Can 100,000 Lefties Get Along?
PORTO ALEGRE, Brazil-As global conferences about managing the future
of the world go, this one is pretty easygoing. Sure, there are a bunch of
Nobel Prize winners, a few heads of state, and experts on every subject
from agricultural subsidies to zero-sum growth. The conference has
drawn more than 100,000 people. They will be here for six days, making
plans to alter entire societies, cultures, and economies.
And not one of them has a briefcase. OK, I'm exaggerating. Maybe six of
them do. But I've been here more than 24 hours, seen thousands of
people, and not one person is wearing a suit. Of course, it's summer
here.
I should explain. You will soon start seeing lots of news articles, which
you won't read, about the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.
You will vaguely remember that it happens every year around this time
at an exclusive ski resort and that big politicians and business guys like
Dick Cheney and Bill Gates lecture to gushing crowds of management
consultants, as-yet-unindicted chief financial officers, and magazine
editors. 's the World Economic Forum. Davos. That´s the World Economic Forum. Davos.
This is the the Fifth Annual World Social Forum. Call it the left's version of
Davos. Did I mention the Vietnamese couple wearing Ho Chi Minh shirts
who handed me a flyer about the U.S. government's cover-up regarding
the use of Agent Orange during the Vietnam War. Did I mention that the
man sitting next to me is wearing camouflage pants, sports a compass
on his belt, has lots of exposed gray chest hair, and is reading the
"Dialects" of Adorno and Horkheimer?
Although what I have said is true, I should stop being snarky. There are,
after all, thousands and thousands of people flooding to this smallish city
in the south of Brazil for the event. Most of them are university
students, almost all of whom-I'm educated-guessing-have come from
Latin America and Europe. Very few Americans, but more on that later.
All these people have come to hear experts, activists, politicians, trade
unionists, members of indigenous tribes, and still more activists. There
are even feminists here.
Oh, cynical American, you are dismissing it already. I know you. But as a
British journalist (there aren't many Brits here either, according to him)
just entreated me: Look at the numbers. Imagine if this many tens of
thousands of Americans traveled all of these hundreds or thousands of
miles to attend something other than a college football game or a
Metallica concert. What if it was to hear a bunch of antiabortion
preachers, pro-gun advocates, and advertising executives? That would be
big news, right?
Wait, that happened. George W. Bush won re-election. But a guy called
Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva from the Workers' Party is president of Brazil,
which has 170 million people. Lefties have also been elected in
Argentina, Uruguay, and Venezuela (whose leader, Hugo Chávez, is,
admittedly, a strongman, but less so than many of the leaders being
feted at Davos). So, with all these populist and reformist Latin America
governments in power, the World Social Forum might be expected to be
a leftist lovefest.
Or not. In a situation that might be familiar to anyone involved in
Democratic politics, the left wing of the Workers' Party is furious with
Lula for enforcing fiscal austerity and economic expansion policies. True,
they've led to an economic expansion of 6.1 percent in the last year and
a record-breaking $33 billion trade surplus. But folks here are angry with
their elected leader, since fiscal austerity is not much fun to live through.
Lula is willing to alienate some of his supporters, as he indicated to
reporters while breaking ground on a new pipeline in the Amazon: "If
people want development that preserves the environment, we have to
have energy," he told reporters in April. "It's no good people saying the
Amazon has to be the sanctuary of humanity and forget there are 20
million people living here."
Lula will attend the World Social Forum, but he will only address a select
group, since a large crowd of leftists would likely be unfriendly.
And that, in a nutshell, is the dynamic-albeit perhaps unspoken-facing
the global left over the next five days: how to navigate the terrain
between ideology and practice.
Copyright by Samuel Loewenberg and/or the publication in which it first appeared
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