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Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace

Latin America's Shock Resistance

By Naomi Klein, The Nation. Posted November 14, 2007.


Recent events in Latin America show how societies can recover from extreme capitalism and become less vulnerable to externally provoked political shocks.
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In less than two years, the lease on the largest and most important US military base in Latin America will run out. The base is in Manta, Ecuador, and Rafael Correa, the country's leftist president, has pronounced that he will renew the lease "on one condition: that they let us put a base in Miami--an Ecuadorean base. If there is no problem having foreign soldiers on a country's soil, surely they'll let us have an Ecuadorean base in the United States."

Since an Ecuadorean military outpost in South Beach is a long shot, it is very likely that the Manta base, which serves as a staging area for the "war on drugs," will soon shut down. Correa's defiant stand is not, as some have claimed, about anti-Americanism. Rather, it is part of a broad range of measures being taken by Latin American governments to make the continent less vulnerable to externally provoked crises and shocks.

This is a crucial development because for the past thirty-five years in Latin America, such shocks from outside have served to create the political conditions required to justify the imposition of "shock therapy"--the constellation of corporate-friendly "emergency" economic measures like large-scale privatizations and deep cuts to social spending that debilitate the state in the name of free markets. In one of his most influential essays, the late economist Milton Friedman articulated contemporary capitalism's core tactical nostrum, what I call the shock doctrine. He observed that "only a crisis--actual or perceived--produces real change. When that crisis occurs, the actions that are taken depend on the ideas that are lying around."

Latin America has always been the prime laboratory for this doctrine. Friedman first learned how to exploit a large-scale crisis in the mid-1970s, when he advised Chilean dictator Gen. Augusto Pinochet. Not only were Chileans in a state of shock following Pinochet's violent overthrow of Socialist President Salvador Allende; the country was also reeling from severe hyperinflation. Friedman advised Pinochet to impose a rapid-fire transformation of the economy--tax cuts, free trade, privatized services, cuts to social spending and deregulation. It was the most extreme capitalist makeover ever attempted, and it became known as a Chicago School revolution, since so many of Pinochet's top aides and ministers had studied under Friedman at the University of Chicago. A similar process was under way in Uruguay and Brazil, also with the help of University of Chicago graduates and professors, and a few years later, in Argentina. These economic shock therapy programs were facilitated by far less metaphorical shocks--performed in the region's many torture cells, often by US-trained soldiers and police, and directed against those activists who were deemed most likely to stand in the way of the economic revolution.

In the 1980s and '90s, as dictatorships gave way to fragile democracies, Latin America did not escape the shock doctrine. Instead, new shocks prepared the ground for another round of shock therapy--the "debt shock" of the early '80s, followed by a wave of hyperinflation as well as sudden drops in the prices of commodities on which economies depended.

In Latin America today, however, new crises are being repelled and old shocks are wearing off--a combination of trends that is making the continent not only more resilient in the face of change but also a model for a future far more resistant to the shock doctrine.

When Milton Friedman died last year, the global quest for unfettered capitalism he helped launch in Chile three decades earlier found itself in disarray. The obituaries heaped praise on him, but many were imbued with a sense of fear that Friedman's death marked the end of an era. In Canada's National Post, Terence Corcoran, one of Friedman's most devoted disciples, wondered whether the global movement the economist had inspired could carry on. "As the last great lion of free market economics, Friedman leaves a void…. There is no one alive today of equal stature. Will the principles Friedman fought for and articulated survive over the long term without a new generation of solid, charismatic and able intellectual leadership? Hard to say."

It certainly seemed unlikely. Friedman's intellectual heirs in the United States--the think-tank neocons who used the crisis of September 11 to launch a booming economy in privatized warfare and "homeland security"--were at the lowest point in their history. The movement's political pinnacle had been the Republicans' takeover of the US Congress in 1994; just nine days before Friedman's death, they lost it again to a Democratic majority. The three key issues that contributed to the Republican defeat in the 2006 midterm elections were political corruption, the mismanagement of the Iraq War and the perception, best articulated by Jim Webb, a winning Democratic candidate for the US Senate, that the country had drifted "toward a class-based system, the likes of which we have not seen since the nineteenth century."


