Looking at the CIAs replacements of these socialists over the century, the US is very PRO despotism.This isn't even a matter of socialism being good or bad. This is a "despotism is bad" issue. Socialists are welcome to try and retain political power in Bolivia, but it can't be by crowning that one guy King, because we know how that goes every time. Socialists in Bolivia (with one exception) are better off now having power generally within their party than they would be with Morales singularly in charge.
Unhinged nonsense.Don't humor these people. He was winning an election he had no place in. He was pressured out by people who didn't want to follow the communist dictatorship plan of government that's killed so many.
It was effective - they've kept a grip on the continent and a half for nearly two centuries. It's that the intended effect was not democracy.if you think the leader be changed, literally don’t put a bigger despot into place. *cough* Iraq *cough*. How many failures that bite you in the ass decades down the line do you need to make before understanding that what you’re doing is the opposite of effective
Why are you even talking about the US? I know why the avowed communists here are content to market this as a CIA operation to turn a nation capitalist and exploit it. Demonizing capitalism is all they know how to do with their lives. Why are you?Looking at the CIAs replacements of these socialists over the century, the US is very PRO despotism.
But you know, America is all about Freedom
if you think the leader be changed, literally don’t put a bigger despot into place. *cough* Iraq *cough*. How many failures that bite you in the ass decades down the line do you need to make before understanding that what you’re doing is the opposite of effective
Nah man, Capitalism is terrible. It’s just slightly better than Communism. Theyre being nice, IMO.Why are you even talking about the US? I know why the avowed communists here are content to market this as a CIA operation to turn a nation capitalist and exploit it. Demonizing capitalism is all they know how to do with their lives. Why are you?
In a rare twist, I think Agema's actually got the facts wrong (and not just opinions). If I understand correctly, running for third and fourth terms is absolutely against the Bolivian constitution. The controversy was 100% called for. It seems to be ending ultimately as a win for the Movement for Socialism. There is no reason to view this as a CIA operation. There is no reason to view this as a "Christo-fascist coup". There is no reason to care about the US in this series of events.
Like, imagine being Jenine Anez. She's not a fascist who planned a coup. She was 5th in line. 5th, when everyone else resigned, and had to deal with the situation that fell to her. Who had to deal with violent protests from day one. Who happened to be in charge when a global pandemic hit. Who eventually managed to mostly gain the support of MAS (not in the sense of voting for her or her party, but in the actual normal usage of support, they had her back on hard decisions). She eventually manages to hold a fair election in between the pandemic and rouge communist groups literally blockading the cities, and tries to peacefully transfer power to the winning party, and people come here to call her a fascist and a CIA plant. Because she's less socialist than the guy who tried to have the Bolivian courts rubber stamp his life tenure against the written law. That's enough to be declared fascist.
That's a sickness.
The running for multiple terms thing is the root of this story. It's been almost precisely 1 year since this current event started, she's been interim president for less. The death toll from months of violence is in the dozens, not the thousands,. The tens of thousands of refugees you're thinking of is Venezuela, where the dictator wasn't removed from power, and everything went to hell.Nah man, Capitalism is terrible. It’s just slightly better than Communism. Theyre being nice, IMO.
I thought the running for multiple terms thing was Venezuela
Im going to have to look it back up because it’s so many years ago, but claiming it ‘fell to her’ is a long string to bow. As far as I remember, the army put her in power. And then killed thousands of protesters. There were tens of thousands of refugees running away because they lost their home.
economy was dependent on a higher oil price, and despite efforts to diversify the economy under Chavez, real harm was delivered to the people of Venezuela by both the low oil price and sanctions and a local capitalist class that deliberately would stop producing goods in order to embarrass the government because they didn't like its labor regulations.The tens of thousands of refugees you're thinking of is Venezuela, where the
The elected judiciary whose job it is to consider, and decide, whether or not something is unconstitutional ruled that it was not. Following said decision, which the public was well aware off, the public still went to the polls and elected Morales.In a rare twist, I think Agema's actually got the facts wrong (and not just opinions). If I understand correctly, running for third and fourth terms is absolutely against the Bolivian constitution.
No, I'm right. The Bolivian Supreme Court scrapped term limits.In a rare twist, I think Agema's actually got the facts wrong (and not just opinions). If I understand correctly, running for third and fourth terms is absolutely against the Bolivian constitution.
I'd broadly agree that there's no clear and direct reason to implicate the USA this time. It just has such a long and varied history of interference that many people find it hard to believe it didn't - and of course not knowing that it didn't interfere isn't the same as it not interfering. Suspicions will be particularly high for many because the OAS election monitors made a big mistake in 2019 which enabled the Bolivian opposition to claim the 2019 election was fraudulent: this looked extremely suspicious. We can also note that the USA was clearly happy to see Morales gone, both at governmental level and in the media given the tone and content of much of it.The controversy was 100% called for. It seems to be ending ultimately as a win for the Movement for Socialism. There is no reason to view this as a CIA operation. There is no reason to view this as a "Christo-fascist coup". There is no reason to care about the US in this series of events.
