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          <title>Reason Magazine - Staff</title>
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<title>Revolutionary Appeals</title>
<link>http://www.reason.com/news/show/29480.html</link>
<description> &lt;p&gt;

The anonymous masked leaders of the rebellious Zapatistas, as well as a number
of sympathetic Mexican analysts, have attempted to portray the Chiapas revolt
as a spontaneous, grassroots reaction to the constitutional and market-based
economic reforms instituted by the Salinas administration. In the wake of the
revolt, these people have called for a repudiation of the very policies that
have energized the Mexican economy and set the stage for a more fully
functioning democracy.&lt;p&gt;
While the Mexican intelligentsia has largely toed the left-of-center line,
there are significant exceptions, such as commentators Arturo Warman, Enrique
Krauze, and H&amp;eacute;ctor Aguilar Cam&amp;iacute;n, who are attempting to
articulate a more balanced understanding of the crisis. The leftist
interpretation of events, they point out, is lacking both nuance and an
understanding of regional history. Perhaps the highest-profile dissenter among
Mexican intellectuals is Octavio Paz, the 1990 winner of the Nobel Prize for
Literature. He finds it significant that the Chiapas revolt and the
assassination of the PRI's Luis Donaldo Colosio, though probably unrelated to
one another, coincide with a Mexican political climate that has reached levels
of discord unseen for over half a century.&lt;p&gt;
Paz lays much of the blame for that climate at the feet of Mexican
intellectuals, many of whom keep writing outmoded &quot;apologies for the use of
violence.&quot; They have, says Paz, forgotten the great political lesson of the
20th century: The only way to achieve a more just, more liberal society is to
further democracy, not authoritarian socialism. Paz believes that many of the
demands of the Indian communities--such as land reform, establishing education
and health programs, and ending the practice of &lt;em&gt;caci-&lt;br /&gt;quismo&lt;/em&gt;, in
which local political bosses grant favors in exchange for personal
allegiance--should be satisfied within existing legal parameters. He therefore
condemns the armed uprising as an interruption of Mexico's ongoing political
and economic liberalization.&lt;p&gt;
Paz has identified a division within the PRI between hard-liners and
conciliators. He warns against violent approaches, which would only produce
more casualties, further divide a troubled nation, and create sympathy for the
rebels. And indeed, after the initial skirmishes, the government has chosen the
conciliatory road by declaring a unilateral cease-fire and granting amnesty
(which the rebels rejected in a sarcastic letter published by the press). The
government has also created an ad-hoc national commission composed of
opposition party members and unaffiliated citizens, as well as government
representatives, to improve the conditions of the communities.&lt;p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
Central to Paz's analysis is a recognition that the identity and interests of
the &lt;em&gt;comandantes&lt;/em&gt;, the leaders of the Zapatistas, do not always coincide
with those of the rank-and-file Indians. The comandantes' speeches betray them
as intellectuals, not unschooled peasants, something even admiring authors such
as Jos&amp;eacute; Agust&amp;iacute;n concede. Paz's point is further confirmed, I
think, by the comandantes' revealingly over-anxious populist explanation for
sporting masks: They want to &quot;share the masses' anonymity.&quot; A more likely
explanation is that they are not themselves Indian, an inconvenient fact that
would undermine their authority as spokesmen for oppressed natives.&lt;p&gt;
Pioneered in Latin America by the Cuban Marxists, the term &lt;em&gt;comandante&lt;/em&gt;
was later adopted by the Nicaraguan Sandinistas. But Mexican observers have
drawn connections between the Zapatistas and Latin America's highest-profile
revolutionary group, Peru's Shining Path. Both groups repeat familiar Marxist
programs: anti-individualism (evident in the Zapatistas' proud claims to having
a &quot;collective&quot; leadership), expropriation of the landowners' property, economic
equalization, and an &quot;end to capitalism and the bourgeoisie.&quot; To the standard
question--how can they persist in trying to implement socialist solutions in
view of the repeated instances of mass misery and colossal crimes brought about
by socialism since 1917?--both give the same standard answer: &quot;&lt;em&gt;Our&lt;/em&gt;
socialism will be different.&quot;&lt;p&gt;
Both groups also idealize a pre-Hispanic past. This idealization, of course,
has no factual basis: The Incas destroyed earlier Peruvian cultures, replacing
their religions with the convenient belief that the Incas descended from the
gods. Similarly, the Mexica (the actual name of the Aztecs) were universally
hated by other Indian nations, whose understandable desire to stop serving as
taxpayers, slaves, and sacrificial victims was a crucial factor in
Cort&amp;eacute;s's victory.&lt;p&gt;
There are significant differences, however, between the Zapatistas and Shining
Path. One is that the Zapatistas' claims to want democracy for Mexico have
gained them acceptability and access to the national and international media.
