This episode of It's the End of the World as we know it and I feel fine was made possible by contributions from slaves like you. Spank you very much! Nice little revolution we're having here. Revolution? What do you mean revolution? Please... don't try to tell me about revolution. I know all about the revolutions and how they start. The people that read the books they go to the people who don't read the books, the poor people, and they say the time has come to have a change, huh? Shhhhhh! Shhh-shhh-shhh shit shoosh! I know what I'm talking about when I'm talking about the revolutions. The people who read the books go to the people who can't the books, the poor people, and say we have to have a change. So the poor people make the change. And then the people who read the books, they all sit around the big polished tables, and they talk and talk and talk, and eat and eat and eat... But what has happened to the poor people? They're dead! Goooooooood morning slaves and welcome to another sedition of It's the End of the World as we Know it and I Feel Fine the show where athletes double as travel agents. We did get word that a famous Brazilian football star, Rivaldo, who's hugely famous, did make some very controversial comments... Rivaldo has called on tourists not to travel to Rio de Janiero for the Olympic Games. And what he said is international visitors should stay away from the Olympic Games. They'll be putting their lives at risk if they do come. Uh.... I'm not going. I am your host the Stimulator and ten years ago, leftists worldwide were celebrating the so-called pink tide that was sweeping across Latin America. Like the commie domino-effect nightmares that keep Henry Kissenger up at night... THE HORROR in country after country socialist heads of state were elected into office, promising to break their countries free from the shackles of the IMF and to slap down the corrupt local mothafuckin elite, who for decades had grown accustomed to treating national economies like their own personal fucking piggy banks. In many ways this gauchismo was fuelled by the explosive growth of militant social movements, comprised of a dynamic mix of urban proles, landless peasants, and Indigenous peeps. Buuuuuuut while it's undeniable that the past ten years has witnessed important gains in the region, from declining rates of poverty and illiteracy, to massive increases in social spending... the reality is that this experiment in Socialism for the 21st Century was still capitalist as fuck and largely financed by the historic high price of oil and other export commodities. And now that the party’s over, the pendulum is starting to swing back to the right. While Dubya and his batshit cabal of neocon advisers were too distracted by their crazy fucking obsession with bombing the Middle East into freedom, the Obama administration has quietly been hard at work re-asserting the Monroe Doctrine of American hemispheric dominance. From the Hillary-orchestrated coup d'état in Honduras, in 2009, to Obama's historic meeting with Raul Castro, that helped open Cuba's proud and culturally-rich nation to the plague of American tourists.... the United Snakes sits poised and ready to capitalize on the economic and political chaos currently destabilizing the region. The point is... the United States will not be imprisoned by the past. And at the top of their list is Venezuela, the oil-rich nation currently wracked by hyper-inflation, shortages of food and basic goods, and an energy crisis that has given rise to daily rolling blackouts. Scenes of mass looting and violent street clashes between opponents and supporters of President Nicolas Maduro, have American policy-makers and oil companies salivating at the prospect of imminent state collapse. For his part, Maduro has declared a state of emergency, and has given a tentative green light for workers to start expropriating closed factories, in a desperate effort to shore up his declining support, and kick-start the economy. Maduro is facing the prospect of a recall referendum, a constitutional process which he has decried as a Washington-backed coup d'etat, echoing the language of his former fellow comrade-in-chief, Dilma Rousseff who was suspended from office following an impeachment vote in Brazil's senate on May 12th. I have not committed any crime under the constitution and law to justify an interruption to my mandate. To condemn someone for a crime that they did not commit, is the greatest violence that can be committed against any person. Leftists and so-called progressives around the world have faithfully echoed the Telesur line, describing the opposition's power-grab in Brazil as a coup, or golpeachment. Buuuuuuuuuuuuut many of the peeps taking to facebook to valiantly decry this gross breach of democratic process seem perfectly fucking content to ignore the fact that Dilma had become a widely hated figure, with an approval rating of just 9 fucking percent and millions of peeps regularly taking to the streets to demand her resignation. Or that she was president of the board of directors of the state oil company Petrobras, while upwards of 33 billion fucking dollars was lost to corruption, in a giant fucking