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See more stories tagged with: economy, latin america, shock capitalism

Naomi Klein is the author of "No Logo: Taking Aim at the Brand Bullies" and "Fences and Windows: Dispatches From the Front Lines of the Globalization Debate."


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I am trying to buy Naomi's paradigm, but something smells...
Posted by: Frankstank on Nov 14, 2007 12:49 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Maybe it is that I smell the thick, gloopy blood of university students shot by Hugo Chavez's thugs recently. Or maybe it is the stench of thousands and thousands of persecuted gay men and women in Cuba. Or maybe it is the blood of all the people killed by police in the favelos of Brazil.

If Naomi lived in these countries, she would be dead by now. I like to never advocate for something that would treat me badly. I always thought that was hypocritical. Maybe public intellectuals should apply the same to their writings. Or maybe Naomi believes she really does float on a rarified cloud above all of us and the laws of mere mortals.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» Could you Elaborate? Posted by: matti
» RE: Could you Elaborate? Posted by: Frankstank
» If true, very bad Posted by: matti
» RE: Could you Elaborate? Posted by: NotNeoCon
Some rotten eggs in the basket
Posted by: El Hombre Malo on Nov 14, 2007 2:12 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have mixed felings after reading pieces like this article. On one hand I rejoice at the regaind independence of the people of those countries, for too many decades subjects of economic policies that never pursued anything but corporate interests. The rich natural resources of the region, put to work, should make it prosperous and not scarred as it has been the norm. IMF and the World Bank were even so abject as to put Pinochet's "Chilean miracle" as an example to developing economies around the world. They fail to mention that Chile was already a developed society when Pinochet took power. Similar recipes led to the disaster of the Corralito in Argentina or the failed dolarizations of the economy in Ecuador and El Salvador (Panama's doing good so far but then Panama is an illusory state within the borders of a USA sanctioned free trade farm).

On the other hand I dont like seeing leaders like Correa, Bachelet or Lula beign put in the same basket as Chavez, Ortega (I am not so sure about Evo Morales ). While all represent the triumph of democracy in a region that needed it, and I support most of their declared political agendas, a political leader should also judged by the effect he has in his country political culture. While bachelet or Lula achieve a lot in terms of economical and social policies, they are also seeding their countries with an experience of constitutional stability and political civility. The first and more obvious consecuence is a more defined, controled role of the Military.

On the other hand Chavez (and lets try all remember he attempted to military seize power while in democracy, albeit a failed one) use of violence and statal power to supress his political enemies taint his social reforms. As much as I support many of the things he attempts in Venezuela, the whole process is tainted, because there is not a democratic atmosphere that would extend those social changes beyond the reach of Chavez coercitive power. No matter what flag or ideals he wraps himself in; strongmen politics have the tendency to wither after the strongman isnt around or becomes "less strong". There is also a hint of racial profiling in the constitutional changes he made that I dislike.

And Ortega... did the author realizes she is praising a man who backed a law outlawing abortion even if the life of the mother is in danger? He had credit as a guerrilla leader and because he transfered power to a democratic sistem, but lately he has turned his back on progressive catholicism and got closert o reactionary vatican hierarchy.

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» RE: Some rotten eggs in the basket Posted by: El Hombre Malo
» Sounds dangerous Posted by: matti
» RE: Sounds dangerous Posted by: El Hombre Malo
» Then this is Very Bad. Posted by: matti
» My views are the same..... Posted by: mjabele
A Third Way
Posted by: Urstrly on Nov 14, 2007 4:07 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Isn't it hypocritical to talk about authoritarian governments in Latin America when we in the US are ceding our civil rights bit by bit to a government that eavesdrops indiscriminately on its citizens, tortures its perceived enemies and has a secret energy policy approved by its own Supreme Court?

If I were a citizen in Latin America, or for that matter Thailand or Russia, and had my life savings rubbed out by some whimsy of the free market, I'm sure I'd be open to alternatives to no-holds-barred globalization. I think Klein's right to see hope in the determination of people to reclaim land and infrastructure which the multinationals abandon and run them for themselves.

