| ABOUT US | ARCHIVES | LINKS | RSS FEED | MONDAYS | |

3quarksdaily

An Eclectic Digest of Science, Art and Literature

« Wednesday Poem | Main | Wealth Inequality in America »

March 06, 2013

On the Legacy of Hugo Chávez

Greg Grandin in The Nation:

Chavez_sign_rtr_imgI first met Hugo Chávez in New York City in September 2006, just after his infamous appearance on the floor of the UN General Assembly, where he called George W. Bush the devil. “Yesterday, the devil came here,” he said, “Right here. Right here. And it smells of sulfur still today, this table that I am now standing in front of.” He then made the sign of the cross, kissed his hand, winked at his audience and looked to the sky. It was vintage Chávez, an outrageous remark leavened with just the right touch of detail (the lingering sulfur!) to make it something more than bombast, cutting through soporific nostrums of diplomatese and drawing fire away from Iran, which was in the cross hairs at that meeting.

The press of course went into high dudgeon, and not just for the obvious reason that it’s one thing for opponents in the Middle East to call the United States the Great Satan and another thing for the president of a Latin American country to personally single out its president as Beelzebub, on US soil no less.

I think what really rankled was that Chávez was claiming a privilege that had long belonged to the United States, that is, the right to paint its adversaries not as rational actors but as existential evil. Latin American populists, from Argentina’s Juan Perón to, most recently, Chávez, have long served as characters in a story the US tells about itself, reaffirming the maturity of its electorate and the moderation of its political culture. There are at most eleven political prisoners in Venezuela, and that’s taking the opposition’s broad definition of the term, which includes individuals who worked to overthrow the government in 2002, and yet it is not just the right in this country who regularly compared Chávez to the worst mass murderers and dictators in history.

More here.

Posted by S. Abbas Raza at 07:03 AM | Permalink

Comments

I had to laugh listening to the NPR obit of Chavez yesterday. In a voice dripping with disdain, we were informed that Chavez "showered social programs on the poor". The unstated assumption: we all know the correct policy is to shower tax cuts the rich.

Posted by: FrankZ | Mar 6, 2013 9:42:06 AM

Thanks for the article, Abbas. Greg Grandin's obituary expresses much better than I could what I've been saying all along. A great man has died. In the words of Sean Penn "a friend the Americans never knew they had and a champion of the poor all over the world".

Posted by: Pepito | Mar 6, 2013 10:28:21 AM

Chavez it was a madman and a clown paved with good intentions that his demagogy and the cruel poverty of his nations put him in power; after his death, the Venezuelan people are still poor, but less poor than before . He changed the face of Latin America, creating an example of socialism based on oil exploitation that gave a model to other states (that have no oil). As Qaddafi , he did many good deeds to strangers and mostly to the wrong persons. In the modern history after WWII only Qaddafi, Idi Amin and Chavez (as chef of states) said so many stupidities and made so many wrong friends and so many true and powerful enemies.
His death is leaving his own poor voters less poor, more educated, with a better social health care, with a better welfare system, with people less used to work and hardship, with a demagogically ideology with no base in the true capitalist global economy .He died leaving his country, Venezuela, more poor than before, with a lot of socialist promises that the next (socialist!) government will be not able to provide, before an economical crisis , with a impoverished middle class that is resented as a class enemy by the poor, with strong external enemies as USA and with sick and agonizing friends as Iran and Syria.
On the exit of this (sad) clown we will regret his outrageous remarks that gave color to our grey and serious world:

http://www.buzzfeed.com/ellievhall/the-17-most-outrageous-quotes-from-hugo-chavez

Posted by: mirel | Mar 7, 2013 1:22:38 PM

It must be so hard for you, Mirel, to face up to what the Israelis are doing to the Palestinians.

Posted by: Louise Gordon | Mar 7, 2013 10:28:51 PM

Louise my friend... it's hard to me to see what the Israelis are doing to Palestinians, it's hard to me to see what the Palestinians are doing to Israelis, it's hard to me to see what the world is doing to Israelis and Palestinians, it's hard to me to see what the Palestinians are doing to themselves....anything but peace and compromises.

