tv [untitled] March 8, 2013 11:30am-12:00pm EST
11:30 am
crossed out the child as a legacy i'm joined by george took a real omar in philadelphia he's an assistant professor of political science at drexel university and author of the upcoming book we created jobs in london we have boyd he is a venezuelan blogger and civil and political rights activist and in washington we cross to alex maine he is an international policy analyst at the center for economic and policy research right gentlemen cross-talk rules and effect i mean you can jump in anytime you want and i very much encourage it george what is job as his legacy. well i think frankly chavez is legacy is twofold domestically speaking the first is the vast improvement in the social welfare of everyday venezuelans the massive decline in poverty the near eradication of extreme poverty and the provision of free health care free education to the poorest of venezuelans for the first time on the political side which i actually think is more important the legacy is one of increased popular participation in direct and participatory democracy in the every day runnings of the state in this
11:31 am
was something that is far from complete in venezuela and it remains the task of the forthcoming government but it's really this element of the chavez legacy which is which has allowed venezuelans to participate in engage in political life in that country that is really going to live with them self in london you want to jump in that's the point of the program go ahead yeah yeah i would i would i would love to i think george has made it quite interesting remark when he says that charges for the first time provided health and education for the poor people when in fact our constitution mandates the provision of health and education for everybody since at least eighteen seventy one so perhaps george would like to explain to our view is why does he say the child is for the first time provided such services to the poor . ok george go ahead. well you know perfectly well i believe. that i know that tradition is one thing and the actual concrete provision yes of
11:32 am
course i do in the concrete provision of things in reality is very different from what's written in the constitution and so you know perfectly well that sixty percent of venezuelans were in poverty up to very extraordinarily extreme poverty even in the one nine hundred seventy one nine hundred eighty s. that new liberal reform was a devastating devastating impact on the health and education of the poorest venezuelans and so it's slightly ridiculous to say that there was free healthcare and universal access to health care in seventy one there's always been there's always been free on health care and education in venezuela is not a right to be childless ok i want to jump in ok we have to hear from him go ahead alex. yeah i mean i can just complement what georgia said which is absolutely you have constitutional provisions which are one thing and then you have the reality which is another and the reality is that when chavez came into power you had a great number of poor people millions of poor people in the country who were essentially disenfranchised second rate citizens really so not only were they not
11:33 am
receiving health care or access to higher education but also many of them didn't vote they didn't participate in the political system they weren't truly licensing the. gentlemen we sure there are now and i think you're there i don't think i don't i don't think yeah i don't think that's born in the facts actually chavez did do a great deal for the poor but to state that for the first time he allowed the poor to address cvs health and education is totally inaccurate and that's the point that i'm trying to make he did carry out a great deal of poverty alleviation measures with barrier enter he did spread a hell of a lot of money because of the fact of the great is income that the country received since he got to power in one thousand nine hundred nine but to actually state that
11:34 am
because of him the poor for the first time in our history have access to education or health what accounts for the you know what what accounts for then george i mean other than chavez. well i mean the point is not that it's only each of us that has done this and actually i would i would want to i would hope to drive that point home it's not that chavez is sort of the savior of the venezuelan people no the venezuelan people have saved themselves for decades they've been organizing and beginning with the guerrilla struggle and generating a whole series of social movement in the one nine hundred seventy s. and eighty's it was actually these movements that then drove chavez the power to this is really not about chavez himself coming into power and you know and saving the people because this constitution the one thousand nine hundred nine constitution was not was not written by chavez himself was not the sole creation of a child as well it was going to be sent to a body monitor of one hundred or two in mangalore of one hundred twenty nine of their representatives in the constituent. yet constituent assembly would
11:35 am
representatives of challenge or aligned with child this so it was largely basically written they were interested by the c. portis. after they were elected by the people they were not in popular election by the people alex jump in yes no well well absolutely that's right i mean whether they were aligned with chavez or not i don't think is the point these were democratic elections that elected all of the assembly members the constituent assembly. you know and they had a mandate of the people they reported back to the people and there was a period of consultation of all sorts of sectors of society when that constitution was being drafted i think something quite unprecedented in the region probably in the world in terms of drafting constitutions and that constitution was submitted to a popular referendum something that's also very rare in the history of the world. constitutional history and so i think you know often you read in the media that you know costs chad has created this constitution that he forced this constitution on
11:36 am
