Lagniappe
Joel
Wendland :
The Reality of Venezuela
Xiomara
Garcia Gunderson thinks the US media and many politicians aren't telling
the truth about Venezuela. A middle school math teacher who lives in
Salem, Oregon, Garcia Gunderson organized a few friends and family members
into a Bolivarian Circle. The sole purpose of this small group is to
educate the public on the truth about what's happening in Venezuela.
In addition to this work, Garcia Gunderson works with the education
and outreach committee of Venezuela Solidarity (www.venezuelasolidarity.org),
a coalition of groups and individuals that oppose US intervention in
Venezuela. Garcia Gunderson recently talked with Political Affairs about
what Venezuela is really like and the potential for friendship between
our countries.
Of
Venezuelan origins herself, Garcia Gunderson has lived in the US for
about 30 years. Though she has family in Venezuela and visits it often,
she only became involved in the solidarity movement after the April
2002 coup against Chávez, which was strongly supported by the
Bush administration. "I was not actively involved in any movement,"
she said, "until I saw the manipulation in April 11 2002, how CNN
manipulated the news." The US media failed to report the truth,
and the Venezuelan media played an active role in promoting and aiding
the leaders of the 2002 coup.
Garcia
Gunderson described the 2002 events as "primarily a media coup
because it was all manipulated and created by the media." In Venezuela,
wealthy families, which opposed the election (in 1998 and 2001) of President
Chávez and the repeated passage of his policies in the National
Assembly, own and control just about all of the major television, radio,
and print media. According to Garcia Gunderson, perceptions that President
Chávez controls the Venezuelan media "couldn't be farther
from the truth."
Media
watchdogs in Caracas have reported that opposition media personalities,
such as columnist Patricia Poleo, daughter of a wealthy newspaper owner,
aside from giving full support to the violent and illegal coup in April
2002, may have also provoked terrorist attacks against government officials.
In one such incident, government prosecutor Danilo Anderson, appointed
to investigate the involvement of police and business officials in the
April 2002 coup, was assassinated in November 2004.
Caracas
law enforcement officials charged Poleo with playing a role in provoking
the assassination, but she escaped responsibility for her actions by
fleeing to the US where she was welcomed by the Bush administration.
In a bit of media hype, Poleo claims to have "escaped" Venezuela
on a raft in an attempt to identify herself with Cuban exiles who "fled"
on rafts to Florida. Of course, once she got here, Poleo boarded first-class
flights to Washington and then to Miami where she was greeted by political
and business elites in both cities with limousine escorts and champagne
cocktails. And this week Poleo was appointed to a lucrative position
at South Florida media conglomerate MEGA-TV.
Despite
the passage in Venezuela's National Assembly of a law to promote the
social responsibility of the media, the opposition-controlled media
still does what it pleases and encourages violence and social disruption.
This social responsibility law is regularly given as evidence that the
government has tried to crack down on the "free" press in
Venezuela. Some human rights groups, short of condemning Venezuela,
have described the law as too vague and containing the possibility for
abuse. But the promotion of violence and lawlessness and calls for the
assassination of the President of the US would never be tolerated in
the US, and have always engendered swift responses from law enforcement
officials when such irresponsibility has been exhibited. Why can't Venezuela
do the same?
Nevertheless,
the opposition-controlled media in Venezuela breaks the law "all
the time and there are no consequences," Garcia Gunderson noted.
For
its part, the US media persist regularly in promoting many falsehoods
about Venezuela. For example, on just about any Fox News report, one
can find references to President Chávez as a "strongman"
and other thinly veiled claims that he is a dictator. CNN and others
typically reduce the Venezuelan president to a "firebrand"
or troublemaker. The truth, however, is that the Venezuelan "government
is democratic and constitutional and President Chávez has been
elected president in multiple elections," Garcia Gunderson pointed
out.
Garcia
Gunderson described the Venezuelan government as truly representative.
"Venezuela has one of the most progressive Constitutions in the
whole continent, if not in the world," she added. "This Constitution
was done by a consultation with all the regions of the country. Every
region of the country sent representatives to work out this constitution."
In
an August 2004 recall referendum sponsored by the wealthy opposition
parties, President Chávez won 60 percent of the vote, the highest
total for any presidential candidate in that country's history. And
even conservative polling companies controlled by the opposition estimate
his current approval rating to be about 57 percent, somewhere between
15 and 20 points higher than President Bush's. Garcia Gunderson said
that she does not believe those polls reflect the depth of Chávez's
support accurately, however. "Like we say in Venezuela," she
remarked, "those pollsters don't climb the hills where the poor
people live or go to the poor neighborhoods."
Despite
this high level of popularity, these same pollsters dishonestly claim
that public opinion is evenly divided for the upcoming December 3rd
national elections. Pollsters tied to the opposition hope to give an
impression that Chávez's wide lead in the opinion polls is much
smaller in order to foster disruption after the election, Garcia Gunderson
argued. "They're going to scream fraud and try to disrupt the country,"
she predicted.
The
political opposition has been in disarray since the coup was thwarted
in 2002. Despite their access to large financial resources and control
of the major media and many large businesses, opposition parties suffer
from a lack of unity and popular support, facts repeatedly demonstrated
between 2003 and the present.
