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Mass riots happening in Venezuela, 3 dead, dozens injured

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stonesak

Okay, if you really insist
For having beliefs?

For judging the validity of the protester's actions toward their government. Unless your Venezuelan?

Edit: perhaps you could define why you believe the conditions you stated in your post are not met. Do you have evidence of such?
 

Fyrion

Member
Venezuelan here, this article explains a lot of why the people protest and why is it only the "middle class" doing it.
http://fivethirtyeight.com/features/why-venezeulas-middle-class-is-taking-to-the-streets/

Besides that Is hard to protest when you are living near the wolf's den. I can understand Why some slum's communities simply cannot take street and protest. But They are also jaded of this reality as the rest of us.

Today there were another death reported by hand of damned militia forces (the infamously called "colectivos"). Adriana Urquiola, a Venevision sign language performer was killed by two shots.
 

qumo

Neo Member
Besides that Is hard to protest when you are living near the wolf's den. I can understand Why some slum's communities simply cannot take street and protest. But They are also jaded of this reality as the rest of us.

Today there were another death reported by hand of damned militia forces (the infamously called "colectivos"). Adriana Urquiola, a Venevision sign language performer was killed by two shots.

And of course, the government media shifted the blame from the actual killers to the blocked streets. Disgusting.
 

Fyrion

Member
And of course, the government media shifted the blame from the actual killers to the blocked streets. Disgusting.

I cannot describe how disgusted I am right now. Nevertheless, We are suffering the consequences for letting this blight thrives beyond measure. We allowed that nowadays they have a large army of heavily armed minions paid with our taxes. The regime controls all of our institutions, our imports, our food, our money, our media, our future and almost every aspect of our lives which even is limitated for rampant delinquency .

But I certaintly now this struggle is irreversible. Try to look back and you will soon realize our previous reality exists no more, meh, that previous reality was far from insufferable anyways.

The ships are burned. The only path is forward.
 

mantidor

Member
Do you understand the monopoly on firearms is on the government side, right? The civilians were armed by Chavez himself to defend the "revolution". How do you jump to the conclusion that the opposition was the one causing this is beyond me.
 
Do you understand the monopoly on firearms is on the government side, right? The civilians were armed by Chavez himself to defend the "revolution". How do you jump to the conclusion that the opposition was the one causing this is beyond me.

Because it fits the pattern of the opposition's violent defense of its illegal barricades. And, no, I don't believe that the Venezuelan government armed its citizen supporters. I find the Venezuelan opposition's conspiracies to be as fantastic as the American tea party's, to be honest.
 
Interesting how the apologists quieted down after these posts. You can always tell what side of history to be on when one side starts attacking universities.

Here's an article from Private Eye, the UK's premier anti-corruption and satire magazine.

It's funny, I've had people (almost always Americans) wonder how on earth we can live without a Constitution. "Couldn't the Queen just invoke her powers... couldn't the government just change laws and imprison people indefinitely?" Yet I live here relatively safe in the knowledge that this won't happen outside of a WW3-type scenario.

Frankly, a Constitution isn't worth the paper it's written on if there isn't a tradition of elites following these rules.
 

qumo

Neo Member
Because it fits the pattern of the opposition's violent defense of its illegal barricades. And, no, I don't believe that the Venezuelan government armed its citizen supporters. I find the Venezuelan opposition's conspiracies to be as fantastic as the American tea party's, to be honest.

It may sound fantastic to you, but it is a reality here. There are dozens of armed groups (commonly called "colectivos") defending the government. Of course they deny being armed, they have their "social movement" facade, but everyone knows the truth.

As far as I can tell, Adriana Urquiola and National Guardsman Miguel Antonio Parra appear to have lost their lives due to the opposition's terrorism, just as many others have.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/...21d_story.html

http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/...A2N17Y20140324

Both Adriana Urquiola and Miguel Parra's murder are regrettable events that took place in the protests scenario, but Urquiola was killed by a group of men who came shooting down on the barricade with the intention of killing the protesters; to say she was killed by the "opposition's terrorism" is being apologist to the actual murderers.
 

Fyrion

Member
I find the Venezuelan opposition's conspiracies to be as fantastic as the American tea party's, to be honest.

There are several evidences which prove Government's implications with armed civilians(militias). You're free to look up for them, I believe this post have some.

HeHe Fantasy. I find very ironic your posture. Because.....

You also found Chávez crackpot accusation fantastic too?

And this one government's conspiracy too?

As far as I can tell, Adriana Urquiola and National Guardsman Miguel Antonio Parra appear to have lost their lives due to the opposition's terrorism, just as many others have.

Right. Because barricades are like terran bunkers with units inside, automatically shoots on sight.

I'll copy the witnesses's tweets:

Acabo de hablar con mi hermano, quien pudo contarme lo que pasó en Los Nuevos Teques:

— José M. Orsini (@josema_orsini) March 24, 2014

La muchacha asesinada en efecto estaba embarazada. Se había bajado de un bus ya que la barricada puesta por los del Barrio Buenos Aires…

— José M. Orsini (@josema_orsini) March 24, 2014

Tenía bloqueada la Panamericana en el Km. 24. La muchacha iba con su novio, no eran parte de los manifestantes de la zona.

