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Mario Vargas Llosa President
Executive
Board
Gerardo Bongiovanni
Fundación Libertad . Argentina
Lorenzo Bernaldo de
Quirós Fundación Iberoamérica
Europa .
Spain
Alejandro Chafuen ATLAS Foundation . USA
Enrique G hersi CITEL.
Perú
Pablo Izquierdo Fundación Iberoamérica Europa .
Spain
Ian
Vásquez
Cato Institute. USA
Charter Board Members
Dora de Ampuero IEEP . Ecuador
Ana Eiras Heritage Foundation . USA
José Luis Feito Spain
Rocío Guijarro CEDICE, Venezuela
Cristián Larroulet Instituto Libertad
y Desarroll o.
Chile
José María Marco Universidad Pontificia
Comillas .
Spain
Carlos Medina Manhattan Institute . USA
Plinio Apuleyo Mendoza Colombia
Carlos Alberto
Montaner
Spain
Paulo Rabello de
Castro Instituto Atlántico . Brazil
L. Jacobo
Rodríguez Cato Institute .
USA
Roberto Salinas
León TV Azteca . México
Joaquín Trigo Universidad de
Barcelona . Spain |
Mario
Vargas Llosa to Receive 2005 Irving Kristol
Award
Washington,
D.C.-The renowned Peruvian novelist,
essayist, playwright, and political thinker
Mario Vargas Llosa has been selected to
receive the American Enterprise Institute's
Irving Kristol Award for 2005. Mr. Vargas
Llosa will receive the award and deliver the
Irving Kristol Lecture at the Institute's
annual dinner on March 2, 2005, at the
Washington Hilton Hotel in Washington, D.C.
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| Mario
Vargas Llosa |
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One
of the deepest and most prolific of
contemporary novelists and a pioneering
force in Latin America's literary revival
since the 1960s, Mr. Vargas Llosa is also a
prominent advocate of democracy, free
markets, and individual liberty. In
announcing his acceptance of the Kristol
Award, AEI president Christopher DeMuth
stated, Mario Vargas Llosa's richly
variegated work and career teach that the
cause of freedom is universal-it is
fundamental to the human condition and
essential to the pursuit of justice and
peace. As we confront this truth in a course
of a strange and violent new political
struggle, it is important to recognize that
the narrative of freedom has unfolded in
many times and places and has stirred the
imaginations of our greatest creative
artists.
Mario Vargas Llosa was born in 1936 in
Arequipa, Peru, raised in Peru and Bolivia,
and educated in literature and law at the
University of San Marcos in Peru and at the
University of Madrid (Ph.D.). Working as a
journalist and editor of literary journals
in the 1950s, he published his first
collection of short stories, Los jefes
(The Cubs and other stories), in 1959; his
first novel, La ciudad y los perros
(The Time of the Hero), appeared in 1963 and
gained immediate international recognition.
Among his best known works are Conversación
en La Catedral (Conversation in the
Cathedral, 1969), La guerra del fin del
mundo (The War of the End of the World,
1981), and La fiesta del chivo (The
Feast of the Goat, 2000). His novels,
stories, and studies of Gustave Flaubert and
Gabriel García Márquez have been
translated into many languages and have
spawned a substantial body of literary
criticism.
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Dick
Cheney,
Vice Presidente
de EEUU, participó
de la ceremonia |
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| Agitation
against a government seizure of Peru's private banks
in 1987 drew Mr. Vargas Llosa into active politics
for several years. In 1990, he was the candidate of
the FREDEMO Movement for the president of Peru,
running on a platform of conservative reform and
losing narrowly to Alberto Fujimori. His memoir El
pez en el agua (A Fish in the Water, 1993)
relates his brief political career.
