PODER POPULAR COMUNITARIO.
19 de septiembre de 2023
http://www.ImmigrantSolidarity.org
MENSAJE DE VICTOR TORO RAMIREZ.
Video: 50 AÑOS DEL GOLPE
Movimiento de La Peña del Bronx.
http://www.ImmigrantSolidarity.org
https://poderpopularcomunitario.blogspot.com
Chile :: 11/09/2023.
Miguel Enríquez, el menos muerto de todos x Andrés Bianque.
Chile. Mientras Daniel Ortega acusa a Boric de ser un “Pinochetito”, el mandatario chileno sale en defensa de “sus” carabineros represores (videos)
Resumen Latinoamericano, 14 de septiembre de 2023.
El presidente nicaragüense Daniel Ortega habló claro y señaló a los carabineros y militares chilenos como “asesinos” de su pueblo, acusando al mandatario Gabriel Boric de ser un “pinochetito” por defenderlos.
En este 50 aniversario del golpe pinochetista, los carabineros, como es habitual en ese cuerpo de corruptos y criminales, reprimieron a mansalva a los manifestantes, y lo hicieron con la impunidad que les da su presidente y también los aliados de este desde la “izquierda”.
Editorial de Radio Plaza de la Dignidad
NO ME TOQUEN LOS PACOS
1- Cuando te las das de demócrata tratando de dictador a otro, al tiempo que eres capaz de cercar una marcha dejando entrar solamente a los partidarios de tu régimen y apalear a todos los otros manifestantes, en una actitud innegablemente propia de dictadores y fascistas eres un FARSANTE.
2- Cuando presumes de paladín de la democracia y eres capaz de apoyar y dar chipe libre a una institución corrupta, torturadora y asesina sin haber cumplido con tu promesa de refundar a los pacos, utilizando el cerco mediático de los medios de comunicación para limpiar su imagen. No sólo no eres demócrata sino que eres más FARSANTE aún.
3- Cuando te dices demócrata y en campaña prometes terminar con los estados de excepción en el Wallmapu y luego eternizas la militarización de la zona criminalizando y encarcelando a los Mapuche que luchan por su libertad, no solamente NO ERES DEMÓCRATA, sino que además de FARSANTE eres un dictadorcillo mocito del empresariado extractivista.
4- Cuando haces gala de demócrata haciendo CAMPAÑA electoral en contra del TPP11 y luego firmas el tratado silenciosamente, no sólo no eres demócrata, sino que eres un mentirosillo que apoya el colonialismo del capitalismo extranjero.
5- Cuando en campaña avisas a Piñera que le caerá el guante por las violaciones a los DDHH en la Revuelta y luego andas de la mano con el “avisado” tratándolo incluso como un gran demócrata, no solamente no eres un paladín de la democracia, sino que eres un cómplice, encubridor y PERKIN limpia imagen del criminal Piñera.
6- Cuando homenajeas a Allende imitándolo esquizofrénicamente, al tiempo que apaleas, reprimes y mutilas al pueblo, no solamente no te pareces a Allende, sino que te asemejas Pinochet.
EN LAS URNAS BURGUESAS NO HAY NADA
LIBERTAD A TODXS LXS PRESXS POLÍTICXS AHORA.
Chile.
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Chile. Revolución y Contrarrevolución: 50 años del Golpe de Estado
Por Gustavo Burgos. Resumen Latinoamericano, 12 de septiembre de 2023. El régimen en su conjunto, con su boato y sus ceremonias, se dispone a conmemorar...
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Chile. 50 años del Golpe militar: Defensoría de la Niñez revela más de mil casos de violaciones a los DDHH contra la infancia
Por Antonia Acuña. Resumen Latinoamericano, 12 de septiembre de 2023. Este año, Chile conmemora 50 años del Golpe Militar y la posterior instauración de una...
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Chile. Miguel Enríquez, el menos muerto de todos
Por Andrés Bianque. Resumen Latinoamericano, 12 de septiembre de 2023. A 50 años del 11 de septiembre. Martes 11S, Allende no acepta planes de retirada...