— José M. Orsini (@josema_orsini) March 24, 2014

Una camioneta bajó desde el Barrio Buenos Aires llena de chamos armados, quienes dispararon en contra de algunos que salieron de LNT…

— José M. Orsini (@josema_orsini) March 24, 2014

A desmontar la barricada. La muchacha recibió un impacto de bala y cayó arrodillada al frente de la casa de mis viejos.

— José M. Orsini (@josema_orsini) March 24, 2014

Mi prima, enfermera, intentó auxiliarla. La PoliMiranda llegó, pero ya era tarde. La camioneta ya se había ido.

— José M. Orsini (@josema_orsini) March 24, 2014

El novio de la chama gritaba por su novia y su hijo. Los del barrio Buenos Aires gritaban "¡Vengan a buscarnos pues, Chavez Vive!".

— José M. Orsini (@josema_orsini) March 24, 2014

Mi hermano, quien me relató esto por tlf, no deja de llorar. Él también tiene una chica embarazada, y pensar en perder a su hija lo puso mal

— José M. Orsini (@josema_orsini) March 24, 2014


Because it fits the pattern of the opposition's violent defense of its illegal barricades.

And "Illegal" you say. Again, oh the irony. Someone who supports a terrorist regime that the only legal things they respect are....well.........em.....
................................ Seriously they respect nothing.

You want a recent example? Diosdado revoked Maria Corina Machado as a current National Assembly's deputy, and now they are claiming she left her charge for her own.

About barricades: Article 350 and 333.

Art 333

TODO VENEZOLANO INVESTIDO O NO DE AUTORIDAD TIENE EL DEBER Y LA OBLIGACION DE UTILIZAR TODOS LOS MECANISMOS A SU ALCANCE PARA RESTABLECER EL ESTADO DE DERECHO, CUANDO EL MISMO HAYA SIDO VULNERADO.

Art 350

“EL PUEBLO DE VENEZUELA, FIEL A SU TRADICIÓN REPUBLICANA, A SU LUCHA POR LA INDEPENDENCIA, LA PAZ Y LA LIBERTAD, DESCONOCERÁ CUALQUIER REGIMEN, LEGISLACION O AUTORIDAD QUE CONTRARIE LOS VALORES, PRINCIPIOS Y GARANTIAS DEMOCRATICAS O MENOSCABE LOS DERECHOS HUMANOS”.

Allow me write you something to make it clear:

1) THE OPOSSITION IN GENERAL (MUD) DON'T SUPPORT BARRICADES. AND THEY DON'T WANT TO "OUST" MADURO. THEY NEGOCIATE OUR RIGHTS TO KEEP STATUS QUO. THEY ARE IN CONNIVANCE, AND IS A LONG EXPLANATION.

2) THE OPOSSITION ONLY ARRANGE PROTEST'S MARCH.

And as I wrote you before. Nicolas Maduro was a candidate by force, his candidacy was illegal and therefore they broke our right's state. After that, everything they do is illegal.

We use (the citizens, the students, not opposition political parties), barricades to protect us against tiranny. When they assault our neighborhood shooting ramdonly, throwing gas grenades, and commiting vandalism.

Therefore, We are in LEGITIMATE civil disobedience. And They want to stop us at all cost. Even the opposition wants to stop it.



Fortunately the facts are in plain sight. You can keep on writing your neoliberal violent fascist opposition vs legitimate government propaganda's nonsense as you please.
 

FerDS

Member
Because it fits the pattern of the opposition's violent defense of its illegal barricades. And, no, I don't believe that the Venezuelan government armed its citizen supporters. I find the Venezuelan opposition's conspiracies to be as fantastic as the American tea party's, to be honest.

Opposition's violent defense of the barricades? Could you elaborate on this, please? I'll agree with you that they are illegal, though.

On the subject of the government armed groups, as others have said there is a lot of evidence to support this. In fact in these past protests it's been quite clear honestly. I also encourage you to, if you haven't already, investigate Lina Ron's role during Chavez presidency before she passed, and the results of it.

One of these groups actually shot towards the buildings of the people protesting and destroyed some cars that were inside garages on February 18th on my neighborhood. All of this happened literally in the block of one of the three biggest television channels of the country. They didn't even ran the story, and simply made a tweet about it (that said nothing about the shots, and only said that the group had "passed" through the neighborhood) take from that what you will.
 

mantidor

Member
Because it fits the pattern of the opposition's violent defense of its illegal barricades. And, no, I don't believe that the Venezuelan government armed its citizen supporters. I find the Venezuelan opposition's conspiracies to be as fantastic as the American tea party's, to be honest.