A past president of
International PEN, Mr. Vargas Llosa has held
visiting professorships at Harvard, Princeton,
Georgetown, and other American and European
universities and is a member of the Scholars'
Council of the U.S. Library of Congress. He was the
first twentieth-century Latin American to be elected
to the Spanish Royal Academy (1994); among his
numerous other honors are the Cervantes Prize
(1994), the Peace Prize of the German Book Trade
(1996), and the National Book Critics Circle Award
for Criticism (1997). He and his wife, Patricia,
have three grown children and currently reside in
London, Madrid, and Lima.
The Irving Kristol
Award, AEI's highest award, recognizes individuals
who have made extraordinary intellectual or
practical contributions to improved government
policy or social welfare. The award was established
in 2002 in honor of AEI senior fellow Irving Kristol,
replacing the Institute's Francis BoyerAward, which
had been awarded annually for the previous twenty-five
years. The Kristol Award is selected by the AEI
Council of Academic Advisers |
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Introduction to 2005 Irving Kristol Lecture
Christopher
DeMuth
President, AEI
Vice
President and Mrs. Cheney, President Aznar,
distinguished guests, welcome to the American
Enterprise Institute(s 2005 Annual Dinner and
Irving Kristol Lecture. My AEI colleagues and
I are very gratified that such a large and
accomplished congregation should be gathered
here this evening. We are especially grateful
for the generous support of our good friends
at Pfizer and of the esteemed ladies and
gentlemen of our Dinner Committee.
President
Bush(s bold recasting of American foreign
policy, and stirring recent developments in
Iraq, Ukraine, Afghanistan, and now throughout
the Middle East, maybe more this afternoon,
maybe Iran is next, have given us what Michael
Novak wrote of in a 2004 book--“some faint
reason to believe that the narrative of
liberty will not be finished until it has
suffused every society on Earth.” Of course
Michael and the rest of us at AEI are hard-boiled
realists when it comes to foreign policy. We
hold that the facts of human aspiration are
what they are and must be faced without
illusion, and that only the most woolly headed
ideologue could ignore them.
The past two
years have been harsh and brutal for the
people of Iraq and for the men and women of
the American and coalition military forces.
Many good people have been killed and many
have suffered, among them several guests here
this evening. Our hearts have been seared and
broken many times but our resolve has not been
broken--quite the contrary. Now, with the
dramatic events of the past two months, dare
we hope that we have arrived at the end of the
beginning? Can freedom turn the tide against
such maniacal cruelty? In the Cold War, it was
not only our military might but also our
personal and political freedoms that gave us
the strength that prevailed in the end. For
the duration those freedoms had often appeared
to be softness, handicaps in a mortal struggle.
But freedom is not soft. It is hard to win and
hard to practice, and the institutions it
gives rise to--those of liberal democracy and
competitive enterprise--are correspondingly
adamant and resilient. Now Islamist and
secular tyrants and terrorists hold freedom in
the same contempt that the Soviets once did;
now the Soviets await them in the ash heap.
This year's
Irving Kristol Award is being bestowed on a
man whose wondrous literary achievements are
more than deserving of that recognition. But
Mario Vargas Llosa is also a man of deeply
considered political judgments, and the
careful student of his fiction and his essays
will see the connections. We are honored that
he has accepted our award and look forward to
his Kristol Lecture with great anticipation.
The Kristol
Award will be presented by James Q. Wilson,
chairman of the AEI Council of Academic
Advisers and Ronald Reagan Professor of Public
Policy at Pepperdine University. Mr. Vargas
Llosa will then be introduced by his friend
José María Aznar, two-term President of
Spain from 1996 through 2004 and currently
President of the Foundation for Analysis and
Social Studies in Madrid. Please hold your
applause for now, but when the time comes let
us also recognize President Aznar for his
brilliant leadership of his nation, which
produced that largest gains in economic
welfare in all of Spanish history; for his
courageous friendship with the United States
of America; and for his continuing adamant
devotion to the cause of liberty.
