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- From: covici@ccs.covici.com (John Covici)
- Reply-To: covici@ccs.covici.com
- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.catholic,alt.activism
- Subject: Can Economic Policy be Based on Christian Principles?: part 4
- Message-ID: <245-PCNews-124beta@ccs.covici.com>
- Date: 26 Jan 93 17:5:21 GMT
- Organization: Covici Computer Systems
- Lines: 217
-
- The following series is taken from Executive Intelligence Review V20,
- #5 and is the cover story of that issue. For further information on
- EIR, please contact me by Email.
-
-
- Mexico's Pronasol: Nazi-communists dance
- to Wall Street's tune
- by Carlos Cota Meza
-
- Mexican President Carlos Salinas de Gortari's
- National Solidarity Program (Pronasol, or Solidarity) has
- achieved worldwide notoriety. Its most radical advocates
- maintain that with Pronasol, Salinas could aspire to some
- Nobel Prize in the future. Pronasol has been praised and
- supported by George Bush and Bill Clinton. It has received
- the backing of numerous European governments, the
- Vatican's State Department, and the Vatican's ambassador
- to Mexico. A variety of regional governments, including
- Chile, Brazil, and Costa Rica, have sent delegations to
- Mexico to learn the ``secret'' of Pronasol. Anti-poverty
- ``experts'' from China and India have been sent to Mexico
- to study its unique success.
- Above all, the bankers of Wall Street are euphoric.
- The {Wall Street Journal} of Jan. 8 wrote: ``The
- Solidarity Program is the fulcrum of President Carlos
- Salinas de Gortari's effort to ensure that the benefits
- from Mexico's free market economic renaissance reach the
- very poor.... And the do-it-yourself anti-poverty plan has
- been such a success that hardware stores can scarcely
- keep picks and shovels in stock.''
- The Mexican government's own public explanations
- about its program do not suffer from modesty either. With
- President Salinas in the lead, officials say that with
- Solidarity, ``we have done in 30 months what for other
- nations has taken their entire history.'' They say that the
- program is intended ``to construct a social state with full
- respect for citizens' rights,'' or that it offers ``a space
- for the exercise of direct democracy,'' and so on.
- The truth is that Pronasol emerged from the
- recommendations of the World Bank, that the Mexican
- government allocate budget resources to a program for
- ``combatting extreme poverty'' which would, at the same
- time, serve to create a base of political support among
- the impoverished layers of the population for the
- government's neo-liberal economic policies (payment of the
- foreign debt, budget cuts, wage freezes, privatization,
- elimination of traditional social aid institutions). It is
- the creation of a new corporatist, Nazi-communist entity,
- which rejects any form of traditional management of the
- national economy.
- The source of Pronasol's financing is no secret. Each
- time that Salinas de Gortari refers to it, he insists that
- its projects be financed with money from the privatization
- of state companies. But this is a simplistic explanation.
- Through the privatization of state companies, money is
- obtained for paying off the foreign debt. Those payments
- in turn produce some ``relief'' on payment of future
- interest costs. A portion of that ``relief'' is allocated to
- Pronasol. This is why, while the Salinas government's
- amortization and interest payments on the foreign debt
- (through June 1992) has been more than $44 billion, the
- National Solidarity Program has received nearly $9 billion
- over five years (including 1993 allocations). Pronasol's
- resources have grown from year to year: $547 million in
- 1989; $1.222 billion in 1990; $1.729 billion in 1991;
- $2.267 billion in 1992; and $2.582 billion in 1993.
-
- - A brainwashing program -
- Beyond all the propaganda, Pronasol is a
- brainwashing program not unlike the Maoists' Cultural
- Revolution, which seeks the reform of the Mexican state,
- the restructuring of the ruling PRI party elites, to win
- votes for the government, and to coopt independent and
- leftist political organizations. All of this is intended
- to establish a new political base of support under the
- corporatist control of the presidency, as a means of
- giving continuity to neo-liberal economic policies with
- the backing of the poor.
- Every social program of previous governments is now
- accused of being ``ruinous populism by a paternalistic
- state.'' Analysts of the speeches of the President and of
- other government officials about Pronasol have encountered
- a strange mixture of ideologies. The Italian Communist
- Antonio Gramsci is sometimes cited; Gramsci postulated
- that power would be given to civil society through the
- process of ``social autogestion'' and suppression of the
- bourgeois state, much like the Count Saint Simon who,
- together with other ``utopian socialists'' like Pierre
- Joseph Proudhon (of the ``Philosophy of Misery'') urged a ``new entrepreneurial
- ethic.'' In practice, Pronasol translates into the
- re-creation of Adolf Hitler's ``voluntary work armies.''
- To carry out this ``cultural revolution'' (reform of
- the state), the Salinas government is relying on an
- impressive political apparatus. From the very beginning of
- the program, suspicions were aroused by the fact that its
- facilitators were in the majority ``former'' leftist
- militants. On every level of the Pronasol hierarchy, one
- finds ``ex''-communists, ``ex''-Trotskyists, ``ex''-Maoists,
- ``ex''-guerrillas from Mexico, Guatemala, Uruguay, and
- Argentina. Many of them have done jail time for acts of
- terrorism. All work on an intellectual level as the heads
- of promotion teams, as field organizers (all are
- self-dubbed ``employees at the service of the people'').
