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July 29, 2008

a revolution of empanadas and red wine

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With his tailor-made suits and thick black glasses, Salvador Allende did not look the part of a revolutionary. Indeed, his love of high-end clothing and fine wine would seem to belie his status as a champion of the working class. It is widely reported that at dinner parties in the Chilean presidential palace, Allende would approach nattily attired guests and say, half in jest, "That's a nice jacket you're wearing, but it would look even better on a president, don't you think?" By night's end, the guests would have dutifully contributed their jackets to Allende's already extensive wardrobe.

But make no mistake about it: even though he was not as earthy or tousled as his contemporaries in Cuba, Allende was every bit as dedicated to revolutionary change. He simply disagreed with the means through which such change could come about. Instead of adhering to then ruling leftist practice of revolutionary change through violence and terror, Allende proposed an unprecedented democratic route to socialism, one where ballots would replace arms. It would be, in his words, "a revolution of empanadas and red wine"—socialism Chilean style.

more from n+1 here.

Posted by Morgan Meis at 12:47 PM | Permalink

Comments

Allende was a physician turned politician by the harsh realities of Latin American Politics.

In all of our countries seems as if corruption is the rule of the law.

But, the CIA had no role in Chile's affairs and in deposing by mayhem a lawfully elected president.

And, imperial Britain, was not too far behind the USA,as Thatcher became bosom friends with bloodthirsty Pinochet in exchange for tactical support during the Malvinas fiasco.

Now, Chileans can breath again, since the Ugly American Government is meddling in other people's affairs.

The sad part is that it can happen again, and again, and...

Posted by: Felix E F Larocca MD | Jul 29, 2008 1:25:42 PM

Funny how Chavez gets criticized for doing, fairly succesfully, what Allende tried to do. And with far more opposition from an unsympathetic media than Allende ever had, El Mercurio notwithstanding.

The evident conclusion is that for the "Western" world, the only good revolutionary is a dead revolutionary.

Posted by: Pepito | Jul 29, 2008 2:19:33 PM

South America is the place on the planet where things are actually looking up, as the IMF and World Bank have been discredited and told to leave (often with help from Chavez, covering financial obligation that would of kept the blood suckers feeding on the poor)--
It is interesting times, and let's let them have their revolution, and see what happens when democracy is allowed to work (often with a few mistakes).
The South American trade bloc Mercosur has proved very powerful, and is something to be reckoned with.

Posted by: Dave Ranning | Jul 29, 2008 3:04:14 PM

A "jefe" by any other name is still a "jefe."

Posted by: Heney Barth | Jul 31, 2008 1:26:10 PM

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