In Shock Doctrine, Klein points out that the favored way in Latin America has always been democracy combined with a mixed economy of private and public ownership. But when people can't afford to eat or heat their homes, we shouldn't be so clueless as to why authoritarians get the upper hand.

Vast inequalities of wealth and opportunity have been the lot of Latin America for many generations, and, sadly, it's the one commonality we seem eager to foster in the USA.

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» RE: A Third Way Posted by: Frankstank
» RE: A Third Way Posted by: El Hombre Malo
» RE: A Third Way Posted by: El Hombre Malo
» Support (in a small way) Posted by: matti
» RE: A Third Way Posted by: Frankstank
» I'm with you. Posted by: matti
» RE: I'm with you. Posted by: Bosquésillo
For Decades The Biggest Thugs in L.A. is U.S.
Posted by: MeridaLady on Nov 14, 2007 6:45 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You all don't know the real history of Latin America atrocities committed by the U.S. & really aren't paying attention now.
Don't you know about what the U.S. did to Guatemala, El Salvador, Panama, Mexico, etc., etc..
You need to do some unbiased, non-U.S. media, homework.
You don't know that the U.S. rounded up ten of thousands of professors, doctors, & other educated people in Panama during the U.S. invasion & they were never seen again?
This was done to weaken the countries intellectual ability to independently take back democratic control their country.
You don't know anything. There is similar atrocities documented all over the entire region of Central & South America initiated or carried out by the U.S. government.
Sure keep reading & watching the U.S. public news media for your information. It has certainly helped us Americans, who are being subjected to the Bushy Gang's bag of scare tactics for their monetary gain.
Don't you see any parallels here?

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» RE: Links about Bush SR. & Panama Posted by: MeridaLady
Paraguay
Posted by: profmarcus on Nov 14, 2007 9:03 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
ms. klein, you need to check out the establishment of u.s. troops in paraguay and the paraguayan government's authorization last year, given to donald rumsfeld, for the 18-month tours of u.s. troops and the u.s. use of the estagarribia airbase... in a parallel development, george w. bush purchased several thousand hectares of land in paraguay last year... paraguay is the new u.s. military toehold in latin america, exluding colombia, of course, which opened its doors to u.s. troops several years ago...

http://takeitpersonally.blogspot.com/

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Must Be Two LAs On This Planet
Posted by: Just The Facts on Nov 14, 2007 9:11 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Interesting perspective presented and cannot dispute the theories or opinions but I must admit however, they do not resemble anything I experienced in ten years of business management and living in Colombia, Venezuela, Peru, Chile and the last three in Argentina.

By far the more serious economic influences in at least these countries is not the USA, not even close. Spain, France, other EU countries along with Canada and recently a very aggressive China are all more active in ownership and influence.

The article appears more of a historical perspective and really does not make much connection to the present.

What I personally witnessed generically across the continent was a ruling class of wealthy families that have mastered a systematic repression of the poor, practice pervasive corruption, and will do anything to keep control (nepotism, vote fraud, intimidation, the usual). No mysteries really and maybe they learned all this from Freidman and his cronies from U of Chicago.

On a positive note:
Hooray for the educated emerging middle class in Chile!

Have a Great Day!

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» Oh rubbish. Posted by: pig
A Media related question...
Posted by: El Hombre Malo on Nov 14, 2007 9:43 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I get the sensation that media coverage of foreign events in the USA is somewhat...poor (and biased). Ive been looking searching american media sites, from foxnews to Alternet and I havent found any mention of the hottest topic in hispanoamerican international relationships; the confrontation between Chavez and the King of Spain in Santiago de Chile's hispanoamerican leader summit.

The incident has been filling front pages all over the spanish speaking world for days, but I havent seen even a brief note in Alternet nor any american media site, except a small mention from Reuters in yahoo news.

