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Although I've spent a lot
of the last year and a half at antiglobalization
actions and meetings, many of which included forums
of various sorts, and although in at least some of
my incarnations I am a Respectable Adult with a
college education and books to my credit who even
gets asked to speak at conferences and
universities, and even though some of my best
friends work for NGOs, this is the first time I've
actually made it up out of the direct action
trenches and into the conference rooms. I found it
highly educational (although like most university
education it had its moments of airless, deadly
boredom.) The amazing number of participants,
thousands more than expected, coupled with limited
translation facilities and a high degree of
confusion meant that I often didn't get to
workshops I would have liked to attend or didn't
know about events until after they happened. What
follows, therefore, is an extremely limited picture
of all the immensity of discussion and debate and
strategizing and organizing that went on around
hundreds of issues. In order to get this out, I've
limited my focus to issues that affect groups I'm
currently working with.
Water: Water is a key issue
worldwide, as there is a strong push from corporate
interests to privatize water resources and water
delivery services. The FTAA, the WTO, and a whole
list of smaller bilateral and regional trade
agreements open the door to the privatization of
water. For me, this issue had eerie echoes of the
negative society I imagined in my novel The Fifth
Sacred Thing, where the poor could not afford to
drink and people were imprisoned for stealing
water. The antiglobalization movement now must
assert that water is a human right, linked to the
right to life. There is no substitute for water;
therefore there must be a limit to private
ownership and control of water
resources.
Women's Issues: Are key in
the antiglobalization struggle. There was a
powerful workshop on feminist perspectives on
globalization, and many other workshops on women's
issues. The main morning panels, however, tended to
be quite male dominated, and there was much talk of
the need for an even stronger focus on women. I was
able to connect individually with some of the women
working on antiglobalization, and hope that our
women's action in Quebec City in April will bring
our issues more to the forefront. There was great
interest in it among women I met and as soon as the
call is finalized I will be able to get it out to
some of the women's networks I've connected with
here.
Indigenous Peoples'
Struggles: For me, the most moving and clear talks
I heard in the entire five days were two indigenous
speakers who spoke so heartfully and poetically
(and in such clear, blessedly slow Spanish!) that I
felt like I was drinking cool, spring water after
days of stale coffee. There was an encampment of
youth, the MST (Landless Rural Workers' Movement)
and indigenous groups, but unfortunately it was
separate from the main campus and also there was no
clear announcement of the fact that there were
ongoing meetings, speeches and presentations of the
indigenous people's networks. Had I known, I
probably would have spent most of the conference
there. As it was, I got there only almost at the
end, in time to learn that the situation in Chiapas
is not happily resolved under Vicente Fox, that he
is also trying to outlaw abortion, and that the
growing struggle in Chiapas will also focus on
water rights. High on the corporate agenda is
control of the hydroelectric potential represented
by Chiapas' rivers: Bay Area folks, take note in
light of our current energy 'crisis'!
The FTAA: I knew about the
FTAA, I knew it was bad enough that I'm devoting
most of my time currently to organizing against it,
but I didn't know in detail just how bad it
is:
Privatization of services:
Education, medical care, libraries, water
delivery&emdash;the FTAA would open those areas to
regulation by international trade agreements. It's
one of the things the WTO hadn't quite gotten
around to yet. Presumably, that could mean a
corporation that runs prisons could sue a
government for providing its own and thereby
limiting its potential profits. Ditto with water,
schools, health care, etc. Of course, for most
countries in Latin America the World Bank and the
IMF have already dealt with their health care and
educational systems. But the FTAA would make it
difficult or impossible for local or national
governments to take control of their own schools,
health care programs, or utilities and run them for
the benefit of their own citizens instead of for
corporate profit.
Agriculture&emdash;probably
the most important aspect for the South, for
farmers and indigenous people. The agreement would
make it impossible to support small farmers, to
ensure biosafety standards around genetically
engineered foods and seeds, to prevent market
manipulations and crop dumping that destroys
traditional cultures.
Natural resources and the
environment: The agreement would undermine every
legislative and regulatory tool for conservation of
resources and environmental protection, from the
Endangered Species Act on down, and override local
and federal laws.
Investment&emdash;remember
the Multilateral Agreement on Investments, that was
defeated back in '97 by the opposition of civil
society? This agreement brings it back, opening the
door to 'investors' rights' to control of
government regulations and financial
systems.
End run around the WTO: The
FTAA, along with a whole lot of other bilateral and
smaller multilateral agreements, are part of the
new strategy of the corporate globalists. Since the
body blow that was dealt to the WTO in Seattle,
what they're trying to do is put in place piecemeal
the provisions they couldn't yet put into the
WTO.
The WTO:
May or may not hold it's
next meeting in Quatar in November&emdash;although
the media is reporting it as a sure thing, it will
actually be a couple of weeks before they confirm
the decision. It is less of a priority for
corporate interests, however, because their
strategy has shifted to bilateral and regional
trade agreements that essentially put its noxious
provisions into place.
Direct Action:
We did do one forum on
direct action in FTAA organizing, with groups from
Brazil and Argentina. But in general direct action
is sort of the stepchild of the NGO world. It
happens around the edges: the MST (The Landless
Rural Workers Movement) did a great action pulling
up bioengineered crops on the first day of the
conference. Unfortunately we were still en route
and couldn't take part. They Respectable Adults
know about direct action; they often support it,
and some of them actually take part in it. The
introduction to the Forum Schedule credits the
movement sparked by Seattle and DC and Prague. But
many of the groups seem to have a bit of difficulty
actually focusing on the direct action component of
that movement or thinking about it as part of their
strategy. Of course, they have funding to protect,
so maybe they're better off not linking to us too
directly. Maybe we don't need joint strategies and
these parallel worlds can just continue to exist
semi-separately. But I can't help but think that
we're their best friends&emdash;we're the reason
why the World Bank is going to read a letter of
protest with alarm and concern, or look at a
petition, or pretend to have a dialogue. And that
it might be nice occasionally, or smart
strategically, for that to be a little more clearly
acknowledged. Our direct action movement gains a
lot when we do work together with the groups which
have a level of sophistication and expertise that
paid staff can develop&emdash;for example, in our
San Francisco organizing around the FTAA there are
a number of NGOs and also some union people who
bring an incredible amount of knowledge and
sophistication to the issues. But I'd also like to
see more of the high level strategists come down to
the convergence center and actually listen to the
anarchists and the dreadlocked youth and the black
bloc who have a level of radical clarity that can
get lost after years of reading reports and
pressing for minor policy changes. Anyway, I amused
myself by tossing out radical proposals:
"Great&emdash;you guys send out a joint letter of
protest and meanwhile we'll shut down every major
stock exchange on the planet." And some people
seemed genuinely interested.
There are, however, awesome
groups down here that are organizing around direct
action. There are groups in Sao Paolo, Belo
Horizonte and Buenos Aires that did solidarity
actions around the S26 protests in Prague and are
now gearing up for actions around the preliminary
FTAA (ALCA in Spanish) meeting April 7 in Buenos
Aires. They're serious, determined and
radical&emdash;the Argentinians want to make the
Quebec City protests unnecessary by shafting the
FTAA before it ever gets to Quebec. It's a joy and
a privilege to be down here sharing some of our
experiences and helping in that endeavor.
Yours in Persistent
Opposition to Authority,
Starhawk
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