James
Q. Wilson
Chairman, AEI Council of Academic Advisers
The Council
of Academic Advisers is proud to have selected
Mario Vargas Llosa to receive the Irving
Kristol prize. In doing this we take note that
this famed novelist was praised by the New
York Times for having written a
“fierce, edgy, and enthralling book” that
has “lasting emotional resonance.”
Some of you
may be surprised to learn that AEI shares the
judgment of the New York Times. I
would remind you that even a stopped clock is
correct twice a day.
Never fear.
In his long and illustrious writing career,
Vargas Llosa, the author of countless books
and stories of the highest caliber, has moved
from an early flirtation with communism to
become an outspoken defender of human freedom.
In one memorable sentence he wrote this:
“prosperity or egalitarianism, you have to
choose. I favor freedom--you never achieve
real equality anyway; you simply sacrifice
prosperity for an illusion.”
Vargas Llosa
is a liberal in the classic sense of the term.
“Liberalism,” he wrote, is a doctrine that
is a “relatively simple and clear
combination of basic principles,” in
particular a defense of “political and
economic liberty.” It teaches no political
dogma other than to oppose “dictatorships
and collectivist utopias.” In his view, that
opposition has begun to sweep Latin America
even if the realization of democratic regimes
is still incomplete.
One of his
earliest writings was his doctoral thesis
about the celebrated novelist, Gabriel García
Márquez. Later, after García Márquez had
endorsed Fidel Castro and Vargas Llosa has
embraced freedom, the two men met in a Mexico
City theater. An argument ensued, at the
climax of which Vargas Llosa punched García Márquez.
This may be the only time in scholarly history
in which a dissertation author has pummeled
the subject of his thesis.
In 1990,
Vargas Llosa ran unsuccessfully for president
of Peru, being defeated by Alberto Fujimori.
He ran, not because he is an ambitious
politician, but because he cared deeply about
his native country. It was under siege from
the left-wing Shining Path movement and
crippled by a president who had created
massive inflation. It was, at best, a fragile
democracy. He wanted to rescue it. But he lost,
and readily admitted that he had the skills of
a novelist, not those of a politician. To
prove it he wrote a book about his electoral
experiences, suitably entitled A Fish in
the Water.
In it he
restates with great clarity his view that
“economic freedom [is] inseparable from
political freedom,” and that is because the
way out of the poverty that has gripped Peru
lies not in redistributing the little wealth
that exists but in creating more.”
Throughout Latin America, he wrote, countries
have refused to choose prosperity because
their regimes, both from the right wing and
the left wing, have chosen instead a corrupt
form of populism. But despite his country’s
need to overcome these burdens, Vargas Llosa
readily admitted that “I was no good at
politics.”
Our
respect for him does not depend on his
doubtful skills as a politician but on his
undoubted commitment to human freedom. He has
come to that commitment from both imaginative
writing and practical experience. On behalf of
the AEI council of academic advisers, I
present to him the Kristol Award for 2005. The
inscription reads as follows:
To
Mario Vargas Llosa
Whose narrative art and political thought
Illumine the universal quest for freedom--
Which the virtues love and the follies require.
In return he
will give the Kristol Lecture, but first we
will hear from his old friend, José María
Aznar, the former president of Spain, who is a
great ally of freedom and a firm opponent of
terrorism.
José
María Aznar
Former President of Spain
When I first
heard about the possibility of being here
tonight, among you, in order to make some
introductory words about my friend Mario
Vargas Llosa, I have to say that I was more
than pleased.
First, because this is an AEI event. AEI is
the cradle where the ideas I believe in have
been nurtured and developed, the place where
they are constantly brought forward. Being a
liberal in Spain—liberal in the European
sense, don’t get me wrong—is not an easy
endeavour, even worse for a neoconservative.
Thus the importance of having an intellectual
lighthouse powerful enough to make a
difference in the dark times we are living in
nowadays, particularly on the other side of
the Atlantic. So being here is sincerely a
great pleasure for me.