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Chile. Se realizó una masiva marcha en Valparaíso el 11 por los 50 años de memoria fértil (fotoreportaje)
Resumen Latinoamericano, 12 de septiembre de 2023. Reporte fotográfico de MARIO AGUIRRE MONTALDO Valparaíso, lunes 11 de septiembre de 2023. Con variadas manifestaciones y una...
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Chile. Cuando el Cóndor aterrizó en Europa
Por Geraldina Colotti, Resumen Latinoamericano, 12 de septiembre de 2023. Roma, 6 de octubre de 1975. Dos sicarios atentan contra la vida de Bernardo Leighton...
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Chile. 50 años del Golpe de Estado: El cinismo de Boric y la fake-izquierda
Por Rafael Agacino. Resumen Latinoamericano, 11 de septiembre de 2023. Ironía de la historia. Ayer 10 de septiembre, en Santiago, el Partido Comunista y el...
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Cultura. “La batalla de Chile”: su valor político
Por Marta Harnecker*, Resumen Latinoamericano, 11 de septiembre de 2023. Patricio Guzmán tiene el mérito, único en la historia del cine, de haber filmado paso...
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Chile. Acción de arte anti-imperialista en la embajada yanqui de Santiago (video)
Resumen Latinoamericano, 11 de septiembre de 2023. La actuación criminal de los gringos se refleja en esta acción de arte contra el intervencionismo y la...
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Chile. No pasó
Por Álvaro Bisama, Polítika /Resumen Latinoamericano, 11 de septiembre de 2023. No pasó. No sucedió. Fue un invento. No hubo golpe de estado.La Armada no...
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Cultura. “Nueva Canción Chilena” fue la banda sonora de la utopía socialista de Salvador Allende
Por Rodrigo Durao /Brasil de Fato | Resumen Latinoamericano| 11 de septiembre de 2023. El movimiento sociocultural de los años 60 sigue inspirando a generaciones valorando...
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Chile. La conspiración yanqui para destruir Chile
Por Atilio Borón. Resumen Latinoamericano, 11 de septiembre de 2023. La escasa y parcial evidencia producida por organismos oficiales de EEUU demuestra, de modo abrumador,...
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Chile. En una base militar del Estado español el 11 de septiembre de 1973
Por Ramón Pedregal Casanova. Resumen Latinoamericano, 11 de septiembre de 2023. (Un conocido de aquel momento me contó lo que había vivido el 11 de...
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Chile. A 50 años del golpe: “El país es una olla a presión y en algún momento estallará”, dice ex militante de la lucha clandestina contra la dictadura
Por Gabriela Moncau /Brasil de Fato /Resumen Latinoamericano, 11 de septiembre de 2023. “La lucha por la memoria disputa sus efectos en el presente”, dice...
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Chile. Lágrimas de cocodrilo por los 50 años del golpe militar
Por Oleg Yasinsky. Resumen Latinoamericano, 11 de septiembre de 2023. El gran escritor portugués José Saramago, al visitar Chile unos años después del retorno a...
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Chile. Hace 50 años sólo importaba una cosa en la nación chilena : sobrevivir a un feroz golpe de estado
Por Julio Adamor / Brasil de Fato /Resumen Latinoamericano, 11 de septiembre de 2023. Testigos presenciales del derrocamiento de Salvador Allende cuentan detalles de lo...
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Chile. Comunicado del MIR a 50 años del golpe cívico-militar
Resumen Latinoamericano, 11 de septiembre de 2023. foto: El MIR desfila por las calles de Santiago en 1973. A 50 AÑOS DEL 11 DE SEPTIEMBRE...
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Chile. A 50 años del crimen: Represión en la marcha, cinismo gubernamental y acción antiimperialista
Por Andrés Figueroa Cornejo, Resumen Latinoamericano 10 de setiembre de 2023 El gobierno de Gabriel Boric, a través del Ministerio del Interior y Carabineros, decidió...
