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Editorial:
FTAA Protesters Bring Street Heat to Miami
By Freedom Road Socialist Organization
Tens of thousands of demonstrators will flood into Miami, Florida during
the week of Nov. 18 to protest the Free Trade of the Americas Agreement
(FTAA). Workers, students, environmentalists and young militants - the
folks who brought the world the Battle of Seattle - are reviving the anti-imperialist
globalization movement. While the Western Hemisphere’s trade ministers
(excluding Cuba) meet in corporate bunkers, youth and workers will be
outside marching and protesting. While the rich financiers plot the ruin
of Latin America, young protesters will be breaking through police lines.
FTAA: Poverty and Misery for the Americas
The FTAA is a plan for poverty, misery, and ruination. The FTAA does
to all of Latin America and the Caribbean what the North American Free
Trade Agreement (NAFTA) did to Canada, the U.S. and Mexico. In all three
countries workers’ standard of living is driven down, wages are lowered
and work conditions have deteriorated.
Union workers in Canada and the U.S. have been undercut by NAFTA, while
peasants in Mexico have been driven off their land by the ‘competition’
of unfairly subsidized corporate farming in the U.S. These peasants are
forced to move to city slums or migrate north to the U.S., where the same
corporations take advantage of them. Workers are forced to compete with
each other in a race to the bottom, while the rich, mostly in the U.S.,
stand back and count their profits.
For evidence, look at the maquilladoras that NAFTA created along the
Texas-Mexico border. Jobs are moved there and the corporations take no
responsibility for the neighborhoods - no streets, no water supply, no
electricity, no schools, no local government. In short, chaos and desperation!
The FTAA will do away with trade protections that U.S. big business finds
unfavorable to its corporations and financial investments. The FTAA is
NAFTA on crack. The FTAA will put into practice a program that undercuts
national independence abroad while giving U.S. corporations more power.
Privatization will be the order of the day in Latin America. The FTAA
will accelerate the sell-off of profitable state industries, such as the
state oil company in Colombia, ECOPETROL, which provides over $2 billion
(or 23% )of the Colombian government’s revenue every year.
Pollution control standards at all levels will be trampled over. As with
NAFTA, if a government body puts up a fight over pollution issues, then
corporations will sue them in court and demand millions. The Canadian
government paid a U.S. corporation called Ethyl $13 million in damages,
and the company’s legal costs, to settle a $251 million lawsuit over a
gas additive called MMT that Canada had banned. Canada also agreed to
proclaim that MMT is safe even though Canada’s own health department does
not think so.
The rich man’s democracy that exists in the U.S. and all its neo-colonies
in Latin America and the Caribbean will be strengthened by a negotiated
contract called the FTAA.
Growing Resistance
When protesters in Miami turn up the heat on the FTAA, they will have
a large array of supporters throughout the hemisphere. In Colombia, where
the freedom fighters of the FARC (Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia)
and ELN (National Liberation Army) govern half the country, a recent joint
communiqué proclaimed unity in “Pushing forward all the political
processes that favor peace with social justice and the pursuit of political
alternatives in opposition to Plan Colombia and the FTAA.”
In socialist Cuba, the people are building an alternative political and
economic model that contrasts with the hunger and suffering that imperialist
globalization forces on its neighbors. In Brazil, over 10 million working-class
people have signed petitions against the FTAA, and the Brazilian government
is attempting to create a separate market bloc with other Latin American
countries.
The government of the Bolivarian revolution in Venezuela has taken a
tough stance against the FTAA. Venezuelan President Chavez said, “Signing
the FTAA as it is now is like saying ‘Rest in peace for the republic.
It is not worth it,’ and ‘We still have a colonial-model economy.’” Chavez
told Reuters press, “Venezuela is on the side of the people and we propose
a new integration system that is definitely not the FTAA, which, as it
has been put forward, is a perverse mechanism that would be a death order
for the future of the region.”
Across Latin America and the Caribbean, the workers movements, the peasants
and farmers associations, the student movements, the left and nationalist
political parties, indigenous peoples and revolutionary guerrilla armies
are actively opposing the FTAA.
When young people and workers in the U.S. unite to fight the FTAA in
Miami, they will speak and act for millions whose voices will not be featured
on CNN or Fox news. Like the Battle of Seattle, where the dreams of the
big capitalists went up in smoke, the street heat in Miami may bring a
victory for the people throughout the Americas.
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