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La forza è nascosta nelle cuciture non negli eventi principali, il cambiamento deve partire dall’ambito politico ma deve interessare tutti gli ambiti soprattutto quello sociale. L’Argentina era un alievo modello del FMI. Ed ancora ne sta pagando le conseguenze. Economia, lavoro e assistenza sociale in America
Misure di sicurezza nazionali e continentali in previsione di presunti attacchi terroristici dopo l’undici settembre. I tentativi del presidente Bush di sponsorizzare gli Stati Uniti  sono condannati. Gli attivisti protestano contro un fiume di parole…i fatti non si vedono.
Il Fondo monetario internazionale ha già avuto la sua occasione e ha fallito. L’Argentina non dovrebbe chiedere prestiti ma risarcimenti. Da Buenos Aires, il reportage di Naomi Klein Both Bin Laden and US cold war nostalgics pine for epic narratives
Il problema dell'America non è il suo marchio - che non potrebbe essere più forte - ma il suo prodotto. Messaggi pubblicitari distorcono la realtà The best-selling Canadian author of No Logo, the international anti-corporate activists' guide, begins her fortnightly column for the Guardian today.

World poor in sale of the 21st century

Democratic rights are a high price to pay for western free trade.
Trade ministers from the 34 countries negotiating the Free Trade Area of the Americas will today meet in Buenos Aires. Many in Latin America predict that the ministers will be greeted with protests much larger than the ones that exploded in Seattle in 1999.
The FTAA's cheerleaders like to pretend that their only critics are white college kids from Harvard and McGill who just don't understand how much "the poor" are "clamouring" for the FTAA. Will this public display of Latin American opposition to the trade deal change all that?
Don't be silly.
Mass protests in the developing world don't register in our discussions about trade here in the west. No matter how many people take to the streets of Buenos Aires, Mexico City or Sao Paulo, defenders of corporate-driven globalisation just keep on insisting that every possible objection lobbed their way was dreamed up in Seattle, by somebody with newly matted dreadlocks slurping a latte.
When we talk about trade, we often focus on who is getting richer and who is getting poorer. But there is another divide at play: which countries are presented as diverse, complicated political landscapes where citizens have a range of divergent views, and which countries seem to speak on the world stage in an ideological monotone.
In western Europe, the foot and mouth inferno puts the entire model of export-oriented industrial agriculture on trial. In North America, we are finally hearing the debates about whether or not more of the same model of deregulation, privatisation and liberalisation will protect their heath and education and water systems.
And yet such diversity of public opinion is rarely attributed to citizens of third world countries. Instead, they are lumped into one homogenous voice, channelled by dubiously elected politicians or better yet, ousted ones like Mexico's Ernesto Zedillo, now calling for a global campaign against "globophobes".
The truth is that no one can speak on behalf of Latin America's 500m inhabitants, least of all Mr Zedillo, whose defeat was in part a repudiation of Nafta's record. All over the Americas, market liberalisation is a subject of extreme dispute.
The debate is not over whether foreign investment and trade are desirable - Latin America and the Caribbean are already organised into regional trading groups such as Mercosur. The debate is about democracy: what terms and conditions will poor countries be told they must meet to qualify for trade and investment?
For the past two decades, these terms and conditions have been negotiated and enforced by the IMF and the World Bank in exchange for loans. Social services have been privatised, user fees introduced, agricultural subsidies cut (while richer countries kept theirs), hard-won land redistribution programs abandoned, and the minimum wage has been controlled - all in the name of becoming "investment ready".
Argentina, the host of the current FTAA ministers' meeting, is currently in open revolt over massive cuts to social spending - almost $8bn over three years - that have been introduced to qualify for an IMF loan package. Three cabinet ministers have resigned, unions staged a general strike, and university instructors moved their classes to the streets.
Though anger at wrenching austerity measures has focused primarily on the IMF, it is rapidly expanding to encompass trade deals such as the proposed FTAA. The Zapatistas began their uprising on January 1 1994 - the day the North American Free Trade Agreement came into force.
Seven years later, 75% of the population of Mexico lives in poverty, real wages are lower than they were in 1994, and unemployment is rising.
No wonder the Zapatistas were able to draw 150,000 supporters to the streets of Mexico City last month. And despite the claims that the rest of Latin America is clamouring for a Nafta to call its own, the central labour associations of Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay - representing 20m workers - have come out against the plan. They are now calling for nationwide referendums on membership in the FTAA.
Brazil, meanwhile, has threatened to boycott the summit altogether, furious at Canada's dirty trade war and wary that the FTAA will contain protections for drug companies that will threaten its visionary public health policy of providing free generic Aids drugs to anyone who needs them.
Defenders of free trade would have us believe in a facile equation of Trade = Democracy. The people who will greet American trade ministers on the streets of Buenos Aires next week are posing a more complex and challenging calculation: how much democracy should they be asked to give up in exchange for trade?

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