Victor, 9/11. Many living in the U.S. think of this disaster only in terms of American lives. But the Bush/Cheney regime used it to launch the global "war of terror" that led to the deaths of 4.5M people in the Middle East with at least another 65M people displaced. This was an imperialist disaster with unprecedented repercussions for the climate and human rights, spreading more wars of aggression. And here's the "other" 9/11: the 1973 CIA-sponsored coup in Chile. 50 years ago today... Here in NYC, because of super-high temps last week, we postponed the vigil to close the U.S. torture camp at Guantanamo. Join us 5:00 pm Wednesday September 13 outside the NY Public Library. We won't shut up about this 21-year war crime because it officially broke with the rule of law, setting a precedent the U.S. so far is sticking to of imprisoning people outside the law.
Recent articles & asks on Guantanamo:
✔️ Trial Judge Destroys Guantánamo's Military Commissions, Rules That "Clean Team" Interrogations Cannot Undo the Effects of Torture ✔️ Letter to State Department re: Saeed Bakhouch, former Gitmo detainee imprisoned in Algeria after release ✔️ Please Write to the Guantánamo Prisoners, to Let Them Know We Remember Them ✔️ “Doing Harm”: Roy Eidelson on the American Psychological Association’s Embrace of U.S. Torture Program
It's a Climate EMERGENCY!Join us this coming Sunday, September 17 at the mass (multiple thousands are expected) March to End Fossil Fuels. We will be gathering at the NE corner of 54th Street and Broadway (moving towards 7th Avenue). We'll be there from 12:00 on. The march begins at 1:00 and ends at 4:30.
We are part of the Anti-Militarism Contingent. You will find us easily by looking for the giant elephant representing the elephant in the room, the U.S. military. With a military that burns more fossil fuel than any other institution and a global empire that produces more petroleum than any other country, the U.S. is a danger to the planet. In the interests of humanity, we must take action to stop the crimes of our government.
There may still be some seats available on buses from Washington DC and Philadelphia - free of charge. If you're interested, email us ASAP. And, please email us to let us know if you'll be marching with us.
We're living on a planet that's on the brink — wildfires decimating whole communities, floods upending lives and ice caps melting at an alarming rate. The climate and ecological crisis threatens everything on our planet. Science makes clear that we have only a very small window of time in which to end fossil fuels and stop carbon emissions. trigger catastrophic climate breakdown to an extent no known climate technology can recover from. Biden has not lived up to his climate pledges and rhetoric made during the 2020 election campaign — while those failed pledges are largely ineffective and weak. And, the Biden administration's actions are even worse: increased fossil fuel oil and gas drilling, production and export. Projects such as the Willow Project and Alaska LNG, commonly referred to as "carbon bombs," will
If you will be in NYC this week or following the Sunday march, there are additional actions taking place. Take a look and sign up if you can participate in any. Check out NYC Extinction Rebellion's special events and actions. On Monday, September 18, there will be a mass direct action with expected hundreds of participants. Sign up here.
Debra Sweet, Director, World Can't Wait Stephanie Rugoff, Coordinator, WeAreNotYourSoldiers.orgMake a donation online Send checks or money orders, payable to "World Can't Wait" To make a tax-deductible donation of $100 or more in support of World Can't Wait's educational activities, please make checks out to "Alliance for Global Justice," a 501(3)(c) organization, note: World Can't Wait, or donate here.
WarCriminalsWatch.org • WeAreNotYourSoldiers.org • FireJohnYoo.net
Check out Sudan's Struggle, a project of World Can't Wait volunteer Carol Dudek
World Can't Wait | (646) 807-3259 | 2 East 28th Street #321, New York NY 10016-7402
POR Ariel Dorfman
I Watched a Democracy Die. I Don’t Want to Do It Again.
I Watched a Democracy Die. I Don’t Want to Do It Again.
Mr. Dorfman, a former cultural adviser in President Salvador Allende’s government, is the author of the novel “The Suicide Museum.”
For 50 years, I have been mourning the death of President Salvador Allende of Chile, who was overthrown in a coup the morning of Sept. 11, 1973. For 50 years, I have mourned his death and the many deaths that followed: the execution and disappearance of my friends and so many more unknown women and men whom I marched with through the streets of Santiago in defense of Mr. Allende and his unprecedented attempt to build a socialist society without bloodshed.
