lunes, 15 de septiembre de 2008

The Mystery of Unbroken Fears

It is sicken and comical to watch a candidate blatantly lie in front of millions with untroubled manner. This has happened before and will occur forever, until that is when the world is over.

What is troublesome is that even when they are wicked creatures who deceive for personal gain, they are just like lawyers, torturous and necessary. Like a story that is passé the old complain about politicians should come to reality. None of the prolific speech tellers are willing to rule for the common good if it interferences with his personal achievements.

But there is no other way to make things work, society is a moving entity that follows unknown patters that are God´s guess how they work. In any case, the citizen of a country is left to believe that change is always the solution for the problems that the country is facing. We know this much, everyone always offer change, that is because we never think that our country is working as good as it should be.

You may not care about a singular voting process in the middle of the world, but there is a remarkable aspect in the human sick that is best to describe.

Ecuador will go to the polls in a couple of weeks to vote for a referendum asking if the new constitution – written under the regime of Rafael Correa – should be approved. The fact that there is a voting on the constitution is pretty important – even so – it is heinous to branch it as the best we ever had. Some trouble appeared when questions rose that the text that was voted on the assembly floor was different from the one that will appear on the Yes or No voting.

Correa´s allies on the assembly admitted that the actual text have some differences from the original one, but called those mistakes of “good faith”. They parrot responses given by the President over and over until they get transformed into a well design script. This is not unique of Ecuador, most politicians will read somebody else’s speech making you thinking that they know it by rote.

Most of the process ended up as a bunk, we are still struggling to understand if the pros of the new constitution are better than the cons. Overall it seems to me that this is the least concern that we should have in our heads.

Personally I don´t trust democracy, I do feel the need of it, but we all face the mistakes done by a majority that not always takes elections as serious as they are – or to be even clearer are too dumb to think. The problem of democracy is that just like free market it will always lead to the right thing, but only after we all pay a high price.

In this particular voting process the flaws are basically the same ones that we had before. The “wise” Rafael Correa – who by the way is an economist – poor soul, talks about change, about a better future that will start as soon as the new constitution gets a Yes from the majority of voters. What is troublesome is that most of that is just talk, the fact is that you see the same old habits, only that this time he screams that he is not part of the old “policies”. Sounds familiar? Looks like someone has the same tactics that Karl Rove used for the G.O.P.

The situation is sometimes disturbing as it seems that the government flogged the constitution and then threw it to the people – some of them who barely understand that the future of the country is at stake. My response to the nay voters is that they are wasting their time making false assessment about articles in the constitution. The main problem surrounding this whole process is the process itself.

You can proclaim change when people are in woe and, lo, nothing seems to happen for better. That is a cheap strategy but it will certainly work, even more when people in distress are clinging to a leader that they see as honest and hardworking.

The resemblance of today´s division in Ecuador looks like what happened years ago in Venezuela, it puts a wanton weight over the few that acknowledge the dangers of letting the starving claim a better future. And it is not that the poor do not have the right to claim change, the problem is that it is easier for politicians to trick them. To me this is the case today.

Millions of grievous citizens are feeling the heavy investing that the government has put into infrastructure; roads have been built, schools improved, health care given. So if you are as the majority of Ecuadorians – poor – then you will be an ingrate if you voted No.

My particular position is that in some cases projects seem like profligate investments. I understand that investment is needed in poor areas as much as big buildings need to rise in big cities. What the government must do is to find balance between these parts; if you want to execute leverage you need that first. The country as a whole does not have a path to follow; we lack that distinctive get together to go to the moon theme, that open our market so we can manufacture everything that the world needs, that unite the continent so we will be stronger.

What I always grumble about is that good words written on a paper are not relevant to change, the dim future exasperate the brightest and hardest working people, they usually don´t benefit from a herd of delinquents that plague our government. Change is a cultural matter that starts with basic and unpopular measures. This will affect not only the pockets of the rich, but some benefits that the poor get. Medicine and education could not be taken away from people, and food to children should be provided by the government if necessary. Any other wickedness by the government may as well damage our free future.

We are not committed to a better future with the rest of the country, we face the same problems that Thomas L. Friedman and Paul Krugman entitle to the Bush administration for making people go out shopping instead of asking them to face the war with all the sacrifice needed. Our path is not limpid – not to the common citizens at least – it may be blight to some of us, but crystal clear to the dark Machiavellian advisors that Correa has. He appears talking from one non sequitur to another, in the end I even doubt the evidence and hope on a glimpse of light that never appears on the horizon.

We are facing a deep transformation that may start just like every other one done in the past, with flaws, corruption charges, a youth full of stoicism, personal attacks that end up on the opposition taking umbrage on Correa´s regular tasteless remarks. We hear the wail of the hunger and a hand willing to give them help. That is a strength that populist have, it is not fundamentally wrong, what complicates it is the fact that it violates the foundations of democracy and free market. Price control and other measures are not welcome in the long run, they help create black markets and distort the real output that the economy can achieve.

I don´t believe in a transcended transformation that cannot address the most underlying problems in this tumultuous times. You should not spend as if the price of oil will be over $140 a barrel forever – Ecuadorian oil prices are much lower – cause as it happens today is falling below the $100 mark. We need a fundamental transformation that focuses on what we do best and what we will do best. We have had more than enough constitutions to play with, now comes one more. Correa may have the charisma to blatantly lie without being caught, we may be so desperate to let that happened with no accountability. We sure missed another shot at creating a unique opportunity for our children. Shame on everyone that let this happen, mainly on the passive voices that watch change without knowing that change is not synonymous of better; change is just different and there are out there a millions ways to be different and get it wrong.

You can read the next constitution as much as you want, if we as a society are not willing to enforce it as we haven´t done before, we may need to make a better one in the next ten years. We are scornful citizens prompt to depression as we pull away from each other, and there are no signs of détente between the President that has polarized Ecuador – just like Chavez successfully did in Venezuela – and a weak opposition that sure can´t make their case right. Think again, this is not about a Yes or No on the ballot, it is about starting that “better” future with the wrong foot.

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