A Sunday Reflection
I have been asked to
write an essay on this topic for a French publication, dead line in January
2015, and have started to put my ideas in order. One of the first things I have
tried to clarify in my own mind is if I am using the same criteria for success
or failure that most Latin Americans do. Perhaps I am not a typical Latin
American but have been greatly influenced by the U.S. philosophy of life,
country where I have spent, off and on, a significant portion of my life.
I say this because for
many of my countrymen political leaders like Fidel Castro and Hugo Chavez have
been very successful while I consider them to be failures. When Fidel Castro visited
Venezuela, in February 1989, invited by Carlos Andres Perez for his second presidential
inauguration, more than 900 Venezuelan intellectuals published a welcome letter
for him, offering him their respect for his role in “upholding the dignity of Latin
America” and telling him that he remained “a hope for all of us to build an
independent and just Latin America”. Later on, many of those who signed that
letter also endorsed Hugo Chavez’s arrival to the presidency and accompanied him,
at least, for a while, until he proved to be an inept dictator. Why would these intelligent men and women of
Venezuela idolized leaders who, in my opinion, had been despicable strongmen,
highly harmful to their peoples?
In looking for an
answer to this difference of perspective I have been doing some reading about Latin
Americans, about what makes us the way we are, looking for the sociological
(and, even, philosophical) explanations given by authors who have discussed
this theme before. For example, thanks
to the blog Caracas Chronicles I have read some pages by a man I did not know
anything about, Jose M. Briceño Guerrero, who recently died in Merida,
Venezuela. I have also looked for
inspiration from the likes of St. Augustine, Bolivar, Rodó and some U.S. authors
like Glen Caudill Dealey and Samuel Huntington.
Some of what I have
gathered, so far, suggests that when I define Latin American political
leadership as failed I might be using an Anglo-Saxon rule of measurement which
is essentially Unitarian, in the
sense that there should be no difference between politics and ethics or between
public and private personae, while those Latin Americans who see
them as successful might be thinking in binary
terms, disaggregating them into public, political leaders and private, moral
individuals. Of course, this would only represent a very partial explanation because
there seem to be other apparent reasons for the difference in perspectives.
Below I list some of
the traits of Latin American political leaders that, in my opinion, lead to
their failure, although some or all of them could be considered to be qualities
by many Latin Americans. They are listed without order of importance, only as
food for further thought:
1.
Latin American political leaders often
have a perverted sense of history, one that aspires to immortality through the
exercise of power rather than good deeds
2.
Their yearning for power is often more
important than quiet, efficient management of their duties
3.
They prefer theatrical approach to
politics, including rhetorical grandeur and pomposity, rather than substance
4.
They believe that politics and
morals/religion should be kept separate. To Cesar what is Cesar’s, to God what
is God’s.
5.
They tend to think of heroes as men in
horseback, not in the universities
6.
Poverty is the result of the perversity
of others, not a consequence of ignorance and lack of personal empowerment.
Therefore, redistribution of existing wealth becomes more important, as a political
solution, than creation of new wealth
7.
Leaders from the right and the left
share an addiction to Personalism, a caudillo mentality
8.
They exhibit a duality of morals, a
separation of the ethical world into the public and private domain. Religion
and morals is one thing, politics another. As Machiavelli said: “It is better
to act and repent than not to act and repent”.
9.
Latin American leaders share the
catholic approach about religious faith being more important than good deeds to
go to heaven. Church going cleans political misdeeds. It is possible to
separate neatly the City of God and the City of Man. St. Augustine says: ‘It is
possible for a citizen of the kingdom of heaven to hold some office upon earth:
proconsul, Emperor, directing the earthly republic”
10.
Latin American leaders find it more attractive
to be important than to be useful, they prefer being the center of attention
than to act silently. Lack of punctuality becomes an essential characteristic
of the important leader because forces everyone to “wait for them”
11.
Latin leaders believe that a perquisite
of power is the free, unrestricted personal use of the public resources
12.
Latin American leaders feel that the
position is more important than the person. Therefore, the investiture places him,
her above the law and never as a simple servant of the people.
13.
Latin American leaders seem to believe
that friendship is more important than justice and that laws apply to the
people at large, not to friends
14.
Latin American Leaders often cannot
think of projects and programs that extend beyond their time in power. What has
to be done must yield results while they are in power
There
are more ingredients that could be considered to explain why the performance of
Latin American leaders often fail to improve the conditions of their people
while, at the same time, giving them an aura of success among those they have
failed to help effectively. The reason is that both the leaders and the led
share a similar cultural criteria for success. Even when being humiliated and oppressed
many Latin Americans seem incapable of not feeling admiration of, and
dependency in, the powerful and the audacious.