I can pinpoint the moment I realized that our peaceful revolution had failed. It was early on the morning of the coup in the nation’s capital, when I heard the announcement that a junta led by Gen. Augusto Pinochet was now in control of Chile. Later that night, huddling in a safe house, already being hunted by Chile’s new rulers, I listened to a radio broadcast that Mr. Allende had been found dead at La Moneda, the presidential palace and seat of government, after the armed forces bombed it and assaulted it with tanks and troops.
My first reaction was dread. Dread of what could happen to me, to my family and friends, dread at what was about to happen to my country. And then I was overcome by a sorrow that has never quite lifted from my heart. We had been given a unique, luminous chance to change history — a left-wing, democratically elected government in Latin America that was set to be an inspiration to the world. And then we had blown it.
Not only did General Pinochet end our dreams; he ushered in an era of brutal human rights violations. During his military rule, from 1973 to 1990, more than 40,000 people were subjected to physical and psychological torture. Hundreds of thousands of Chileans — political opponents, independent critics or innocent civilians suspected of having links to them — were jailed, murdered, persecuted or exiled. More than a thousand men and women are still among the desaparecidos, the disappeared, with no funerals and no graves.
How our nation remembers, 50 years later, the historical trauma of our common past could not be more important than it is now, when the temptation of authoritarian rule is once again on the rise among Chileans, as it is, of course, across the world. Many conservatives in Chile today argue that the 1973 coup was a necessary correction. Behind their justification lurks a dangerous nostalgia for a strongman who supposedly will deal with the problems of our time by imposing order, crushing dissent and restoring some sort of mythical national identity.
Today, when around 70 percent of the population had not even been born at the time of the military takeover, it is critical for people both in Chile and the rest of the world to remember the dire consequences of resorting to violence to resolve our dilemmas and indulging in division rather than striving for solidarity, dialogue and compassion.
Fifty years ago, as soon as I heard the name Augusto Pinochet, I knew we were doomed. Mr. Allende had trusted General Pinochet, the head of the Chilean Army, as the one officer we could count on to support the Constitution and stop any putsch. I spoke to the general briefly just a week earlier. I was working at La Moneda as the media and cultural adviser to Mr. Allende’s chief of staff. I often answered the phones, and I happened to pick up when General Pinochet called, saying in his gruff, nasal voice that would soon bark out the orders to destroy the democracy he had sworn to uphold.
Chile had entranced me ever since I arrived in the country as a 12-year-old, born in Argentina and raised in the United States. As I grew older, what became central to my love for the country was the thrill of living in a nation with a longstanding democracy and a national liberation movement born of the struggles of generations of workers and intellectuals, with the charismatic figure of Mr. Allende leading the way to a future that did not rely on the exploitation of the many by the few.
That wasn’t just a dream. When our leader won the national elections in 1970, his coalition of left-wing parties put in effect a series of policies that began to release Chile from its reliance on foreign corporations and the local oligarchy. It is hard to describe the joy, both personal and collective, that accompanied this certainty that ordinary people were the protagonists of history, that we did not have to accept the world as we had found it.
But what was a radiant opportunity for us had felt like a threat to a number of our compatriots who saw our revolution as an arrogant assault on their deepest identities and traditions. This was especially true for those who considered their property and privileges as part of a natural and eternal order. These longstanding owners of Chile’s wealth, with the support of President Richard Nixon’s White House and the C.I.A., conspired to sabotage Mr. Allende’s government.
There was no mourning among the rich and powerful that night of Sept. 11. They were celebrating that Chile had been saved from what they feared would become another Cuba, a totalitarian state that would erase them from the country they claimed as their fief. The abyss that opened that day between the victims and the beneficiaries of the coup persists, many years after democracy was restored in 1990.
There has been some progress since then in creating a national consensus that the atrocities of the dictatorship must never again — nunca más — be tolerated. But today Chile’s radical right and more than a third of Chileans have expressed approval of the Pinochet regime.
