Cybersyn And Early Uniminds 339
An anonymous reader writes "The Guardian Website is running a story on Cybersyn. An experimental computer network based on cybernetic principles that was used by Chile's revolutionary government between 1971 and 1973 to provide a real-time, decentralized form of economic analysis in the nationalized sector of the Chilean economy. The network has been described as Chile's Internet. There is a photo of the control room which looks something like the deck of the Starship Enterprise.
The whole thing was the brainchild of Stafford Beer, a sort of British Buckminster Fuller. All very Orwellian and Big Brother, the whole experiment was brought to an end by the CIA sponsored coup d'etat on the September 11th, 1973."
As opposed to "nutritional principles"? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:As opposed to "nutritional principles"? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:As opposed to "nutritional principles"? (Score:5, Informative)
You're thinking of bionics. (Although the definition you give isn't exact for that, either). Cybernetics is the study of control and communication in both living and non-living systems.
Here are the dictionary links:
bionics [hyperdictionary.com]
cybernetics [hyperdictionary.com]
(Triva note: the term "cybernetics" was coined by Norbert Wiener, "bionics" was coined by Dr. Jack Steele -- my father-in-law)
Re:As opposed to "nutritional principles"? (Score:3, Insightful)
Most of the ideas that we think are cool today are really just twists or refinement of ideas that have been around for a long time.
Re:As opposed to "nutritional principles"? (Score:3, Informative)
True. But when Staff wrote 'Cybernetics and Management" in 1959, the idea that you could apply Wiener's 1948 observational theories to real enterprises, let alone an entire national economy, has got to have been one of the all-time crazy ideas. Like Team Syntegrity (part of the Viable Systems Model [staffordbeer.com], kicking off from the idea that every imaginable system can in some sense be modelled as an icosahedron), based on Buckminster Fuller's idea that 'al
Cybersin ? (Score:4, Funny)
Not quite the internet (Score:5, Funny)
Uhhh, no, that's nothing like the Internet, actually. The Internet links men with chicks, to transform their relationship into something profoundly more equal and responsive than before - the guys shell out money and get pr0n. Nothing socialist about it, and certainly nothing to do with voters.
hey now.. (Score:4, Funny)
CIA sponsored coup d'etat (Score:5, Insightful)
34
Re:CIA sponsored coup d'etat (Score:5, Insightful)
Firstly, the USA is an extremely large country, and only has one neighbour of any relative population size. This helps make the USA far more of a self-contained world than just about any other country out there. It also means that ~97% of television content is locally produced, furthering this.
America is extremely nationalistic and has a national myth of grandious pridefulness 2nd to very few. Most Americans don't want to tolerate anything that gets in the way of that nationalism. It skews the mind into thinking that Americans are superior and that foreigners are inferior, no matter what the ears hear and the eyes see.
So if the USA is taking out governments in places like Venuzvela, Chile, Greece, Zaire etc, it is because they're 'enemies of freedom', while supporting evil regimes like the government of Turkey for 'the greater good'. I doubt anyone much in America sees the oxymoron of this.
It was much the same with the British Empire. It stood for 'freedom' and 'christian charity' and so on. In reality, the people in power were just cold greedy sociopaths. Same with America. And the people cling to the national myth out of their personal fears, and in part because the people against the national mythos are for sociological reasons often even more dysfunctional than those for it.
Re:CIA sponsored coup d'etat (Score:2, Flamebait)
Anyone who's ever tried to convince an american that their country is in the process of being fucked without ceremony by its "elected" leaders will have to agree with that.
It's a shame to see what was and could still be a great country going to bits because so many of its citizens are either stupid, full of blind patriotism, or both.
Daniel
Another Connection in your Observations. (Score:2, Insightful)
Now our media comes from 2 places. Ourselves and the US! Great! That's a healthy balanced view of the world.....
Re:Another Connection in your Observations. (Score:4, Insightful)
That is the point. The US is very much in a position today were only a relatively small minority of US citizens are exposed to any degree to foreign opinions of them except as digested by US media, whereas in most smaller nations that is much less likely to happen.
Poverty can do it - you'll likely find many third world nations where the majority of citizens are largely unaware of the politics of the rest of the world, but then most of these countries have little impact on the world.