the venezuelan people and nothing could be further further from the truth. i was like it was a democrat and i think it worked well well. there's there's there's a few there's a few issues here no one can deny the charge is one democratic elections in one thousand nine hundred eight on the back of huge discontent in our country about the duopoly of the more kartika compay for the previous forty years who had basically squandered a hell of a lot of money but then chalice came on one thousand nine hundred ninety eight with the process with the promise of reforming re founding the state that was not. established in any of our legislation in any of our constitutional precepts so he said basically or he or he came to with the promise that in order for him to carry out the changes that he needed he had to change the constitution which effectively
11:37 am
ended up with a national constituent assembly and a further referendum that alex was referring to so that first election of his in one thousand nine hundred ninety eight was indeed democratic and it was indeed approved by the people on the back of the huge support that he'd had that he had at one time but the changes that came afterwards are far from democratic in my opinion george does it really work ok alex goen what i mean one thing is that you disagree we're going to go head out. well i mean i don't really know what alec is talking about in terms of the decline of democracy following those elections in the one nine hundred ninety eight and then the following elections in which the constitution was approved. in one thousand nine hundred nine when you've had all the other fourteen elections that have been judged free and fair internationally transparent the last of course was that's no
11:38 am
answer in november and i started a little known central regional elections ok please explain his nonsense they have been they have been judged free and fair by whom by jimmy carter by chavis is friends by the current law last time that does not matter machines but under us the laws and that of this modern national observance were independently audited when was the last time that our nationality have you ever seen was it hard as i don't know if you have you ever seen the carter center's professionalism in terms of. neutrality yes so i have i have someone i have seen tested i have as you have to go over sections of the series that are sen as a matter of fact i remember very clearly perhaps i see them again as well as often to the referendum in two thousand and four when jimmy carter was sitting next to secretary-general of the oil and said sort of varia assuring all of us in venezuela that they had witnessed the count in the top of lies nation room of the sea any
11:39 am
when as a matter of fact no one was allowed into the totalization room of the sienese so jimmy carter was always a little lying that day and he subsequent reports were obviously useless and so that i see in the organization of american the same thing that is in the minds of the time we got to say what i provided what they were all lying all the international none of the regular middle men you're talking i don't reject your issues in venice you're going to go ahead george go ahead. well just going to say we're what we're witnessing here is a profoundly conspiratorial fringe of the venezuelan right when that does not even actually pertain to much oh yeah business with an opposition officially the venezuelan but the other hand we have two thousand and. ten has it wasn't the national going to let a member of the academics chavis in america is that what you're trying to say george that my view is not valid because i think that you're irish but we have good security theories i'm saying your view is not valid because i wanted for you with
11:40 am
your view are not valid because it's ridiculous and i'm one with gore of course you will agree alex of course you will agree you are a fool not just of the venezuelan government of course you will agree. so will george well then but not only would i or do you really but your use of the real with venezuelan opposition also agrees they've been participating in the last few elections encouraging everyone to participate and discounting claims of fraud that's come from the caprio campaign itself to explain that. ok i don't have to explain this if it really really is you can definitely contents a computer to sion on like you alex i am completely independent so i don't have to talk anyone's line i am of in a swell and blogger and i am independent and i don't derive my salary either from the venezuelan government as you once did or from c.b.r. which is closely aligned with the venezuelan government so i am the master of my opinions and i don't have to toe the line of america previous whatever he said with
11:41 am
regard to fraud being there in venezuela or not i don't i don't have to agree with actually i disagree. but it's wrong to hear a lot about how to go to a break in after that short break we'll continue our discussion a good chance to take the. least. because powell was the envy of emperor as he had good reason to trust no one. his body was found on the floor of his huge empty house. but did he die of
11:42 am
natural causes. the mystery of stalin's death on a hot seat. victims multiply here each day. it's very profitable to invest in colombia with that every profit out of it is a very high return on investment. good knowing that he has said that i've been working in this area for thirty years and i've always had to play the armed groups in a meeting that is not a managers who change their name and strategy but just tell the same murderous. high ranking suspects give no comment pretty upset about that mr president is soon . to president clinton. both the media. i won't give an interview i'm sorry but no. investigation
11:43 am
is a dead. end he says sick and stop your bullshit and keep quiet or else you'll suffer the consequences. even if they're your bodyguards to watch themselves because the same goes for them. blood rivers from gold sink i've never heard of such a case as ours where so much money and gold has spoken for so many years. for all the gold in colombia on our t.v. .
