Reflections
by the Commander in Chief
THE
IDEOLOGICAL
I have been working on the
many reflections that I have promised. One of them deals with the main ideas of
a book by Greenspan, former chairman of the Federal Reserve, making use of his
own words. His book clearly reveals how imperialism seeks to continue buying up
the world’s natural and human resources with perfumed paper bills.
Another idea I had consisted in compelling certain
individuals to confess the truth about NATO’s war plans. I directly challenged
Mr. Aznar and brought pressures to bear on US leaders to have them openly admit
their responsibility in the empire’s wars. Some of the documented evidence I
presented had not been published before.
Then the Ibero-American Summit was held and hell broke
loose there. Zapatero’s cowardly and untimely remarks, his defense of Aznar,
the King of Spain's abrupt interjection, and the dignified response of the
President of Venezuela who, because of technical problems, was unable to hear
precisely what the King had said, were an unambiguous display of the genocidal
ways and methods of the empire, its accomplices and the anesthetized victims of
the Third World.
Chávez' talents and debate skills came to the fore in
this tense atmosphere.
Aznar's twisted soul is best captured by one of his
pronouncements. When Chávez asked him what fate was in store, in the neoliberal
world, for poor countries such as
I know the Bolivarian leader well: he never forgets the
words he hears in direct conversation with others.
I wrote a third reflection on the Ibero-American Summit
which I have yet to publish. I am publishing this one, instead, on the eve of
President Chávez’ trip to
Fidel Castro Ruz