Apart from the US, there are perhaps a handful of countries where the general populace are so isolated from foreign culture and viewpoints and that have anywhere near the influence on the world. Russia doesn't really apply - while powerful, it is also politically and culturally extremely influenced by a lot of surrounding countries and the West. China, possibly, given that the majority of the populace is relatively isolated from surrounding countries or any influence from the west. India certainly not - it's a melting pot of a wide variety of political and cultural influences, drawing both on the West and influence from a variety of it's neighbours.
I'm not sure how much I agree with the idea of US isolationism, but it's an intriguing idea, and superficially it would seem to explain a lot of why US opinion generally seem so completely unfazed and unaware of what happens internationally
Re:Another Connection in your Observations. (Score:2)
For example, yesterday's Associated Press article about reaction to Bush's speech was significantly different [in German] [typepad.com] / [in English] [instapundit.com] in the version sent to Germany than that distributed in the US.
This is normal. Europeans, who so proudly tell us about the undersophistication
Re:CIA sponsored coup d'etat (Score:4, Interesting)
First paragraph - pretty much spot-on.
Second para, 1st sentence - still ok, but drifting into empty spitefulness
2nd P, 2nd s: hard veer into nonsense.
"I doubt anyone much in America sees the oxymoron of this" - Based on what, your own HUMUNGOUS generalizations? Your fervently-held political beliefs?
I think you were right at the beginning. *MOST* of America really doesn't have anything to do with the world, and doesn't want to. Why? Because they don't have to. Provincialism all over the world is being invaded by American products, advertising, and culture (such as it is). SELF-EVIDENTLY, Americans (with no cultural heritage to speak of) don't really mind this.
Thus the furious protests against "globalization" - yes, American culture is shallow and self-serving, but at least it's more benign (as was the British Empire before it) than pretty much any conceivable global alternative, as well as a LARGE number of "local" dogmas, no matter where you are from.
"And the people cling to the national myth out of their personal fears, and in part because the people against the national mythos are for sociological reasons often even more dysfunctional than those for it."
I do confess this is a great statement.
Re:CIA sponsored coup d'etat (Score:2)
Thank you for your widely overgeneralized summary of America. One thing you forgot to mention is that the USA, believe it or no, is probably the most diverse country on the planet. If you set aside Bush & Cheny and their clone army of Christain oil barons, there is much to appreciate in the US. There are still people here who know our roots. There are statistics like there being more Irish people in parts of the US than all of Ireland. Most
Re:CIA sponsored coup d'etat (Score:3, Insightful)
Firstly, the USA is an extremely large country, and only has one neighbour of any relative population size. This helps make the USA far more of a self-contained world than just about any other country out there. It also means that ~97% of television content is locally produced, furthering this.
All this is true. (It's also why people in the USA are rarely bilingual. There's no practical use for a second language for many Americans. Anyone who learns a second langauge is just doing it for the sake of rou
Re:CIA sponsored coup d'etat (Score:2, Insightful)
Who said we took it lightly? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Who said we took it lightly? (Score:3, Informative)
Pakistan.. (Score:3, Insightful)
So.. could someone please explain to me why the USA is now best-friends with Pakistan?
Musharraf ousted an elected civilian regime and replaced it with a military dictatorship.
This was harshly criticized by the international community, including the USA.
Come 9/11 and we're suddenly best friends?
This entire "The enemy of my enemy is my friend" and
"ends-justify-the-means" mentalit
CIA + Crack Cocaine (Score:2)
Re:Pakistan.. (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm not sure I agree with the whole Pakistani bloodless coup. However, I know a lot of Pakistanis and they seem to imply that a majority of their fellow citizens had no problem with the coup. A lot of Pakistanis felt the "democratic" government had beco
Re:Pakistan.. (Score:2)
Musharraf is still in power. It's not the CIA that's his closests friends in the US at the moment, but the elected parts of the governments.
True, the CIA was nice enough to help fund the build up of the Taliban, but it's the elected US government that continue to ignore the fact that Musharraf is a dictator in a country with a massive WMD program, an intelligence service that supports terrorists (both in Afghanistan and in Kashmir), and that would seem to embody what the US is offici
Re:Who said we took it lightly? (Score:3, Informative)
Did it have any effect?