11:44 am
welcome back to cross talk we're all things are considered i'm peter lavelle to remind you we're discussing the legacy of chop. insurance why did the united states so demonize chavez i mean we'll explain it he was a funny guy it was a lot of antics there but he didn't threaten the united states that's actually an interesting phenomenon both domestically within venezuela and also internationally namely the fact that before chavez had actually even done anything to powerfully antagonize the venezuelan elites before he had taken away the economic power for example there was a fierce counter revolution without a revolution as it's been called in this happened as well internationally namely the fact that chavez had not cut off oil to the united states he had not threatened
11:45 am
u.s. interests in a particularly sharp way actually we can mark the deterioration of relations which of this especially from september eleventh and the beginning of the afghan war afterwards charges was critical of the initial u.s. intervention and innocent innocent children who were being killed and it was really from that moment on that you saw an increasing aggression from the united states towards chavez culminating of course with his overthrow with the cooperation of the united states unable to thousand to i once when you come out on this because again he didn't threaten the united states is not a fact united states imports a lot of oil. no that's right well he didn't directly threaten the united states but i think he was seen as very threatening to the agenda of the united states in latin america and george was pointing out earlier new liberalism had spread throughout the region in the liberalism being of course through adduction of the state to its most minimum and you know privatization of all sorts of social
11:46 am
services. the lowering of trade tariffs so on and so forth just to profit really international corporations international financial entities and so on this had a devastating effect on latin america the rate of poverty went up the rate of inequality when up throughout the region particularly in venezuela and then as well there was a big anti in the a liberal. protest really that resulted in the end in a massacre of thousands of people perpetrated by the venezuelan government so a resistance was beginning to emerge but it was really just in the streets and chavez when he came into power he gave voice to this resistance and he actively actually fought the neo liberal agenda he started to roll back these reforms and to bring the state back into the picture in terms of bringing basic social services
11:47 am
health care and education and so on to the people and so this was an example of course that the u.s. was very much opposed to they didn't want to see it spread so they were very intent in getting rid of this government they supported a coup in april of two thousand and two against chavez and. fortunately that coup unraveled quickly there were divisions within the military and also many of the venezuelan people came into the street and called for chavis returned he came back within forty eight hours and then following that. other left leaning governments governments you know very much against the neo liberal agenda also emerged throughout latin america and today the map of latin america is very different politically it's a very different place georgy think that's because of chavez in many ways.
11:48 am
i mean it's it's undeniable that chavez has played a powerful role in this but in reality electoral first of his morning expression of these revolutionary movements and sort of a point of coalescence and condensation of these popular demands because the reality is as i said they preceded this and one of the primary aspects of this was as alex has mentioned opposition to new liberalism but even before that in venezuela there was a struggle over what democracy meant since one hundred fifty eight the you know venezuela was under what had been understood as a very exceptional and stable form of democracy and yet what this was was a very buffered form of representative democracy in which the people really had very little say it was a two party system that institutionalized all popular dissent and so what you had was a gradual increase of of dissent and the inability to express that within a political system so one of the fundamental aspects of what exploded in the late one nine hundred eighty s. and early one nine hundred ninety s. and what led to charges coming to power was the demand for a different kind of democracy and i think this is where you get into some of the
11:49 am
you know some of the difficulties that our previous guest had been discussing with the new constitution because what you have is really a contradiction in a conflict between two forms of democracy and occasionally you takes it takes some kind of bully pulpit in the figure of chavez to break down the barriers of an old existing form and to allow the new sort of more participatory form to break through and that's that's really what has led to this sort of almost paradoxical relationship between shove as in the social movements in which he seems like an authoritarian to many outside of venezuela and yet what he's doing is to it in facilitate for the most part profoundly democratic developments within the country alex do you think the revolution will continue with this passage if solid enough foundation so. undeniably there's a very solid foundation now it's sort of been for the next the next guy's going to get a massive i want washington the next guy i'll get the wrath of washington as well.