The whole incident and consecuences so far tells a lot about how Chavez uses his position, and shows that iberoamerican left goverments are not a block, nor follow the same ideological guidelines (thankfully). Anyone interested in the present state of iberoamerica sgould find this whole story fascinating. I do.

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» The King of Spain... Posted by: mjabele
» RE: The King of Spain... Posted by: El Hombre Malo
» Good point... Posted by: mjabele
» dude, it's in ALL the papers Posted by: hellofriends
» Hilarious. Posted by: pig
Jim Z.
Posted by: jzelensk on Nov 14, 2007 9:47 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Check out the book "The Future of Freedom," in which Fareed Zakaria argues that developing countries that suddenly get democracy (universal suferage, etc.) often elect dictators who proceed to restrict peoples' freedoms. Democracy and freedom are by no means synonymous.

Apparently it takes emerging nations generations to develop the collective wisdom to demand and defend free institutions quite separate from the mere right to vote. We may be seeing a version of this phenomenon in Venezuela, etc.

Problem is, the US insists on immediate conformity not with free institutions, but with allegiance to our interests (notably US corporate interests) throughout Latin America. How can these populations possibly develop their own freedoms under the cloud of US military and economic hegemony?

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Naomi's wearing rose-colored glasses . . .
Posted by: MAD on Nov 14, 2007 10:11 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I like Naomi's work, but I'm afraid she's painted a far too rosy picture of Latin American politics this time out. First of all, Venezuela's Bolivarian movement should no longer be held up as a socio-economic paradigm worth emulating. Every day it becomes increasingly apparent that Chavez is the thug that many of us have assumed he was all along. Even Alternet's Mr. Holland seems to have backed away from him altogether. I can remember reading his weekly Hugoganda pieces, wondering to myself when he would finally come to the conclusion that he was losing credibility backing a would be dictator. The American media, for all the ire it normally directs at Hugo, has been remiss in its duties of reporting what has been happening in Venezuela recently.

I speak and read Portuguese and Spanish which enables me to survey other sites like Globo.com from Brazil and La Nacion in Argentina, both of which have been reporting many more deaths as a result of student protests than our media outlets. Even staunch political allies of Chavez are quite opposed to his efforts to modify the constitution which will presumably allow him to fulfill his lifelong dream of becoming the next Castro. Don't get me wrong, Venezuela is still mostly on the right path but killing students is clearly the wrong direction and with a skyrocketing crime rate, including one of the highest murder rates in the world, something needs to change.

Argentina, Brazil, Bolivia and Ecuador are doing a wonderful job of screwing things up on their own now that the yoke of American imperialism has bee cast off.

*Let me just take a moment to flash this obligatory message for those of you who are already preparing your "oh yeah, well the US is killing babies in Iraq" statements. I'm well aware that our is the most vile and corrupt of all countries and I abhor it. However, that does not nor should it ever preclude us from scrutinizing other countries with the same level of intensity.* Now, back to business.

Yes, all of them [Brazil, Venezuela, Argentina, Bolivia] are currently riding the waves of a commodities boom but most of its attendant wealth is trickling upwards. Sound familiar? I would know better than most. I spend a great deal of time in Argentina and Brazil and my wife is Brazilian. Long talks with her family and my friends in Argentina reveals one thing: the rich continue to get rich and the poor are, well, still poor. I saw this firsthand when I was living there and I know little has changed.

For all the posturing about how well things are going, the wealth gap continues to widen in ALL of those countries. Crime is ramapant in Brazil and Argentina and recent surveys reveal that this is the primary preoccupation of residents. I've been to Rio's favelas and Argentinas provincias where shootouts between corrupt cops looking to augment their US$300/month salaries and drug dealers trying to exterminate rival gangs are all to common.

I love Latin America. Apart from El Salvador and Nicaragua, I've been to every Latin American country. It's quite honestly my favorite place in the world but I'm rational enough to take all factors into consideration when weighing in on the political scene. Naomi is a gifted writer and scholar but she simply didn't write a unbiased account of what is REALLY happening in Latin America.

