I for one would be very interested to hear you expand on this point.
ok, I'll try - but be forewarned it might not be overwhelmingly lucid, I still haven't worked some of this stuff out in my own head. it's tricky in ways it simply wouldn't be if they
were traditional Marxist guerrillas, where you pretty much know the pros & cons going in. it's also hard sometimes to draw the line sometimes between "critique" & cultural definitions or, much worse, imposing my own values on them. "critique" too is perhaps not the best word - "mixed feelings" is probably more accurate most of the time. with all that said:
their politics are hard to pin down b/c EZLN spokespeople & documents are often (mostly deliberately, I reckon) vague &/or evasive - quite savvy in terms of attracting support as it's allowed them to be many things to many very different supporters. the flipside to this is that it allows them to evade critiques just as easily. generally they've always been for self-determination, dignity (don't underrate the importance of that) & land, maybe not in that order, all of which I fully support. you also hear more abstract terms like peace & justice.
"they're reformist" is essentially true. I don't know if I'd call it a critique - at least not for me if stated so bluntly - but I do think it's at least problematic. this is really an endless problem for anti-state lefties of all stripes - do you support anti-colonial & indigenous struggles which are authoritarian or reformist (sometimes both at once!) in nature or not? really it's total abstract bullshit unless you're planning on doing active support work, not that that stops from people in these circles from agonizing about at it great length. In this case it matters for me b/c, in very pragmatic terms, in the long run I just don't see how it's possible for them to live in peace & prosperity & retain something of their traditional life
and for an economy based on neoliberal capitalism to flourish there. I guess I fall on the side of supporting but I don't try to invent excuses for things I disagree with.
there's the things you mentioned too, people being expelled from communities - really it's very hard to know the facts here - as I've said they're pretty closemouthed about a lot of this, nor did I feel it was at all my place to ask. as in the midst of any revolution or war I'm sure there's been abuses where people used the cause to prosecute personal vendettas or settle old scores. I don't know, really.
a lot of cultural things as well, with the aformentioned warnings. as the great majority of Zapatistas are rural peasants & I'm an American city boy you can imagine there was some culture shock. most of them are devout Catholics (albeit a weird syncretic Catholicism incorporating elements from their own religions), some evangelical Protestants as well, I was born half-Jewish, half-Catholic but I've been an atheist since I was 12. mostly this is whatever but there are some things, like; homosexuality was a totally taboo topic. very traditional gender roles, woman kept in their place - tho tbf supposedly the uprising has changed this somewhat not by design but b/c it offered opportunities for woman that hadn't existed before, in the army (there have always been women fighters) & EZLN government.
other small things, like they drank Coca-Cola all the time. I didn't, b/c it wasn't my place, but I'd always want to say "don't you know they've murder union organizers by the bushel in Colombia" or something, just to point out the irony of being so much against neoliberalism & drinking Coke. I don't know if you'd call these critiques really. especially cos why they should have to conform to my western, anti-capitalist values, you know?
anyway I hope you find some of this interesting.