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Mexico: Zapatista Rebellion
I. Arise in Chiapas, Mexico - January 1, 1994
- A. In response to NAFTA, though organizing for some time
- B. identify with Emiliano Zapata
- C. Primarily indigenous of Chiapas (mostly Maya)
- D. Visible leadership in Subcommandante Marcos
- E. Also known as the EZLN
- F. Have had enourmous impact because of Internet -- first rebel group anywhere to do this
II. Worldview of the Zapatistas
- A. Neoliberalism vs. Humanity the major conflict of today
- B. Mexico divided (how Zapatistas describe the government's point of view)
- 1. neoliberal producers - those who are active in the modern, global economy
- 2. All others regarded by government as parasites
- 3. But Zapatistas see the state and the owners as the parasites
- 4. Zapatistas believe that it is the peasents and the workers who are the real producers, not capitalists and financiers
- C. What is Neoliberalism?
- 1. Presently the dominant economic model in the U.S. and most international economic policy
- 2. Essentially a return to capitalist orthododoxy
- a. Rule of th market
- b. Cutting public expenditures
- c. Dergulation
- d. Privatization of state-owned industry
- e. Elimination of concept of "pulic good" in favor of "individual responsibility"
- 3. Free trade, low taxes, minimal government regulation - unfettered competition
- 4. meant to make economies highly efficent to produce maximum growth
- 5. idea is that while many protections will be removed, a rising tide will lift all boats
- 6. Has, so far at least, a distinct tendency to concentrate wealth at the top
- D. Zapatistas' view of Neoliberalism
- 1. EZLN sees Mexico City as a model of neoliberalism - tanks and sewers
- a) tanks in the street to keep order over an increasingly impovershed population
- b) order needed to keep economy running efficently
- c) meanwhile, street children live in sewers to hide from death squads
- 2. Zapatistas argue that a society governed strictly by market laws is a society in which humans are valued only in financial terms.
- 3. Further argue that Neoliberalism has created a new world war, in which the concentration of wealth is the greatest crime against humanity.
- E. Seek creation of a democracy based on civil society
- F. Do not seek full control of nation, but to participate in this new democracy
- 1. "We are not guerrillas, we are revolutionaries"
- 2. Seek to create revolutionary thinking -- do not focus on military overthrow of state
III. Who are the rebels?
- A. Subcommandante Marcos - "This is an ethnic movement!" 1/10/94 - well, not really
- B. Alliance of Amerindian peasents and leftist intellectuals
- 1. most of the soldiers are indigenous peasents from Chiapas
- 2. But Marcos clearly a member of Mexico's educated elite
- 3. this kind of alliance common feature of Latin American Rebel groups
- C. Real identity is "the opressed" - people united because of history of struggle
- 1. argue that they are the products of 500 years of struggle
- 2. Independece from Spain meant nothing - most Mexicans are still colonized, this time by Mexico City and international capitalism
- 3. have made efforts to identify with others around they world they regard as oppressed
- a. do this in part to gain support, money from the outside
- b. but also to demonstrate the univeral nature of their struggle
- c. Internet has enabled them to link with protest groups around the world
- D. Argue that they are the true builders of the nation
- E. Also, that they are a real army, with flags, uniforms, adhere to the Geneva Convention
IV. Who are the oppressors? - Zapatistas' viewpoint
- A. Opressor is ahistorical
- 1. all those people through history who have oppressed the poor of Mexico
- 2. In effect, those who steal
- B. Chiapas as a state that bleeds
- 1. Zapatistas point out that Chiapas has tremendous agricutural and oil wealth
- 2. But most of that wealth leaves Chiapas
- 3. Chiapas traditionally ignored in reforms after the Revolution
- C. Destroyers of nation in name of neoliberalism
V. Objectives
- A. To create a humane Mexico - an economy based on humaneness, not efficency
- B. A blend of traditions and socialism
- C. Expropriate all farms over 50 hectares, except communal and collective farms
- D. Mexico must recognize the differences among its people before it can have unity
VI. Government response
- A. Government has been somewhat confused in its response
- 1. tries to deal with them militarily, but EZLN won't really fight them
- 2. Tries negotiations, but EZLN presents a very fundamental challenge to government's legitimacy
- 3. Government can't decide whether to treat them as terrorists or legitimate political group.
- 4. Death squad style massacres have been a huge embarassment at home and abroad (major massacre 22 Dec 1997)
- B. The basic challenge
- 1. Government claims to be heirs of Revolution
- 2. But Zapatistas say that they are the true heirs of the Revolution
- 3. If government has betrayed the Revolution, it is not legitimate
- 4. Also show that Mexico's rising tide missed a lot of people
- 5. Exposes the inequities of Mexico to the world through the Internet
VII. Response of public, at home and abroad
- A. Has helped to spur the development of civil society in Mexico
- B. Zapatistas supported by majority of Mexico's 10 million Amerindians
- C. Many in Mexico appaled by government tactics, and have mobilized
- D. Human rights violations of government criticized by UN, members of European and U.S. public
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