Lagos: "Micheletti does things he shouldn't."
Tuesday, Ricardo Lagos, a member of the Verification commission, in an interview, said of Zelaya, "It's not that he doesn't want to negotiate, it's that Micheletti does things that he shouldn't, like saying 'I'm going to form a National Unity Government' and a National Unity Government must be made by both parties."
"It is a shame, we haven't advanced everything that we would have liked...The last thing we lose should be hope. I call on both parties to maintain the possibility, the open call to possibly come to a consensus."
By now Craig Kelly has heard this, since Zelaya firmly rejected his offer last night.
"It is a shame, we haven't advanced everything that we would have liked...The last thing we lose should be hope. I call on both parties to maintain the possibility, the open call to possibly come to a consensus."
By now Craig Kelly has heard this, since Zelaya firmly rejected his offer last night.
Protesters: State Department Not Interested
Assistant Secretary Phillip Crowley made it abundantly clear in today's daily press briefing that no one in the State Department wants to hear from, or cares about, the protesters out front today protesting US policy on Honduras. Only the press took them seriously. Here's part of a transcript of the exchange between reporters and Crowley from today's daily press briefing found here:
http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/dpb/2009/nov/131774.htm
QUESTION: And I’m sure you’re aware of the protesters out front who are saying that this is a sham election.
MR. CROWLEY: Yes, I heard them myself. (Laughs.)
QUESTION: Has anyone from the State Department met with the representatives of the protestors or taken a letter from them, or what is your --
MR. CROWLEY: Not to my knowledge.
QUESTION: Or any response to the protestors saying it’s a sham election?
MR. CROWLEY: Well, first of all, on that point, we have been earnestly pushing to get a resolution of this issue so that you could have, in fact, a free and fair election on November 29 that both the United States, Honduras, the region could stand behind, support, and lead to the installation of a new government that the people of Honduras can support and can heal this divide that has --
QUESTION: Why is --
MR. CROWLEY: -- that Honduras has suffered through over several months. We understand that this is a very emotional issue and – which is why we’ve been so integrally involved; not only Craig Kelly, but Tom Shannon, others, our support for the OAS process going back a number of months, because we recognize that the only path out of this is through an electoral process that – where we’re – the people of Honduras get to speak and you have a new government that can go about the work of serving the needs of its people.
http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/dpb/2009/nov/131774.htm
QUESTION: And I’m sure you’re aware of the protesters out front who are saying that this is a sham election.
MR. CROWLEY: Yes, I heard them myself. (Laughs.)
QUESTION: Has anyone from the State Department met with the representatives of the protestors or taken a letter from them, or what is your --
MR. CROWLEY: Not to my knowledge.
QUESTION: Or any response to the protestors saying it’s a sham election?
MR. CROWLEY: Well, first of all, on that point, we have been earnestly pushing to get a resolution of this issue so that you could have, in fact, a free and fair election on November 29 that both the United States, Honduras, the region could stand behind, support, and lead to the installation of a new government that the people of Honduras can support and can heal this divide that has --
QUESTION: Why is --
MR. CROWLEY: -- that Honduras has suffered through over several months. We understand that this is a very emotional issue and – which is why we’ve been so integrally involved; not only Craig Kelly, but Tom Shannon, others, our support for the OAS process going back a number of months, because we recognize that the only path out of this is through an electoral process that – where we’re – the people of Honduras get to speak and you have a new government that can go about the work of serving the needs of its people.
"Magical realism" meets Lew Amselem's "real world"
As we noted in a previous post, the US representative at OAS, Lew Amselem, continues to be the sole OAS member to argue for recognizing the Honduran elections despite the evident manipulations of mediation attempts by the Micheletti regime.
Now the New York Times' report on the same meeting crystallizes something we have not quite been able to put a finger on: Amselem's attitude toward Latin America is fundamentally dismissive and disrespectful.
The Times suggests Amselem was pushing for a more "pragmatic" position than that of people like Paraguay's Hugo Saguier Caballero, who is quoted as saying
For those of you who didn't catch it, Amselem is displaying his cultural knowledge here: "magical realism" is of course a distinctive literary mode that is closely associated with Latin American literary pioneers like Gabriel Garcia Marquez.
