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AMY GOODMAN: President Bush has
arrived in Guatemala for the second-to-last stop of his
five-nation tour of Latin America. He is meeting with
Guatemalan President Oscar Berger for talks expected to be
dominated by immigration and free trade.
Bush's visit to the region has been marked
by mass protest and marches. In Brazil Thursday, 30,000
people took to the streets. The next day in Uruguay, some
6,000 marched in the capital of Montevideo. In Bogota,
police made 120 arrests when 5,000 protesters marched just
one mile from where Bush held talks with the Colombian
President Alvaro Uribe. Bush will travel to Mexico later
today for the last leg of his tour.
While many analysts agree the President's
trip is part of an effort to gain back influence in the
region, the White House has sought to portray the tour as
part of a humanitarian effort to address issues of poverty.
Last week in Washington, President Bush spoke before the US
Hispanic Chamber of Commerce.
PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH: You
know, not far from the White House, there’s a statue of
the great liberator Simon Bolivar. He’s often compared
to George Washington -- Jorge W. Like Washington, he was
a general who fought for the right of his people to
govern themselves. Like Washington, he succeeded in
defeating a much stronger colonial power. And like
Washington, he belongs to all of us who love liberty.
One Latin American diplomat had put it this way:
“Neither Washington nor Bolivar was destined to have
children of their own, so that we Americans might call
ourselves their children.”
We are the sons and daughters of this
struggle, and it is our mission to complete the
revolution they began on our two continents. The
millions across our hemisphere who every day suffer the
degradations of poverty and hunger have a right to be
impatient. And I'm going to make them this pledge: The
goal of this great country, the goal of a country full
of generous people, is an Americas where the dignity of
every person is respected, where all find room at the
table, and where opportunity reaches into every village
and every home. By extending the blessings of liberty to
the least among us, we will fulfill the destiny of this
new world and set a shining example for others. Que
Dios les bendiga.
AMY GOODMAN: President Bush, speaking
in Washington last week. In addition to the mass protests to
his presence in the region, Bush has been dogged by
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, who’s on a counter-tour of
Latin America at the same time. In fact, Chavez has
practically shadowed Bush since the beginning of his trip.
When Bush was in Uruguay on Friday, Chavez held a mass rally
in neighboring Argentina. When Bush flew to Colombia, Chavez
addressed thousands in Bolivia. When Bush was in Guatemala,
Chavez is again close by in neighboring Nicaragua.
Today, we’re going to play an excerpt of one
of Chavez's speeches, this at the mass really in Buenos
Aires on Friday. The Venezuelan president launched a
stinging attack on Bush, who was in Uruguay, just thirty
miles away across the River Plate.
PRESIDENT HUGO CHAVEZ:
[translated] On the other side of the river, that is
where that little gentleman of the North must be. Let's
give him a big boo! Gringo, go home!
I am convinced that our friends in
Brasilia and in Montevideo are not going to feel
offended, because we would not want to hurt any of our
brethren from Uruguay or Brazil. We recognize their
sovereignty. We recognize that those governments have
the sovereign right to invite the little gentleman of
the North, if they so choose.
But Kirchner and I don't need to plan
anything to sabotage this visit, because we are
witnessing the true political cadaver. The President of
the United States is a political cadaver. He doesn't
even smell of sulfur anymore. He doesn't even smell of
sulfur or brimstone, if you will. No longer. What you
smell from him now is the stench of political death. And
not long from now, he will turn to dust and disappear.
So we don't need to put forth any effort to sabotage the
visit of the President of the United States to some
countries, sisters countries of Central and South
America, of course. We don't need to do that. It's a
simple coincidence, the visit of Nestor to Venezuela and
our visit here to Buenos Aires.
Well, we nevertheless need to thank that
little gentleman that's visiting us, because if he were
not here in South America, perhaps this event would not
be so well-attended. We have organized this event to say
no to the presence of the chief of the empire here in
the heroic lands of South America.
