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marmar Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Oct-19-07 12:31 PM
Original message
No Cheers For CAFTA
from TomPaine.com:



No Cheers For CAFTA
Ottón Solís, TomPaine.com
October 19, 2007


Ottón Solís is head of the Costa Rican Citizen's Action Party and a former presidential candidate.

The Wall Street Journal may say “Bravo, Costa Rica" on its Opinion page October 9, but almost half of the people who voted in the Central American Free Trade Agreement referendum October 7 are not celebrating.

We are proud that our health and environmental policies are, by far, the best in the region, that our democracy is founded on an extensive system of family farming, that our telecommunications services are lower priced and more efficient than those of our neighbors, that we abolished all military forces 60 years ago, and that our laws forbid the trade and production of weapons and their parts. All these sources of national pride are threatened by CAFTA. That is why we tried to stop it through a popular referendum.

The fundamental problem is that, on many issues, CAFTA would give multinational corporations more power than our government. For instance, if a corporation thought that a new environmental regulation or a democratically decided performance requirement interfered with the company’s interests, it could sue Costa Rica in a court located outside our territory, regardless of where the corporation registers its operations.

We supply health care and medicines to those who need them, not just those who can afford them. But since CAFTA’s intellectual property protections exceed U.S. patent law and the regulations of the World Trade Organization, CAFTA will reduce access to generic drugs and thereby increase the price of medicines.

It seems contradictory that even though the Bush administration is even willing to wage war over weapons proliferation, it promotes an agreement that liberalizes trade and manufacturing of all kinds of weapons and parts, including nuclear.

CAFTA is very good for multinational corporations and a very small elite of Central Americans. Elsewhere in the region these elites managed to get CAFTA ratified after one or two sessions of their parliaments. But Costa Rica has a much more sophisticated democracy. We tend to reject both the grotesque wealth concentration prevailing in the other Central American countries and also the populism that has taken hold in some South American countries. Opposition to CAFTA had nothing to do with Hugo Chavez or Fidel Castro, whom most of us disagree with. In Costa Rica there is practically no anti-U.S. feeling. There are more Americans living in Costa Rica than Costa Ricans living in the United States. .....(more)

The complete piece is at: http://www.tompaine.com/articles/2007/10/19/no_cheers_for_cafta.php



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acmavm Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Oct-19-07 12:34 PM
Response to Original message
1. CAFTA was only good for a select few Americans as well.
You know the ones. The big corporate campaign donors.
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