Another
line of reflection has come to me from reading Briceño Guerrero’s prologue to
his book “The Labyrinth of the three Minotaur”, one of his most important
works. Jose M. Briceño Guerrero was a little known Venezuelan philosopher and linguist,
recently deceased (October 2014), who merits more exposure. In trying to
explain the Latin American soul he says, beautifully translated by Caracas
Chronicles blogger Francisco Toro, see, http://caracaschronicles.com/2014/11/04/jose-manuel-briceno-guerrero-1929-2014/ :
“Three great, underlying discourses govern Latin American
thinking. This can be seen in the history of ideas, the observation of
political events, and the examination of artistic creativity. First there is the European rationalist discourse, imported at
the end of the eighteenth century,
structured by instrumental reason and its outcomes in science and technology, driven
by the possibility of deliberate and planned social change tending to realize
universal human rights, expressed in the texts of constitutions as well the
platforms of political parties and in the scientific conceptions of humanity
and their consequent collective manipulation, and invigorated verbally by the
theoretical boom of the various positivisms, technocracies, and of socialism,
with its doctrinaire rousing of civil or military or paramilitary movements of
revolutionary intent. Its key words in the nineteenth century were modernity
and progress. Its key word in our time is development. This discourse acts as a
screen onto which the aspirations of large sectors of the population, as well
as the collective psyche, are projected – but also as an ideological vehicle
for the intervention of the great foreign powers in the region and is, in part,
a result of that intervention; only in part, however, because it is also,
powerfully, a function of Latin American identification with rationalist
Europe. In parallel, there is
the Christian-Hispanic Discourse, or Mantuano Discourse, inherited from
imperial Spain, in its Latin
American version, typical of the criollos (white elite) and the Spanish
colonial system. This discourse affirms, in the spiritual dimension, the
transcendence of man, his partial belonging to a world of meta-cosmic values,
his communion with the divine through the Holy Mother Church, his ambiguous
struggle between transient interests and eternal salvation, between his
precarious terrestrial citadel and the firm palace of multiple celestial
mansions. But, in material matters, it is linked to a social system of
inherited nobility, hierarchy and privilege that found its theoretical
justification in Latin America as paideia (the dissemination of western culture
to the Americas) while, in practice, it left as the only route for
socioeconomic improvement the remote and arduous path of race whitening and
cultural westernization through miscegenation and education, exasperatingly
slow twin paths, strewn with legal obstacles and incremental prejudices. But,
while access to equality with the criollo class was in practice closed off to
the majority, the discourse entrenched itself over centuries of colonialism and
persists with silent strength in the republican period up and into our time,
structuring aspirations and ambitions around the personal and familial (or
clan-based) striving for privilege, noble idleness through kinship rather than
merit, built on relationships of seigniorial loyalty and protection, grace
rather than function and territory rather than official service, even on the
fringes of power. The mantuano ethos survives in a thousand new forms and
extends through the entire population. Finally,
there is the savage discourse, executor
of the wound produced in the pre-European cultures of the Americas by their
defeat at the hands of the conquerors, and in African cultures by their passive
transfer to the Americas under slavery, executor also of the resentments
produced in the pardos (mixed race people) by the indefinite postponement of
their aspirations. It is a vehicle for the nostalgia for non-European,
non-Western ways of life, a refuge for cultural horizons apparently closed off
by the imposition of Europe on Latin America. To this discourse, both the
rationalist European and the Hispanic-colonial discourses are foreign and
strange, strata of oppression, representatives of an alterity that cannot be
assimilated and cannot rid itself of the savage’s apparent submission,
occasional rebellion, permanent mischief and dark nostalgia. These three great
underlying discourses are present in every Latin American, though with an
intensity that varies depending on social class, place, psychic level, age, and
the time of day…..”.
This text generates in me the same fascination that does the
poetry of T.S. Eliot. I intuit its great
importance without understanding it fully. It forces me to read and re-read it,
trying to make it mine.
These are the ingredients which I have come up with, so far. I
will look for others to use in my essay, applying them to our Latin American
leaders to try to document my opinion that they are a pretty sorry bunch. I
would welcome any suggestions.
Political success is unfortunately measured by one thing in Latin America: degree of hostility toward the USA. The fact that there is no toilet paper and that the government is a bunch of incompetent crooks doesn't seem to matter to the voters as long as the handouts continue and the fiery anti-gringo rhetoric of scapegoating continues.
ResponderEliminarDear Gustavo Coronel,
ResponderEliminarUnfortunately Anti Americanism (anti-US) is a dimension of the leadership in latin America, as pointed out by Anonimo. Carlos Rangel's book "del buen salvage al buen revolucionario" is useful for an analysis of latin American politics. By the way which french review will publish because you know that antiamericanism is also a dimension of the french politics as Jean-François Revel demonstrates in one of his books.
Jacques Carbou