List of US-sponsored/CIA involvment in coups/invations in Central America from 1975:
-Nicaragua 1979
-El SAlvador 1979-1989
-Grenada 1983
-Panama 1989
And CIA has been linked to paramilitary organizations, coups and secret operations in Puerto Rico, Peru, Bolivia, Colombia and Venezuela (as late as 2002).
The list is pulled from the back off my head and prob. not complete.
So did the act to stop CIA from doing this have any effect at all?
IMO, no.
Venezuela anyone? (Score:3, Insightful)
There were hearings, the Republican administration withheld information from the Congress
Re:Venezuela anyone? (Score:2)
Anyone remember "Iraq will be a cakewalk", want to compare today's, "We knew Iraq would not be easy"...
It was the press that was saying the Iraq invasion would be easy, not the administration.
And:
While the Bush's may have stolen the last election, I'm more ashamed that it was so easy for him to actually win support of 48% of eligible voters who showed up at the polls, than less than half a million Democrats his brother illegaly removed from the rolls and a few h
Re:Venezuela anyone? (Score:2)
Well, Google News can be a timesaver. But even that isn't enough. Mainly it is important to choose three or so news sources with known and transparent slants of various degrees, and read through the bias to get the nuggets of truth out there. It doesn't have to be 200, but it definitely has to be more than one. Unfortuna
Re:Venezuela anyone? (Score:2)
Replace the biggest function of the CIA, informatio analysis, with a translation service. Publish the translated news articles web with translated ads, the ads give you a better idea than the news articles from some sources. You could either do this under fair use only for articles not translated by the news organization itself to placate WIPO
Number Two... (Score:3)
Here is an article
It is fair to note that the article is accurate in it's disparaging remarks about both Otto Reich [gwu.edu] and Elliot Abrams [pitt.edu].
The similarity between the ecconomic and historical events leading to the April Coup (US interference with trade, propaganda published by White House spokesmen in the US media, and demands that the d
Re:Who said we took it lightly? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:CIA sponsored coup d'etat (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:CIA sponsored coup d'etat (Score:3, Interesting)
Allende might not have been that bad of a man but his country was in chaos from within. If he had failed and it looks like he was going to a strong arm Marxist with ties to the USSR could very have been the one to re
Re:CIA sponsored coup d'etat (Score:2)
First of all, Allende wouldn't have had nearly as many economical problems if it hadn't been for the massive CIA interference in the form of support for strikes etc. to help the right wing movements trying to overthrow him.
Secondly, Soviet support would have been very unlikely, as Allende was unpopular with the Soviet Union because of his commitment to democracy and
Re:CIA sponsored coup d'etat (Score:2)
Re:CIA sponsored coup d'etat (Score:2)
Re:CIA sponsored coup d'etat (Score:2, Insightful)
Because Americans do; we do not reflect. We consider everything through the prism of self-interest--is it good for the U.S. or bad for the U.S.? This is probably the secret of our national strength: we're so self-absorbed and so confident of success that we don't consider alternatives, but spend our energies moving around or through whatever obstacles are in our way.
It's telli
Re:CIA sponsored coup d'etat (Score:3, Insightful)
The US (with the constant agreement and assistance of the UK, btw), ha
Re:CIA sponsored coup d'etat (Score:2)
Perhaps you would like to give some sources to back up this unsubstantiated allegation?
The reason investment dried up was that companies were not interested in putting money into a regime which confiscated property, as Allende had done.
Actually the reason the economy was doing bad is that the CIA did its best to cripple it. That is also in the officia
Re:CIA sponsored coup d'etat (Score:2)
Daniel
Re:CIA sponsored coup d'etat (Score:2)
The support for the Pinochet coups is one of the most blatant examples, because it is not disputed that the CIA was involved - CIA people have even boasted about it in documentaries about their involvement
Chilean Enterprise (Score:5, Funny)
"Computadora, te, gris del earl, caliente."
Not Orwellian at all (Score:5, Interesting)
The system contains strict limits on what information is passed upwards - this is how it was able to function on 1970s computer hardware over 1970s WANs. The absence of totalitarian control is a crucial design factor. There just isn't the bandwidth, nor would you want it.
Beer is the most freedom-loving person you could hope to imagine. He designed Cybersyn to enhance freedom, not to crush it. He sadly died last year.