scandal that implicated more than half of the country's sitting politicians, including many members of her own party. Or the inconveniently neoliberal character of her government itself, which oversaw the violent pacification of the county's favelas by heavily militarized BOPE pigs, and the massive waste of money spent on useless fucking infrastructure to prepare the country to play host to the World Cup in 2014, and the FIVE COCK RINGS OF DEATH this summer.... which, by the way, look like they're slated to be an epic fucking disaster. So... while it's true that the old-guard of Latin American politics are corrupt, neoliberal pieces of shit, in the pocket of Uncle Sam, it's also long-time past due that leftist commentators got over their moralistic and hypocritical rhetoric of democracy and realized that class war is a gruelling process, and that the impetus for revolutionary transformation comes from below, not from top-down state structures, no matter how revolutionary their leaders claim to be. This year marks the tenth anniversary of the mothafuckin Oaxaca Commune, a seven month long popular insurrection in the land of tacos, dubbed by some commentators as the first Latin American revolution of the 21st century. For those not familiar with this epic fucking chapter in the annals of revolt, the Oaxacan uprising began in May of 2006 when members of the famously militant Section 22 of the national teachers union, the CNTE, went on strike and occupied the central square, or Zócalo, in the state's capital of Oaxaca City, demanding that the government invest more public skrilla in education, and specifically in schools located in the state's remote rural areas, where the majority of the students come from the families of poor Indigenous farmers. Buuuuuuuuuuut rather than break them off a bigger piece, on June 14th, Oaxaca's fascistic fucking governor, Ulises Ruiz Ortiz, sent in a squad of 3000 pigs to violently clear out the teachers' occupation, and shut down their radio station, Radio Planton, which had been broadcasting updates about the strike, alongside interviews with grateful parents and students. Well.... as shit turns out, that was a big mothafuckin mistake! Responding immediately to this blatant act of aggression, thousands of peeps took to the streets, kicked the pigs outta dodge, and set to work building barricades. At its peak, the Oaxaca Commune was dotted with over 3,000 barricades, which completely paralyzed the pigs ability to operate, launch raids, or make deployments anywhere in the fucking city. In other words... for months there were no fucking police! BASS DROP Within this power vacuum, a horizontal structure of popular self-governance, called the Asamblea Popular de los Pueblos de Oaxaca, or APPO, was formed to take over the coordination of self-defense and organization of everyday life in the commune. The revolt spread quickly across Oaxaca with students occupying their universities and other peeps occupying government buildings, and forming popular assemblies in cities and villages across the state. All of these assemblies issued repeated demands that the state’s governor step down and fuck off. On August 1st, a mob of revolutionary women seized the state radio and television stations, transforming them into vital hubs of communication and coordination, broadcasting regular revolutionary programming, and updates of activity within the liberated area. Women took a leading role in many other aspects of the insurrection as well, from organizing rallies and marches, to defending barricades, and by doing so were able to temporarily liberate themselves from the patriarchal division of labour that had traditionally relegated them to roles as domestic caregivers Tragically, the Oaxaca Commune had its beating heart ripped out in late October, when an army of Federal police managed to clear out the occupied Zócalo in Oaxaca City. While sustained resistance continued for another two months, these were dark fucking days, in which many revolutionary militants were detained and arrested on trumped up charges, and dozens more disappeared, or assassinated by mothafuckin paramilitary death squads working for the Mexican security forces. Buuuuuut while the Oaxaca Commune was ultimately crushed by this grim fucking wave of repression, the spirit of revolt it inspired and drew upon has lived on. Today, Oaxaca remains a site of militant resistance to the neoliberal fuckery of the Mexican state. And the teachers from section 22, who helped kick things off a decade ago, are still at the forefront of this resistance. For the past several years, they have been fighting against attempts by the country's gringo-hugging jefe, Enrique Peña Nieto, to enforce capitalist reforms on the state education system. So... to learn a bit more about what's been going down, I recently caught up with Cesar Chavez, a teacher from Oaxaca, and member of Section 22 of the CNTE. Hey Cesar… how the fuck are you? Well... we are working hard. We're tired Shortly after being elected, Mexico's current President Enrique Peña Nieto passed a series of neoliberal reforms called the Pact for Mexico. One of these reforms was an overhaul of the Mexican education