I
Isambard
Guest
This was the bit I wanted you to focus on. Its the definition of the basis for Marxist exploitation, that is commodification.**I read the wikipedia article you linked to. It was very interesting. **
The Bolivian government asked the World Bank to get involved:
Bolivia capitalized (its landmark privatization reform) its railways, telephone system, national airlines, and hydrocarbon industry
Yep, tend to happen when a foreign power interferes in your economy as often as it happens in Bolvia.Protests developed when they proposed to raise the rates for water. Other people got involved and caused a more general uprising.
The coca growers of Bolivia led by then Congressman Evo Morales (elected President of Bolivia in December 2005) had joined the demonstrators and were demanding an end to the US-sponsored program of eradication of their crops (while coca can be heavily refined and made into cocaine it is used legally by many in Bolivia for teas and for chewing).
The victory gained the cocalero and campesino groups international support from anti-globalisation groups.[2] Oscar Olivera and Omar Fernandez have become sought after speakers at venues discussing how to resist resource privatization and venues critical of the World Bank. His actions in the Water Wars raised the profile of Congressman Evo Morales and he became President of Bolivia in 2005. Omar Fernandez joined Morales’ socialist party Movimiento al Socialismo and became a Bolivian senatorB]The government caved in to the demonstrators and abrogated the contracts with the water companies. The people who stirred up the trouble gained notoriety and are apparently poster-boys of the left:
Can you imagine that? The government taking the will of the people into account? How absolutely horrid
Welcome to the wet n’ wild world of political economy. Everything has consequences.In the meantime, the poor people in Cochabamba still don’t have any water.
They didn’t have water before, and Bolvia continues getting victemized by Western firms. All things back to normalcy:thumbsup:**They were just cynically used by leftists with their own agendas, and afterwards forgotten about.
It seems to me, this is more a story about exploitation by careerist leftists than by “imperialism.” The World Bank was asked by the government to intervene in the situation. They saw that an improvement in the infrastructure of the water system was needed, and proposed a rate increase to (partially) pay for it. **
Which made the water unobtainable to just about everyone given the Western GDP model the company was operating on.
Mea Culpa;4035480:
People got upset, outside groups like the coca growers represented by Evo Morales got involved, and the project was shut down. The result is that Evo Morales is now president of Bolivia and he and his buddies give talks to leftists around the world about the evils of “imperialism.” In the meantime, the poor people in Cochabamba don’t have any water.