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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkEditorials | Issues 

Social Forum Ends with Vows to Fight Capitalism
email this pageprint this pageemail usAlan Clendenning - Associated Press
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January 29, 2010



A boy selling candy leans against a wall next to a banner of the World Social Forum in Porto Alegre, Brazil, Thursday, Jan. 28, 2010. The social forum is the annual counterpoint to the World Economic Forum. (AP/Silvia Izquierdo)
Porto Alegre, Brazil — Leftists who converged in Brazil to protest what they view as uncontrolled capitalism ended the World Social Forum Friday with vows to take advantage of the financial crisis to promote a global socialist agenda.

Activists at the annual countercultural gathering against the World Economic Forum under way at the Swiss ski resort of Davos said the meltdown proves that the business titans attending the economic forum shouldn't be permitted to help reshape the global economy.

About 30,000 people attended the 10th annual social forum over the last five days, some 500 of whom braved a sweltering conference room to close the event Friday. They railed against unfettered capitalism they claimed is responsible for corporate greed that saps natural resources and destroys the environment while virtually enslaving the poor in developing nations.

The social forum "projects another vision of the world, not the Washington consensus or the Davos view that free markets are the solution," said Leonardo Dahmer, a member of Brazil's ruling Workers Party and a city councilman in Esteio. "Even Davos didn't predict the crisis, but we have to be careful because the capitalist system can reorganize itself quickly."

Leftists also said the failure of world leaders to forge a plan to prevent global warming in Copenhagen last month shows that they are unable to come up with a solution to save the environment and protect the poor from climate swings that could devastate the planet and subsistence farmers.

Instead, they said, the world's most powerful nations are still subject to too much influence by large companies.

"We're in the midst of a crisis caused by capitalism," said Claudia Prates, a Brazilian coordinator for the World March of Women feminist group. "Capitalism treats us like merchandise."

The forum's highlight came Tuesday, when Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva told an elated crowd of 10,000 that he would head to Davos and again reproach rich nations and bankers for causing the crisis.

But Silva - who gained fame as a radical union leader before becoming Brazil's first working class president in 2003 - had an attack of high blood pressure late Wednesday and canceled the trip.

On Friday, Foreign Minister Celso Amorim accepted on Silva's behalf the economic forum's first award to a head of state for "Global Statesmanship."

Silva has won praise from both the left and right for presiding over an unprecedented economic boom that has boosted corporate profits in Latin America's largest nation while helping lift millions out of misery.



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