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PUBLIC MEETING: CHILE 1973 AND THE WAR ON TERROR TODAY

category dublin | miscellaneous | news report author Monday September 15, 2003 11:15author by LASC - Latin America Solidarity Centre

Organised by Lasc as part of its commeration of the Coup in Chile in 1973

To mark the 30th Anniversary of Pinochet's bloody coup against the democratically elected government of Chile.

Teachers Club
36 Parnell Square
Monday 15th
7.30 PM

Speaker: Hugh O'Shaughnessy

Hugh O'Shaughnessy was the only Irish journalist to cover the coup in Chile from Santiago itself and he has written extensively on Latin America. He is the author of Pinochet: The Politics of Torture.

Tonight he will look at the events in Chile then and the links with the War on Terror waged by the US today.

Comments (11 of 11)

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author by >>>>>Seáinínpublication date Mon Sep 15, 2003 19:32author address author phone

Well, the one simialrity I see in both cases is that the US intervened to save a country from misrule. Allende destroyed the Chilean economy and people had had enough, the military coup was popular with most Chileans at the time, something leftists conveniently forget.

author by anarchopublication date Mon Sep 15, 2003 21:35author email anarcho at geocities dot comauthor address author phone

Allende destroyed the economy? Really? What about
the heroic actions of the CIA and the US state?
The US on record about making the economy "scream".
Not to mention, of course, the activities of the
Chilean capitalist class. So, please, credit where
credit is due... And lets not forget that Pinochet
also successfully destroyed the economy as well.

And "most people" supported the coup? That explains
why Pinochet was dictator for nearly two decades...
After all, if the coup was popular and people did
not want Allende then elections could have been
held instantly. But, no, the Chilean people were
not given that option, suggesting that the coup
was not popular.

Of course anyone suggesting that under Pinochet
could look forward to torture and, perhaps, death.

Obviously dictatorship and torture were "popular"
as well...

Related Link: http://www.anarchistfaq.org
author by JD Daltonpublication date Mon Sep 15, 2003 22:05author address author phone

Hugh O'Shaughnessy isn't Irish. He's not a very good journalist either.

author by correctingpublication date Tue Sep 16, 2003 10:35author address author phone

Actually Hugh O'Shaughnessy is Irish, though he has spent most of his life in England, as for not being a good journalist well you are entitled to your opinion, whatever it is based on. Others might disagree, fortunately it is easy enough to get hold of his articles.

As for Seanin the arsehole, well he is still at it talking about destroying economies. I think the arguments for that are extremely weak, not that they would justify a coup.

author by >>>>>Seáinínpublication date Tue Sep 16, 2003 11:00author address author phone

The proof really lies in how things have turned out. Chile is one of the most successful economies in South America. On the other hand Cuba remains a hellhole of a country.

author by hépublication date Tue Sep 16, 2003 11:28author address author phone

but one contributive factor is "freedom".
Freedom might be catagorised as economic, legal, gender related, access to health, education....
Freedom and Human Development do _seem_ linked.

The UNHDR report, started at the end of the 90s is a periodic review of all member nations indices relation to "human development" and thus in a sense "liberty".

Chile scores lower than Cuba on emancipation of women, thus 50% of the population have less access to jobs, educational opportunities and such.

NOTE that in Chile married women are still legally "chatteled" and not considered to be individuals regards custody of children or entitled to property in times of marital breakdown.

Interestingly in the accompanying UNHDR anaylsis you will notice that Chile and Ireland come together on the "freedom to choose" index.
Chile less than 1% below the average Ireland less than 1% above.

you may google for U.N.H.D.R.
or read
FREEDOM AND HAPPINESS
A comparative study in 46 nations in the early 1990's

Ruut Veenhoven
Published in: Diener, E. & Suh, E.M. (eds) 'Culture and subjective wellbeing'
MIT press, Cambridge, MA USA, 2000, ISBN 0 262 04182 0, pp. 257-288
at the link, then go on with these silly and comparisons of GDP/GNP and economic output claiming they are related to "happyness".

Related Link: http://www.eur.nl/fsw/research/veenhoven/Pub2000s/2000a-txt.rtf
author by zayínpublication date Tue Sep 16, 2003 12:39author address author phone

You're thinking if there's only one% difference between Chile and Ireland in the afore mentioned text and it's table, then Chile can't be that bad.
thus Seanín knows best.

But think again.

The U.N.H.D.R. was a landbreaking idea. Never before had a global comparison been made between societies using this type of information. When the first copy came out, (irritating personal detail: I had a small bookshop on Charing X Rd. and I did my best to dstribute about 500 copies).
But because the scope was global, the information within was not exactly up to date.
So the table which equates Chile and Ireland is based on information from the end of the 1980s.
Our youngest readers were born in the 1980s.

SO: In the 1980s kids, there was no divorce in Ireland, there was extensive censorship in Ireland, there was limited contraception in Ireland, there was limited rights of women to marital property, there were no gay rights in Ireland, it was very very different to now.
If you're reading this in UCD/UL/DCU/TCD etc., it is very likely you can get a copy of the UNHDR.
= read it.
If you're doing a course in "economics or how to get a job in a NGO you'll prob. have to read it".
& you ought to read here too.
%-)

author by >>>>>Seáinínpublication date Tue Sep 16, 2003 17:28author address author phone

Oh ywah, Cuba is such a woderful place the people are trying to get over to the US in flimsy little rafts to spread the good news.

Why don't some of you communists go and help Fidel, seems he's having a little trouble getting the revolution finished.

author by JD Daltonpublication date Wed Sep 17, 2003 09:21author address author phone

You're quite wrong. O'Shaughnessy is not Irish. Did you never hear him speak ?

author by qophpublication date Wed Sep 17, 2003 13:58author address author phone

people left Cuba in droves, just like they left Ireland in droves. Didn't they? And if I'm wrong correct me, but didn't two of the ferries out of Ireland in the 1980s fail safety tests?
And in the 1990s didn't another suffer the ignominty of losing it's stabiliser mid sail between Rosslare and France?
And wasn't every poor irish boy and girl who left with their 35kg luggage by air, charged between 10 and 15 punts tac for the privelage?
And how many came back?

author by anarchopublication date Wed Sep 17, 2003 23:51author email anarcho at geocities dot comauthor address author phone

"The proof really lies in how things have turned out. Chile is one of the most successful economies in South America. On the other hand Cuba remains a hellhole of a country."

So the ends justify the means? So dictatorship and torture are okay if the "economy" is doing well? What about basic things like treating people are ends, not means?

And, btw, the economy collapsed big time under the Pinochet dictatorship. Also, of course, inequality, poverty and so on exploded under Pinochet. But, obviously, the working class do not count when evaluating whether the "economy" is "successful." But, I suppose, by "successful" it is meant "the rich are getting richer"

For more on the so-called Chilean "successful" economy under Pinochet visit:

http://www.infoshop.org/faq/secC11.html

The facts are somewhat different from the "ends justify means" rhetoric used by some.

Related Link: http://www.anarchistfaq.org


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