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Venezuela forum debates prospects for revolutionary change in U.S.
The Militant ^ | December 3, 2007 | OLYMPIA NEWTON

Posted on 11/26/2007 7:45:45 AM PST by Nickname

CARACAS, Venezuela—A five-day rolling panel discussion on “United States: A possible revolution” was the central event at the third Venezuela International Book Fair, which took place here November 9-18.

The 22 panelists, four or five of whom spoke each day, included political activists and writers from the United States expressing diverse political views, as well as a number of U.S. citizens living in Venezuela. Hundreds of Venezuelans and others took part in one or more sessions, with dozens raising questions and making comments from the floor. The forum was covered by Venezuelan television, radio, and newspapers. The issues debated on the character of the working class and prospects for revolution in the United States sparked a political discussion that permeated the book fair. An article on the fair itself will appear in next week’s Militant.

The forum kicked off November 10 with presentations by Mary-Alice Waters, a member of the Socialist Workers Party National Committee and president of Pathfinder Press; Eva Golinger, a Venezuelan-American lawyer and author of The Chávez Code; Chris Carlson, a contributor to the venezuelanalysis.com website; and Tufara Waller, cultural program coordinator of the Highlander Center in Tennessee. The issues joined at that first session remained at the center of the debate the following four days. (See “Venezuela book fair theme: ‘U.S., a possible revolution’” in last week’s Militant.)

In addition to the forum panelists mentioned below, others included Bernardo álvarez, Venezuela’s ambassador to the United States; former University of Colorado professor Ward Churchill; August Nimtz, a University of Minnesota political science professor; William Blum, an author who has written a number of books opposing U.S. foreign policy; ex-Maryknoll priest Charles Hardy; and Dada Maheshvarananda, yoga instructor and founder of the Prout Institute.

Debate over immigrant workers The political perspectives most sharply debated over the five days were, first, the impact and importance of millions of Latin American immigrant workers in the United States, and, second, the history of revolutionary struggles of working people in the United States and the lessons of those struggles for revolutionary prospects. In a striking way, the discussion registered that those living and engaged in the class struggle in the United States generally expressed greater confidence in the revolutionary capacities of working people there than did those—both U.S. citizens and many Latin American participants—living outside the United States.

Several panelists are active in work to expand rights for immigrants in the United States. These included Diógenes Abreu, a Dominican-born community organizer who currently lives in New York; Luis Rodríguez, a Chicano activist in California’s San Fernando Valley; and Gustavo Torres, an organizer for the immigrant rights group Casa de Maryland. Several of them gave a vivid and accurate picture of conditions of life for immigrant workers in the United States and the growing resistance and confidence manifested in strikes and ongoing street mobilizations against raids and deportations.

Both Torres and Antonio González, president of the Southwest Voter Education and Registration Project, said the road to “empowerment” is organizing Latinos to vote. “What does a revolutionary do in the U.S. today?” asked González. “Take power wherever you can” by electing Latinos to city, state, and federal offices. His PowerPoint presentation highlighted the growing number of Latino voters.

During the discussion periods day after day, a number of participants from Venezuela and elsewhere in Latin America took exception to the evidence that immigrant workers resisting the superexploitation they face in the United States are an important force in the working-class vanguard that is emerging there. In various ways, several said that Latin Americans living and working in the United States are simply there to get “a piece of the pie.”

“They are only there to get passports,” said one participant. “Once they get them they’ll stop marching.” Many characterized immigrant workers as sellouts who have bought into the “American dream” at the expense of fighting for political, economic, and social change in Latin America.

In the discussion, Carlos Samaniego, a packinghouse worker from Minnesota, countered this view. He described the vanguard role that immigrant workers are playing in struggles in the United States—from coal mines in the West to union struggles in Midwest slaughterhouses.

America’s revolutionary heritage The other hotly debated question was the revolutionary history of toilers in the United States and, by extension, prospects for a Third American Revolution, a socialist revolution.

“America was created by revolution,” said panelist Lee Sustar, labor editor of the Socialist Worker newspaper, which reflects the views of the International Socialist Organization. Speaking at the November 13 session, he referred to the U.S. Civil War as “the completion of the bourgeois democratic revolution” that had won independence for the 13 British colonies some 80 years earlier.

“There has never been a revolution in the United States, and anyone who thinks there has been is ignorant of their own history,” responded panelist Richard Gott, a British author and journalist. Gott said the American Revolution, which defeated British colonial rule, could not be considered a revolution. Rather, it was a war to take land from Native American tribes, whose territory, he said, was being protected by the British royal army.

