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National Office
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By Rober Saper, Witness for Peace International Team Member in Mexico During George W. Bush’s five-country visit to Latin America last week—passing through Brazil, Uruguay, Colombia, Guatemala, and ending in Mexico —the president stated repeatedly that the U.S. is committed to alleviating poverty, improving healthcare, and increasing access to education in the region; in a pre-trip address to the U.S.-Latin American Chamber of Commerce, he touted these same objectives as the content of U.S. policy in our Western Hemisphere “neighborhood.” Unsurprisingly, Bush left out a few pieces in the policy discussion. While strolling through the
neighborhood, he failed to disclose the whole story on free trade
agreements, including the botched promises of NAFTA and its devastating
impacts on poor communities in
Thirteen years of “free”
trade under NAFTA, while resulting in more Mexican billionaires, have left
laborers and small agricultural producers unable to afford life in
While
It comes as no surprise that Mexican president Felipe Calderón, among many others, demands that Bush implement immigration reform and radically rethink border militarization and the construction of the wall. It is quite astounding, on the other hand, that political decision-makers fail to call into question the economic policies that have virtually built the invisible wall between impoverishment and prosperity. Free trade agreements stoke the fires of migration, present few if any viable alternatives in the rural sector, and continue privatizing public services and energy resources. These policies, resulting
in scandalous poverty in regions that are rich in natural resources, have
set the stage for popular outrage. Demands are on the rise for alternatives
to current governance and U.S.-backed policies that curtail democratic
participation and obliterate hopes for sufficient employment and
subsistence; hence, the Zapatistas’ implementation of autonomous communities
in
Over the past nine months, the Oaxaca social movement demanding the governor’s resignation has been fueled by the negative effects of top-down imposition of U.S.-backed economic policy: wages, educational funding, and healthcare availability are declining, living costs are rising, international agricultural prices are unfair, and traditional forms of government have been suppressed. To date, 23 people have
died at the hands of federal and state police and paramilitaries in the
Instead, Bush boasts of
nearly doubling the amount of poverty-directed foreign aid to all
No amount of
Robert M. Saper, a graduate of Gannon
University in Erie, grew up in West Sunbury, Butler County, and currently
works for Witness for Peace in Oaxaca,
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