No consensus, therefore, has been reached about the coup itself, despite the efforts of Chile’s current president, Gabriel Boric. Mr. Boric, who is just 37 and an admirer of Mr. Allende, tried to have all political parties sign a joint statement that declared that under no circumstances can a military takeover ever be justified. Last week, the right-wing parties declined to sign the statement.
The right-wing leader José Antonio Kast, a sort of Trump of the Andes who is favored to win the presidency in 2025, is an outspoken supporter of the dictator’s legacy. He refuses, like an alarming number of his devotees, to condemn what happened on Sept. 11, 1973. They insist on the thesis that, regrettable as the resulting abuses may have been, the armed forces had no alternative but to rise up in order to save Chile from socialism.
Perhaps many young Chileans will shrug and think of this as just another political feud that has little impact on the long list of troubles they face today: crime and migration into the country; an economic and climate crisis; inadequate health care, education and pensions; a revolt by Indigenous communities in the south of the country. But we need to find a way to forge a shared understanding of our past so we can start creating a shared vision of Chile for the many tomorrows that await us.
At this time of confusion and polarization, what sort of guidance can I, a Chilean who lived through this history, offer the younger generations as they grapple with how to remember this day? How can we encourage them to continue to work toward a future when it will be possible for all Chileans — or almost all — to fervently say, “Nunca más”?
I offer one word: seguimos. We go on.
We go on. We do not flag. We will not be discouraged.
It is one of Mr. Boric’s favorite words. It’s also an attitude that Mr. Allende immortalized in his last speech from La Moneda as he prepared to die. He told the people of Chile that soon “the calm metal of my voice will not reach you. It does not matter. You will continue to hear me. I will always be beside you.”
Seguimos, so that Chile, despite all it has suffered, perhaps because of what it has suffered, can persevere on the road toward justice and dignity for all. And seguimos, so young Chileans today do not spend the rest of their lives in mourning, lamenting what might have been.
Ariel Dorfman, a distinguished professor emeritus of literature at Duke University, is the author of the play “Death and the Maiden” and the novel “The Suicide Museum.”
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Chile. El MIR homenajeó a las y los militantes caídos en la población La Legua
Resumen Latinoamericano, 10 de septiembre de 2023.
Este pasado sábado, el Movimiento de Izquierda Revolucionaria (MIR) recordó a las y los luchadores asesinados en un acto en la población La Legua, en el marco de los 50 años del golpe
Carta de Fidel Castro a Salvador Allende del 29 de julio de 1973 X Fidel Castro.
La batalla de Chile x Juan Diego García
Henry Kissinger, el hacedor de masacres centenario x Alberto López Girondo.
Colapso climático y geoingeniería x Silvia Ribeiro
Zelensky junto al "fuhrer blanco" x Red Voltaire / La aine.
Movimiento de La Peña del Bronx.
36 ANIVERSARIO.
HONOR Y GLORIA AL PRESIDENTE MARTIR SALVADOR ALLENDE ASESINADO EL 11 DE SEPTIEMBRE DE 1973 Y CELEBRACION DEL FESTIVAL POR EL 36 ANIVERSARIO DEL Movimiento de la Peña del Bronx.PEOPLE POWER. Apoya UN DIA SIN INMIGRANTES y Huelga Global el 2023 .POR UNA LEGALIZACION PARA TOD@S L@S INDOCUMENTAD@S...CHILE.ANIVERSARIOS -HISTORICOS.SEPTIEMBRE,2023.LUGAR -MARIA SOLA COMMUNITY GARDEN.134 ST. AND LINCOLN AVE.SUR DEL BRONX.TREN 6.3ERA AVE-138 ST.2 A 7 PM.TELEFONO:1(718)2926137..
ANIVERSARIOS-HISTORICOS.
PEOPLE POWER.
EN EL 36 ANIVERSARIO DEL Movimiento de la Peña del Bronx apoya UN DIA SIN INMIGRANTES y Huelga Global el 2023 .POR UNA LEGALIZACION PARA L@S 12 MILLONES OLVIDAD@S DEL 2006 Y PARA TOD@S L@S RECIEN LLEGAD@S. ...,
Chile: resistencia: Ni víctimas ni derrotados, la lucha continúa. | |||
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