“No, a revolution is not possible in the United States,” said Gott. “It is conservative and reactionary. The only hope is Latin America.”

“I want to express my total agreement,” interjected Haiman El Troudi, the moderator of the panel that day. “There never has been a revolution in the United States and never will be!” El Troudi has held several offices in the Chávez government and written books including Being Capitalist is Bad Business and History of the Bolivarian Revolution.

“It is impossible for a revolution to begin in the United States,” said a Venezuelan participant from the floor. He pointed to what he considered U.S. workers’ complicity with Washington’s wars against Iraq and Afghanistan as proof that working people there are desensitized to injustice.

But in remarks during the November 11 panel, ex-Marine and founder of Iraq Veterans Against the War Jimmy Massey described his evolution from a prowar patriot to a staunch opponent of the war in Iraq. He walked through day-to-day experiences in Iraq that led him to oppose U.S. policies in the Middle East and to organize fellow soldiers to do the same.

Another idea frequently expressed by speakers from the floor and by a few panelists was that “change has to come from the South,” referring to Latin America. Many said the only hope was to wait until enough countries in Latin America close their doors to imperialist penetration so as to cause a collapse in the U.S. economy. The fact that nowhere in Latin America but Cuba have working people yet successfully carried through to victory the kind of revolutionary struggle necessary to end imperialist domination received scant attention.

Some participants argued that U.S. capitalism would be thrown into crisis if enough leftist governments were elected in Latin America and refused to sign bilateral “free-trade” agreements with Washington or join the U.S.-initiated Free Trade Area of the Americas. Others pointed to popular struggles in Venezuela, Ecuador, Bolivia, and Nicaragua as being the key to educating working people in the United States. Despite different arguments and emphases, the point of agreement was that no initiative could be expected from working people inside the imperialist bastion.

A contrasting point of view was presented by Héctor Pesquera, a leader of the Hostosiano Independence Movement of Puerto Rico. “The Puerto Rican struggle is connected to the North American revolution,” he said. Pesquera summarized the worsening conditions facing both working people in Puerto Rico and Puerto Ricans living in New York. Pointing to the movement that forced Washington to withdraw its naval bases from the Puerto Rican island of Vieques, Pesquera noted that this blow to the U.S. rulers had strengthened social movements in the United States.

“I’m going to take issue with what every one of you has said,” stated Amiri Baraka, a poet from Newark, New Jersey, speaking from the audience. Baraka, a panelist on the closing day of the event, has been active in Black nationalist, Maoist, and Democratic Party politics since the 1960s. Attacking Sustar for not identifying himself as a “Trotskyite,” and falsely accusing fellow panelist George Katsiaficas of introducing himself as a former member of the Black Panthers, Baraka’s intervention was the first time in four days of sharp debate that the tone of civil discourse was breached.

Final session “When I first heard the theme of this forum, I thought it was a joke,” said Steve Brouwer, an American living in Venezuela and writing a book on peasant cooperatives. Brouwer was a panelist at the final session. “But the more I thought about what is happening in the world, the more I listened to my Latino brothers here, the more I became convinced that revolutionary change in the U.S. is possible.”

Brouwer said that working-class complacency in the United States in the 1920s had given way to labor battles in the 1930s that shaped U.S. politics for 45 years. He cited a “mildly progressive” Democratic Party, influenced by these developments in the labor movement, as key to what he called a progressive course that ended with the election of Ronald Reagan in 1980.

Amiri Baraka and Amina Baraka were also panelists at the final session.

Amina Baraka, introducing herself as “a Black woman who is a communist who uses the cultural arena,” spoke about her work and read a poem.

Amiri Baraka came back to the previous day’s discussion, disagreeing with Gott and others who denied the two great revolutions in U.S. history. He also disagreed with Sustar’s characterization of the Civil War as the completion of the bourgeois democratic revolution.

“That revolution has never been completed,” Baraka said. “There is still no democracy for Blacks.” He proposed that Blacks and Latinos, including the “progressive” Black bourgeoisie, unite around a program to abolish the electoral college; establish a unicameral parliamentary system; ban “private money” from election campaigns; make voting compulsory; and restore voting rights to felons. Such constitutional reforms, he said, would shift power towards “people’s democracy” in the United States. Revolutionary goals could then be put on the agenda.

