks another victory, albeit a bit tighter. But what if we look at the situation as befits judging not a
simple parliamentary election but instead an accounting of sentiments in a broad
and long social struggle? After ten years of a government that seeks revolutionary
transformation in the direct material, social, and psychological interest of 80%
of the population, and, arguably, also in the social interest of quite a few
more - support has dropped roughly 10%. Where support for the Bolivarian process
should, in the past ten years have risen from about 60% to up near 80%, it
instead appears to have fallen to roughly 50%. Momentum is undercut. The
publics hopes decline, their support much less inclination to act, diminishes.
Even the resolve of avowed revolutionaries starts to
wither. This trajectory has to be seen for what it is: a downslope to
hell. This trajectory must be
reversed. This trajectory cannot be reversed if the fourfold oppositional
strategy listed earlier, and also the additional internal Bolivarian flaws of
process and practice persist. This trajectory cannot be reversed if efforts to deal with the
fourfold oppositional features and internal failings proceed so slowly that
their minor gains are swamped by continually growing pubic exhaustion and
doubt. The Bolivarian Revolution needs to regain aggressive momentum and
wide spread participation. The Bolivarian Revolution needs clarity as to its aims. Why else
will people be energetic supporters? How else then by knowing what the
revolution's aims are, and being able to adapt and alter the aims for
themselves, can the public be part of and literally command the
process? The Bolivarian Revolution needs mobilization at the base of
communities and throughout workplaces to attain its aims. How else can progress
be gained and defended? Nothing much can be achieved over night. But reticence to act due
to not wanting to arouse stronger opposition so as to avoid serious conflict -
or not being willing to see and admit the need - is a direct road to
hell. The Bolivarian idea, or one might say the Bolivarian hope,
incredibly admirable, was that in a fair and rational debate with vote after
vote - reason would prevail and sympathy for the public would win out. And well
it would have, except for one thing. The opposition is not interested in a fair
and rational discussion. The opposition simply wants to win by whatever means
they can find, including obstructionism, lying, manipulating, fear mongering,
and criminality. Waiting for a fair debate is suicide. While waiting, one's
support is undercut or grows tired and despondent, and one's priorities and
policies become distorted as well. There comes a time when one must finally admit - however admirably
much one wished to avoid the implications - that to have Venezuela undergo a
truly democratic and self managing popular assessment of options and then freely
and insightfully choose among those options - the opposition must be denied
pride of place and practice. The opposition can debate like all others - but they cannot own
and control the only megaphone in society - its tv, newspapers,
etc. The opposition can work at producing social outputs like all
others, but they cannot obstruct work by owning firms and directing them away
from revolutionary agendas. The opposition can help to govern like all others, but they cannot
use governing positions to obstruct popular organizing and decision making and
abuse participation. The opposition can aid in fighting against corruption and theft
like all others, but they cannot become the country's most egregious corruptors
and thieves. And even among the agents and allies of the Revolution, ever
greater receptivity to the desires of masses of people throughout society, ever
greater willingness to admit and correct errors rather than deny and paper them
over, and ever more receptivity to widening participation, are also
essential. From outside Venezuela, admittedly having only modest connection
to or information about the details of complexly developing options inside
Venezuela, it does seem that to overcome reaction and to seriously pursue
liberation something quite like the following steps must somehow soon be
achieved as the necessary minimal basis for continuing
success. (1) The media must become democratic and public - critically
insightful and inspiring - not a lapdog mouthpiece of the revolution, but also
certainly not a lapdog mouthpiece of insane and venal reaction. Yes, there will
be a price in rhetorical assault and real confusion around the world when the
mass media are taken from venal and even criminal private ownership and turned
into exemplary vehicles of public participation, education, criticism, and
exploration - but this is a price that must be paid at some point - and sooner
is better. (2) Mayors, governors, and other officials throughout Venezuela,
whatever their other inclinations may be, must become abettors of and advocates
for popular power. Neither Chavez nor the PSUV should support candidates or
elected officials rerunning for office who do not as a core element of their
program and practice work hard to develop the popular assemblies of popular
participation and rule, including supporting and working to implement programs
mandated by those assemblies. Yes, those who lose support and then office
may become overt opponents of the Revolution, but they will be far less damaging
in that role than as trusted officials given power to subvert
progress. (3) Old police, wedded to reaction and engaging in crime and fear
mongering - whether by action or by calculated inaction - must be replaced. If
the new national police can push and teach and force local police to comply,
fine. But, if not, then more aggressive steps must be taken. Are there
centralizing dangers in such scenarios? Most certainly there are very serious
centralizing dangers as well as a rhetorical cost in criticisms. But what must
be done, must be done - and putting off acts which, by their delay make their
eventual success harder, not easier, is self defeating. The solution to the
dangers is to address policing like one addresses production, or health care, or
anything else - not only improving it beyond abysmal, but thinking through what
would be exemplary, in accord with self management, etc., and implementing
that. (4) The old owners must have their property appropriated for
control by the relevant workforces. Their compensation should be that which the
society sees as morally warranted - which is to say, at least in my view, enough
to maintain a viable income level while seeking new economic involvements.
Owners who have sabotaged Bolivarian agendas for the poor and weak, however,
should arguably get nothing. Again, any transfers will lead some losers of land
or property to overt opposition - but that overt opposition will do far far less
damage than the same people's quiet opposition undertaken as heads of
workplaces, rather than mere citizens. (5) The revolution also needs to look again at itself. Not all
current problems are a function of overt external opposition. Some problems
reside within, albeit perhaps largely induced by the long obstruction and
threats of reaction, but by this time also rooted in on going and self
sustaining habits of the present. So in addition to dealing with the above four
opposition obstacles, there must be a new level of practical commitment to
rectifying stale or misguided practice by incorporating criticism from and the
desires of the broad population into the actions of local government, of the
PSUV, and of the national government as well. The above steps are not the
revolution. The above steps don't bring plenty to the poor. They don't elevate
the weak to influence. They don't remove hierarchical difference. They simply
remove the obstacles to seriously and steadfastly seeking those greater aims
including ever growing popular participation and popular self managing control
over political life and over production and allocation, and indeed over all
dimensions of Venezuela's future, with new social structures and programs suited
to the purposes. But in the absence of fulfilling the above steps, more
encompassing positive efforts will continue to be subverted, the public will
continue feel despondant and cowed, and Chavista support will continue to
atrophy. The road to hell - or the road to solidifying and enlarging
revolution. From outside, it appears that that is the current
choice. In Brazil, when the PT and Lula won office, they succumbed to
fears of reaction and violence. To avoid that calamity they settled on a path
less radical and encompassing than their rhetoric had suggested they would
pursue. In Venezuela, the path has been the opposite. Threats have
provoked Chavez and the Bolivarian government to move further left, not retreat
to the right. But now comes the real
crossroads. To now stand pat and keep debating the opposition while they
criminally subvert projects - a calculated opposition behavior that will in
coming months only become more aggressive - will end in
disaster. To rear back and decide that the Brazilian social democratic route
at least preserves broad political participation and avoids overt conflict, will
end in disaster. The only road with promise is the road forward. And the road
forward must be traversed over and through - not simply around - the old owners,
the old political bureaucracy, the old police, the old media, as well as new but
hopefully only superficial habits of aloof defensiveness in the PSUV and the
Revolution, as well.
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