Secondly, we are gathered to present this year’s
Irving Kristol Award. I first met Mr. Kristol
only this evening, though I have known of his
intellectual stature and know his son, Bill. I
invited him to have coffee in my office a
couple of times when I was President, and
later on, after I left government, he invited
me for lunch. You know, asymmetries are
unavoidable when you place austerity at the
core of your fiscal and budgetary policy. Now,
the opportunity of speaking during the Irving
Kristol Award ceremony also allows me to pay a
small tribute to him and his work. Mr. Kristol,
you can be sure that you have many followers
and friends in Spain.
Finally, I am thrilled of having the
opportunity to introduce my close friend Mario
Vargas Llosa. He is much more than an
excellent writer. The night before the Spanish
general elections of 1996--the first elections
I won--Mario insisted in taking me to the
theatre in order to help me escape from the
tensions of the day. I remember we saw
Tennessee Williams’s play, “Cat on A Hot
Tin Roof.” Mario was one of the first people
I invited to my official residence once I took
office.
You may not know that Mario Vargas Llosa
became a Spanish citizen in 1993, even though
he has not yet settled down in Madrid, despite
all my efforts. He told me once that he could
not live in Madrid if he wanted to keep
working. “José María,” he said, “You
cannot live under permanent temptation,
because, in the end, you are permanently
enticed by temptation. And life in Madrid is
an endless but divine temptation.” I offered
to make him the head of the Cervantes
Institute, our main national tool for
promoting the Spanish language, but he kindly
declined. He was fully committed to his work.
It is common to talk about engaged writers,
though I don’t understand why it is
generally accepted that such figures are
always from the left. Mario Vargas Llosa
proves that wrong. He is committed--but,
totally opposing the totalitarian inclination
of the left, he is truly committed to liberty
and individual dignity. His commitment is
always present in his fictional work, in his
articles and essays, and, more important, in
his life. Mario not only creates magic worlds
with his words, he is also a fighter against
the wrong ideas. As President of the
International Foundation for Freedom, Mario is
in a constant battle, trying to help to
reinforce democratic institutions, something
painfully needed today in Latin America, a
battle we must pursue together in light of
what we are witnessing in places like
Venezuela.
Hans Magnus Ezensberger, the critical German
author, recently said that the majority of
intellectuals are neither intelligent nor a
moral example. But there is always an
exception. I do believe Mario Vargas Llosa is
the exception to this rule, since he is very
intelligent and always a moral example.
I will not make the mistake tonight of
revealing what fiction work by Mario I love
most, but I feel free to say that I find one
of his best A Fish in the Water, his
outstanding memoirs. I would like to encourage
all of you to rush into a bookshop and buy it
after dinner. I have nothing to do with the
publisher, I promise. But it is a book where
you will sense the deep responsibility of a
free man defending freedom for the rest of us.
The world of literature is not a very generous
one, to put it mildly. But I consider it a
blatant injustice that the Nobel Prize has not
yet been awarded to Mario. Tonight we are
offering him a small reparation for this.
Nonetheless, I do hope that the jury in
Stockholm will correct this historical
oversight as soon as possible.
Let me conclude by saying, that being a writer
myself, though of a very different kind--a
sort of pupil if you like--it is a real
privilege to call forth and give the floor to
Mario Vargas Llosa, the outstanding writer,
the amazing person, and, above all, my good
friend.
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Confessions
of a Liberal
by
Mario Vargas Llosa
I am especially grateful to those who have awarded
me this prize because, according to their “whereases,”
they are honoring me not only for my literary work
but also for my ideas and political views. Believe
me when I tell you that this is something new. In
the world in which I move most frequently, Latin
America and Spain, when individuals or institutions
pay tribute to my novels or literary essays, they
typically add an immediate “although we disagree
with him,” “although we do not always concur
with him,” or “this does not mean that we accept
his (my) criticisms or opinions regarding political
issues.” After having grown accustomed to this
bifurcation of myself, I am happy to feel
reintegrated again thanks to the Irving Kristol
Award, which, rather than subject me to that
schizophrenic process, views me as a unified being,
the man who writes and thinks. I would like to
believe that both activities form part of a single,
inseparable reality.
