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An Entertaining Evening With Hugo Chavez in New York
venezuelanalysis.com ^ | 9.21.06 | Nikolas Kozloff

Posted on 09/21/2006 11:37:15 AM PDT by texas_mrs

I have just returned from Cooper Union in New York, where I saw Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez give a long winded speech. Chavez was in New York to speak before the United Nations and to shore up Venezuela's bid for a seat on the Security Council. Though I have seen Chavez give dozens of speeches on TV and just came out with my book entitled Hugo Chavez: Oil, Politics, And The Challenge To The U.S. (recently released by St. Martin's Press), I had never seen the president speak in person.

I received word of the event through the Venezuelan Information Office in Washington, D.C. The staff informed me to pick up my tickets in midtown Manhattan at the Venezuelan Consulate. The tickets, one for me and one for my cousin, displayed a beaming picture of Chavez amidst the colors of the Venezuelan flag: yellow, blue, and red.

At Cooper Union, the line went round the block. We waited to enter the building, which took more than an hour. Fortunately there was a pleasant breeze outside and people did not seem very phased by the delay.

At long last we cleared the security check on the first floor and proceeded to the main hall, which was full to capacity. Some people in the audience wore red, the official color of the Chavistas in Venezuela. Interestingly, I also noticed a group of Hassidic Jews dressed in formal attire.

The noted singer and activist Harry Belafonte introduced Chavez to the crowd. There was a standing ovation and Chavez found it difficult to get started. Periodically throughout the speech, members of the audience would call out, "Long Live Socialism For the Twenty First Century!"

I had come to the event with the idea of taking notes, but I soon found it impossible to keep track of Chavez's rapid fire discussion. I could not hear the president very well where I was seated, and the speech, true to form, was rambling.

But before he got started, Chavez introduced notable figures sitting in the audience. Key among them was Roger Toussaint, head of the transit workers union in New York. Chavez seemed genuinely interested to know more about labor in the city, and asked Toussaint how many workers were in the union.

Chavez also wanted to know how much oil was consumed every day by city buses.

Chavez then introduced the Venezuelan diplomatic staff which included Francisco Arias Cardenas, the Venezuelan Ambassador to the United Nations.

Like Chavez, Arias Cardenas was in the military and joined Chavez in their failed coup attempt in 1992. Later, Arias Cardenas broke ranks and ran against Chavez unsuccessfully in the presidential election of 2000. Though formerly a Chavez rival, interestingly enough he is now the Venezuelan Ambassador to the United Nations.

In a rather bizarre twist, Chavez then turned to the Hassidic Jews in the audience and proclaimed that he had some Jewish friends and that Jews were treated well in Venezuela. "We are a friend of the Jewish people, but we are against Israeli aggression," he remarked.

Chavez then turned to one of his subordinates, who had brought him a cup of espresso. Drinking the espresso, he started on his whirlwind monologue.

Among the other miscellaneous themes addressed by Chavez that I jotted down on my notepad:

- Abraham Lincoln, the Civil War and the Emancipation Proclamation

- Afro Venezuelans

- Noted political writer Noam Chomsky, whose latest book talks about how U.S. dominance could give rise to the extinction of the human race

- Noted American author Mark Twain, who espoused anti imperialist politics

- astronomy and the planet Mars, advances in NASA technology and his own ponderings of the universe and Big Bang theory

- Chavez's own global travels throughout Africa, Portugal, Spain, and South America

- Peter Cooper and the importance of Cooper Union as an educational institution (this fed into a wider discussion of educational advances in Venezuela and Simon Rodriguez, Simon Bolivar's tutor)

- structural reform of the United Nations

- U.S. President John F. Kennedy, who was killed by the American right wing

- Martin Luther King, who would have been U.S. president if he had not been assassinated

- wasteful military spending world wide and the military slaughter of civilians during urban riots in Caracas in 1989

- The war in Iraq and the destruction of Mesopotamian architecture

- Christian socialism

- Venezuelan independence leader Francisco de Miranda and his travels to Russia and France

- New Yorkers who traveled with Miranda to liberate Venezuela in 1806 (Chavez presented a plaque in their memory, each time he read out their individual names the audience would shout, "Presente!")

- Coca leaf in Bolivia and the cultural sacredness of this plant

After two hours listening to Chavez, I felt inspired but tired. As I left the hall the president was still energetically speaking to the crowd.

Nikolas Kozloff, who received his doctorate in Latin American history from Oxford University, is the author of the recently released Hugo Chavez: Oil, Politics, and The Challenge To the U.S. (St. Martin's Press)


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: chavez; dictator; hugo; un; unitednations; venezuelan
- U.S. President John F. Kennedy, who was killed by the American right wing

WTH?
1 posted on 09/21/2006 11:37:17 AM PDT by texas_mrs
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To: texas_mrs
Chavez did not say Bush is like the Devil. He said Bush "is the Devil" - a new low of statemanship at the U.N. He recommended Communism through Norm Chomsky's book (as if we haven't had enough of communism before) and said that the U.N. should be moved to Venezula.