system. Can you explain the motivations behind these reforms, and why they've sparked resistance from teachers in Oaxaca? In 2012, in the Presidential elections in Mexico the PRI came back into power, the party that has been abusing the Mexican people for most of the last 100 years. The Pact for Mexico is basically a plot to reform various government-run institutions, which requires changes to the Mexican Constitution being pushed for by the United States. They want to privatize all of the productive sectors of the country – energy, labour, finance, even water – and one of the specific reforms deals with the third article of the Mexican constitution, which the government needs to change in order to allow for the privatization of education. So the state is seeking to avoid its obligation to guarantee free public and non-religious education, which in its basic form covers children from the age of 3 to 15 years old. And one of the principal obstacles is the rights of teachers to permanent labour contracts. So they've invented an evaluation that will allow them to lay off teachers without any legal recourse, and they are proposing this as a federal education model. But here in Oaxaca, we teachers are continuing to struggle and to fight, as always, because we are against the privatization of educational services. Their proposed reforms would mean three years from now, that many poor children from the barrios won't be able to go to school. Without offering basic education services, they are dooming our children to misery. And it's clear that this is a model being imposed by the World Bank and IMF. They are imposing this type of model in Latin America, and they have already experimented with this model in other South American countries, and now they want to implement it in Mexico. But here in Oaxaca we are going to resist. Because children deserve free public and non-religious education. What types of tactics have teachers been using to resist the government's proposed changes? At this time the resistance is civil, peaceful and organized. In Oaxaca we have been constructing an anti-hegemonic educational project. We understand this as a project against the imposition of an educational curriculum model that will favour the private sector - that will favour capitalism. We have a model based in our own cultural diversity. We make up part of the original inhabitants of this land. And what we are proposing is the empowerment of the culture of our people.... our language.... our way of living... our way of organizing. We are trying to create a model in the almost 13,000 schools in the state of Oaxaca. And we have a general project, but each community - each school according to their geographical area, their culture - will adopt and will create these resistance models in their schools. We're including ways of working with textbooks, but also with oral history. And it doesn't only include teachers. It involves the community. It includes workers, peasants, the ladies preparing tortillas... because we believe their knowledge is important too and we want to value these types of knowledge. Teachers in Mexico, particularly in its southern states, have been at the forefront of many recent popular struggles, and have also been a primary target of state and paramilitary repression. A dramatic recent example is the 43 missing Normalista students in the state of Guerrero. Why do the struggles of teachers resonate so strongly with other sectors of Mexican society? And why does the state see you as such a threat? The struggle of the teachers has been going on in this country since the 1960s. And it's been very linked to the resistance of the original peoples - to the Indigenous peoples. And that's the reason the state sees us as such a threat. We've been speaking about other ways of doing politics, outside of parliamentary or electoral politics, and questioning the true roles and functions of political parties. And so the state is trying to destroy the resistance of the education teachers of Oaxaca. The disappearances in our country has had a lot of international coverage because these young people, these Normalistas, were training to put themselves at the service of the education of our people. They were brutally disappeared, and it's a totally atrocious act, but we have to insist that they are not just 43. After the 43 there have been more killings in the state of Oaxaca. We can count 260 teachers that have been killed, and others that have disappeared. And we can also say that there's over 30 people have had to leave into exile. This is only in the state of Oaxaca. In 2006, teachers rose up against former Governor Ulises Ruiz Ortiz. That same year, President Felipe Calderón launched Mexico’s War on Drugs. These intervening years have witnessed a sharp escalation of neoliberal capitalist restructuring and further militarization of the Mexican state security forces. How have these changes affected the situation on the ground in Oaxaca? The movement of 2006 was a massive social movement that involved many aspects of society. The federal government immediately militarized these peaceful protests, like they are militarizing now the state of Oaxaca, where