The imperial little gentleman that's
visiting Latin America today said about seventy-two or
forty-eight hours ago in one of his speeches, when he
was announcing that he was leaving for Latin America, he
compared Simon Bolivar to George Washington. In fact, he
even said the ridiculous thing -- and I can't say it's
hypocrisy, because it is simply ridiculous, the most
ridiculous thing he could say. He said, today we are all
children of Washington and Bolivar. That is, he thinks
that he is a son of Bolivar. What he is is a son of a --
but I can't say that word here.
So he has said -- he has said -- and you
should listen to what he said here -- he said that now
is the time to finish the revolution that Washington and
Bolivar commenced . How's that for heresy? That is
heresy and ignorance, because we have to remember -- and
I say this with all due respect to George Washington,
who is historically one of the founding fathers of that
country -- but we must also remember the differences and
how different George Washington and Simon Bolivar were,
are and will always be.
George Washington won a war to gain the
independence of the North American economic elite from
the English empire, and when Washington died, or,
rather, after his independence and after having been the
president of the United States, after ordering the
massacre of the indigenous peoples of North America,
after defending slavery, he ended up being a very rich
owner of slaves and of a plantation. He was a great
landowner. That was George Washington.
Simon Bolivar, however, was born with a
silver spoon, and at eight years old his parents died
and he inherited a large fortune, together with his
brothers, and he inherited haciendas and slaves. Simon
Bolivar, when history led him -- and as Karl Marx said,
men can make history, but only as far as history allows
us to do so -- when history took Bolivar and made him
the leader of the independence process in Venezuela, he
made that process revolutionary. Simon Bolivar turned
over all of his land. He freed all of his slaves, and he
turned them into soldiers, and he brought them here. He
brought them to Peru and Carabobo, and he worked
together with the troops of San Martin to liberate this
continent. That is Simon Bolivar.
And Simon Bolivar, having been born with
that silver spoon in his mouth, when he died on the
Caribbean coast of Colombia, when he died on December 17
in 1830, he was dressed with a shirt of someone else,
because he had no clothes. Simon Bolivar is the leader
of the revolution of this land. He is the leader of the
social revolution, the people's revolution, the
historical revolution. George Washington has nothing --
nothing -- to do with this history.
It was in 1823 that James Monroe said,
"America for the Americans." And when I say this
tonight, I say it because I want to remind you, my
brothers of Argentina, of Venezuela and of America, that
the presence of the President of the United States in
South America represents all of that. He represents that
Monroe Doctrine of America for the Americans. Well, we
will have to tell him: North America for the North
Americans and South America for the South Americans.
This is our America.
The President of the United States, that
political cadaver -- and when I say political cadaver,
he would like to see me as a real cadaver -- I want him
to be a political cadaver, and he already is a political
cadaver. The President of the United States has the
lowest level of credibility and acceptance from his own
people. He is the current president of the United
States.
It would appear that he doesn't even
dare mention my name, because he was asked in Brasilia
today in a press conference -- I saw it, I watched it at
the hotel -- and the journalist asked him, “It is said
that you are here to stop Chavez's movement in South
America.” And it looked like he almost had a heart
attack when he heard "Chavez," because he actually
stuttered a couple of times, and he actually changed the
subject. He didn't answer the question. He didn't answer
the question at all. So he doesn't even dare.
And I definitely dare to say his name.
The President of the United States of North America,
George W. Bush, the little gentleman of the North, the
political cadaver that is visiting South America, that
little gentleman is the president of all the history of
the United States, and in the history of the United
States, he has the lowest level of approval in his own
country. And if we add that to the level of approval
that he has in the world, I would think he's in the red
now -- negative numbers.
AMY GOODMAN: Venezuelan President
Hugo Chavez in Argentina on Friday, speaking before a mass
rally of tens of thousands of people -- an excerpt of that
address. When we come back, response to the Latin American
trip with Greg Grandin, who is author of Empire’s
Workshop, a professor in Latin American studies. We'll
also speak with Steve Ellner, just back from Venezuela. Stay
with us.
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