- According to information put out by Pronasol, there are
- some 700,000 Solidarity ``militants.'' Arturo Marti@aanez
- Nateras, former communist and current coordinator of
- Pronasol's regional programs, says that the National
- Solidarity Program does everything. ``If it's a matter of
- settling accounts with a mayor, a Pronasol official
- appears to purge him; if one seeks to promote such and
- such a person, he is identified as a prominent member of
- the Pronasol family. Absolutely everything is decorated
- with the tricolor bow,'' which is Solidarity's emblem.
- On June 10, 1992, the creation of a National
- Solidarity Institute was announced, whose purpose is to
- prepare ``labor cadre who will be able to organize,
- represent, lead, and act under the Solidarity philosophy.''
- Documents of the institute complain that ``labor
- organizations have been generally incapable of superseding
- the traditional forms of labor intervention and action.''
- Sources have revealed that the institute is offering
- courses propagandizing against the Mexican Labor
- Federation (CTM) and its leader Fidel Vela@aazquez, the
- oldest and most established labor organization on the
- Mexican political scene. The ``fourth historic reform'' or
- ``re-founding'' of the ruling PRI party that has been
- announced, has as one of its primary objectives the
- incorporation of ``Solidarity Committees'' into the
- structure of the ruling party such that these become the
- party's new base of support.
- For the communists of the Pronasol family, the
- political line is: ``With Solidarity, the balance of power
- in Mexico has been changed. There has been a transfer of
- power from the bureaucracy to the organized communities.''
- At the same time, these official communists are completely
- interlinked with the opposition communists organized
- around the Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD), who
- have proclaimed that their fight against the International
- Monetary Fund and its policies is now over.
- Adolfo Gilly, a national executive committee member
- of the PRD and a longstanding Trotskyist leader in Mexico,
- proposes the creation of new political organizations
- against those which ``wasted the decade of the eighties
- with illusory slogans such as non-payment of the foreign
- debt.... The International Monetary Fund and World Bank
- have built-in and unavoidable guarantees so that no
- government in its right mind could, on its own, take the
- risk of that kind of measure.... The restructuring of
- Latin American capitalism [has done away with] the
- outmoded national-populist pacts for all time.'' As
- Pronasol's regional coordinator Marti@aanez Nateras has
- indicated, Pronasol has become a parallel government at
- the local level, and in many states at the level of
- governorships, where Solidarity delegates have more
- political and budgetary power than governors themselves.
-
- - New budgetary structure -
- In May 1992, the national congress approved a
- presidential initiative to create a new cabinet post:
- Secretary of Social Development. The Pronasol structure
- has been integrated into that new department, which has
- not only replaced the Department of Ecology and Urban
- Development, but establishes a new ministerial hierarchy
- and new budget. The Secretary of Social Development
- coordinates the operations of the Departments of
- Education, Labor, Social Security; the State Workers
- Institute; Family Development; the National Housing
- Institute; Popular Housing Development; and the National
- Development Bank.
- One of the main objectives of this reorganization is
- to reduce the costs of various public works projects, by
- using the semi-slave labor power provided by Pronasol. As
- the {Wall Street Journal} wrote on Jan. 8, ``Because
- citizen participation minimizes labor costs and reduces
- waste, the program's $9 billion price tag is far less than
- what the government would have paid to do the work
- itself.... Solidarity road-building projects ... cost just
- 70% of what the government used to pay to do the jobs.''
- A Pronasol census revealed that there are 40 million
- officially poor in Mexico, of whom 17 million subsist
- under conditions of ``extreme poverty.'' It is among this
- sector of the population that Pronasol operates, not to
- combat the structural causes of poverty but rather to
- organize and convert it into a political force.
- According to Salinas's Fourth State of the Nation,
- address given Nov. 1, 1992, there are 100,000 ``Solidarity
- Committees'' spread throughout Mexico and organized by
- official communists. The people they serve have no place
- in the government's neo-liberal economic model, since they
- are not even considered a reserve army of labor power.
- Instead, they are viewed as a potential organized
- battering ram against other Mexicans who have had access
- to ``modern Mexico,'' namely, the exploited {maquiladora}
- workers, those who still have a bit of land, those who are
- making starvation wages but are still organized in unions,
- etc.
- According to the Salinistas, who hope to perpetuate
- their stay in power beyond the year 2000, it is the
- targeted victims of Solidarity who will demand that the
- dismantling of the state and of the national economy
- continue, that payment of the foreign debt be maintained,
- and that the International Monetary Fund and World Bank
- continue to govern Mexico. Herein lies the ``success'' of
- Pronasol, touted worldwide.
- Salinas de Gortari has brought together Nazis and
- communists to work for the imposition of the policy of the
- international financial institutions. And for these
- supranational oligarchic institutions, the deal has come
- cheap: a mere $9 billion spent so that in 1994 there will
- be a new government in Mexico controlled by Carlos Salinas
- de Gortari, Wall Street's man.
-
-
- ----
- John Covici
- covici@ccs.covici.com
-
-