But now, to be
honest with you and to try to respond to the
generosity of the American Enterprise Institute and
the Irving Kristol Award, I feel I should explain my
political position in some detail. This is not an
easy task. I fear it is not enough to claim that I
am--perhaps it would be wiser to say, “believe I
am”--a liberal. The term itself raises the first
complication. As you well know, “liberal” has
different and frequently antagonistic meanings,
depending on who says it and where they say it. For
example, my late beloved grandmother Carmen used to
say that a man was a liberal when referring to a
gentleman of dissolute habits, someone who not only
did not go to Mass, but also spoke ill of the
priests. For her, the prototypic incarnation of a
“liberal” was a legendary ancestor of mine who,
one fine day in my native city of Arequipa, told his
wife that he was going to the main square to buy a
newspaper and never returned. The family heard
nothing of him until 30 years later, when the
fugitive gentleman died in Paris. “So why did that
liberal uncle flee to Paris, Grandma?” “Why else,
son? To corrupt himself of course!” This story may
be the remote origin of my liberalism and my passion
for French culture.
Here in the United
States, and in the Anglo-Saxon world in general, the
term “liberal” has leftist connotations and is
sometimes associated with being a socialist and a
radical. On the other hand, in Latin America and
Spain, where the word was coined in the 19th Century
to describe the rebels who fought against the
Napoleonic occupation, they call me a liberal--or,
worse yet, a neo-liberal--to exorcize or discredit
me, because the political perversion of our
semantics has transformed the original meaning of
the term--a lover of liberty, a person who rises up
against oppression--to signify conservative or
reactionary, that is, something which, when it comes
from the mouth of a progressive, means to be an
accomplice to all the exploitation and injustices
befalling the world’s poor.
To complicate
matters further, even liberals themselves cannot
seem to fully agree on what liberal means
and what it means to be a liberal. Everyone who has
had the opportunity to attend a conference or
congress of liberals knows that these gatherings are
often very entertaining because discrepancies
prevail over agreements and because, as occurred
with the Trotskyists when they existed, every
liberal is in and of himself potentially both a
heretic and a sectarian.
Because liberalism
is not an ideology, that is, a dogmatic lay religion,
but rather an open, evolving doctrine that yields to
reality instead of trying to force reality to do the
yielding, there are diverse tendencies and profound
discrepancies among liberals. With regard to
religion, gay marriage, abortion and such, liberals
like me, who are agnostics as well as supporters of
the separation between church and state and
defenders of the decriminalization of abortion and
gay marriage, are sometimes harshly criticized by
other liberals who have opposite views on these
issues. These discrepancies are healthy and useful
because they do not violate the basic precepts of
liberalism, which are political democracy, the
market economy and the defense of individual
interests over those of the state.
For example, there
are liberals who believe that economics is the field
through which all problems are resolved and that the
free market is the panacea for everything from
poverty to unemployment, marginalization and social
exclusion. These liberals, true living algorithms,
have sometimes generated more damage to the cause of
freedom than did the Marxists, the first champions
of the absurd thesis that the economy is the driving
force of the history of nations and the basis of
civilization. It simply is not true. Ideas and
culture are what differentiate civilization from
barbarism, not the economy. The economy by itself,
without the support of ideas and culture, may
produce optimal results on paper, but it does not
give purpose to the lives of people; it does not
offer individuals reasons to resist adversity and
stand united with compassion or allow them to live
in an environment permeated in humanity. It is
culture, a body of shared ideas, beliefs and customs--among
which religion may be included of course--that gives
warmth and life to democracy and permits the market
economy, with its competitive, cold mathematics of
awarding success and punishing failure, to avoid
degenerating into a Darwinian battle in which, as
Isaiah Berlin put it, “liberty for wolves is death
to the lambs.” The free market is the best
mechanism in existence for producing riches and, if
well complemented with other institutions and uses
of democratic culture, launches the material
progress of a nation to the spectacular heights with
which we are familiar. But it is also a relentless
instrument, which, without the spiritual and
intellectual component that culture represents, can
reduce life to a ferocious, selfish struggle in
which only the fittest survive.