For a full account of this system, read Beer's book "Brain of the Firm".
Re:Not Orwellian at all (Score:3, Informative)
Cybersyn is the implementation of Stafford Beer's "Viable System Model" which is modelled on the working of the human nervous system.
Totalitarianism would be like if the brain demanded to know every detail of what the hand was doing.
The body doesn't work this way - hand control (for instance) is decentralized, with part being controlled by local "muscle memory", part being controlled where the nerves meet the spinal cord, and part being controlled at different levels of the brain. In order
Re:Not Orwellian at all (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Not Orwellian at all (Score:2)
Repeated because this topic finally made me get an account
It's all downhill from here, trust me. :)
--RJ
Re:Not Orwellian at all (Score:5, Funny)
Beer is the most freedom-loving person you could hope to imagine.
Ah, this must be where the phrase "free as in Beer" I keep seeing on Slashdot comes from.
Re:Not Orwellian at all (Score:2)
Saying this system was a "Big brother" like system is like saying that e-mail is a Big brother like system because it can help information flow to an authoritarian syst
Re:Not Orwellian at all (Score:2)
Thank you for seeing the point. People in the US can't really get a notion of how much leftist brainwashing takes place south of the Rio Grande, or across the pond... I always have a laugh when I see US people complaining about the "liberal" bias in their own communication channels.
If XX century History is any guide, I'd say 99,999... percent chance.
Re:Not Orwellian at all (Score:2)
Is a fascist dream to pass the government to a freely elected successor after stamping down the attempt to turn the country into a stalinist dictatorship, possibly hereditary like Cuba or North Korea? Perhaps, after all that's what happened with the most famous fascist after the Duce, namely Franco...
No, but I don't do
It's a Conspiracy - I tell you. (Score:4, Funny)
Looking there, you can find beer.
Looking there, you can find Stafford
eg It's in the UK [staffordbc.gov.uk] The United Kingdom is well known for its relationship to beer.
Oddly enough, searching for both Stafford and beer returns no links about the proliferation of fermented ales in a certain part of the United Kingdom.
All right-handers, eh? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:All right-handers, eh? (Score:3, Funny)
Not at all -- you can still fetch coffee for your dextrous overlords.
--
Didn't work (Score:2, Interesting)
Yeah, but, well, it didn't work. What they got was a real-time view of a country going down the drain.
I propose tagging the network RTDTDA.NET (Real-Time Down The Drain Analytic Network)
Re:Didn't work (Score:4, Insightful)
Chile....? (Score:3, Funny)
Ministry of love... (Score:5, Insightful)
All very Orwellian and Big Brother, the whole experiment was brought to an end by the CIA sponsored coup d'etat on the September 11th, 1973.
Why is this "Orwellian and Big Brother[ish]"? You seem to forget that the "CIA sponsored coup" was actually a pretty bloody affair itself... More than 3000 people "disappeared" (tortured and fed to the fishes), some because they were just suspected of left-of-center sypathies.
But don't take my word for it, read the following:
Amnesty International 1 [amnesty.org], Amnesty International 2 [amnesty.org], Amnesty International 3 [amnesty.org], Human Rights Watch [hrw.org], and even this week's Economist [economist.com], etc... I could go on, but you get my drift.
Re:Ministry of love... (Score:2)
Two wrongs don't make a right...
Actually, if it is a fact that CIA sponsored this specific coup, it is also a fact that Chile was in economic, social, political and juridical disarray due to Allende's allies trying to turn it into a richer, southern Cuba, with KGB aid. Between KGB and CIA, I'll side with CIA every time.
Pacifism fails to reckon sometimes you ne
Re:Ministry of love... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Ministry of love... (Score:2)
Supposing you were right (I happen to disagree), the natural (and planned) course of the socialist revolution he was leading would have created a perhaps richer, but certainly no more democratic Cuba... even if Allende himself would have needed to be assassinated by hard-core revolutionaires later.
If you can get past the leftist hagiography that clouds real History, Chile was already in destabilization phase of a typical revolution, with Ministers of State h
Re:Ministry of love... (Score:2)
Re:Ministry of love... (Score:2)
While I don't have much sympathy for Castro - while he got rid of an oppressive dictator, he doesn't exactly seem to have kept to his ideals - Allende on the other hand was democratically elected, and still had to endure massive CIA interference, and was murdered thanks to the CIA. How that qualifies to being compared to Ca
Re:Ministry of love... (Score:2)
Yes, and some people still believe Stalin was a nice guy.
