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Peace Patriot's Journal
Posted by Peace Patriot in Environment/Energy
Sat Feb 28th 2009, 11:39 AM
Rafael Correa--the Sir Lancelot of the leftist sweep of South America--calling the indigenous protectors of Mother Earth "nobodies" and "extremists." Yikes.

If it was written by the Associated Pukes and that lot, I would dismiss it out of hand--as lies aimed at "divide and conquer." There is nothing that our corpo/fascist 'news' monopolies would like more, in South America, than to destroy Rafael Correa. Only Hugo Chavez's assassination would please them more.

But this is "In These Times," a publication that--unlike the Christian Science Monitor, for instance--is not fake leftist in service to corpo/fascism. Nor does it have that metallic taste, that true leftist publications sometimes get--Counterpoint comes to mind--of such relentless negativism, with no solutions suggested, that you simply get tired reading it, and end up feeling hopeless, powerless and doomed. ITT is more in the vein of the Catholic Agitator (out of Los Angeles): There are solutions but you may not like them ("Give everything you own to the poor and come follow me!").

ITT is non-profit, and was founded in the 1970s by the likes of Daniel Ellsberg and Noam Chomsky. But its highest recommendation is this: “If it weren’t for In These Times, I’d be a man without a country.” —Kurt Vonnegut.

I mean, if you can't trust Kurt Vonnegut, who can you trust? (ITT's "About" page: http://www.inthesetimes.com/about / )

The article is written by Daniel Denvir, "a freelance journalist who recently moved from Quito to Philadelphia. He is writing a book on poor people’s environmentalism in Ecuador." He has no other credits at the ITT author credit page. Far be it from me to dis an unknown writer, but he has no creds and I have no idea who he is or where he's coming from. The only thing to recommend him is that ITT is publishing him.

However, I will say this: I have certainly heard of this indigenous criticism of Rafael Correa before. It is not coming out of nowhere. And if it's true that, a) Correa dismissed these indigenous protesters so contemptuously, and b) he is going for big corporate mining, instead of small scale, highly regulated mining (or no mining in sensitive areas)--then it is, at the least, questionable, and probably reprehensible.

Dismissing poor, indigenous protesters as "nobodies" and "extremists" could be described as tantamount to giving them a death sentence. If the leftist government considers them to be inconsequential, how are mining interests going to regard them? Denvir reports that, "One leader in the Amazon was briefly disappeared only to show up in a hospital in the Amazonian city of Macas with a gunshot wound to the head. Police officers were also injured in attempting to clear blockades."

However--caveat--Denvir does not say anything more about this. He doesn't quote the family or friends of the shot man, nor give any hint of what locals believe happened to him. Could be a private dispute. We don't really know. The article is broadstroke in this way. It is not good reporting.

Ecuador's Amazon has taken a truly severe hit of pollution by Chevron-Texaco--in what has been described as the "Rainforest Chernobyl," a spill of oil and toxic sludge far worse than the Exxon-Valdez. That horror certainly spurs the indigenous to try to prevent such a thing ever happening again. Denvir mentions this, but it is not the full context. The full context is regional, and, indeed, global, involves other sectors and interests besides the indigenous tribes, and is a very, very, very, very difficult problem, which can be summed up this way: vast poverty.

Great leftist leaders like Rafael Correa in Ecuador, Hugo Chavez in Venezuela and Evo Morales in Bolivia--leaders who have had Bushwhack bull's eye targets on their backs from the day they were elected--are in one hell of a bind, to solve the chief problem they were elected to solve--vast poverty--while trying to do so sustainably, as to the environment, and fairly, as to all sectors (for instance, the displaced urban poor, with no jobs), and trying to stay alive, and protect and promote democracy, at the same time.

Denvir does give Correa's side of it: "In his Jan. 24 weekly radio address just days after major protests, Correa pledged to press on with large-scale mining. 'It is absurd that some want to force us to remain like beggars sitting atop a bag of gold,' he said."

So there you are. And "beggars" is not a metaphor in Ecuador or most anywhere in South America. Correa is literally speaking for the "beggars"--thousands, millions of human beings, whom he is expected to provide for--directly, in some cases (those who are extremely poor and lack very basic necessities), or indirectly, by opening up opportunities for employment and the achievement of decent, prosperous, happy lives, in a decent society.