Posted by: mirel | Mar 8, 2013 2:16:32 AM

Most of Latin America did much better than Venezuela (as measured by poverty reduction). This in spite of more than $100billion / year in oil revenue. (that works out to approx $4000 per Venezuelan).

By any reasonable measure, Chavez has been a catastrophe for the Venezuelans. And this is even before we reckon the damage he did to democracy in the country.

For data: http://www.economist.com/news/briefing/21573095-after-14-years-oil-fuelled-autocracy-hugo-ch%C3%A1vezs-successors-will-struggle-keep

Posted by: Sundar | Mar 8, 2013 9:48:04 AM

Whilst I don't believe Chavez was a catastrophe for Venezuela, his implementation of "Socialism of the 21st Century" should be the fundamental measurement of his success. Putting aside his hegemonic contrariness and the associated magnetized despots, oh, and Sean Penn, we have 30 million people gaining supposed social justice initiatives via a decade of massive oil riches. How has a decade of socialist reform impacted on Venezuela? Late last year Chavez altered the constitution to invoke a further elected term, so he could be reelected. Should this constitutional change be revoked or remain? Basically, Chavez thought it right that he deliver social justice or 'what's right' via a form of diluted democracy. Authoritarianism lives on both sides of the ideological divide.

http://www.ippr.org/juncture/171/10437/between-heaven-and-hell-chavez-the-south-american-left-and-the-crisis-of-representative-democracy

Posted by: Troy | Mar 9, 2013 4:01:14 AM

Post a comment






Subscribe to this blog's feed  

PayAnywhere with iphone credit card swiper

Android Tablet

Bluetooth Headset

2013 New Style Dresses

Compare Car Rental Prices

DHgate.com Wholesale

3QD on Facebook

3QD on Kindle

3QD by Daily Email

Receive all blogposts at the same time every day.

Enter your Email:


Preview 3QD Email

3QD on Twitter

Miscellany

Lijit Search

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Add to Google

Recent Comments

chris on Race Is Not Biology

Dave Ranning on REFLECTIONS ON WOOLWICH

Sumiran on Friday Poem

prasad on Race Is Not Biology

omar on REFLECTIONS ON WOOLWICH

G on REFLECTIONS ON WOOLWICH

Erich on REFLECTIONS ON WOOLWICH

omar on Race Is Not Biology

Raza Husain on Race Is Not Biology

Raza Husain on Race Is Not Biology

Josef Stern on REFLECTIONS ON WOOLWICH

Colette on POETRY IN TRANSLATION: CORDOBA

Dana on A young Houston couple is planning to give away $4 billion—but only to projects that prove they are worth it. Can they redefine the world of philanthropy?

omar on REFLECTIONS ON WOOLWICH

Dredd on REFLECTIONS ON WOOLWICH

omar on Race Is Not Biology

prasad on Race Is Not Biology

JF on REFLECTIONS ON WOOLWICH

Sundar on REFLECTIONS ON WOOLWICH

omar on REFLECTIONS ON WOOLWICH

musafir on Loneliness, isolation and desperate yearning

carlos on The Gut-Wrenching Science Behind the World’s Hottest Peppers

Dredd on A young Houston couple is planning to give away $4 billion—but only to projects that prove they are worth it. Can they redefine the world of philanthropy?

Dredd on Why Rational People Buy Into Conspiracy Theories

JonJ on Daniel Dennett's seven tools for thinking

Acclaim For 3QD


"I couldn't tear myself away from 3 Quarks Daily, to the point of neglecting my work. Congratulations on this superb site."—Steven Pinker, Johnstone Professor of Psychology, Harvard University.

"I have placed 3 Quarks Daily at the head of my list of web bookmarks."—Richard Dawkins, Charles Simonyi Professor of the Public Understanding of Science at Oxford University.

"Just wanted you to know I’m one of many who reads and enjoys 3 Quarks....almost daily."—David Byrne, musician, former lead-singer of the Talking Heads, artist, intellectual.

Read more here.

The 3QD Prizes

Subscribe to this blog's feed