Thus, the liberal I
aspire to be considers freedom a core value. Thanks
to this freedom, humanity has been able to journey
from the primitive cave to the stars and the
information revolution, to progress from forms of
collectivist and despotic association to
representative democracy. The foundations of liberty
are private property and the rule of law; this
system guarantees the fewest possible forms of
injustice, produces the greatest material and
cultural progress, most effectively stems violence
and provides the greatest respect for human rights.
According to this concept of liberalism, freedom is
a single, unified concept. Political and economic
liberties are as inseparable as the two sides of a
medal. Because freedom has not been understood as
such in Latin America, the region has had many
failed attempts at democratic rule. Either because
the democracies that began emerging after the
dictatorships respected political freedom but
rejected economic liberty, which inevitably produced
more poverty, inefficiency and corruption, or
because they installed authoritarian governments
convinced that only a firm hand and a repressive
regime could guarantee the functioning of the free
market. This is a dangerous fallacy. It has never
been so. This explains why all the so-called “free
market” Latin American dictatorships have failed.
No free economy functions without an independent,
efficient justice system and no reforms are
successful if they are implemented without control
and the criticism that only democracy permits. Those
who believed that General Pinochet was the exception
to the rule because his regime enjoyed economic
success have now discovered, with the revelations of
murder and torture, secret accounts and millions of
dollars abroad, that the Chilean dictator, like all
of his Latin American counterparts, was a murderer
and a thief.
Political democracy
and the free market are foundations of a liberal
position. But, thus formulated, these two
expressions have an abstract, algebraic quality that
dehumanizes and removes them from the experience of
the common people. Liberalism is much, much more
than that. Basically, it is tolerance and respect
for others, and especially for those who think
differently from ourselves, who practice other
customs and worship another god or who are non-believers.
By agreeing to live with those who are different,
human beings took the most extraordinary step on the
road to civilization. It was an attitude or
willingness that preceded democracy and made it
possible, contributing more than any scientific
discovery or philosophical system to counter
violence and calm the instinct to control and kill
in human relations. It is also what awakened that
natural lack of trust in power, in all powers, which
is something of a second nature to us liberals.
We cannot do
without power, except of course in the lovely
utopias of the anarchists. But it can be held in
check and counterbalanced so that it does not become
excessive. It is possible to take away its
unauthorized functions that quell the individual,
that being who we liberals believe is the touchstone
of society and whose rights we must respect and
guarantee. Violating these rights inevitably
unleashes a series of escalating abuses, which like
concentric waves sweep away the very idea of social
justice.
Defending the
individual is the natural consequence of believing
in freedom as an individual and social value par
excellence because within a society, freedom is
measured by the level of autonomy citizens enjoy to
organize their lives and work toward their goals
without unjust interference, that is, to strive for
“negative freedom,” as Isaiah Berlin called it
in his celebrated essay. Collectivism was inevitable
during the dawn of history, when the individual was
simply part of the tribe and depended on the entire
society for survival, but began to decline as
material and intellectual progress enabled man to
dominate nature, overcome the fear of thunder, the
beast, the unknown and the other--he who had a
different color skin, another language and other
customs. But collectivism has survived throughout
history in those doctrines and ideologies that place
the supreme value of an individual on his belonging
to a specific group (a race, social class, religion
or nation). All of these collectivist doctrines--Nazism,
fascism, religious fanaticism and communism--are the
natural enemies of freedom and the bitter
adversaries of liberals. In every age, that
atavistic defect, collectivism, has reared its ugly
head to threaten civilization and throw us back to
the age of barbarism. Yesterday it was called
fascism and communism; today it is known as
nationalism and religious fundamentalism.
