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Bang Your Pots
to Support Argentina vs. the IMF
http://www.corpwatch.org/action/PAA.jsp?articleid=1557
Source: Global
Cacerolazo
Posted: February
1, 2002
In Solidarity
With The Resistance Of The Argentine People Against The Exploiters (Transnationals,
Banks, Corrupt Government Thieves),
meeting at the
World Economic Forum/WEF (Davos) in New York.
February 2 and
3, 2002: Concrete place, time and format of the action to be decided
in each city.
Neighbors And
Citizens Of The World: Let's make our caceroles sound together! All
of the world's caceroles sounding off at the same time in a Huge
Cacerolazo Global.
As We Shout
Together With The People Of Argentina In Rebellion: "Down With Them
All; Not Even One Will Remain!"
What Is A Cacerolazo?
When hundreds, thousands or hundreds of thousands of people get
together and bang on their caceroles (pots and pans) as loudly as
humanly possible, moving forward or standing still, in collective
protest. The Cacerolazo has become the symbol of Argentine popular
rebellion against the neoliberal order, and is fast becoming associated
with the global resistance to transnational capitalism.
Why Argentina?
Argentina is not a poor country, but rather a country that has been
destroyed. It is the latest example that transnational capitalism works
like a "neutron bomb": destroying all living things.
A large part of the population of Argentina, once the "breadbasket of
the world" with tremendous natural resources -- the hope and destiny of
many millions of poor immigrants from around the world -- is now going
hungry.
Fifteen of the 36 million Argentines are living below the poverty
line.
Five million live in extreme poverty.
Argentina is a global mirror of neoliberal capitalism. Argentina is
your future. Argentina is a global scenario.
The current crisis in Argentina, the "top student" of the IMF and the
Washington consensus, is the culmination of 25 years of the neoliberal
economic model imposed through significant bloodshed by the military
dictatorship in Argentina (1976-1983; 30,000 dissappeared, hundreds of
millions tortured, jailed and exiled), which was supported by the IMF
and the government of the United States.
But Argentina has also been during the past few years, and especially
since the popular rebellion on December 19 and 20, 2001 (that forced the
pseudodemocratic government of De la Rua to resign), an example of a
society, a people, and a citizenry that said ENOUGH!: No more victims!
The cacerolazos have produced an irreversible and irreperable rupture in
the established order.
Local, self-generated calls to action are coming from the grassroots
through neighborhood assemblies, which are totally self-managed,
horizontal and democratic. A profound transformation of the political
culture is rapidly emerging among wide sectors of the population.
Many solidarity actions with the Argentine people have been carried
out or are about to be carried out in diverse cities throughout the
world, such as Barcelona, Bilbao, Paris, Toronto, Montreal, Oviedo,
Berlin, Madrid, London, Porto Alegre and New York.
Why February 2/3, 2002?
There will be a huge demonstration and cacerolazo in New York City on
Saturday, February 2 against the World Economic Forum (which used to
take place in Davos, bringing lobbies, transnationals and banks together
with government leaders), along with demonstrations and cacerolazos on
the same day in cities throughout the world, particularly in Canada,
Europe (above all in Spain) and Latin America (especially the city of
Porto Alegre, Brazil, where the World Social Forum will be meeting at
the same time, and in Buenos Aires).
Why A Cacerolazo?
The "Cacerolazo" is globalizing as a form of protest; as a method it
has many advantages:
It is absolutely non-violent.
It is loud and clearly visible.
It is an extremely simple and grassroots method; it does not require
expensive technology, training or special abilities.
The entire family can participate and any community or city can
organize one.
It is festive, carnavalesque and it symbolizes the social response to
the big winners in the Argentine Crisis and the global neoliberal order
more generally.
Proposal For Action In Each Locale:
1) Organize a Cacerolazo shaming those who are responsible for the
crisis.
2) Write a text to denounce the situation.
3) Spread the word through the mass and alternative media.
4) Communicate progress and results through the internet and other
global communication networks.
Neighbors And Citizens Of The World:
Because we are all
Argentines... On Saturday/Sunday, February 2/3 Let's create the sound of
a global cacerolazo...
May Our
Resistance And Solidarity Be As Global As Capital! |