THE RIGHT OF INTERVENTION OF PEOPLES !!A DECISIVE BATTLE IS BEING FOUGHT TODAY IN LATIN AMERICA

Those who believe that only Peru’s future will be decided on June 7 because of the pending electoral process are mistaken. At this moment, Latin America is fighting a hard battle unfolding on many fronts. One of them is our homeland.

What happens here will have an impact across the continent, just as events in other countries are reflected in our own reality. This is not about a cosmetic change, but rather about significant transformations whose ultimate purpose is to break the corrupt Mafia that has degraded the life of sovereign states and that seeks to perpetuate its domination at any cost.

Broadly speaking, the forces confronting each other in this historic struggle are twofold: the Latin American oligarchy supported by the Empire, clinging to continental domination as part of its global strategy; and the peoples fighting to find and affirm a path originally envisioned by the liberators, but later strengthened in an early stage of history by outstanding figures such as José Martí, Augusto C. Sandino, and José Carlos Mariátegui.

Cuba is undoubtedly the brightest beacon for the peoples of the Americas in this fierce confrontation. Not only because it opened the path toward transforming productive structures in search of a better society in these fertile lands, but also because it has heroically resisted the Empire’s aggression for more than six decades, offering the world an unparalleled example of dignity and courage.

But today the struggle is intensifying throughout every corner of our continent. It cannot be hidden by media outlets serving the ruling class, nor silenced by the repressive forces of governments determined to suppress the voice of the people through violence.

Curiously, the media at the service of the powerful distort what is happening or simply remain silent so as not to awaken the interest of peoples increasingly committed to forging a way out of the crisis of a decadent system now in the process of extinction.

In Milei’s Argentina, police aggression against workers, students, women, and other sectors of the population has become constant—almost daily—as they strongly resist the plans of enslaving domination that a neo-Nazi regime seeks to impose while mocking the will of the citizens.

In that country, the most reactionary cliques have historically used force to crush the popular movement. This has been the case since the coups d’état orchestrated at different times by Lonardi, Aramburu, Onganía, and Videla, and even under formally elected governments that defended the interests of Capital, such as Carlos Saúl Menem, Mauricio Macri, and Javier Milei.

The same is happening today in Ecuador under the government of Noboa, which seeks above all to crush Indigenous populations through the treacherous methods of dirty war, while marginalizing a vast and vigorous social sector organized within the “Citizens’ Revolution” led by Rafael Correa.

At this very moment, millions of workers are fighting in the streets of Bolivia, determined to overthrow Rodrigo Paz, who heads a regime bent on defending itself through armed force while massacring the people. The ruling clique aspires to repeat in the highland nation the painful experiences of Hugo Banzer, Sánchez de Lozada, and Jeanine Áñez, who stained with blood the land of Túpac Katari and Bartolina Sisa.

And in Chile, the regime of José Antonio Kast is reinventing obsolete and punitive formulas in order to reconstruct, under new conditions, Pinochet’s economic and social “model,” strengthening “the powerful” while mercilessly attacking communities and workers, even destroying the gains achieved during the more progressive governments of Michelle Bachelet and Gabriel Boric.

In these countries, the common denominator is the massive popular will that rejects current plans of domination and, even more so, the neoliberalism inherited from the dictatorships of the 1970s.

Such plans are expressed in the desire to subject workers to brutal systems of exploitation, extend the workday to ten or even twelve hours, impose wage cuts, eliminate job security, and destroy trade unions in order to subdue the people.

Objectively speaking, under governments of a different orientation, Correa’s Ecuador, the Kirchners’ Argentina, and Evo Morales’s Bolivia experienced difficulties, but the popular masses never suffered the collapse now visible in the streets of Quito, Buenos Aires, and La Paz, where current presidents—servants of the Empire—simply cannot govern and instead rely on unrestrained repression, violence, and crime in order to survive.

In contrast, in Peru and Colombia, forces for social change are growing and consolidating, opening new perspectives for development and progress. The elections to be held in both countries in the coming days are, in this context, decisive expressions of a confrontation that will make history. Provoking the Empire’s fury, the peoples are today fighting decisive battles.

Source:By Gustavo Espinoza M, http://www.nuestrabandera.pe

@albagranadanorthafrica

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