In fact, even if the US really helped ejecting Allende and boycotts Cuba to this day, most of Chile's woes were, and Cuba's are, self-inflicted. While the Soviet Union endured, it subsidised Cuba with the equivalent of at least US$ 10G per annuum, or US$ 1K per inhabita
Re:Ministry of love... (Score:2)
Or in this case you needed violence to ensure thirteen years of oppressive military dictatorship and frequent murder of members of the opposition, and assorted other evils.
Re:Ministry of love... (Score:2)
How is that even comparable to the much more numerous killings perpetrated in the much longer dictatorship in Cuba, which is the nearer example of what-would-have-happened?
This taking only Latin America into account... don't even get me started about the Iron and Bamboo Curtains countries.
It is true two wrongs don't make a right, but in this case I fear it wa
Re:Ministry of love... (Score:2)
If this is Orwellian (Score:4, Insightful)
No, I don't think so either. Most sane people would think that giving a business the information it needs to stay in business is a good thing. And if you actually RTFA, you will see it describes how the system was able to keep the Chilean economy functioning during a national strike. It made the economy more resilient. Isn't that what software is supposed to do?
I feel a major rant coming on, but it's off-topic.
Re:If this is Orwellian (Score:3, Insightful)
No. Actually it's ultra-right wing and ultra-totalitarian. The only difference is that employees of this totalitarian system have the possibility of disengaging. Remember that Henry Ford was an early economic advisor to the Bolsheviks and businesses are still run in much the same way as in his day - the tools may have changed, but in the final analysis, it's still all about command and control.
Take a Tour of the Federal Reserve (Score:2)
Mmmmm.... (Score:2)
The US will eventually have a planned economy. (Score:5, Interesting)
The lack of a national electronic currency is a glaring absence. You can hardly expect e-retailing to compete with cash when e-currency consists of credit cards issued by usurous, predatory corporate behemouths. But a conservative government has no reason to disturb the status quo of all things. A national e-currency would disrupt the existing financial industry to no end and that potential negative is much more important to a conservative government than the possible positive of helping the economy as a whole. Why trade what works for some today for what might work for many tomorrow.
So, I understand that it's a political impossibility today, but when the government finally does awake to its responsibility to create a usable currency as it is laid out in the Consitituion, the possibilities are great. It could make a viable welfare state a reality.
The currency could be manipulated in ways previously unheard of. People could be paid simply to live their lives and still there would be no need for inflation. Businessnes could prosper at the same time. It wouldn't have to be anti-business at all. America could never thrive without business, but it wouldn't have to. A planned economy and a thriving business world could easily exist side by side.
I realize these ideas are still quite blasphemous, but should we reach a point of crisis trodding the well worn path, it's nice to know that there are alternatives that could be introduced before things got too bad.
Re:The US will eventually have a planned economy. (Score:2, Insightful)
Electronic transfers in and out of bank accounts via debit cards or ACH transfers isn't good enough? Also, guess which is the most expensive way for a retailer to take payment? Cash! It's more difficult to keep track of due to 'sticky fingers' or just plain incompetance. One also has to take the time and risk of transferring it to a bank or hiring an armored car service to pick it up.
Our economy is as vibrant as it is because it's not planned. Bureaucracies are notoriously inefficient when it comes to
Re:The US will eventually have a planned economy. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:The US will eventually have a planned economy. (Score:2)
The greatness of the USA is founded in volatility and uncertainty to a great degree. How do you plan for things never before imagined?
It could make a viable welfare state a reality.
I would bet stagnation soon follows. Humans are animals, and, left wanting nothing, they will become consumers to the fullest degree. Trust me, we are a long wa
Re:The US will eventually have a planned economy. (Score:2)
Study economics. Planned economies are fundamentally worse than free ones. Think about it: how can a central planner know what the next big fad is going to be? Who knows best what you want: you or him? Multiply that out by 300 million souls...
The free market is the best possible mechanism for the allocation of scarce resources (which is all
I was hoping somebody would ask. (Score:3, Interesting)
It's disturbingly simple. I'm not going to pretend that I thought this up myself, but I've added a bit to the original idea that I saw in The Economist last year.