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Capitalism and Unbridled Greed
Posted by: aberdeen on Nov 14, 2007 10:36 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Unbridled human greed is the engine that drives free market capitalism. In order for the vision of Adam Smith and his disciple Milton Freedman to be accurate and, for unbridled capitalism to ultimately provide the best "common good", then human greed would logically, have to be a good thing.

The silly notion that unbridled capitalism will every produce anything other than theft, rape, violence, murder, war and rumor of war, is simply that, an uneducated silly notion. Evil = human greed = human oppression, about as certain as on cloudless summer days when not obscured by human pollution, the sun will rise in the east and sink in the west, at least from our viewpoint in the Continental United States.

Of course, liberals who do not believe in good or evil, have no logical argument against capitalism. If there is no good or evil, then there is no logical or valid reason to oppose theft, rape, violence, murder, war and rumor of war, other than to selfishly protect one's own wealth and well-being.

When was the last time a progressive socialist system produced peace on earth and scads of people practicing goodwill towards each other? Maybe I overlooked that in my history book somewhere. It would appear that modern conservatives and modern liberals are both pied pipers of loony tunes solutions, as Jesus predicted, like children playing in the marketplace, who did not know until the floods came and took them all away.

Gee, maybe our modern science doesn't know everything and there really is such a thing as sin, or as we say today, as if changing the terminology will somehow change the human oppression result reality, "negative societal maladjustment". Go figure.

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JUDGING CHAVEZ BY A BIASED STANDARD
Posted by: sofla100 on Nov 14, 2007 10:48 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The first thing to realize about Chavez is he could be all the dictatorial and repressive he wanted to be and still enjoy the utmost in American support. All it would take is for him to repudiate socialism, say how much he hates Castro, stop the 40% tax on oil exported to the USA, and surround himself with a rich and wealthy cadre of corrupt businessmen. You must realize that the USA has a bad, a very bad history when it comes to supporting dictators, tyrants, and military juntas. As a consequence, leaders like Chavez may be prone to a little over-reaction. Regardless of this, if you have been to Venezuela, you know the truth. Chavez remains OVERWHELMINGLY popular. The poor in Venezuela are finally starting to have some rights and services. Access to medical care is finally starting to be available for them. Crime, still a problem, is decreasing. And, it should continue to decrease as the desperation of the poor becomes lessened. This (poverty), by the way, is the major cause of crime in countries like Brazil, where abject poverty is the norm for the masses of people. Finally, the American people have been subject to a continuous litany of anti Chavez propaganda. Last I checked, Venezuela does not run places like Guantanamo, does not start unprovoked wars, and does not use torture as part of its foreign policy apparatus.

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Obvious Bias Against Chavez (and probably Castro)
Posted by: Wacre on Nov 14, 2007 11:02 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I don't think that anyone suggests that Hugo Chavez is perfect, but the example you linked to doesn't illustrate your point at all because there is nowhere in the Daily Mail article that says that Chavez has anything to do with the shootings of the students.

Which is not to justify the violence, only to say that until there is a confirmable connection between Chavez and it, you shouldn't project your own issues (whatever they may be) upon him.

Send a link to the situation in Cuba as well (and I am aware that I can look it up myself, but that also would mean that I will probably not be looking at the same thing that you are/were).

And besides, let's assume that you're right (I suspect that you're not, but let's roll with it for a moment). The United States still leads by a wide margin in terms of death and body counts caused by it's policies.

Btw, interesting how you seem to seek to divide posters who are probably of a very progressive ilk; transparent, but very interesting nonetheless.

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» A weak argument... Posted by: mjabele
» RE: A weak argument... Posted by: sofla100
» You're correct... Posted by: mjabele
» Chavez making people go hungry Posted by: Frankstank
» I know many Zimbabweans..... Posted by: mjabele
» Oh please. Posted by: pig
mpgingdl
Posted by: mpgingdl on Nov 14, 2007 2:43 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If Latin America had done this 35 years ago, perhaps the region would have been spared the horrific bloodshed and economic dislocations of the 1970s to the 1990s. What the area has needed since "independence" from Spain and Portugal is its own model of development, one based on its own realities and responding to its own problems, not foreign-grown "miracle cures" such as Positivism, Marxism, or uncontrolled, unregulated "free-market" capitalism (just how "free" is a market when it is completely dominated by a handful of corporations and banks that can call the shots as they please and stamp out any resistance?) The "globalized" economy is not a "free market," nor was it ever intended to be; and Latin America has at last awakened to this fact.