A great liberal
thinker, Ludwig von Mises, was always opposed to the
existence of liberal parties because he felt that
these political groups, by attempting to monopolize
liberalism, ended up denaturalizing it, pigeonholing
it, forcing it into the narrow molds of party power
struggles. Instead, he believed that the liberal
philosophy should be a general culture shared with
all the political currents and movements co-existing
in an open society supportive of democracy, a school
of thought to nourish social Christians, radicals,
social democrats, conservatives and democratic
socialists alike. There is a lot of truth to this
theory. Thus, in our day, we have seen cases of
conservative governments, such as those of Ronald
Reagan, Margaret Thatcher and José María Aznar,
which promoted deeply liberal reforms. At the same
time, we have seen nominally socialist leaders, such
as Tony Blair in the United Kingdom and Ricardo
Lagos in Chile, implement economic and social
policies that can only be classified as liberal.
Although the term
“liberal” continues to be a dirty word that
every politically correct Latin American has the
obligation to detest, essentially liberal ideas and
attitudes have begun to infect both the right and
the left on the continent of lost illusions for some
time now. This explains why, in recent years, Latin
American democracies have not collapsed or been
replaced by military dictatorships, despite the
economic crises, corruption and failure of so many
governments to realize their potential. Of course
they are still there: Cuba has that authoritarian
fossil Fidel Castro, who with 46 years of enslaving
his country, is the longest-living dictator in Latin
American history. And the ill-fated Venezuela now
suffers at the hand of Commander Hugo Chavez, an
inadequate contender to become a lowercase Fidel
Castro. But they are two exceptions on a continent
which, and this should be stressed, has never had so
many civil governments engendered from relatively
free elections. And there are interesting and
encouraging cases such as that of Lula in Brazil who,
before becoming president, espoused a populist
doctrine, an economic nationalism and the
traditional hostility of the left towards the market,
but who is now a practitioner of fiscal discipline
and a promoter of foreign investment, private
business and globalization, although he wrongly
opposes the Free Trade Area of the Americas. With
more fiery rhetoric infused with bravado, Argentine
President Kirchner is following his example,
although unfortunately he seems to do so unwillingly
and somewhat erringly at times. In addition, there
are indications that the recently inaugurated
government in Uruguay, led by Tabaré Vázquez, is
willing to follow Lula’s economic policy example
rather than repeat the stale state-controlled,
centralist recipe that has caused so much
devastation on our continent. Even the left has been
reluctant to renege on the privatization of pensions--which
has occurred in eleven Latin American countries to
date--whereas the more backward left in the United
States opposes the privatization of Social Security.
These are positive signs of a certain modernization
of the left, which, without recognizing it, is
admitting that the road to economic progress and
social justice passes through democracy and the
market, which we liberals have long preached into
the void. If in fact the Latin American left has
accepted liberal politics, albeit cloaked in a
rhetoric that denies it, all the better. It is a
step forward suggesting that Latin America may
finally shed the ballast of underdevelopment and
dictatorships. It is an advance, as is the emergence
of a civilized right that no longer believes that
the solution to problems is to knock on the door of
the military headquarters but rather to accept the
vote and democratic institutions and to make them
work.
Another positive
sign in today’s Latin American scenario filled
with uncertainty is that the old anti-American
sentiment pervading the continent has diminished
notably. The truth is that today, anti-Americanism
is stronger in countries such as Spain and France
than in Mexico or Peru. Certainly, the war in Iraq,
for example, has mobilized vast sectors across the
European political spectrum, whose only common
denominator seems to be not a love for peace but the
resentment and hatred of the United States. In Latin
America, this mobilization has been marginal and
practically confined to the hard-line sectors of the
far left. There are two reasons for the change in
attitude toward the United States, one pragmatic and
the other one of principle. Latin Americans who have
retained their common sense understand that for
geographic, economic and political reasons, fluid,
robust trade relations with the United States are
indispensable for our development. In addition, U.S.
foreign policy, rather than back dictatorships as it
did in the past, now consistently supports
democracies and rejects authoritarian tendencies.