The man is nutty as a fruitcake and a throwback to the 20th century. The MSM is so lame in not calling him on it.

2 posted on 09/21/2006 11:42:30 AM PDT by sr4402
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To: texas_mrs
...members of the audience would call out, "Long Live Socialism For the Twenty First Century!"

Would be interesting to know what percentage of those members actually live under socialism. There`s many countries that they can move to try it first hand such as Mr. Belafonte who to date I believe still resides in the US.

"No matter what the greatest tyrant in the world, the greatest terrorist in the world, George W. Bush, says, we're here to tell you: Not hundreds, not thousands, but millions of the American people support your revolution." - Harry Belafonte remarks made to Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez in January 2006

3 posted on 09/21/2006 11:45:10 AM PDT by Screamname (By God, pray for me, someone help me please! Hillary is my Senator! HELP MEEE!)
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To: texas_mrs

Must have been taught in one of our wonderful government schools. Good heavens, what a complete idiot.


4 posted on 09/21/2006 11:45:24 AM PDT by flynmudd (Proud Navy Mom to OSSR Richard T. Blalock-USS Ramage)
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To: texas_mrs
U.S. President John F. Kennedy, who was killed by the American right wing

Of course it was! Having Oswald remain the killer would make communisim look bad.

5 posted on 09/21/2006 11:46:01 AM PDT by beltfed308 (Nanny Statists are Ameba's.)
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To: texas_mrs
Boycott Citgo gas, which is owned by the Venezuelan Government.

I guess the good news about Hugo's speech at the UN and at this event is that President Bush would be welcome to visit Venezuela and make similar speeches vilifying Chavez and his country, right? Oh...never mind.
6 posted on 09/21/2006 11:47:31 AM PDT by SaxxonWoods (Free Iran! WARNING! Forbidden Cartoon: .. . *-O(( :-{>. . . .)
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To: texas_mrs
Kozloff wrote, "I felt inspired but tired."

It makes my head hurt: a presumably highly educated man trained in critical thinking, yet he comes away feeling 'inspired but tired' by a rambling, incoherent Castro disciple. I keep thinking of the scene in Orwell's '1948' where Winston Smith has his magical totalitarian moment. Of course, Winston was tortured and beaten into submission. This Kozloff guy goes willingly, lovingly, religiously. He loves Big Brother. He has loved Big Brother from the start.
7 posted on 09/21/2006 11:47:40 AM PDT by Rembrandt_fan
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To: texas_mrs
"WTH?"

You didn't know this guy was a nut?

8 posted on 09/21/2006 11:47:48 AM PDT by sinclair (Justice comes to America when the unjust in power hang on the Capitol steps. Get a rope boys!)
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To: texas_mrs

Too many Oliver Stone movies for old hugo, I guess.


9 posted on 09/21/2006 11:48:33 AM PDT by A Citizen Reporter
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To: texas_mrs
Nikolas Kozloff did they say he was a so called professor? A professor of what? Communism or Fascist or just a normal anti-American left-wing fascist piece of scum?
10 posted on 09/21/2006 11:51:12 AM PDT by YOUGOTIT
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To: Screamname

Hmmmmph!! Danny Glover can follow suit, just saw him on TV giving ol Hugo a bear hug like he was a long lost rich uncle. I know Glover is waaaaaaaaay left leaning but, in my book, this makes him certifiable. Too bad he and Belafonte can't be kicked out of the country and branded Enemies of the State.


11 posted on 09/21/2006 11:51:32 AM PDT by fishergirl (Choose your vices carefully, then be loyal to them.)
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To: texas_mrs
"The noted singer and activist Harry Belafonte"
Wouldn't it be more accurate to say "The one hit wonder and activist Har....."?
12 posted on 09/21/2006 12:04:11 PM PDT by kublia khan (Absolute war brings total victory)
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To: texas_mrs

Where's the barf alert?


13 posted on 09/21/2006 12:35:04 PM PDT by standingfirm
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To: texas_mrs

14 posted on 09/21/2006 12:49:53 PM PDT by Disturbin
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To: standingfirm

I'm sorry, I forgot to include it.


15 posted on 09/21/2006 1:03:25 PM PDT by texas_mrs
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To: texas_mrs

16 posted on 09/21/2006 3:43:53 PM PDT by End_Clintonism_Now (MONEY IS THE ROOT OF ALL CLINTON!)
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