The message from Latin America today (with the notable exception of Mexico) is simple: it will no longer tolerate being pillaged and looted to serve foreign interests. The banks and the corporations will now feel themselves what they have been inflicting with imunity on Latin America and the world the world.

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» RE: mpgingdl Posted by: El Hombre Malo
Some lessons the South should learn from Bush & Cheney's behavior
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Nov 14, 2007 3:10 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Let's say that the U.S. establishment is committed to the rationale of global empire, either through economic warfare or through outright military warfare. This seems like a safe bet to make, considering how most Democratic and all Republican politicians lined up behind Petraeus and the Bush-Cheney plans for Iraqi oil (i.e. the bipartisan support for the Iraqi hydrocarbon law, and Biden's call for the tri-partitian of Iraq, after the Ottoman Empire approach in the 1880s). The domestic agenda seems to be empire over democracy as well, based on the Congressional support for expanded domestic population control, I mean spying.

Then, what can Latin American countries do? Well, one good thing to do is to get lots of foreign investment and foreigners into your country. If you've got the French and Chinese and Russians engaged in economic activity, then the Security Council is unlikely to approve a U.S. led-invasion. If Iraq had had a bunch of French and Chinese firms and engineers scattered all over the country, the U.S. would never have invaded.

Another good thing to do is to engage in regional cooperation schemes. If Iran, Iraq, and Saudi Arabia had all been on peaceful terms and had a shared economy, at least to some extent, Bush's claims about "Iraqi threats to the region" would have been obviously absurd. Thus, by presenting a united front, you'll be able to look after your own interests with some success. However, this kind of openness requires addressing basic grievances of the poverty-striken population, or they'll use the opportunity to blow up your government buildings. Build schools and health clinics and create jobs for people, in other words.

Third - watch out for the Drug War card. Naomi Klein's article doesn't go into that, but the main military tool that the U.S. still has available to influence the region is the so-called Drug War. This has been used to influence politics all across the region - it usually has to do more with supporting one set of drug dealers over a different set for political reasons, as is the case in Colombia. It really has nothing to do with drugs, and everything to do with politics - as at home, as abroad.

This is an often glossed-over fact. At home, the drug war props up the private prison industry and also provides a rationale for extensive government sureveillance of the U.S. population. Abroad, the drug war provides a rationale for aggressive military intervention in other countries (the classic example being in Panama).

The real difficulty will be extracting your countries from all the "free-trade agreements" and "drug control agreements" made with the U.S. State Department, which are designed entirely to pry open your economies so that they may be raided - but then, you should know this by now.

Despite all that, I rather doubt that Hugo Chavez wants to stop selling his sour heavy crude petroleum to the U.S. Personally, I'd love to see the end of all energy imports to the U.S., regardless of their sources. Imagine that! Would we all die? Or would we get on just fine with solar and wind?

Probably the latter.

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I Only Hope
Posted by: apophenia_monkey on Nov 14, 2007 7:39 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
that after klein's demise, some fellow snot-nosed emotionally overcharged charlatan writes an assassination piece like this about her.

wtg naomi! always easy to taunt when they're dead eh?

feh.

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"The times they are a-changin'" Bob Dylan
Posted by: Sojourner on Nov 14, 2007 7:42 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Walsh estimated that it would take twenty to thirty years until the effects of the terror receded and Argentines regained their footing, courage and confidence, ready once again to fight for economic and social equality. It was in 2001, twenty-four years later, that Argentina erupted in protest against IMF-prescribed austerity measures and then proceeded to force out five presidents in only three weeks."