This has contributed to significantly reducing the
distrust and hostility of Latin American democratic
sectors toward the powerful neighbor to the north.
This rapprochement and collaboration are crucial for
Latin America to quickly advance in its fight to
eliminate poverty and underdevelopment.
In recent years,
this liberal who speaks before you today has
frequently been entangled in controversy because he
defended a real image of the United States, which
passions and political prejudice have occasionally
deformed to the point of caricature. The problem
those of us who try to combat these stereotypes face
is that no country produces as much anti-U.S.
artistic and intellectual material as the United
States itself--the native country, let us not forget,
of Michael Moore, Oliver Stone and Noam Chomsky--to
the extent that one must wonder if anti-Americanism
is not one of those exquisite export products
manufactured by the CIA to enable imperialism to
ideologically manipulate the Third World masses
Previously, anti-Americanism was especially
popular in Latin America, but now it occurs in some
European countries, especially those clinging to a
past that was, and that resist accepting
globalization and the inter-dependence of nations in
a world in which borders, once solid and
inexpugnable, have become porous and increasingly
faint. Of course, I certainly do not like everything
that occurs in the United States. For example, I
lament the fact that many states still apply the
aberration that is the death penalty, as well as
several other things, such as the fact that
repression takes priority over persuasion in the war
on drugs, despite the lessons of Prohibition. But
after completing these additions and subtractions, I
believe that the United States has the most open,
functional democracy in the world and the one with
the greatest capacity for self-criticism, which
enables it to renew and update itself more quickly
in response to the challenges and needs of changing
historical circumstances. It is a democracy which I
admire for what Professor Samuel Huntington fears:
that formidable mixture of races, cultures,
traditions and customs, which have succeeded in co-existing
without killing each other, thanks to that equality
before the law and the flexibility of the system
that makes room for diversity at its core, within
the common denominator of respect for the law and
for others.
In my opinion, the
presence in the United States of almost 40 million
people of Latin American heritage does not threaten
the social cohesion or integrity of the country. To
the contrary, it bolsters the nation by contributing
a cultural and vital current of great energy in
which the family is sacred. With its desire for
progress, capacity for work and aspirations for
success, this Latin American influence will greatly
benefit the open society. Without denouncing its
origins, this community is integrating with loyalty
and affection into its new country and forging
strong ties between the two Americas. This is
something to which I can attest almost firsthand.
When my parents were no longer young, they became
two of those millions of Latin Americans who
immigrated to the United States in search of
opportunities their countries did not offer. They
lived in Los Angeles for almost 25 years, earning a
living with their hands, something they never had to
do in Peru. My mother was employed for many years as
a factory worker in a garment factory full of
Mexicans and Central Americans, with whom she made
many excellent friends. When my father died, I
thought my mother would return to Peru, as he had
requested. But she decided to stay here, living
alone and even requesting and obtaining U.S.
citizenship, something my father never wanted to do.
Later, when the pains of old age forced her to
return to her native land, she always recalled the
United States, her second country, with pride and
gratitude. For her there was never anything
incompatible about considering herself both Peruvian
and American; there was no hint of conflicting
loyalties.
Perhaps this memory
is something more than a filial evocation. Perhaps
we can see a glimpse of the future in this example.
We dream, as novelists tend to do: a world stripped
of fanatics, terrorists and dictators, a world of
different cultures, races, creeds and traditions, co-existing
in peace thanks to the culture of freedom, in which
borders have become bridges that men and women can
cross in pursuit of their goals with no other
obstacle than their supreme free will.
Then it will not be
necessary to talk about freedom because it will be
the air that we breathe and because we will all
truly be free. Ludwig von Mises’ ideal of a
universal culture infused with respect for the law
and human rights will have become a reality.
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