This tactic is more reminiscent of the early Cuban revolution and the
Sandinistas than the more brutal--but also more honest--Shining Path. Along
with the pointed use of comandantes, this savvier approach makes me suspect
that the Zapatistas' ideology and perhaps even their armaments (whose
mysterious financing suspicious observers have wondered about) might in fact
have more to do with Cuba and the still Sandinista-controlled Nicaraguan army
than with Shining Path.&lt;p&gt;
The one clear similarity between the Zapatistas and Shining Path is that both
groups have an urban, intellectual leadership and an Indian following. The gulf
between the Zapatista comandantes and the Indian communities they purportedly
represent shows up most concretely in the divergent demands the two groups make
and in the limited native support given to the rebels. The comandantes'
proclamations include urban and national goals, among them the creation of a
socialist country. By contrast, the Indians are traditionalists interested in
issues directly affecting their local area.&lt;p&gt;
And despite their populist rhetoric, it is clear that there was no broad-based
support for the Zapatistas in Chiapas--the revolt managed to take over only
four municipalities. The majority of local peasant organizations have not
joined the insurrection, and some have even captured Zapatistas. In the towns
of Ocosingo and Altamirano, for instance, armed residents forced the rebels to
withdraw. In Oxchuc, the Tzeltal Indians will not allow the return of the
comandantes. A bitter Zapatista told a Mexican paper of his unhappy experience
in Oxchuc: &quot;When I saw them [the residents of Oxchuc] I thought that they were
our comrades, but I changed my mind when 15 of them beat me up.&quot;	&lt;p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
But although the Zapatistas have only limited support among the Indians, they
enjoy ample support among a Mexican intelligentsia traditionally  jealous of
the superior standard of living of the commercial middle class. In a country
often accused of dictatorship, newspapers, magazines, and even government-owned
TV stations have given wide and often sympathetic publicity to the comandantes'
manifestoes. These supporters have defended killings by the Zapatistas while
condemning killings by the army and justified the kidnappings and forced
conscriptions of young Indians by the rebels while denouncing the government's
incarceration of Zapatistas.&lt;p&gt;
The press has also been quick to connect the uprising with Salinas's economic
reforms: His &quot;neoliberalism&quot; has failed; his constitutional changes are wrong
because now private investors can buy peasant land; NAFTA will make things even
worse. The rich will continue to get richer and the poor poorer.&lt;p&gt;
This last assessment has a familiar ring and indicates the ideological slant of
much of the commentary on the revolt. In the 19th century, Karl Marx argued
that widening income gaps in 19th-century European and American capitalist
economies would create the conditions for proletarian revolution. Since his
colossally wrong prediction, of course, people who have become rich in those
countries are indeed better off. But so are those who have remained poor,
because their standard of living is now not only higher than that of the
19th-century poor but frequently higher than that of the 19th-century
not-so-poor. To be sure, Mexico is much farther from capitalism than the United
States or Western Europe. Its bureaucratized economy stands somewhere between
them and Mussolini's Italy. But its distance from truly free markets is
precisely its problem.&lt;p&gt;
The media, however, have no monopoly on leftist sympathies for the Zapatistas.
The Catholic bishop of Chiapas believes that one positive outcome of the revolt
will be a &quot;transitional Mexican government which will establish the grounds for
`true' democracy in Mexico.&quot; This desid-eratum is in fact one of the Zapatista
demands which Paz finds not even worth discussing, since it amounts to
rejecting the ongoing electoral process and surrendering to the comandantes'
&quot;argument by force.&quot; The fact is Mexico has been building the foundations of a
more open electoral process for years now, long before the Chiapas revolt.&lt;p&gt;
Equally uninformed is the bishop's view that among the beneficial cultural
consequences of &lt;br /&gt;the revolt will be the recognition of the Indians'
&quot;ancestral values...after 500 years of oppression.&quot; Statements like this echo
the hard-left, redistributionist &quot;liberation theology&quot; preached in Chiapas
since the late 1960s. They also echo the pro-Zapatista statements of priest,
poet, liberation theologian, and Sandinista functionary Ernesto Cardenal. The
work of this &quot;religious left&quot; should not be ignored in any thorough explanation
of the revolt.&lt;p&gt;
But what makes the bishop's embrace of the revolutionary agenda so out of touch
is that it overlooks the fact that, precisely in the cultural realm, the
Mexican government has far from neglected the Indian. Throughout most of the
20th century, the government has vigorously promoted the Indian past as
essential to Mexico's national pride and cultural heritage--would that such
attention to the native culture were accompanied by an equal regard for the
well-being of the remaining natives! The bishop overlooks, too, that a true
recovery of &quot;ancestral values&quot; in Mexico would be incompatible with the
existence of the bishop himself. In a pre-Hispanic Mexico, there would simply
be no room for Catholic priests, except perhaps as sacrificial victims.&lt;p&gt;
Like the good bishop, the governor of Chiapas supports &quot;agrarian reform&quot; and is
unencumbered by a knowledge of history. If the &quot;conditions&quot; for the reform are
not sufficiently favorable now, he has told the press, the government must then
create them by &quot;brushing aside&quot; the &quot;minor differences&quot; standing in the way.
