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June 09, 2008

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Very well written Prof Grandin. You're assessment is both well thought out and well summarized. If you would be so kind as to give a moment of your time to the thoughts of a Peruvian-American who is trying to focus his specialization in South American and Chinese cooperation-- both economically and financially.

Everything emerging from the mouths of our politicians right now from my perspective is fabricated for their campaigns elections and in reality. No one, not even the Clinton’s have a legitimate plan to engage and develop / repair relations with Latin America. No one wants to touch the subject I feel largely yes… because of immigration. Cuba thank fully will probably help the political scene by reforming itself, and the embargo, a injustice in so many forms may be lifted if new leadership continues to liberalize. At least one area of Us-Latin American relations will move forward instead of back… but it will be from Cuba, not because of better foreign policy from the US.

Many Peruvians, I’ll talk from where I have experience, realize the US is not about to disappear—thus the recent push and actual signing of the FTA, but at the same time the intellectuals of Lima, the average workers of Lima, and the people emigrating to Lima from the Andes and Amazon still feel as if the US totally marginalizes the continent as a whole. As my uncle told me last time I was in Lima in December and January of 2006… “The only news you hear about South America is flashy… usually bad news. The Bush twins get robbed in Argentina, Argentina makes headlines… Assassination of a mayor in Colombia happens… Colombia makes the news.”

What I’m trying to convey… is outside money and historical ties and similarities from our mutual past and mix of various cultures, which few US citizens even recognize, the US is loosing favor and many, perhaps too readily have already declared the US a Empire on the way the way down—while Asia sparkles across the Pacific as the new land of opportunity. New policies are needed, but the US simply is extended too far and foreign policy will continue to be dominated by various other areas which will take priority.

Repairing relations with our European Allies, the Middle East, Israel, the growth of China, Afghanistan… even Africa will get more attention in the US as it brings in far better ratings for media reporting on the continents troubles. Latin America I am sad, will slowly continue to slip away… I hope things change, and a real help could come from the US population… who currently knows nothing about the magnificent continent to their South—which at one point was their own, back before the US education system started teaching that they were two; North and South.

- Bennett A. Reiss


Chinasouthamerica.blogspot.com

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