Amselem is in part responsible for the continual muddying of the purported US position, and thus is either part of an incompetent State Department, or-- as many Latin American observers think-- part of a devious neocolonial enterprise based on disrespect for other nations as political actors.
So perhaps before he makes what he thinks are effective digs at the irrealism of principled positions like that articulated by Paraguay, he might want to review one of the resources about magical realism out there on the web (assuming he is not up for reading a book about Latin American literature; I can recommend the 1995 collection Magical Realism: Theory, History, Community, edited by Lois Zamora and Wendy Faris).
He might learn something. He apparently thinks "magical realism" is something like a belief in fairies: but that would be the US State Department position on Honduras, in which Craig Kelly will fix everything.
In fact, magical realism includes a serious awareness of the impossibility of entirely representing the point of view of another. Ambiguities and contradictions, including those of theories of causality (rationalism and irrationalism both motivate people in magical realist works) abound, as they do in the world most of us inhabit, where people are not always pragmatic and predictable. Latin American magical realism depicts the world of post-coloniality, shot through with contradictions between rich and poor, powerful and weak, persistent indigenous presence and only partly coherent European histories of colonization.
Most pertinent, as Lindsay Moore puts it on a webpage Emory University maintains,
Now the New York Times' report on the same meeting crystallizes something we have not quite been able to put a finger on: Amselem's attitude toward Latin America is fundamentally dismissive and disrespectful.
The Times suggests Amselem was pushing for a more "pragmatic" position than that of people like Paraguay's Hugo Saguier Caballero, who is quoted as saying
Paraguay is not only not going to accept the outcome of the elections, it will not even accept that the elections are held...These elections for us simply will not exist.Evidently frustrated with such declarations, Amselem is quoted as saying
I’ve heard many in this room say that they will not recognize the elections in Honduras...I’m not trying to be a wise guy, but what does that mean? What does that mean in the real world, not in the world of magical realism?This would actually seem to illustrate the very definition of being a wise guy.
For those of you who didn't catch it, Amselem is displaying his cultural knowledge here: "magical realism" is of course a distinctive literary mode that is closely associated with Latin American literary pioneers like Gabriel Garcia Marquez.
Amselem is in part responsible for the continual muddying of the purported US position, and thus is either part of an incompetent State Department, or-- as many Latin American observers think-- part of a devious neocolonial enterprise based on disrespect for other nations as political actors.
So perhaps before he makes what he thinks are effective digs at the irrealism of principled positions like that articulated by Paraguay, he might want to review one of the resources about magical realism out there on the web (assuming he is not up for reading a book about Latin American literature; I can recommend the 1995 collection Magical Realism: Theory, History, Community, edited by Lois Zamora and Wendy Faris).
He might learn something. He apparently thinks "magical realism" is something like a belief in fairies: but that would be the US State Department position on Honduras, in which Craig Kelly will fix everything.
In fact, magical realism includes a serious awareness of the impossibility of entirely representing the point of view of another. Ambiguities and contradictions, including those of theories of causality (rationalism and irrationalism both motivate people in magical realist works) abound, as they do in the world most of us inhabit, where people are not always pragmatic and predictable. Latin American magical realism depicts the world of post-coloniality, shot through with contradictions between rich and poor, powerful and weak, persistent indigenous presence and only partly coherent European histories of colonization.
Most pertinent, as Lindsay Moore puts it on a webpage Emory University maintains,
The idea of terror overwhelms the possibility of rejuvenation in magical realism. Several prominent authoritarian figures, such as soldiers, police, and sadists all have the power to torture and kill....Characters rarely, if ever, realize the promise of a better life. As a result, irony and paradox stay rooted in recurring social and political aspirations....The reality of revolution, and continual political upheaval in certain parts of the world, also relates to magical realism. Specifically, South America is characterized by the endless struggle for a political ideal.Based on this description, a little "magical realism" might be a useful addition to Mr. Amselem's understanding of the culture of Latin America of which he was so dismissive, and the histories that present-day Latin Americans want to ensure never come back again-- as the age of dictatorial coups has so tragically in Honduras.
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