What has derailed all previous revolutionary struggles in the United States, Baraka argued, is “white privilege.” He citied the defeat of Radical Reconstruction following the Civil War, the failure of the 1930s labor upsurge to go further, and the decline of the mass movement that brought down Jim Crow segregation as three examples. Moreover, “white privilege” and the failure of the “white left” to fight it remain the primary obstacle to struggles today.

Baraka also renewed his attack on Katsiaficas, who had spoken about Asian student struggles on the panel the previous day. Baraka accused him of being an agent trying to stir up support in Venezuela for student marches against the government of Hugo Chávez.

Baraka concluded by reading his poem, “Somebody Blew Up America,” a Spanish translation of which was distributed to participants. Written after September 11, 2001, the poem presents a long list of historical atrocities, interlacing anti-imperialist and anticapitalist rhetoric with conspiracy theories of history and anti-Semitism. “Who decide Jesus get crucified,” the poem asks. “Who knew the World Trade Center was gonna get bombed / Who told 4000 Israeli workers at the Twin Tower / To stay home that day / Why did Sharon stay away?”

During the opening day of the panel, a participant from Panama had said during the discussion that Jews are the main problem facing working people in the world today because “they have all the money” and control everything. Norton Sandler, a member of the Socialist Workers Party in the United States, spoke from the floor the next day and pointed to the danger of scapegoating and Jew-hatred for the working-class movement.

After Baraka’s remarks the final day, Mary-Alice Waters took the floor to thank the organizers of the book fair “for bringing together diverse forces for such a broad variety of views for the discussion that took place here.” She stressed the importance of civil debate, noting that “the poison of agent- and race-baiting should be rejected by all.”

Some prominent speakers invited to take part in the central forum were unable to make it during that event, but joined the discussion in the following days.

A November 17 program on “Liberation, Imagination, Black Panthers” featuring Kathleen Cleaver, former national spokesperson for the Black Panther Party, was one of the larger events of the fair outside the central forum. A video interview with Noam Chomsky, the well-known author, anarchist, and a linguistics professor, was played after the conclusion of the forum, and a booklet containing a translation of his comments was distributed for free.

Ramón Medero, president of Venezuela’s National Book Center, the sponsor of the fair, expressed his appreciation to all the panelists whose efforts had contributed to the success of the event, and satisfaction that the fair served to open a much-needed political discussion.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; US: Maryland; US: Virginia
KEYWORDS: aliens; amiribaraka; blackpanthers; immigrantlist; venezuela; wardchurchill
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I came across this while reading Black Velvet Bruce Li

A couple of the names of people attending this "event" jump out at me, like Ward Churchill and Gustavo Torres. I'm sure other names will mean more to others here on FR.

Gustavo Torres of CASA de Maryland was one of the people instrumental in trying to establish the notorious day labor center in Herndon, VA and apparently sees illegal aliens as a method to his madness of the workers' paradise.

Anyway, I hesitate to post this because it's so freakish to me but I do think it's good to know what these "revolutionaries" are up to and who they are.

1 posted on 11/26/2007 7:45:47 AM PST by Nickname
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To: Nickname
A Communist lovefest for fellow Communists. Viva La Revolucion! The more things change in Latin America, the more they stay the same there.

"Show me just what Mohammed brought that was new, and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached." - Manuel II Palelologus

2 posted on 11/26/2007 7:48:13 AM PST by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives In My Heart Forever)
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To: Nickname
Un-freaking-believable.
3 posted on 11/26/2007 7:50:28 AM PST by DigitalVideoDude (It's amazing what you can accomplish when you don't care who gets the credit. -Ronald Reagan)
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To: Nickname

The more we tie these names to efforts like this, the better.

It seems that citizens can just about do anything they like as long as it has a leftist vent to it. If a right wing group went to another nation to help devise ways to overthrow the government, I don’t think it would take too long for the feds to swoop in and do their magic.

Why do guys like Ward Churchill get away with this?


4 posted on 11/26/2007 7:52:24 AM PST by DoughtyOne (California, where the death penalty is reserved for wholesome values. SB 777)
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To: Nickname
The 22 panelists, four or five of whom spoke each day, included political activists and writers from the United States expressing diverse political views...

Of course... the left is "diverse" if it ranges from "hard-core" to "ultra".

5 posted on 11/26/2007 7:53:13 AM PST by Philistone (If someone tells you it's for the children, he believes that YOU are a child.)
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To: Nickname

I never understood the attitude of these leftist revolutionaries?

“There’s no way we’re going to take this great, free nation and longer! No longer will we be able to work hard and earn a good living! No more will Christians be tolerated! No more will we put up with being able to provide for ourselves and not have to suppport deadbeats! Revolt! Revolt!”