For
example, in December 2003, opposition parties, with the backing of the
Bush administration, promoted what they called a general strike, which
was supported by most of the major media, including Poleo's newspaper.
In reality, it was an illegal lockout by managers in major industries,
especially the oil industry, that blocked workers from going to work
for a couple of weeks. In addition to tremendous damage to the entire
economy, the goal of the lockout was to create enough social disruption
to either destabilize the Venezuelan government and force President
Chávez's resignation or to seriously damage his popularity.
In
the end, the workers forced their way into the industries and almost
single-handedly restarted the economy. Few of the lockout masterminds
were brought to account for the crime, and many left the country disingenuously
claiming they were victims of political repression.
After
the lockout failed, opposition parties again sought support from the
US government. Through the National Endowment for Democracy, tens of
millions of US taxpayer dollars have been used to intervene in Venezuelan
politics. All of it has gone to opposition parties under the guise of
funding civil society groups that claim to "promote democracy."
Most opposition groups that received these funds, however, are less
than civil. Some have been involved in violent disruptive behavior such
as attacks on the Colombian and Spanish Embassies and violence towards
supporters of the government. None of these stories appear in the mainstream
media in either Venezuela or the US.
In
2005, opposition groups could not develop a unified, coherent platform
to run effective campaigns in the National Assembly elections. Instead,
they chose not to run any candidates and pretended to boycott the parliamentary
elections purposely in order to give the appearance of a lack of popular
support for the parties aligned with Chávez. Of course, polls
indicated that they again would have been soundly defeated.
So
what does the US media tell us about Venezuela and its democratically
elected president?
Right-leaning media bias in the US has so carefully selected the information
it provides about Venezuela that most people in the US probably know
precious little other than that it is an oil-producing country whose
president recently called Bush the devil.
Given
the Bush administration's record of promoting violence and political
discord in Venezuela, why wouldn't President Chávez think badly
of Bush? Indeed, personal attacks from the Bush administration and the
right-leaning US media on President Chávez have been plentiful.
The administration has tried to link Chávez to the "axis
of evil," to characterize him as a clone of Hitler, and they have
claimed he is tied to terrorists and drug dealers.
Despite
the open hostility from the Bush administration, according to Garcia
Gunderson, who travels frequently to Venezuela and whose family lives
there, most Venezuelans distinguish between the bad policies and harsh
attitude of the US president and the friendship and common history they
share with the people of the United States. "President Chávez
is always talking about Martin Luther King, Lincoln, and all the ideals
that we share, because we have a similar history," Garcia Gunderson
stated.
She
pointed to the similarities of the independence movements of both countries
and at the economic ties – mainly oil – that bind the two
countries. She said that President Chávez's program of providing
discounted heating oil to poor and marginalized communities in the US
demonstrates "that never before has the connection [between our
countries] been so strong, people to people." Several local and
state entities in the US have either made agreements with the Venezuelan
government to receive discounted oil shipments or are currently in talks
to do so.
In
addition to this program, after the disaster caused by Hurricane Katrina
and the failure of the Bush administration to respond rapidly and adequately
to prevent the deaths of over 1,800 people, President Chávez
immediately offered financial aid to the people affected by the disaster.
He also volunteered assistance in petroleum and gasoline products that
might be needed in the rescue and recovery operations. In a surprising
and shameful gesture, President Bush declined the offer and proceeded
to continue to botch recovery and reconstruction projects.
With
Bush's unrelenting and irresponsible antagonism, it is easy to see why
President Chávez, his political supporters, and millions of ordinary
Venezuelans would be seriously concerned about additional interference
in the upcoming December 3rd elections. Chávez's opponent has
earned the suspicion of Venezuelan voters because he has sought and
won public support from Venezuela's elites and the Bush administration.
Garcia
Gunderson said she believes Chávez will win by a large margin.
"He has to be overwhelmingly elected by at least the same percent
he got in the referendum so that they can once more prove to the international
community that he is the president that the people in Venezuela want
to elect," she added. She expressed frustration that it will take
a fourth election to prove this but believes it will be accomplished.
The
role of the solidarity movement and organizations like Venezuela Solidarity
is to promote the basic idea that the people of a country like Venezuela
have the right to elect whom they want, Garcia Gunderson concluded.
Venezuela has "the right to self-determination," she stated
emphatically, "without having somebody always pointing the finger
and saying this is what you should do." She compared the current
interference in Venezuela by the Bush administration to that of the
Nixon administration in Chile in 1973. After President Salvador Allende
was elected in Chile in 1970, Henry Kissinger said that the US government
couldn't let those "irresponsible people" choose their own
president and proceeded to order assistance to the military coup plotters.
People
in the US need not agree with Chávez's policies in order to support
the basic notion that the people of Venezuela should be able to choose
their own government without interference. It is nothing more than what
we expect from other countries every other November.
Joel
Wendland
is managing editor of Political Affairs (jwendland@politicalaffairs.net
/ www.politicalaffairs.net).
Petroleumworld not necessarily share these views.
Editor's
Note: This commentary was originally published opednews.com,
Oct 06, 2006. Petroleumworld reprint this article in the interest of
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News 10/10/06
Copyright©2006
Joel Wendland. All rights reserved.