11:50 am
well most likely but you know washington does have to come to terms with the new reality in latin america it's no longer the reality of the late ninety's when you know going as well it was an outlier it's now a region that's changed completely i mean south america most of the governments there were very close to the venezuelan government even the right wing governments were it's very interesting to see the sort of mage is the eulogies of chavis is legacy that are coming from all over the place in latin america i mean today of course there was a beautiful op ed in the new york times written by the silver the former president of brazil but you also have eulogies that are coming from the right wing governments of chile and the columbia they recognize this is legacy not only at home in venezuela but in terms of transforming the region in terms of being
11:51 am
a leader who has fought effectively for regional integration and and so now it's a much more independent place than it was some ten years ago georgy think the u.s. will try to turn back the clock i mean chavez may has made an impact. certainly it would be very difficult for them to turn back the clock but at the same time the u.s. government has not done much to change relationships with venezuela you know you could have said in two thousand and eight when obama into power that you could have expected some kind of improvement in relations and certainly that didn't happen because the continuing orientation especially with someone like hillary clinton as secretary of state the orientation was toward getting rid of chavez as quickly as possible in any strategy really was was open and the reality was only that the strategy had failed in the past and so the strategy now under obama has been to fund actually with increasingly large amounts of money the venezuelan opposition to fund them openly and to hope that they would defeat chavez in an election which they still could not manage to do despite the money flowing in from washington and
11:52 am
so no i'm sure that that's the obama administration's continuing orientation is that now with child is gone we can we can deal with this question electorally but until as well is that until the u.s. government recognizes the ability of the venice where the people to govern themselves and to decide on their own leaders to develop their own form of democracy into practice it and to not you know to not impose a specific form of democracy and certainly not to impose economic you know economic demands on venice with and that are unjust until that happens is really no way for these relations to improve you know alex in the world love chavez ok is it because he stood up to the united states. yeah and i'm glad you mentioned that because yes the world loves chavez but you get the impression in the us and certainly looking at the us media. venezuela that he was a very isolated crazy ranting sort of befooled like figure and and of
11:53 am
course he's been reduced to this caricature in the media here but i think throughout the world the messages got through he defied the u.s. very openly he defied them their foreign policy he after nine eleven said you cannot fight terrorism with terrorism when afghanistan was bombed that i was a very courageous and extremely isolated thing but he's created a political space for people to. you know fearlessly contest us the u.s. had germany throughout the world and you know u.s. foreign policy goals in particular u.s. intervention and the fact that he's stood up a bit of a david to a goliath here and survives whether all this time despite so many temps from the u.s. to destabilize that government it's really quite heroic well georgian alex you
11:54 am
have a very diverse opinions from the mainstream and what is the mainstream telling americans about chavez and his passage a good thing george. i mean that the response in the mainstream media i admit to possibly being naive and maybe expecting something a little more balanced than what was received but the response from the mainstream media has been astounding it has been revolt thing in many ways it ranges from outright celebrations of death not only from the media but also from from members of congress in the united states to do the sort of liberal line which is essentially chavez was crazy and here's you know here's here's some here some crying venezuelans in we're going to interpret this as something that we want to you know as we want to see it for example i thought that rory carroll who wrote some astoundingly ridiculous things in the guardian was tweeting today about how
11:55 am
about how venezuelans at the procession today in caracas were professing professing a faith in religious resurrection when there were things others lives forever one of them got the benefit of the things that the struggle to continue will go on without him and that they are all shabbas but it's this is this is the sort of willful misinterpretation that is prevalent in the mainstream media these days alex is it was it was just as a revolutionary last thirty seconds. oh undeniably yes in the tradition of the great revolutionaries of latin america simone will leave our marty the che guevara he's going to be greatly missed but is example really stronger than ever i think he really lives in the arts of many latin americans that seek much more profound change throughout the region thank you very much elam of run out of time many thanks to my guests today in philadelphia london and in washington and thanks to our viewers for watching us
11:56 am
11:57 am
another well behind that which is how to influence these situations steer clear of provocations don't answer any question. came into the office and found the man is kind you around the office and lots of strange faces around him want to turn once. what's happening will somebody please tell me what's going on and they said oh we've come to occupy your building. possibly they want to do a confrontation possibly they want to me to ring up the police have the police come in through the man that. didn't seem to me a good idea to learn the european way with brussels business an art in the crossing it's one person one fault but in brussels baseness it's one euro one fault.
11:58 am
11:59 am
to something a little extreme cold just a chilling threat to life or imminent death it's a cooling if you look you can see that the water in the outbreaks in my body feels really warm now and this is good for you. they plunge into icy water to make themselves stronger you can't get used to the cold if you can tolerate it and you can struggle with. people. pictures of frost's. life up to chavez the body of venezuela's longtime leader is said to be.
28 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on