The idea is that with a centrally controlled electronic currency, you'd have a degree of control over the economy that nobody in the pre-digital world could begin to imagine. In that sense, it's a completely revolutionary break from earlier economic theories because in the past there was no way to anticipate its possibility and
Re:I was hoping somebody would ask. (Score:2)
This is very artificial and arbitrary, like a board game. Sounds very satisfying.
If anything, you'd think this system would provide an enormous incentive for people to get into business and businesses would become more efficient and productive than ever.
Given that centralized government is the antithesis to personal liberty, I wonder if there will be enough people left to actually start businesses. Given this controlled economy, it will be very convenient to destr
Captain! (Score:4, Funny)
"On...screen! What...could it...Sensors?"
"Sir, it appears to be a second-class hiring anomaly. They are pointing fingers, I suggest evasive action. Our treasury is not capable of withstanding a direct attack."
"Understood. It appears that...we can...not win this...one. Change our course to...braised shrimp and roast duck. Maximum warp!"
Montioned in Shockwave Rider (Score:3, Interesting)
a chilean perpective (Score:3, Informative)
For those of you already complaining about how a bloody coup thwarted this clearly great idea, please read that article. It is very politically biased, but it shows how this guys ideas have evolved over time, and I would dare to say he wouldn't think of building such a clearly useless system now.
A system like that cannot take individual human actions into account, it cannot deal with subjective market decisions, it cannot handle human relations. A professor at Universidad de Chile (the one the submitter mentions) told us about this system years ago, and how it seemed to be such a great idea for managing coal production (for example)... until it had to deal with a coal miners strike...
If you want to know why such a centralized system will never be useful check econlib [econlib.org], you might learn a thing ot two.
By the way, I'm chilean.
Not "Revolutionary" (Score:2, Insightful)
There was an U.S. sponsored coup after, and then the most brutal regimem of the 20th century in americas took power.
Re:Not "Revolutionary" (Score:2)
Re:Not "Revolutionary" (Score:2)
Most brutal regime? I am not sure. There have been some pretty awful cases elsewhere. Certainly it was not good though. When I visited Chile during Pinochet's period in power, it was quite clear that it was a pretty repressive situation.
However the economy under the Unity government was a total basket case, and maybe Chileans were better off under Pinochet. If it hadn't been for the coup th
Al Gore (Score:2, Funny)
Allende and the CIA coup (Score:2)
It probably wasn't what you think. [dorta.com]
Re:Allende and the CIA coup (Score:2, Insightful)
There is a possibility that the elected Allende government would have deteriorated into chaos or civil war or totalitarianism. There is a possibility that it wouldn't. The article you quote obviously assumes this would be the case, by using right-wing economic models. If you use left-wing economic models this isn't so clear. Obviously all we are seeing is a difference of opinion, not "confusion about exactly what Allende was".
I find it difficult to justify CIA in
Have you actually ever talked to anyone in Chile? (Score:4, Insightful)
Over 15 years, 3000 people were killed, but this was remarkably humane compared to the communist revolutions at the time. Around the same time in Cambodia, 3,000,000 people (That's 1000 times more people) were executed by a fanatical communist regieme. In the aftermath of Vietnam there were 10s of thousands killed in political executions.
Communists hate Pinochet because he was the only person to ever remove a communist government from power. Up to that point it was assumed that the world would soon be 100% communist because slowly but surely every country was turning communist and no country had ever gone back.
Today in Chile many people marvel at the non-Chilean's media's obsession with the Allende Coup. Today Chile has the best economy in Latin America, and the least corrupt, most well run government in the region that actually does a great job at promoting things like public health.
I was there during the 2000 election between Lagos and Lavin and if you read the Chilean or Argentinan press you saw story after story about Lagos and Lavin's varying postitions on the economy, education, etc. If you read the international press the whole thing was Pinochet vs Allende , Pinochet vs Allende. It's as if you were reading about the 2000 U.S election in some newspaper and they were framing the whole thing as an election where the primary issue was the Vietnam War.
Re:Have you actually ever talked to anyone in Chil (Score:4, Insightful)
If so, then why didn't the opposition arrange demonstrations, arrange strikes without massive CIA intervention and actually manage to keep the strikes going, and demand changes?
