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The Miami Model

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Producer(s)The FTAA IMC Video Collective
Director(s)The FTAA IMC Video Collective
Release Date2004
Runtime90 min
Format(s)DVD
Youth Mediayes
Educational Materials Yes

Film Description

In November, 2003, trade ministers from 34 countries met in Miami, Florida, to negotiate the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA). The FTAA threatens to devastate workers, the environment, and public services like health care, education, and water, and to destroy indigenous rights and cultural diversity across North, Central, and South America. Thousands of union members, environmentalists, feminists, anarchists, students, farm workers, media activists, and human rights activists who gathered in Miami to struggle against the FTAA were brutally attacked with rubber bullets, pepper spray, electric guns and shock batons, embedded reporters and information warfare, all coordinated by the new United States Department of Homeland Security.

Against Capital's model of paramilitary oppression, information warfare, and corporate rule, we offered models of grassroots resistance, creative action and solidarity. Collectively, Indymedia activists shot hundreds of hours of video footage documenting the FTAA protests in Miami. This footage has been edited by the FTAA Miami Video Working Group into a documentary that cuts through the mass media blackout to reveal the brutal repression and assault on civil liberties that took place, as well as the life-affirming and inspiring alternatives to capitalist globalization that were also in full effect in Miami.

Official Sitewww.ftaaimc.org
Contactftaa-miami-video@lists.indypgh.org

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Related IssuesAgriculture, Censorship, Central America, Corporate Violations to the Environment, Criminal Justice, Digital Media, Economic Development, Economic Justice, Environment, Environmental Justice, Environmental Preservation, Fair Representation, Housing and Homelessness, Illiteracy, Immigration, Immigration Laws, International, Labor, Latino, Media, Migrant Workers, Peace/War, Police Brutality, Politics/Government, Pollution, Poverty, Prisoner Rights, Racial Discrimination, Racial Justice, Refugees, South America, U.S./Foreign Relations, Welfare