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Speech
delivered by Herbert de Souza (Betinho) At United Nations
Speech delivered by Herbert de Souza (Betinho) At the Plenary of the United Nations during the Second Session of the Preparatory Committee for the Social Summit, New York, August 23, 1994
Thank
you Mr (or Ms.) Chairperson Ladies
and Gentlemen, It
is a great honor for me to be here and to be able to present some
thoughts about the forthcoming Social Summit. I
want to talk about ethics. Ethics was the starting point of the Citizens
Action Against Misery and for Life in It
is according to this ethical stand that we have to consider social
integration, the struggle against poverty, the generation of employment,
which are the topics of this conference. Which values do we want in a
world that excludes and condemns its citizens to starvation, segregating
them into those who eat and those who dont eat? We want the values of
ethics and democracy. I
have a belief. I believe in democracy. I believe in democracy as the
sole instrument capable of responding to the questions of social
integration, fight against poverty and generation of employment.
Democracy has been the inspiration of changes in history all along.
Democracy is an ethical value, a set of principles that have to be
pursued all the time. The
first principle is equality. Countries are unequal. Some are extremely
rich,others are in beggary. But who condemns equality? Everyone favors
it, but that is the great challenge of the modern world. How can we make
a world for the entire mankind? Equality defies us for, whilst we fight
for it, we know that we live in unequality. The
second principle of democracy is diversity. We want equality, but we
also want to respect the differences. Equality and difference can come
together, because when equality eliminates the difference, there is no
longer equality. But we also want everything to be built through
participation, which is the third principle of democracy. I want neither
my freedom, nor my equality for free. I want to participate in their
construction. Democracy is daily participation. All
these values have to be accompanied by and permeated by the feeling of
solidarity. We want to restore the emotion of reaching out. We want to
say that the strongest emotion a human being may experiment is
solidarity. Democracy is also achieved through solidarity. Finally,
the word that has always inspired the great movements is freedom. I also
dont want anybody granting me my freedom. I want to conquer my freedom
through participation. Every man and woman should be free. How many
citizens are actually free today in this world? We are few. All of these
five principles together constitute the definition of all we should ever
want for the entire mankind. The
economic world, the governments, the institutions and society cannot
accept or permit the separation between the economic and the social. To
separate them, means leaving the real with the economic and the utopic
with the social. This leaves the production of material goods in the
economic world whereby the social dimension is only a consequence. In
this division, it is implicit that development is economic and poverty
is social. This vision is one of an admirable simplicity, but it has an
impressive ideological strength. When workers walk into the factory they
are economical factors, when they leave the factory they are a social
problem. When governments define their budgets, they are economical
actors, when they deal with health and education they are social
incompetents, without resources and responsabilities. The
world today shows us a spectacular growth in the concentration of
richness. Never so few nations - and so few people inside them - had so
much power and richness. The world map of richness shrinks, while the
world map of poverty expands. It is fundamental to put social
development in the center of any kind of development, particularly in
economic development. There is no economic without social. The social is
determinant, while the economic is subordinated, derived, a consequence.
The
result of the past 100 (hundred) years of experience forces us to
radically review everything: market, State, society and their relations.
It forces us to question every theory, institution and strategy in the
light of a very simple, elementary, central and decisive question: how
can we build a planetary, equalitarian, participatory and caring society
which is able to place the satisfaction of mens basic needs, regardless
of gender, race, religion and age, as the core of its dynamics? How can
we place social development as the center of everybodys and every
institutions actions? How can we set the values of democracy as a
guideline for all actions, as an inspiration for a new world strategy? These
are the questions that the United Nations Summit on Social Development
is defied to answer. It is necessary to open a path to the construction
of a new age, where the challenge is to place the entire mankind as the
core of its own work in order to erradicate poverty and misery as the
absolute priority of mankind. The
debate on the generation of employment, for example. How can the
generation of employment contribute to the construction of social
integration? Employment is a right of the individual, it is an ethical
value to which society cannot renounce. And what about the fight against
poverty? We cannot be indifferent to all human beings that die of
starvation around the world. We cannot tell someone who is hungry to
wait for structural solutions. The hungry are in a hurry, in urgency and
cannot wait until the coldness and indifference with which the worlds
elites see the problem today are gone. Or still the question about the
democratization of the Bretton Woods system, which has already proved to
be a failure in the struggle against misery. Or the differences of
gender that are yet unresolved. Reproductive rights and economical
equality, just to mention a few examples, are some of womens rights
still to be acknowledged by mankind. It
is necessary to change. It is possible to change. And the change starts
by not accepting what is considered inevitable. Misery is not
inevitable, poverty is not inevitable, social exclusion is not
inevitable. This is where Action Against Misery and for Life came in.
The energy of change is being revealed in this movement of citizens.
This movement is based on the awareness that it is not acceptable, it is
not ethical, it is not good to live in a society which banalizes misery
and accepts poverty as a natural fact, practically of its own nature. The
State has a role, the market has a role, but there is a new actor, with
the power of change, of novelty. Brazilian citizens have proved this
power. The power to replace indifference with solidarity. The Citizens
Action Against Misery and for Life in The
Citizens Action Against Misery and for Life was originated from the
Movement for Ethics in Politics, which in 1990 (nineteen ninety)
mobilized society in the struggle for the impeachment of the president
at the time, Fernando Collor. The Citizens Action Against Misery and for
Life went to the streets on April 1993 (nineteen ninety-three), betting
on decentralization, initiative and participation of every citizen. The
Citizens Action Against Misery and for Life is not compliant to any
political party or religion. An opinion poll has shown that 90% (ninety
percent) of the population considers the movement necessary and that 30
(thirty) million Brazilians have associated themselves with the
movement. Committees were created, food was donated, jobs were
generated, public lands were cultivated, children were assisted. The
experience we undergo in Democracy
exists only with these five principles. Until now, I have been talking
about social development, but I am actually talking about human
development. And human development will exist only if civil society and
the nations accept five fundamental points: 1.
Every society must be free to resolve its problems, but none has the
right to kill parts of its own people. Genocide cannot be tolerated.
Mankind should intervene to save men anywhere. The human being is
sovereign in relation to the State. It is imperative that ethics stands
over politics and that politics stands over economy; 2.
Men have equal rights. All types of poverty are unacceptable. All types
of misery are intolerable. It is imperative that the struggle against
hunger and misery in the world becomes priority number one; 3.
Modern society has dissotiated the production from employment. That only
deepens the gap between integrated people and outcasts. It is imperative
to find the way to generate employment. Without employment, there will
be no humanity for all. Tecnology cannot become the rationality of the
worlds new apartheid; 4.
Development is human, it is either everyones or it does not exist. It is
imperative to confer development this universal dimension; 5.
It is imperative to democratize international institutions, the Bretton
Woods system and to reject the structural adjustment with a human face
as a way to fight against hunger and misery; Due
to all that, and no less than that, mankind can no longer wait. Thank
you very much.
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