there's currently 25,000 police deployed. By comparison, back in 2006, they deployed approximately 14,000. At that time, we faced incredibly high levels of repression. There was more than 26 people killed - 26 that we can confirm, but there's testimony that hundreds of people were disappeared. So, the government, along with the Narcos, declared a war against the people. It takes men with sick minds to declare a war on an entire people. Those are decisions that obviously reflect the logic of a broader system - an international capitalist system. So, in this war there's been more than 200,000 disappearances. And its principally innocent people, the sons and daughters of peasants, - who are very much the lifeblood of their communities - that are being picked up by these organizations - by these criminal gangs of drug traffickers. And so for all this time we've basically been living in an extended state of siege. In 2010, the ruling PRI party lost the state elections in Oaxaca... the first time in 80 years. Governor Ulises Ruiz was succeeded by Gabino Cué Monteagudo, a member of the supposedly left-wing Citizen's Party. Buuuuuuuuuut under his rule the pace of neoliberal reforms has only increased. What effect has this had on regular Mexicans' faith in the electoral system? Well yes... after more than 80 years of the PRI in Oaxaca, we finally have a new government. But that's not just an internal matter. We believe that this situation was manipulated by the gringos in Washington - and not just for this part of Mexico, but for other parts of Latin America where they implanted, or granted a so-called left-wing government only to control and manage the general discontent of Latin American populations. And in Mexico it was presented as if this alternative would change our lives for the better, and alleviate the grievances of the workers and the population in general. Of course that is not how it played out, and in the case of Oaxaca, everyone understood that this so-called leftist government that we've had for the past six years wasn't brought into power to support the workers, but was rather just an extension of the traditional ruling parties. Politically, nothing has changed and regular people understand this very well. So in Oaxaca, there's no less than 36 major capitalist projects underway funded by the World Bank, and international capital. Canadian capital is invested in mining in Oaxaca, and they are being supported in their operations by this new so-called leftist government. These projects are displacing communities and contaminating our natural resources. Our water is being contaminated. So this is the kind of situation we're living in in our state... and we are trying to resist and organize. And we really want people to know this. What is the level of coordination between revolutionaries in Oaxaca and other popular movements such as the Zapatistas, or the auto-defense forces of Michoacán? Well... there's various organizations that resist. This includes groups like the Zapatistas, or EZLN, and the insurgents in Guerreo and other organizations that don't compromise with the state. They demand autonomy. This is what these struggles are about. This is why the state wants to militarize and paramilitarize these spaces. For example in Michoacan, which is talked about a lot in Oaxaca, these people have decided to defend themselves from larger forces that have been trying to impose these criminal ideas. And we are trying to coordinate with these forces that resist. And we believe it's going to be a long and difficult process, because there's repressive conditions that make it hard to organize. The state will never give us what we need or what we want without struggle, so we need to do our best to fight back. And so this is what we think we are going to do, and this is how are going to triumph. Thanks Cesar. And that about does it for this sedition of It’s the End of the World as we Know it and I Feel Fine. I wanted to let y’all know that during the summer months we will be closing down the firehose output of videos to a comfortable garden hose cadence. Did that metaphor make any fuckin sense? Anywho, you fuckers should not be sitting in front of your computer when it’s hot. You should be outside making fuckin trouble. Buuuuuuuuut don’t worry this shit should be out about every three weeks until August, when we will be back full force with more seditions, new A is for Anarchy shorts and mini reports from the global muthafuckin resistance. That said, a virtual fist bump goes out to the following slaves who gave us a hand at making this Soliloquy of Seditious Savagery. So big ups to: Sebastian, Yifan, Renzo, Christopher, Michael, Reto, Gavin, Jeremy, Debbie, Raul, Daniel, Maciej, Willie, Justina, Kirk, Rob, Mason, John, Michael, Itay, Romain, Marisol, Joseph, Andrew, Lauren, Ina, Coby, Sebastien, Stephen, Juliano, Joseph, Gabriel, Willam, Bear Michael, Flyn, Per, Jamie, Andrew, Jan, Jane, Brina, Jonathan, Steve, Blade and Karils. Tlayudas! I also want to send a warm welcome to the newest member of the Taconspiracy: Laura. Mescalito! Stay tuned to subMedia.tv for more news from the global muthafuckin resistance. Hasta la pasta compañeras!