A frightening story came across the radio waves this week and was later
reported by MSNBC: �Texas
governor orders STD vaccine for all girls.�
Governor Rick Perry had just signed an order making Texas the first of
what is likely to be many states to require that school girls be vaccinated
against Human Papiloma Virus (HPV), implementing what at first blush appears to
be sensible and humane legislation attempting to prevent the spread of the
deadly STD. Perry, who usually votes with the conservative Christians who
oppose this order, parted company with them, and little research is required in
order to understand why, given Perry�s cozy relationship with Merck, the
vaccine�s manufacturer. Not only is one of Merck�s principal lobbyists
Perry�s former chief of staff, but his current chief of staff�s mother-in-law,
state legislator Dianne White Delisi, is the state director of Women In
Government. Add to that a $6,000 political contribution from Merck for Perry�s
re-election campaign and Merck�s generous donations to Women In Government,
plus a top official from Merck sitting on the Women In Government business
council, and all the dots begin to connect.
Suddenly, Mr. Champion Of Family Values, Rick Perry, has dumped the
fervent anti-fornicators of the religious right in favor of remaining in bed
with Merck. If we didn�t know about that liaison, and if the governor's order
weren't so draconian, we might be tempted to applaud his concern for the health
of young Texas women.
Last week in Chile, on the other hand, President Michelle Bachelet took
on the Roman Catholic Church and right-wing opposition there by signing
a decree that the morning-after pill be available to girls as young as 14,
|
Chilean President Michelle Bachelet, during a meeting with working mothers |
even as the Constitutional Court of Chile ruled that she could not do so. In
the same week, however, Bachelet held a special ceremony in La Moneda,
Santiago�s presidential palace, celebrating new laws that ensure that working
mothers can nurse their children in the workplace, even when there is no
daycare center on the premises -- another long-time taboo in Chile�s
traditionally Catholic, patriarchal milieu. Moreover, Bachelet affirmed that
her administration was �guaranteeing that people have the tools to exercise a
loving, spiritually strong maternity or paternity, and allowing the bonds
between mothers and children to be enriched.�
Say that again Michelle! That people have the tools to be good
parents? You mean tools like guaranteed daycare for all Chilean children, which
you have instituted since you became president in March 2006? You mean a
national healthcare system that is now �looking forward to an unusual surplus
of funds for 2008 and is currently evaluating how best to spend the
unexpected additional money?� And what about the unprecedented pension plan
your administration is implementing which guarantees that no one need retire in
poverty and that every person over 60 will have all necessary health care for
free? And those generous student loans that can be partially repaid through
community and professional service, instead of graduating from college with a
life-sentence of debt servitude? And the generous new tax credits and
guarantees you are now offering to small businesses?
Well, every North American is waiting with bated breath to find out how
you will pay for all of this -- the inveterate mantra of any society locked in
the jaws of corporate capitalism--those two �c� words so antithetical to
twenty-first century Chile�s other incomprehensibly important �c� word: copper.
It was that industry that helped destroy Chile in concert with Augusto Pinochet,
when the infamous Rothschild-connected Anaconda Copper Company was sucking the
lifeblood out of the nation�s economy until it was nationalized in the 1970s by
Salvador Allende, one in a long list of reasons for his overthrow by the CIA.
In those days, Michelle Bachelet was a teenager -- what we in the U.S.
might call a �military brat,� moving from one location to another in Chile as a
result of her father�s position of general in the Chilean Air Force. A
socialist and staunch supporter of Allende, Alberto Bachelet was arrested,
tortured, and died in prison during the Pinochet coup. Michelle and her mother
were also imprisoned and tortured -- something she greatly dislikes talking
about -- but an agonizing, terrifying ordeal that profoundly shaped her entire
life and helped mould her into the compassionate physician, parent, and
now-chief of state, that she has become. Of this she often says, �I haven�t had
an easy life, but who has?�
But back to that �c� word. In the same week that Bachelet invited
a group of working mothers and children to La Moneda to celebrate the
new �laws
that protect families,� she stood in the middle of a CODELCO mining site in the
Valparaiso Region of Chile and proclaimed, one week after Goldman Sachs at the
Davos world economic summit begged to buy CODELCO, �The good news is that
CODELCO is attractive for people who have lots of money. The bad news for them
is that we are not going to sell it, because CODELCO is going to remain a
State-owned company.� So while her counterpart in Venezuela is busy
nationalizing the petroleum industry, Bachelet is zealously guarding that
precious orange mineral that finances government policy based on authentic, rather
than ecclesiastically-designed family values, and in her socialist system, as
with that of Chavez, Morales, and Correa, natural resources are being used on
behalf of the citizenry, not to fatten the coffers of corporate capitalism in
cahoots with the state.
