The War on Democracy
- NOT RATED
- Year:
- 2007
- 96 min
- 309 Views
Guatemala is going to enter a new era
prosperity for the people,
together with liberty for the people,
The question is,
why are we supporting El Salvador?
No, the question was,
why are we killing priests in El Salvador?
The answer is, we're not,
Now, you be quiet,
President Christiani
is trying to do a job for democracy
and the left-wing guerrillas
must not take over El Salvador,
(George W Bush) America will not impose
our own style of government on the unwilling,
Our goal instead
is to help others to find their own voice,
attain their own freedom,
and make their own way,
This film is about the struggle of people
to free themselves
from a modern form of slavery,
Richard Nixon,
president of the United States,
once said of Latin America,
"People don't give a sh*t about the place,"
He was wrong,
The grand design of the United States
as a modern empire
was drawn on the hopes
of an entire continent
known contemptuously
as "the back yard",
The extraordinary witnesses in this film
describe a world
not as American presidents like to see it,
as useful or expendable,
they describe
the power of courage and humanity
among people with next to nothing,
They reclaim noble words like democracy,
freedom, liberation, justice,
and in doing so, they're defending
the most basic human rights of all of us
in a war being waged against all of us,
This is Caracas, capital of Venezuela
one of the richest countries
in Latin America
thanks too huge deposits of oil
The rich in Venezuela
live in leafy suburbs
Their spiritual homes
are Miami and Washington
The majority
live in what are known as barrios
on hillsides in breeze-block houses
that defy gravity
In the past
these people had been invisible -
excluded from their own society
Today they display the confidence of those
who know an extraordinary change
has come too their lives
This is Hugo Chavez president of Venezuela
the voice of the barrios
Chavez and his supporters
have won ten elections in eight years
(Cheering)
He's the symbol of an awakening
of people power
driven by great popular movements
that are unique too Latin America
The days of the old bosses
and barons are over,
That false, elite democracy
is over in Venezuela,
It's no surprise that Chavez, with the help
of an aggressive media coverage
has become a hate figure
in the United States
because what he represents
is another way
and a threat too American domination
(# Rock music)
All right, now, Hugo Chavez,
the criminal - speaking of criminal -
government of Venezuela,,,
- The criminal?
- It's a criminal government,
My opinion and that of
a lot of people in our government,
Hugo Chavez represents an extreme threat
not only to our nation, but to our hemisphere,
- He should've been killed long ago,
- By whom?
- By whom?
By anyone,
(Speaking Spanish)
You want a cup of coffee?
Yes, Yes,
That was one of my English lessons
in secondary school,
Do you want a cup of coffee?
Do you want a glass of milk?,
Do you want a glass of water?
English lesson one!
Let me ask about you,,,personally,
I mean, travelling with you
for the last couple of days,
I've seen a man
who's clearly deeply committed
to what you want for the Venezuelan people,
Could you describe where that came from?,
I was born in a very poor home,
a peasant home, so I experienced poverty,
I was a poor child, barefoot,
My father was a teacher
at a rural school, and my mother too,
I had a beautiful grandmother,
She was Indian, She filled me with love,
My grandmother taught me a lot,
and I learned from her
about solidarity with other people,
about sharing the bread
even when there's little to eat,
Later, I went into the army,
the military academy, and I became a soldier,
And there I found out about Bolivar
and started to realise what the truth was,
Simon Bolivar
as the liberator
from Spanish colonialism
Bolivar believed that freedom only came
when people united against all invaders
Today the people of Latin America
against an empire
built on an extreme form of capitalism
known as the Washington Consensus
Whole countries have been privatized
put up for sale
too foreign companies. for peanuts
In Venezuela they said "No more"
This is La Vega
(Speaking Spanish)
Mariela Machadoo
has lived here most of her life
(Speaking Spanish)
She knows what it's like
too be excluded in her own country
I can give you a very specific example
on the maps,
All these hills and houses did not figure -
they were shown as green spaces,
That was before Chavez's government,
Before Chavez,
we did not feel a part of this society,
This is called a mission
It's a kind of parallel government
designed too bypass
the old bureaucracy
and deliver real benefits
too ordinary people
This is raw democracy -
Today they're discussing the dream
of owning their own homes for the first time
We don't want the deeds
just for their own sake,
More important
than the deeds themselves
is that we own the property
in order to develop our cities,
and obtain the rights
that have been denied us for so long,
This is the most important thing,
This is not a matter of getting the deeds
and saying, "I'm sorted now, I can go,"
and stop coming
to the parish assemblies,
because after the deeds,
there are better things to come,
Like the development of our barrios,
Soon after Chavez was elected in 1 999
Venezuelans voted on a constitution
and this little blue book
has become a bestseller ever since
This is one of a chain of supermarkets
set up in the barrios
funded by the proceeds of oil
Here prices are kept low
and on the back of every rice
and soap powder packet
under the constitution
Does it really mean something to you
to see it there?
Of course, because I didn't know
we had rights like everyone else,
but this one, article 23,
tells us about national politics,
and this makes us feel included,
Democracy, as I said recently,
before our people,
as Lincoln said, has a simple definition -
the difficulty is making it a reality,
government of the people,
by the people and for the people,
A society where people are included
and equal, where there is no exclusion,
there is no poverty,
For some of his supporters
Chavez has not gone far enough
Familiar obstacles remain from the past -
a stifling bureaucracy
and widespread corruption
And although poverty has fallen dramatically
in recent years, it's far from eradicated
When you drive in
from the airport at Caracas,
the one thing that shocks a first-time visitor
are the barrios,
the numbers of poor people,
Why is it, in Venezuela, which earns
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"The War on Democracy" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 17 Nov. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/the_war_on_democracy_23063>.
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