Fact is, Allende was democratically elected, and the opposition, even with CIA help, didn't manage to raise enough support in the population to get anywhere near overthrowing his government before they decided to start murdering innocent people.
If Allende was so bad for Chile, why couldn't the CIA stay out of it and let Chileans decide for themselves and throw him out of power?
And why did they support a fascist dictator if the goal was to "save" the Chilean people from suffering?
You try to justify it by pointing to Khmer Rouge, but "forget" that Khmer Rouge and Allende had wildly differing political platforms. You also conveniently "forget" that the "communist" Khmer Rouge was finally stopped not by the US, or any of it's cronies, but by "communist" Vietnam.
Allendes regime was different from either in that it didn't murder the opposition or anyone that ever looked like they might consider possibly opposing them, and was democratically elected. If you want to equate Allende and Pol Pot, I would submit that Mother Theresa was really Stalin in drag, and claim that it is just as plausible.
Try telling the hundreds of thousands of people that had close friends or relatives killed because of Pinochet that the coup was "necessary", and that you think the CIA and a small group of military officers, none elected officials, had a right to take that decision on behalf of the Chilean people.
If you truly believe that, then would you also support the removal of the US government if some small group, say Al Quaeda, decides that they think it is necessary to do so on behalf of the American people?
If not, then who do you think have the right to decide that it is "right" to overthrow a foreign democratically elected government?
Re:Have you actually ever talked to anyone in Chil (Score:2)
Thanks!
Re:Kissinger (Score:5, Interesting)
Wouldn't want to be tried before the International Criminal Court now, would he?
Re:Kissinger (Score:5, Interesting)
I wont post links. Google for '"War crimes" USA ICC' and you'll find more than enough reputable links to support everything I've said.
Re:used by Chile's revolutionary government (Score:2, Informative)
There was nothing revolutionary about the Chilean government in the years 1971-1973 other than that they were voted in by the first democratic process the country had ever seen.
This is in contrast to the Pinochet government installed by the CIA in response to this unauthorized installation of democracy, whose crimes are well known.
Re:Sept 11 reference? (Score:5, Insightful)
I for one find the whole deal in Chile a perfect example of american hypocrisy. Democratically elected leaders are OK only as long as they agree with USA. If they don't, they are bad and must be got rid of. That puts the whole "US's crusade against tyranny and dictators" in to a whole new perspective wouldn't you say?
USA overthrowing governments (Score:2)
Had I been born a few decades earlier than I was, I would like to think I'd have seen American actions in certain countries as fairly evil... after all, they were.
These days, however, American foriegn policy is more along the lines of "destroy any dangerous enemy" than "hey, we have political differences with those guys, let's replace their government with a puppet dictator".
Personally, I've nothing against the idea of pre-emptive self defense...
Re:USA overthrowing governments (Score:5, Insightful)
OK. Could the rest of the world then invade USA? I mean, USA seems to be the biggest threat to world peace these days, invading other sovereign countries at whim. I mean, there's nothing wrong with pre-emptive self-defence, right?
Re:USA overthrowing governments (Score:2)
In the last little while, I've seen the USA invade Afghanistan and Iraq. I'm sure that causes every country with a vaguely western style democracy and a moderate-to-decent human rights record to tremble in fear.
Re:USA overthrowing governments (Score:2)
Re:USA overthrowing governments (Score:2)
Not at all. Like just the other day, my neighbor's dog pooed on my lawn, so I sprayed RoundUp on all his grass, his bushes, and his trees...and then I burned down his house! HAHAHA, he'll think twice about letting his dog off his property, now! Oh, and he smiles real nice each time he sees me, because I didn't piss him off not one bit!
What do you mean I could have just talked to the guy?!? Build a fence?!? What?!?
Re:USA overthrowing governments (Score:2)
Re:USA overthrowing governments (Score:2)
I'd counter your first problem with the fact that something being used as a justification to do bad things does not invalidate it as a reason to do good things.
I'd counter your second problem with something a little more complex - The problem ISN'T the nutcase militants, believe it or not. The US has its own brand of them, and manages to keep them mostly under control. The problem is when a significant population encourages the development and exportation of such nutcases - witness the Middle East, where