Also noteworthy is that at the same time that the heterosexual
lifestyle is being supported in Chile, so, increasingly, is that of
the gay and lesbian community. While Chile is still a traditional
patriarchal society strongly influenced by the Catholic Church, acceptance
of its gay community is growing. In fact, Chile�s Ministry Of National
Property has given
the Movement For Homosexual Integration and Liberation (MOVILH) an abandoned
government building for its headquarters, and the organization will be able to
use the space for the next five years. For the $12,500 of restoration work that
will be required before the building is usable, the government granted MOVILH a
government subsidy. While this kind of support is not equivalent to the
legalization of gay and lesbian marriages, we need only ask: When was the last
time the most liberal U.S. presidential administration in the
nation's history demonstrated even this much support of the gay community?
In Chile and overall in Latin American countries, most medications are
available without a prescription, over the counter, and are moderately priced.
For this reason, the pharmaceutical industry does not influence the economies
or cultures of those nations to the extent that it does in the U.S.
Thus, there is little doubt that Bachelet's insistence on making the
morning-after pill available to young Chilean girls has nothing to do with her
personal or political connections with big pharma, but everything to do with a
worldview informed by being a parent, a physician, and a socialist.
Bachelet herself proudly proclaims her agnosticism and is notorious for
having had a child out of wedlock, yet she was still democratically elected the
first female president of Chile. Her anguish, her struggle, and her commitment
to Chile have cultivated within her, at a cellular level, a quality of family
values that pious pontifications by clerical moralists cannot begin to approach.
<>It's important to remember that Michelle Bachelet is not Hugo Chavez.
While both leaders concur politically, their styles are different. Where
<>Bachelet needs to toughen her stance is with the transnational corporation Barrick, which
is mining gold on the border between Argentina and Chile and exploiting land
and water in the process. A mutual treaty between Argentina and Chile makes
this possible, and activists of both countries are demanding that Bachelet and
Argentina�s centrist-socialist President Kirchner suspend the treaty and
Barrick�s presence in the region. One of the realities of the so-called
"Pink Tide" of Latin America's move to the left is that these
neo-socialist countries are rejecting Tapeworm Economics.Every day I receive email from folks who want me to write about certain
topics, i.e., the bloated Pentagon budget, the Iraq War, Plamegate, and many more
topics, but all of those issues, important as each of them is individually, are
symptomatic of Tapeworm Economics and serve to perpetuate it, and no one has
elucidated the Tapeworm better than Catherine Austin Fitts both at the Solari website and at its companion site Dunwalke. I strongly recommend studying
these sites because when one comprehends the Tapeworm, so many other pieces of
the puzzle suddenly fall into place.
<>Chile is exemplifying the kind of society that can be created when the
needs of the citizenry dictate that the entire infrastructure of a nation
is constructed and organized around meeting those needs and not around the
needs of corporations. It is not a Uptopia, and poverty, corruption, and a
conservative opposition to socialist policies remain obstacles to the fullest
realization of human rights and social justice.Nevertheless, what Bachelet has accomplished in 11 months is not only
stunning but awe-inspiring as we in the U.S. navigate the grinding, gray empire
in whose belly we reside, otherwise known as "The Tapeworm" --
mean-spirited, niggardly, and �focusing on the family� -- not your family or
mine, but a family that flourishes only by attacking the values of every other
family that is unlike it and in so doing, belies its contempt for the heart and
soul of the entire human family.
Carolyn
Baker, Ph.D. is author of a forthcoming book, �COMING OUT FROM CHRISTIAN
FUNDAMENTALISM: Affirming Life, Love and The Sacred.�
Her recent book is �U.S.
History Uncensored: What Your High School Textbook Didn't Tell You
�Her website is www.carolynbaker.org where she may be
contacted.