Dick Cheney, Hugo Chávez And Bill Clinton's Band - Greg Palast, August 16, 200

Posted on Tuesday, August 17 at 10:08 by nancymarie
There's so much BS and baloney thrown around about Venezuela that I may be violating some rule of US journalism by providing some facts. Let's begin with this: 77% of Venezuela's farmland is owned by 3% of the population, the 'hacendados.' I met one of these farmlords in Caracas at an anti-Chavez protest march. Oddest demonstration I've ever seen: frosted blondes in high heels clutching designer bags, screeching, "Chavez - dic-ta-dor!" The plantation owner griped about the "socialismo" of Chavez, then jumped into his Jaguar convertible. That week, Chavez himself handed me a copy of the "socialist" manifesto that so rattled the man in the Jag. It was a new law passed by Venezuela's Congress which gave land to the landless. The Chavez law transferred only fields from the giant haciendas which had been left unused and abandoned. This land reform, by the way, was promoted to Venezuela in the 1960s by that Lefty radical, John F. Kennedy. Venezuela's dictator of the time agreed to hand out land, but forgot to give peasants title to their property. But Chavez won't forget, because the mirror reminds him. What the affable president sees in his reflection, beyond the ribbons of office, is a "negro e indio" -- a "Black and Indian" man, dark as a cola nut, same as the landless and, until now, the hopeless. For the first time in Venezuela's history, the 80% Black-Indian population elected a man with skin darker than the man in the Jaguar. So why, with a huge majority of the electorate behind him, twice in elections and today in a referendum, is Hugo Chavez in hot water with our democracy-promoting White House? Maybe it's the oil. Lots of it. Chavez sits atop a reserve of crude that rivals Iraq's. And it's not his presidency of Venezuela that drives the White House bananas, it was his presidency of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, OPEC. While in control of the OPEC secretariat, Chavez cut a deal with our maximum leader of the time, Bill Clinton, on the price of oil. It was a 'Goldilocks' plan. The price would not be too low, not too high; just right, kept between $20 and $30 a barrel. But Dick Cheney does not like Clinton nor Chavez nor their band. To him, the oil industry's (and Saudi Arabia's) freedom to set oil prices is as sacred as freedom of speech is to the ACLU. I got this info, by the way, from three top oil industry lobbyists. Why should Chavez worry about what Dick thinks? Because, said one of the oil men, the Veep in his bunker, not the pretzel-chewer in the White House, "runs energy policy in the United States." And what seems to have gotten our Veep's knickers in a twist is not the price of oil, but who keeps the loot from the current band-busting spurt in prices. Chavez had his Congress pass another oil law, the "Law of Hydrocarbons," which changes the split. Right now, the oil majors - like PhillipsConoco - keep 84% of the proceeds of the sale of Venezuela oil; the nation gets only 16%. Chavez wanted to double his Treasury's take to 30%. And for good reason. Landless, hungry peasants have, over decades, drifted into Caracas and other cities, building million-person ghettos of cardboard shacks and open sewers. Chavez promised to do something about that. And he did. "Chavez gives them bread and bricks," one Venezuelan TV reporter told me. The blonde TV newscaster, in the middle of a publicity shoot, said the words "pan y ladrillos" with disdain, making it clear that she never touched bricks and certainly never waited in a bread line. But to feed and house the darker folk in those bread and brick lines, Chavez would need funds, and the 16% slice of the oil pie wouldn't do it. So the President of Venezuela demanded 30%, leaving Big Oil only 70%. Suddenly, Bill Clinton's ally in Caracas became Mr. Cheney's -- and therefore, Mr. Bush's -- enemy. So began the Bush-Cheney campaign to "Floridate" the will of the Venezuela electorate. It didn't matter that Chavez had twice won election. Winning most of the votes, said a White House spokesman, did not make Chavez' government "legitimate." Hmmm. Secret contracts were awarded by our Homeland Security spooks to steal official Venezuela voter lists. Cash passed discreetly from the US taxpayer, via the so-called 'Endowment for Democracy,' to the Chavez-haters running today's "recall" election. A brilliant campaign of placing stories about Chavez' supposed unpopularity and "dictatorial" manner seized US news and op-ed pages, ranging from the San Francisco Chronicle to the New York Times. But some facts just can't be smothered in propaganda ink. While George Bush can appoint the government of Iraq and call it "sovereign," the government of Venezuela is appointed by its people. And the fact is that most people in this slum-choked land don't drive Jaguars or have their hair tinted in Miami. Most look in the mirror and see someone "negro e indio," as dark as their President Hugo. The official CIA handbook on Venezuela says that half the nation's farmers own only 1% of the land. They are the lucky ones, as more peasants owned nothing. That is, until their man Chavez took office. Even under Chavez, land redistribution remains more a promise than an accomplishment. But today, the landless and homeless voted their hopes, knowing that their man may not, against the armed axis of local oligarchs and Dick Cheney, succeed for them. But they are convinced he will never forget them. And that's a fact. Greg Palast's reports from Venezuela for BBC Television's Newsnight and the Guardian papers of Britain earned a California State University Journalism School "Project Censored" award for 2002. View photos and Palast's reports on Venezuela at www.GregPalast.com.

