-
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.
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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...
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But what has happened to the poor people?
-
They're dead!
-
Goooooooood morning slaves
-
and welcome to another sedition of
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It's the End of the World as we Know it
-
and I Feel Fine
-
the show where athletes double
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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.
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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
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fellow comrade-in-chief, Dilma Rousseff
-
who was suspended from office
-
following an impeachment vote
-
in Brazil's senate on May 12th.
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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.
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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
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the first Latin American revolution
-
of the 21st century.
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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
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Section 22 of the national teachers union,
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the CNTE, went on strike
-
and occupied the central square,
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or Zócalo, in the state's capital
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of Oaxaca City,
-
demanding that the government invest
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more public skrilla in education,
-
and specifically in schools located
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in the state's remote rural areas,
-
where the majority of the students
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come from the families of
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poor Indigenous farmers.
-
Buuuuuuuuuuut rather than
-
break them off a bigger piece,
-
on June 14th,
-
Oaxaca's fascistic fucking governor,
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Ulises Ruiz Ortiz,
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sent in a squad of 3000 pigs
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to violently clear out
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the teachers' occupation,
-
and shut down their radio station,
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Radio Planton,
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which had been broadcasting updates
-
about the strike,
-
alongside interviews with grateful
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parents and students.
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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,
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which completely paralyzed the pigs
-
ability to operate,
-
launch raids, or make deployments
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anywhere in the fucking city.
-
In other words... for months
-
there were no fucking police!
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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
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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,
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a mob of revolutionary women
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seized the state radio
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and television stations,
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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,
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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,
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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!