She's literally a woman of European ancestry who thinks the indigenous population is "savage", "devilish" and their holidays "Satanic", that anyone who wears shoes couldn't possibly be indigenous, and that the country must be returned to Christ.Because she's less socialist than the guy
Actually, she's mixed-race and from a lower middle-class background. Although lower middle class puts a person above a lot a great deal more people on the social scale in Bolivia than it does in the West, because it is far less developed and a far higher proportion of its population are working class poor.She's literally a woman of European ancestry from the Bolivian oligarch class who thinks the indigenous population is "savage", "devilish" and their holidays "Satanic", that anyone who wears shoes couldn't possibly be indigenous, and that the country must be returned to Christ.
You weren't supposed to notice the oligarch part before I edited.Actually, she's mixed-race and from a lower middle-class background. Although lower middle class puts a person above a lot a great deal more people on the social scale in Bolivia than it does in the West, because it is far less developed and a far higher proportion of its population are working class poor.
Of course, this may also explain how vociferously anti-indigenous she is. Someone who feels vulnerable about something may overreact with a great deal of aggression against that vulnerability in order to distance themselves from it as much as possible. This may be particularly true of an ambitious, insecure social climber keen to fit in with their new social circle: adopt and express the values of that social circle especially strongly. In cases where there is an internal conflict (e.g. being homosexual in a highly homophobic society), it may also be an attempt to repress one's own feelings through zealotry.
Forgive me for not even clicking "jacobinmag". I'm well aware you subscibe to communist cesspools that will tell you exactly what you want to believe.She's literally a woman of European ancestry who thinks the indigenous population is "savage", "devilish" and their holidays "Satanic", that anyone who wears shoes couldn't possibly be indigenous, and that the country must be returned to Christ.
Western Media Whitewash Bolivia’s Far-Right Coup
Bolivia has a new US-backed puppet leader, and the Western media can hardly conceal their adulation.fair.orgInterim Bolivian president Añez calls Indigenous citizens “savages”
The outlaw Bolivian president Jeanine Añez has announced that new elections in the country will be held on May 3, 2020. And just prior to that, it was disclosed that Añez called on Bolivians to prevent the return of “savages” to power, referring to Evo Morales, the country’s first Indigenou...www.peoplesworld.orgBolivia’s Coup Government Is a Far-Right Horror Show
The coup-makers that violently deposed Evo Morales last month haven’t even tried to hide their far-right politics. Racist revanchism, backed by Christian fundamentalism, is now the order of the day in Bolivia.jacobinmag.com
She's irredeemably awful. Given your politics, I can see why you'd like her.
That's not how constitutional governments work. The courts judge laws as proper or improper within the constitutional framework. This court tried to remove part of the constitution based on an international treaty. That doesn't count.No, I'm right. The Bolivian Supreme Court scrapped term limits.
The court ruled that said part of the constitution wasn't actually legal because it was created in defiance of an international treaty the country had already signed on to.That's not how constitutional governments work. The courts judge laws as proper or improper within the constitutional framework. This court tried to remove part of the constitution based on an international treaty. That doesn't count.
Then the law or treaty that contradicts the constitution is unconstitutional. The constitution wins, that's the deal.The court ruled that said part of the constitution wasn't actually legal because it was created in defiance of an international treaty the country had already signed on to.
If the idea is that the constitution is supposed to be the legal framework of a nation then it cannot exist in defiance of an already established law or legal agreement entereted into by the nation.
Please do point me to any source that specifies such a thing? Of course it is the norm to take the constitution to be the foremost legal document, but I don't think it is unreasonable to demand that the constitution not violate already established law. By all means, create a constitution to lay down new laws, but if you decide to create sections that defy already established law or agreements you need to reverse those as well.Then the law or treaty that contradicts the constitution is unconstitutional. The constitution wins, that's the deal.
The Supreme Court is the final arbiter of the law. (Let's bear in mind SCOTUS has made rulings that many - including sometimes the government itself - feels are contrary to the US Constitution, and they have all been accepted by the institution of the state: that's the way it works.) The government has remedies available to it if it really doesn't like what the court rules.That's not how constitutional governments work. The courts judge laws as proper or improper within the constitutional framework. This court tried to remove part of the constitution based on an international treaty. That doesn't count.
Well, no.Then the law or treaty that contradicts the constitution is unconstitutional. The constitution wins, that's the deal.