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  1. Tue Aug 17, 2004 5:45 pm
    BRAVO HUGO CHAVEZ !!!!!

    ---
    Dave Ruston

  2. by N Say
    Tue Aug 17, 2004 7:42 pm
    Well there's Chavez of Venezuela, Lula of Brazil, Nestor of Argentina.... who's leading Canada?

    ---
    "George Bush has declared the war on terrorism to be the cause of his generation. The cause of Canadian sovereignty will be ours." - John Godfrey, MP for Don Va

  3. Tue Aug 17, 2004 8:11 pm
    Either the WTO or the Bilderbergers. =(

  4. Tue Aug 17, 2004 10:55 pm
    Apparently Chavez has a 6 hour phone in program on TV each week. Could anyone in Canada do that, besides Rick Mercer?

    If Rex Murphy had a 6 hour radio show each week, there'd be collective suicide.

    ---
    If you don't like these ideas, I've got others. --Marshall McLuhan

  5. Tue Aug 17, 2004 11:08 pm
    <i>... who's leading Canada?</i><p> Which way did they go? Which way did they go? I must find them, for I am their leader . . . <p><p>---<br>"If you must kill a man, it costs you nothing to be polite about it." Winston Churchill <br />

  6. Wed Aug 18, 2004 2:37 am
    What Chavez has accomplished so far: <p> "Just under a million children from the shanty-towns and the poorest villages now obtain a free education; 1.2 million illiterate adults have been taught to read and write; secondary education has been made available to 250,000 children whose social status excluded them from this privilege during the ancien regime; three new university campuses were functioning by 2003 and six more are due to be completed by 2006. <p> As far as healthcare is concerned, the 10,000 Cuban doctors, who were sent to help the country, have transformed the situation in the poor districts, where 11,000 neighbourhood clinics have been established and the health budget has tripled. Add to this the financial support provided to small businesses, the new homes being built for the poor, an Agrarian Reform Law that was enacted and pushed through despite the resistance, legal and violent, by the landlords. By the end of last year 2,262,467 hectares has been distributed to 116,899 families. The reasons for Chavez' popularity become obvious. No previous regime had even noticed the plight of the poor." <p> <a href="http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article6764.htm">Read More</a> </p> <p>---<br>If you don't like these ideas, I've got others. --Marshall McLuhan

  7. Wed Aug 18, 2004 3:55 am
    If Rex had a six-hour show each week, I'd listen....to a lot more CDs. :-)

  8. Wed Aug 18, 2004 4:03 am
    I think that's what scares Bush and Cheney the most about Chavez...what he's doing is working. I think hope this spreads through Latin America and into Africa too, not just against the US, but against all of the countries who use their wealth and influence to the detriment of others.

    Maybe we'll get really lucky and it will even spread to Canada...

  9. Thu Aug 19, 2004 2:31 am
    When the underprivileged and the have-nots start demanding justice and equality for themselves and others, that's a scary situation for the filthy rich who think they run the show exclusively.

  10. Thu Aug 19, 2004 12:26 pm
    I can't believe the stupidity of some who would want to
    compare Canada with Venezuela and our need to have
    leadership such as Chavez.

    If our belly is full, it is greatly because our capitalistic
    societies have been robbing and pillaging poorer
    countries and their natural and human resources for so
    long.

    In our rich western world, I do wonder how many of us
    would react positively if a leader came out on our
    political scene saying we must now redistribute 'our
    wealth' with the poor of this world.

  11. Thu Aug 19, 2004 4:04 pm
    Canada is so rich in resources, that if we ran our own show, we could do just that! We would be in a much better position to help other countries! We could be self-sufficient and more! In fact, it has to be done, or else, there will never be peace!

    ---
    Dave Ruston

  12. by N Say
    Thu Aug 19, 2004 5:28 pm
    That's exactly why the US has never allowed democracies in Central America & the Carribean. That's one reason why the US government can't stand Cuba also, because Castro has set a good example for other Central/South-American countries.

    ---
    "George Bush has declared the war on terrorism to be the cause of his generation. The cause of Canadian sovereignty will be ours." - John Godfrey, MP for Don Va

  13. by avatar Milton
    Sun Aug 22, 2004 7:16 pm
    If you are selling your resources to the rest of the world then that is a form of sharing, so don't babble on about having to share with the rest of the world as though it was not already a fait accompli, anonymouse.



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