Now that's encouraging. It has been 40 years since the rightwing American coup got going full steam again--Nixon's election in 1968 followed in 1971 by Lewis F. Powell, then a corporate lawyer and member of the boards of 11 corporations, wrote a memo to his friend Eugene Sydnor, Jr., the Director of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. The memorandum was dated August 23, 1971, two months prior to Powell's nomination by President Nixon to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Maybe the best thing to come out of the Iraq debacle is that a weakened US government (thanks to the spend and spend Republicans) has enough business of its own to handle and must let S.A. be.

No, I don't want Chavez' revolution here. I want our southern border secured, so that we can let those who live below our border find their own way. It will be hard--hard for us to keep our hands off and hard for the struggle for independence and prosperity below the Rio Grande. But the Western Hemisphere, if we can avoid war, has everything it needs for a wonderful development of economic and social progress.

There's no stopping the change. There's only find the way to make it work for all.

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Paraphrasing...
Posted by: talkville on Nov 18, 2007 6:47 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
At first, they came for Chile. I was not from Chile, so I did nothing.
Then they came for Argentina. I was not from Argentina, so I did nothing.
Then they came for Brazil. I was not from Brazil so I did nothing.
Multiply the countries. I was not from those countries, so I did nothing.
Then Mr Clinton brought NAFTA. But I was not from Mexico, so I did nothing.
Now they're here. And they rule. And their Will be done!

The Theories of Evolution and Revolution are in many ways distinguished by their relation to Time. And then there's Einstein as distinguished from Newton.

Then there's each of us individuals living the "American Traum" (see, for instance, Freud)

It's just slower-motion Shock and slower-motion Awe. And an ever more Obese Oligarchy and an ever more Anorexic citizenry.

Interesting times...

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Disgraceful attack on Friedman
Posted by: gator80 on Nov 24, 2007 8:05 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is preposterous and intellectually dishonest to say that the “shock doctrine” is “contemporary capitalism's core tactical nostrum.” Naomi Klein must certainly know better, but she is probably engaged in some “contemporary capitalism” of her own, knowing that pandering to the leftist masses will sell a lot of books.

No one who has read Friedman, seen his videos or heard him speak would contend that he believed in a strategy of generating change through shock. There are countless examples of the opposite, in fact, where he recognized the role of the political process in changes to the status quo.

Friedman's comment about shock which Mrs. Klein has seized upon is, as she herself recognizes, an observation. Friedman, as intellectually honest as Mrs. Klein is not, understood the importance of understanding history. Mrs. Klein and many of the posters here would do well to study their history a bit more before tossing around their wild accusations.

An example is the Chile episode. To say that Friedman used Chile 'to exploit a large-scale crisis' is either to not understand or to deliberately misrepresent what actually happened. Without taking the time or space to rehash the history (but readers are advised to research the matter - and check both left- and right-leaning sources), I think it is fair to say that Friedman believed that increasing economic freedom increases (but doesn't guarantee) the likelihood of social and political freedom. You can argue that he was mistaken, but you cannot say that he supported totalitarianism.

Another preposterous claim is that “think-tank neocons” used 9-11 to “launch a booming economy in privatized warfare and ‘homeland security.’” That is a claim I have never heard before. Does Mrs. Klein have any statistics to demonstrate how many points of economic growth since 2001 have resulted from “privatized warfare” (whatever that is) and homeland security? (At least she acknowledges the economy is booming, which most leftists today actually deny.)

Lastly, Mrs. Klein posits that Friedman's heirs are worried about the end of the era of capitalism. Perhaps she is not aware of the phenomenal economic growth taking place in China and India - driven by reforms toward increasingly capitalist economies. Perhaps she is not aware of the way many of the formerly Communist Eastern European countries have embraced the capitalist model. Maybe she missed the recent elections in Germany and France, including the economic reforms taking place at this very moment in France.

There is in fact very little evidence to worry supporters of capitalism. That certainly doesn’t mean the matter is settled. Defending and advancing capitalism will always be a challenge, as Milton Friedman frequently pointed out, because it is not intuitive. But facts are facts, and no economic system in history has produced the kind of results that capitalism has, the kind of results which have improved the lives of millions, and now billions, of people worldwide.

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