It is no small problem. It is nearly insoluble. It is especially difficult with global warming and the corporate predators' ravaging of planet earth. It is just not possible, any more, for most of the human race to live like indigenous tribes, on tiny, traditional, organic farms, in harmony with nature. Possibly we will be forced to, if our planet's biosphere begins to seriously unravel. Indicators are that "begin" is not the right word. "End" is what is happening. The planet's biosphere is approaching the end. We humans, in our industrial frenzy of the last hundred years--abetted by corporate greed--are well on our way to destroying our only home. So maybe this conflict will soon be moot--in a few decades not centuries. The urban rich and the masses of displaced urban poor will simply die, and all that will be left are tiny sustainably living indigenous tribes in remote corners of the globe that still have viable soils and some kind of ecosystem.

This puts the people who rise to the top positions in our best political structure--democracy--the governmental system which provides the best chance for indigenous wisdom and environmental caution to prevail--into a tragic position. Well, maybe tragic. Certainly extremely difficult.

Rafael Correa has a 70% approval rating in Ecuador. The other leftist leaders have similar, very high approval ratings. And they have been elected in systems that are far, far more transparent and honest than our own. So they truly represent most people--including most of the indigenous, who have rallied to their cause, as to political support and voting. The 30% who don't approve of them are mostly rightwing assholes, who would do far worse to the environment, with no chance whatever of decent wages and working conditions or environmental regulation and cleanup. This was part of the problem with the Chevron-Texaco spill--a rightwing government let them get away with horrendous practices--and all of the profit went elsewhere. Correa will certainly not let that happen. A good percentage of the profit from mining will stay in Ecuador and be used for social programs. And very likely--given the Constitution that Correa helped write and get passed by the voters (around 60%), which enshrines Mother Nature's (Pachamama's) independent right to exist and to function properly--Correa will insist on environmental regulation and cleanup, and labor protections. He won't make a bad deal for Ecuador and its portion of the Amazon. But what these indigenous are saying is that should be no deal--for corporate-scale mining.

Without Correa, and the leftist tide in Ecuador and South America--with leftist leaders like Correa, Chavez, Morales, the Kirchners in Argentina, Fernando Lugo in Paraguay, Lula da Silva in Brazil, having each others backs and creating region-wide protection for democracy, against all of the Bushwhack plots of the last eight years, and on-going corporate looting and warfare--there would be no hope of even decent, basic environmental regulation in Ecuador, and workers would be mere slave labor to the multinationals.

So there you are, again. That is the dilemma. I remember reading of CONAIE's objections to Correa when he first ran for president in 2006, and their reluctant decision to back him, because the alternative was the richest man in Ecuador, a rightwing banana magnate (the kind of rightwing politician who conspired with the Bushwhacks on plots to stage fascist coups). Now CONAIE is considering running a candidate against Correa in the April elections (according to Denvir). They won't win, of course--but it might help get more attention for their very important issues. But if it were to result in the election of a rightwinger, that would be terrible. Here, we have the fear of Nader-spoilers--a fake fear in a non-transparent election system, with the Supreme Court or Diebold crowning the emperor. But in Ecuador--and other true voting systems--it is a genuine fear that such a division on the left will bring disaster--to labor, to the environment, to the indigenous, to everybody.

Is there some system of government, that we haven't thought of yet, that would insure the survival of planet earth and the human race--and still be progressive, humane and fair? We better get on it then.



Discuss (0 comments)
What are the Traitorgate cover-ups covering up?
The reason Fitzgerald hasn't indicted anyone on the Plame/Brewster-Jennings outingS--though he has a number of the outers by the short hairs--Cheney, Libby, Rove, Armitage, Novak--COULD be that he is either suspicious of the story (political revenge) or already knows that it is a cover story.

And that points to Rumsfeld, in my book. Office of Special Plans.

Look at this way: This conspiracy--if it was, indeed, a conspiracy to plant the nukes in Iraq after the invasion--would have two tracks, political and operational. Cheney in the charge of the political end. Rumsfeld in charge of the operational end. Cheney segues the forged docs into a full-scale allegation against Iraq on nukes, and insures that it gets into Bush's SOTU speech (against advice from several agencies). He continues to adamantly defend that charge no matter how often it is totally and completely debunked. Why doesn't he temper it--show a bit of caution (considering the evidence)? Nope. It has got to be THAT charge--over and over. In addition, the whole Junta goes into summer '03 still maintaining that WMDs will be found (--although many will soon switch to "Iraqi freedom" as motive for the war). It's all set up for the phony "find"--and a triumphant Bush-Blair announcement that will smother all criticism, and all talk of "sexed up" prewar intel, and will cement their political positions with their FIRST and foremost justification for the war: WMDs.

