CHAVEZ’S ENEMIES HAND HIM
HIS GREATEST TRIBUTE ~ DEFAMATION
March 08, 2013
The mass media’s near universal defamation of
Hugo Chavez, presumably to counter the outpouring of eulogies and tributes that
attended the Venezuelan president’s death, illustrates the lengths to which the
wealthy (in whose hands the mass media repose) will go to vilify anyone who
commits the highest international crime: curbing free enterprise.
To say that the anti-Chavez obloquies have
been over the top would hardly be an exaggeration. Author and journalist Terry
Glavin, whose credentials as a propagandist on behalf of the capitalist faith
have been solidly affirmed by his loosing possibly the most extreme diatribe
against Chavez ever written, assures us the Bolivarian revolutionary was
“a sadistic, egomaniacal thug,” a “megalomaniac” at the center of an “autocracy,” who left “millions of Venezuelans living in fear of the knock on the door in the night.” (“Hugo Chavez, incompetent fake socialist,” The Ottawa Citizen, March 7, 2013.)
Sparing no slur, Glavin adds“strongman” and
“hysterical paranoid” to his Himalaya of affronts against the deceased
Venezuelan president, at the same time accusing Chavez of creating a police
state where “an off-the-cuff remark could land you in jail.” Glavin, needless
to say, doesn’t trouble himself to marshal any evidence to support his
slanders, and his editors apparently didn’t ask him to either.
To explain away the difficulties of smearing
the four-time elected Chavez as a dictator, Gavin invokes the concept of the
“glorious contradiction, as in “…a deep contradiction was always at the heart
of the Chavez pathology. Venezuela under his rule became ‘a glorious
contradiction ~ an autocracy with a popular, elected megalomaniac at its
center.’”
This is the same glorious contradiction that
once turned Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet, an ardent friend of free
enterprise, the wealthy, and Wall Street, into a champion of democracy.
Here’s how it works: If the characterization
contradicts the evidence, so much worse for the evidence.
In the hands of the mass media, then, a
popularly elected socialist is demonized as an autocratic thug, while a servant
of the super-rich who comes to power in a military coup that topples a
socialist government is hailed as a democrat. The same logic allows the United
States and its circle of free-enterprise, free-market-promoting allies to rail
and plot against a secular Arab nationalist in Syria on grounds his rule is an
affront to democracy, while propping up Arab autocracies in the Persian Gulf
who are running guns to religious fanatics bent on bringing down the same
secular forces that happen to put local interests ahead of Wall Street’s.
The contradictions ~ hardly glorious ~ should
disabuse leftists who haven’t already been disabused of the illusion that
securing a popular mandate at the polls confers an immunity against defamation
by the wealthy class’s ideological prizefighters, an important element of which
are mainstream writers and journalists. By the same token, failing to secure a
popular mandate will hardly earn you a thrashing in the Western press so long
as you subordinate local interests and those of the oppressed, afflicted, and
exploited to the foreign interests of comfortable bankers on Wall Street and
oil company executives in Texas.
No matter how they come to power, effective
leftist and nationalist leaders will be smeared as “thugs,” “strongmen,”
“autocrats,” and “paranoids,” by Wall Street’s ideological handmaidens.
Ineffective leftist leaders and false messiahs (Polish trade union Solidarity
and Mikhail Gorbachev come to mind) will be celebrated. In southern Africa,
Robert Mugabe, who democratized patterns of land ownership, has received the
same demonizing treatment at the hands of imperialist ideologues as Chavez has,
while Nelson Mandela, whose revolution left property relations intact, is
celebrated.
It might be worthwhile, then, to consider
whether other leaders of popular causes, who themselves have been run through
the mass media demonization machine, are as bad as the imperial class’s
ideological prizefighters have made them out to be.
If the four-time elected social reformer
Chavez can be turned into a sadistic, egomaniacal thug at the center of an
autocracy, imagine the extremes that defenders of capitalist privilege will go
(and have gone) to vilify leaders who, in their championing the interests of
the poor and exploited, pose (and have posed) an even greater threat than
Chavez did to free enterprise, free markets and domination by capitalist
masters from abroad.
LANGUAGE
ReplyDeleteit's very simple...there is us
http://www.israelect.com/reference/Willie-Martin/
and there is them...The THEY...
http://www.realjewnews.com/?p=798
the children of the devil and all their psychophant/zombie robot{s} who believe lies and spread lies...
for filthy lucre
Hugo was an honest man, a hero for the oppressed
that is why "THEY" hate him...
just saw Doug Christie....graduated
happy celestial events to you Noor
Davy