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[Marxism] Re: Stephen Lewis book



Lewis is a legend in Canada, is married to Canadian journalist
Michele Landsberg. He is the father of Canadian broadcaster Avi
Lewis, who married journalist and author Naomi Klein.


On Dec 4, 2005, at 6:51 AM, Louis Proyect wrote:

Fred Feldman wrote:

The rightist opposition to Lula is now getting more support from
Wall Street -- if I read my New York Times correctly (a recent
article,
pretending to sympathize with indigenous demandsthat a planned China
sponsored dam project should benefit their community or not be
built at
all, ended by supporting rightist charges that Lula is selling out
Brazilian national interests to China).


And should we assume that Wall Street is conspiring to topple Thabo
Mbeki when articles such as these appear?

>>A new book by the United Nations' special envoy to Africa on AIDS
brings to light an extraordinary breach between the organization
and South Africa over the crisis, under which the government has
effectively banned the envoy from carrying out his duties here for
the past year.

The book, written by Stephen Lewis, singles out South Africa's
government and its president, Thabo Mbeki, for what it calls
bewildering policies and a lackadaisical approach to treatment of
the nation's millions of H.I.V.-positive citizens.

Virtually every other nation in eastern and southern Africa ''is
working harder at treatment than is South Africa with relatively
fewer resources, and in most cases nowhere near the infrastructure
or human capacity of South Africa,'' Mr. Lewis says in the book,
''Race Against Time'' (House of Anansi Press).

Mr. Lewis, a Canadian who has served since 2001 as the special
envoy to Africa on AIDS for the United Nations secretary general,
Kofi Annan, wrote that ''every senior U.N. official, engaged
directly or indirectly in the struggle against AIDS, to whom I have
spoken about South Africa, is completely bewildered by the policies
of President Mbeki.''

He contended that his colleagues are ''incredulous'' at how Health
Minister Manto Tshabalala-Msimang has exaggerated the possible side
effects of antiretroviral drugs and wrongly suggested that a diet
of sweet potatoes and garlic can be as important as antiretrovirals
in treating AIDS.<<

(NY Times, October 25, 2005)

I actually am grateful that the NY Times prints articles such as
these, whatever the motivation.


Dirceu's identification of Lula with the bourgeois nationalist (and
therefore somewhat resistant to complete US imperialist domination)
tradition in Brazil is significant, in my opinion.


Dirceu is an interesting character. He was a former student leader
who trained guerrillas in Cuba when Brazil was ruled by a
dictatorship and was able to return to Brazil only after undergoing
plastic surgery to conceal his identity. He was charged with
handing out $30,000 a month in kickbacks to buy the votes of PT
opponents in parliament. That's a tidy sum. Now, if the votes were
for land reform or something, I myself would organize a rally for
Lula (smallish, I'm afraid).


It is not unusual today to find among leftists dismissals of
bourgeois
nationalism as completely discredited and no longer able to
attract any
real mass support in conflicts with imperialism. Iraq has shown that
this is simply not true.


I wasn't aware that the neocons have been agitating for regime
change in Brazil.


On the part of the left, failure to defend bourgeois-nationalist
forces
when they come under imperialist attack can only weaken the effort to
bring together genuine popular-revolutionary movements.In fact, a
sectarian posture on this issue can facilitate devastating blows that
can throw back the prospects for a considerable time.


If Lula were in hot water like Allende was in the early 1970s, I
can understand such an appeal. Lula is being attacked from the
right for the same reason that Clinton was attacked by the
Republicans for 8 years. The Brazilian right wants to be in the
driver's seat because there are perquisites associated with power.
Bourgeois politics is an immense trough at which both rightist and
fake "socialist" parties can get fat at. That's what the Lula
corruption scandal is about, not a titanic struggle between the
workers and Wall Street.

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