Rumsfeld (if this theory is true) has meanwhile got several black ops teams (possibly connected to the notorious Iran/Contra arms dealer Manucher Ghorbanifar, who was present at the Rome meeting of Pentagon Neo-Cons and SISMI in late 2001, where many suspect the Niger forgeries were cooked up) moving nukes illicitly into (or on their way to) Iraq. He's got NYT WMD propagandist Judith Miller "embedded" with the U.S. troops who were "hunting" for WMDs (and, according to reports, actually directing, or trying to direct, their efforts), ready to get the "big scoop" of a WMD "find." (She said she had an "embed" contract signed by Donald Rumsfeld. Whether it's true or not, why would she claim it? It's like saying: "...but they TOLD me there WOULD BE a story"! She had Rumsfeld's word--or the word of someone speaking for him.) And Rumsfeld furthermore permitted the creation of chaos in Iraq--in his failure to stop the looting and the breakdown of all order (in fact laughing at). Civil chaos was a prime condition for planting WMDs in Iraq and then "finding" them. It was also a prime condition for setting up a puppet government to sign the oil contracts, giving away Iraqis' interest in their only resource (--and for massive looting by corps like Halliburton).

Anyway, that's how it would be: Cheney covering the political front--and scrambling to cover up the "incompetence of others" (as he put it in his memo on not wanting Libby to be the fall guy) when the shit started hitting the fan. No WMDs. Nuke allegation based on forgeries. Wilson calling them out on the false allegation. And David Kelly, in England, whistleblowing to the BBC about the "sexed up" prewar intel. It would have been RUMSFELD's responsibility to get those WMDs planted and "discovered." What we are seeing may be the political fallout of his failure to do so. (We are also seeing him gone--with no change in Iraq War policy. Was it the midterm elections? Or was it that he was operational head of this attempted massive deceit--a phony "find" of weapons--which Cheney in now having to cover for--politically and legally?)

Back in early July 2003, Kelly, under interrogation at a "safe house" --after he had been outed to his bosses (late June 2003)--revealed that he knew something MORE (--Kelly "could say some uncomfortable things," is how it was reported to Tony Blair on July 7, 2003 (Hutton report))-- but he promised not to speak of it publicly ("I wasn't about to give away any government secrets" is how Kelly put it).

I suspect that THIS was the trigger for the Plame/B-J outingS. Not Wilson's article of July 6, but rather the report to Blair on July 7 that Kelly "could say some uncomfortable things." (He was already whistleblowing, so it wasn't something that he HAD said--i.e., the "sexed up" the prewar intel--it was something that he COULD say. What ELSE did he know?) He had friends in Iraq--from his visits there as UN weapons inspector. He had told them that if they cooperate with the UN inspections, there would be no invasion. (And he then told a friend that if there WAS an invasion, he would be "found dead in the woods"--a truly haunting prefiguration.) IF there was a scheme to plant the weapons, he was in a good position to hear about it (--and my distant judgment of his character--excellent scientist, true believer in his mission of stopping WMD proliferation--is that he would have been offended by it; this could even have been the trigger for his own whistleblowing--it pissed him off that such deception was attempted or planned.)

IF the WMD-planting theory is true, the Blairites discovery that Kelly knew about this nefarious scheme would have put tremendous pressure on the Bushites (and the Blairites), because it would appear to them that the plot was in imminent danger of being exposed--whether it was or not. How far had it gone? Who all knew? There were a couple of reports in the Islamic press about botched US efforts to plant WMDs in Iraq (--and what happened to THOSE people (local observers)--Abu Ghraib?). Was the CIA itself about to expose them (contrary to their tradition of secrecy)? But mainly, WHO ELSE knew? If the Brits couldn't keep a lid on it, how many people, from how many directions, could come at them, with facts and evidence about this audacious effort to deceive?

So, in their panic, they outed EVERYBODY--the entire network of deep cover foreign agents and contacts, built up over the years, of friends of the US and friends of humanity, whose job it was to keep us all safe from illicit traffic in weapons of mass destruction. The multiple-outing was because they DIDN'T KNOW--who had foiled them, and who knew. Their purpose: 1) to punish and disable anybody who had foiled their scheme (including getting them killed by their own governments or by other bad actors); or (if they were still trying to plant the nukes or other WMDs, in July 2003) to destroy the network of WMD detectors and foilers that was slowing things up. By fall 2003, with the CIA enraged at the assault on its own agents, and calling for an investigation, they had to give it up--and switch to "Iraqi freedom" as the motive for the war (which is just about the time that that "talking point" was brought forward).

