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Do you know everything you are for being Argentinean? www.argentina.ar

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you The following is a documentary about the history of the city of Mayo. It is a
project of the National Council of the City of Mayo. It is a project of the
National Council of the City of Mayo. It is a project of the National Council of
the City of Mayo. Olga walks alone in this square that doesn't even have political
signs like the May Pyramid or the Pink House. Olga walks in a square without
hammocks, without slides, alone. alone

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Olga continues the round that is the exact opposite of a game

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Continues the round of a single circle that does not close.

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No man is any man. No woman is just any woman. It's surprising, really. It's not a
lie, it's surprising.

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You feel like crying when you see these things. And also, in that time, we couldn't
claim our rights. Because if everyone who claimed their rights, they would die. Now
we have been left as if we were seeing a being without rights to anything in this
life.

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That's what I wanted to say, because it makes me think a lot about what's going to
happen.

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and the way in which we are able to do so. We are able to do so by being able to
think about the future. Obviously capitalism develops through power relations. It
is not possible to think about capitalism without power relations

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and therefore without strategies of monopolization. and so the territory is always
one of the fundamental purposes of capitalist domination. Because we claim that we
don't want to leave, they told us that we were guerrillas, because we were
guerrillas, we were confronted with them when they started to massacre us.

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in the different moments of their history, have been trying to take possession of
some of these resources and territories.

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Mainly on territories that had four resources, which I think are the most important
to define global reproduction at this time. One of them is that of biodiversity,
the jungles, the forests, and so, well, there, the privileged place was Latin
America.

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They kidnapped two committee members of the community, the president and the
secretary of the committee, and they had the free will in their pockets. All the
promises of INDE had been fulfilled, but it was totally lost. and the Indian
government, when we complained, demanded that if there was a compromise, how would
it be, we would have it, and they already broke it, or massacred the comrades, and
took away their freedom of action,

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so we no longer have a document where we can defend the judgment or the promise
that the Indian government made to us.

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The other resource that is very important is oil, right? The energy resources in
general, oil and gas, above all.

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That day, my late wife, Paulina, told me that I didn't have to be at home in
Rionegro, I had to hide in the mountains, because there were no men left, they had
already killed the 73, and what were they going to do with them afterwards? So she
told me that I had to go to the mountains to sleep. On March 13, 1982, the army and
the patrol of the Civil Defense arrived and began to bring all the women and
children. That day, they took 70 women and 107 children and they were killed and
massacred in the

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Pacochón court.

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The third very important resource is water. All the regions where there is water
are regions where the focus has been placed and where we observe the development of
plans or policies that apparently have nothing to do with water, but they do have
to do with the possibility of having a much greater influence in the territory in
general, including the water.

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But for us there is nothing, there is not even an army, the iguanas,

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everything that is the fauna is finished, completely.

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Here it has become a desert,

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that is justified in all light, whoever comes, there is the desert.

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Well, then, a strategy is designed from that moment,

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which advances, on the one hand, with free trade treaties or with commercial
agreements that allow the passage of investments, especially the large
transnational ones, to these territories, but that also accompanies all this
neoliberal policy that comes from a little further away from flexibilizing
regulations. In the case, for example, of mining or oil, in general, in the
countries, foreign investment is not admitted until neoliberalism begins to change
them. And from that moment, the door opens, and then the acceptance of investments
in those fields opens through the treaties.

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of the people. I made a cut from the signing of the free trade treaty between
Mexico, Canada and the United States because at that time the media of the
oligarchies began to build an imaginary around this international agreement that
would make Mexico enter the first world of full.

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a whole makeup and prestige-building scene, a kind of media factory of prestige,
that painted Mexico at the national and international level as a space where
neoliberalism was finally doing its thing, and thanks to that it could move to a
level of development of a country never seen in my life.

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We are mostly peasant people, bilingual.

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We speak different languages, such as Chol, Tojolabal, the Tzotzil. We see that
this school is a mother for us, where she has sheltered us. Maku Maku is the only
hope in our lives.

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The rural normandas, their main characteristic is that they give them a political
training, they study them. If they take them away, they will simply take away
teachers who have a different approach, a more close approach to people, to the
people, to the peasantry.

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This is a project to close the normal rural schools. Many teachers are needed in
Chiapas. However, we see that the government is not willing to improve the
situation.

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It is being manipulated by the presence of Monsanto in Chiapas, where it is very
clear that the repetition of the same exploitation strategy, of the same
devastation strategy, of the same project of besieging in the fields, in the crops,
in the jungles, which we have seen in the rest of the countries in Latin America.

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in America that we are. The strategies that have been followed, for example, as in
the case of the San Javier mining in San Luis Potosi, Mexico, there the operation
is exactly the same in terms of modalities. There is a capital that, above the
political contradictions that hegemonic powers have at the level of governors,
etc.,

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where very strong contradictions are given, even above what is not convenient for
politicians themselves, because it makes them look like real troublemakers of
companies, even beyond that and with an atrocious cynicism, the behavior, for
example, of the San Javier is a typical case of a company that settles in an area
that hits an entire region where there is agricultural activity, there are peasant
organizations that have been living from this activity for a long time and that
with the absolutely cynical complicity of the states allow the mining company San
Javier to operate and continues to operate until today without having any
possibility of stopping this type of looting.

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The community was assaulted. A group of police officers came, sent by the
terratinistas. Since then, the story has been lost. They stole everything we had.
It has been organized little by little, We are looking for an education that really
speaks of the needs of our community. In the same place, the one I'm talking about,
in San Luis Potosi, Mexico,

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a kind of garbage dump was installed, for example, of polluting products. And a
very important investment was made, of the order of 700 or 800 million dollars, for
this company to be installed. The government of the state co-sponsored this
installation. They offered all the aid, even infrastructure, an important
investment to bring them closer to the important roads, etc. The company began to
operate with a first download that they placed in their land, which they acquired
for two pesos.

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And the next thing was that a great social protest was organized to stop the
presence of this company. Social organizations managed to paralyze this company,
and the company sued the state because it could not operate as a virtue of these
social movements preventing it. So, in addition to something else, the company was
compensated by the state. So, one perfectly opens the possibility of suspicion when
one knows that I suspect that even the fact that those companies stop operating is
a big deal, I suspect that even the fact that those companies stop operating is a
big deal, because the compensation that was paid to them may represent what the
state could not have gained.

Transcribed with Cockatoo

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