Among the minor differences he would brush aside could conceivably be the
reluctance of cattle ranchers to have their land taken away. &lt;p&gt;
The awkward truth for the governor is that past Mexican agrarian reforms
seriously hurt productivity. In the 1920s and '30s, expropriation ruined many
farmers and cattlemen. Land redistribution disrupted production, especially
among cattle ranchers, who suddenly found themselves without land on which to
raise their cattle. The inefficiency of the agricultural cooperatives was the
reason the PRI government of L&amp;aacute;zaro C&amp;aacute;rdenas, which had
redistributed almost half of all arable land and nationalized major
enterprises, abruptly changed its policies in 1938. The party protected
landowners from further expropriation, and a year later chose as presidential
candidate a moderate Catholic rather than an avowed socialist.&lt;p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
This is not to say there are no problems in Chiapas. There is no question that
local unhappiness with the political status quo helped recruit soldiers for the
Zapatistas, but it seems that inequalities alone do not explain the revolt.
Another explanation is that the comandantes by their own admission, prepared
for the uprising for more than 10 years. But there are other factors beyond the
control of either the Zapatistas or the government.&lt;p&gt;
Immigration from neighboring regions (including Guatemala) added to the
notorious Mexican demographic explosion over the past decade and greatly
strained local resources. In fact, the population growth in Chiapas between
1980 and 1990 was double the national rate. In addition, international coffee
prices, the main pillar of the local economy, collapsed in 1991. They have yet
to recover, adversely affecting more than 60,000 peasant growers. International
meat prices have also declined, and cattle raising is the area's second major
source of income. To combat deforestation, the government implemented a
moratorium on timber harvesting. While the ban might save trees, it also
eviscerates Chiapas's third major source of wealth. The state continues to rank
below the national average by every possible living standard.&lt;p&gt;
Racial discord also contributes to the region's problems. In neighboring
Yucatan, an uprising from 1847 to 1850 tried to exterminate the whites and
return to the pre-Hispanic past; in Chiapas the Tzeltal Indians rebelled in
1712 and 1869. Chiapas lacks the degree of miscegenation that grants other
Mexican states a measure of racial harmony. One sees whites on the one hand and
Indians on the other, with only a few mestizos in between. Cattlemen are white
and sometimes behave like overlords. And since cattle require a great deal of
land, cattlemen own large properties. Most peasants are Indian. They farm small
plots that, until Salinas's constitutional reforms passed, they could not even
sell; and such farming is much less profitable than cattle.&lt;p&gt;
Nor is official neglect a sufficient explanation for the revolt. Since 1985 the
government has granted land to 40,000 peasant families and created 400 new
agrarian commons. In the past five years, the National Solidarity Program has
pumped a great&lt;br /&gt;deal of money into Chiapas. A good example is a government
loan of 200,000 new pesos granted in 1993 to the Peasant Organization Emiliano
Zapata. By the end of the year, most peasants were sufficiently well off to
begin repaying the loan. Ninety Indians, however, argued against repayment and
then killed the head of the organization, who favored complying with the
agreement.&lt;p&gt;
Interestingly, much of the government aid went to areas now occupied by the
Zapatistas. Obviously the government's efforts have not been enough. But
perhaps the revolt could also be explained as yet another case of an upheaval
following a period of comparative economic and political liberalization
complicated by the peculiar interests of a resentful intellectual class. This
is how historians such as Simon Schama and, much earlier, Fran&amp;ccedil;ois
Guizot explained the French Revolution.&lt;p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
Explaining the past is easier than predicting the future. Mexico can become a
Peru, but that is not inevitable. A clean election should be a sufficient
prelude to ending the crisis now facing the country. Then the problems of the
Indian communities should be addressed, though not at the expense of property
owners who are productive members of the Mexican economy.&lt;p&gt;
Clean elections and granting the more reasonable Indian demands would take away
much of the high ground from the armed-to-the-teeth comandantes, who want
socialism through turmoil because they fear democratic contests that their
outmoded ideology might not win. The revolt and the murder would then be only
another chapter in a long, painful process of modernization, whereby Mexico
could eventually achieve the prosperity of such formerly backward economies as
Singapore, Taiwan, Hong Kong, South Korea, and Chile.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
<guid isPermaLink="false">29480@http://www.reason.com</guid>
<pubDate>Fri, 01 Jul 1994 00:00:00 EDT</pubDate><author>info@reason.com (Dario Fernandez-Morera)</author>
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