Someone upthread asked, why did they kill Kelly, and not Wilson and Plame? I imagine that Wilson and Plame have lived with that fear. But the critical difference between Plame and Kelly may be that Plame, as a NOC and a high-placed CIA operative, is sworn to a lifetime of keeping government secrets, and Kelly was not. He was a scientist on loan to different agencies (including the UN weapons inspection team). He was not a spy (that we know of). He was already whistleblowing. He was "off the reservation," and could not be trusted, when he promised, under interrogation, not to disclose "government secrets."

Also, she has the protection of the CIA--which, if it kills its own, likes to make that decision itself, I would imagine. And Kelly did not have any such protection. The Blair government and British intel agencies cut him loose. They outed him to the press, and sent him home without protection and apparently without surveillance. And if he WAS under surveillance, they let him bleed to death all night under a tree near his house. (--doesn't add up--none of it adds up).

As for Wilson, he, a) comes under CIA protection as the husband of a NOC, I would imagine, and b) sought the protection of widespread publicity for his dissent. Kelly, too, was the subject of a blazing public controversy in England--one caused by his government's deliberate outing of him to the press. He did not seek publicity. In fact, he backed down somewhat under the kleig lights. It may have been his fatal mistake, allowing the "many dark actors playing games"* around him to spin a web of deceit around his assassination. If he had stuck to his allegation 100% (re: the "sexed up" prewar intel--which turned out, of course, to be 100% true), and had not tried to backpedal a bit, and get himself out of the way of the Blairites' pointed guns, his murder might have been significantly more difficult to cover up, and the plan to kill him abandoned. It also may be a measure of the how dangerous he was to the Bushites/Blairites that they had him killed in the midst of the publicity. One more thought: Kelly's murder may have saved the Wilson's. Three WMD-related murders in one week was too much to cover up.

----------

*(On the day he died, Kelly wrote an email to none other than Judith Miller--an old colleague of his--in which he expressed concern about the "many dark actors playing games." She had emailed him, stating that a "fan" of his had told her that he did well in the hearing that week (note: by all accounts, except this one, he did NOT do well--he was severely stressed during the parliamentary hearing at which he backpedaled on his whistleblowing accusations). He wrote back to her that he would know more by the end of the week, and that there were "many dark actors playing games." He added "thank you for your friendship and support at this time." I've recently begun to wonder if that was an ironical tag. Did he suspect her of being one of the "dark actors"? Of how he got outed to his bosses? His emails to other friends of his that day were upbeat and forward-looking--about his daughter's upcoming wedding, and plans to return to Iraq. He may have been worried about "dark actors," but he was not suicidal. He thought the storm had blown over.) (Note: Miller had used him as a major quoted source in her book "Germs" about bioweapons, published just after 9/11.)

*(Notably, Miller has refused to disclose the OTHER topics of conversation between her and Libby (besides Wilson/Plame and the NIE). Fitzgerald had to agree to this, to get her testimony against Libby on his perjury/obstruction. A week after her first conversation with Libby (mid-June) about Wilson/Plame and the NIE, Kelly was outed to his bosses (as the BBC whistleblower)--initiating the train of events that led to his death several weeks later (three days after Plame was outed). And the other thing that Miller has been secretive about is the "dark actors" email itself. She wrote the NYT news obit on Kelly's death, and did not disclose this email, or her close connection to the subject of the article. It was his family who later disclosed the email.)

---------


So--does Fitzgerald suspect or know that there is something much worse behind the Plame/B-J outingS, beyond Cheney and the political coverup, that has caused him to grant immunity to the actual outers (political operatives), and to be digging deeper into this onion, in his stated purpose of understanding WHY these outings occurred? And is it this--that the Niger forgeries were just Part 1 of a yet more nefarious scheme to plant the weapons--a scheme hatched out of the Pentagon, by Donald Rumsfeld, that Cheney is now covering up?

Dunno. And Rumsfeld name hasn't come up at all, so far, in this case (that I know of). Fitzgerald appears to be building a conspiracy case against Cheney. But when you add up all the people whom Fitzgerald has NOT indicted--and the lack of indictments on the outing crime itself (despite a lot of evidence against certain people, just in the available info)--you have to wonder if he isn't trying to go deeper. The non-indictments (so far) could be part of the strategy of nailing Cheney for conspiracy. But the WHY of that conspiracy is still not known, except on a superficial level (effort to silence dissent--political motive).

--------------------------------------

Originally posted by Peace Patriot in General Discussion
Thu Feb 08th 2007, 01:52 PM
Comment #150 at
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discu...
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