IOW...WHAT are they revolting?


6 posted on 11/26/2007 7:54:49 AM PST by RockinRight (Just because you're pro-life and talk about God a lot doesn't mean you're a conservative.)
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To: Nickname

WHAT A BUNCH OF HORSE HOCKEY!!!!!!!!!!

Communists rear their ugly heads.... again.


7 posted on 11/26/2007 7:55:39 AM PST by poobear (Pure democracy is two wolves and a lamb voting on what's for dinner. God save the Republic!)
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To: Nickname

snif:( Makes me nostalgic and homesick for all those years I spent living in Cambrdge MA.


8 posted on 11/26/2007 7:58:44 AM PST by posterchild ("Congress does two things very well: one is nothing and two is overreact." - Rep. Tom Price, R-Ga)
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To: Nickname

Too funny! A collection of fruits and nuts that Lenin and Stalin would be proud of!


9 posted on 11/26/2007 8:00:45 AM PST by VeniVidiVici (No buy China!!)
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To: Nickname

The Mouth that Roared.

Are these people TRYING to pick a fight with the US?

History shows, that countries that have gone to war with the US, and lost, have almost always gone on to be far more free and prosperous than they ever were before the conflict.

Conversely, nations that go to war with the US, and succeed in expelling the American forces, almost always fall into an economic slump so severe, they are starving and their nation is thoroughly demoralized, to the point their social structure collapses completely, even in the midst of potential wealth. North Korea is a prime example of “winning” against the US. For that matter, Cuba ranks right up there among countries of “failed” status. And Viet Nam is not far behind.


10 posted on 11/26/2007 8:02:34 AM PST by alloysteel (Ignorance is no handicap for some people in a debate. They just get more shrill.)
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To: Nickname

All “The Usual Suspects”.


11 posted on 11/26/2007 8:12:28 AM PST by AU72
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To: alloysteel

Excellent perspective - I had not considered that before. One more reason why FR is superb!


12 posted on 11/26/2007 8:13:53 AM PST by jimmyray
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To: AU72
Did Ward Churchill claim he was a Venezuelan this time ?
13 posted on 11/26/2007 8:15:40 AM PST by Eric in the Ozarks (Go Hawks !)
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To: Nickname

“The People, united, can never be defeated!”

Tell it to the Cambodians and the Norks.

Tell it to the gentle folks of Jonestown.

The Revolution, as they call it, is simply the chief sacrificial rite of the contemporary religion of the State.

The Vanguard, as they see themselves, are simply the judas goats of the human abbatoir that is socialism.


14 posted on 11/26/2007 8:16:11 AM PST by headsonpikes (Genocide is the highest sacrament of socialism.)
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To: Nickname

The Militant, according to its front page, is “A Socialist newsweekly published in the interests of working people.” Curiously, it does not list a publisher, which might give some indication of who pays for the creation of this rag.


15 posted on 11/26/2007 8:19:04 AM PST by 3AngelaD (They screwed up their own countries so bad they had to leave, and now they're here screwing up ours)
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To: Nickname
Just from looking at the guest list of speakers would lead one to believe that being stranded on Fantasy Island with these freaks would lead to instant murder for survival.

I am surprised that Hillary Clinton, Nancy Pelosie, Hairy Reid, John Murtha and others wasn’t on the list.

16 posted on 11/26/2007 8:21:10 AM PST by OKIEDOC (Kalifornia, a red state wannabe. I don't take Ex Lax I just read the New York Times.)
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To: Nickname

And here is a link to a picture of the, ahem, attractive writer of this BS. http://www.dcwatch.com/archives/election98/socialist-6.htm


17 posted on 11/26/2007 8:21:40 AM PST by 3AngelaD (They screwed up their own countries so bad they had to leave, and now they're here screwing up ours)
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To: Nickname
>>Amina Baraka, introducing herself as “a Black woman who is a communist who uses the cultural arena,” spoke about her work and read a poem.<<

All I need to know...

18 posted on 11/26/2007 8:34:16 AM PST by ishabibble (ALL-AMERICAN INFIDEL)
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To: Nickname

You know, America truly is the adult in a world of children.


19 posted on 11/26/2007 8:39:30 AM PST by steel_resolve (If you can't stand behind our troops, then please stand in front...)
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To: Nickname

Where’s a JDAM when you really need one?


20 posted on 11/26/2007 8:39:32 AM PST by dfwgator
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