There's plenty of evidence of this, some already posted, what is your counter evidence, besides Maduro's ramblings? Your political beliefs have really blinded you, so I don't know why we even try, nothing short of Maduro himself shooting would make you change your mind, and even then I'm sure you will somehow find an explanation.
 
Resource wealth outside of the West all to often goes hand in hand with instability unfortunately. I think the students are a good poster child, and on an individual level I definitely sympathise with some of the issues they articulate. On the other hand, this is a real conflict fought over class divisions and economic models. Neo-liberalism vs a socialist protectionist model... Venezuela is an awesome country and this situation pains me.

Mantidor: I think some arms of the government have facilitated arms to segments of supporters, perhaps against the grain, but it happens. Just as I suspect, the protestors are also seeing supplies from internal and external sources.
 

JDSN

Banned
Just as I suspect, the protestors are also seeing supplies from internal and external sources.

Care to provide a source on that? Theres plenty of evidence that the colectivos are being supplied by the government and that cuba has certain degree of control over them, but I have seen nothing about someone supporting protesters.
 
Leopoldo López wrote an editorial in the NYT today
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/26/opinion/venezuelas-failing-state.html?ref=opinion

Los Teques, Venezuela — As I compose these words from the Ramo Verde military prison outside Caracas, I am struck by how much Venezuelans have suffered.

For 15 years, the definition of “intolerable” in this country has declined by degrees until, to our dismay, we found ourselves with one of the highest murder rates in the Western Hemisphere, a 57 percent inflation rate and a scarcity of basic goods unprecedented outside of wartime.

Our crippled economy is matched by an equally oppressive political climate. Since student protests began on Feb. 4, more than 1,500 protesters have been detained, more than 30 have been killed, and more than 50 people have reported that they were tortured while in police custody. What started as a peaceful march against crime on a university campus has exposed the depth of this government’s criminalization of dissent.

I have been in prison for more than a month. On Feb. 12, I urged Venezuelans to exercise their legal rights to protest and free speech — but to do so peacefully and without violence. Three people were shot and killed that day. An analysis of video by the news organization Últimas Noticias determined that shots were fired from the direction of plainclothes military troops.

In the aftermath of that protest, President Nicolás Maduro personally ordered my arrest on charges of murder, arson and terrorism. Amnesty International said the charges seemed like a “politically motivated attempt to silence dissent.” To this day, no evidence of any kind has been presented.

Soon, more opposition mayors, elected by an overwhelming majority in December’s elections, will join me behind bars. Last week the government arrested the mayor of San Cristóbal, where the student protests began, as well as the mayor of San Diego, who has been accused of disobeying an order to remove protesters’ barricades. But we will not stay silent. Some believe that speaking out only antagonizes the ruling party — inviting Mr. Maduro to move more quickly to strip away rights — and provides a convenient distraction from the economic and social ruin that is taking place. In my view, this path is akin to a victim of abuse remaining silent for fear of inviting more punishment.

More important, millions of Venezuelans do not have the luxury of playing the “long game,” of waiting for change that never comes.

We must continue to speak, act and protest. We must never allow our nerves to become deadened to the steady abuse of rights that is taking place. And we must pursue an agenda for change.

The opposition leadership has outlined a series of actions that are necessary in order to move forward.

Victims of repression, abuse and torture, as well as family members of those who have died, deserve justice. Those who are responsible must resign. The pro-government paramilitary groups, or “colectivos,” that have tried to silence the protests through violence and intimidation must be disarmed.

All political prisoners and dissenters who were forced into exile by the government, as well as students who were jailed for protesting, must be allowed to return or be released. This should be followed by restoring impartiality to important institutions that form the backbone of civil society, including the electoral commission and the judicial system.

In order to get our economy on the right footing, we need an investigation into fraud committed through our commission for currency exchange — at least $15 billion was funneled into phantom businesses and kickbacks last year, a move that has directly contributed to the inflationary spiral and severe shortages our country is experiencing.

Finally, we need real engagement from the international community, particularly in Latin America. The outspoken response from human rights organizations is in sharp contrast to the shameful silence from many of Venezuela’s neighbors in Latin America. The Organization of American States, which represents nations in the Western Hemisphere, has abstained from any real leadership on the current crisis of human rights and the looming specter of a failed state, even though it was formed precisely to address issues like these.

To be silent is to be complicit in the downward spiral of Venezuela’s political system, economy and society, not to mention in the continued misery of millions. Many current leaders in Latin America suffered similar abuses in their time and they should not be silent accomplices to the abuses of today.

For Venezuelans, a change in leadership can be accomplished entirely within a constitutional and legal framework. We must advocate for human rights; freedom of expression; the right to property, housing, health and education; equality within the judicial system, and, of course, the right of protest. These are not radical goals. They are the basic building blocks of society.

Leopoldo López is the former mayor of the Chacao district of Caracas and the leader of the Popular Will opposition party.
 

Lopez played a role in the 2002 coup. Had he done that in the US, he would have been in prison since that time and for the rest of his life. Could you imagine what charges the US would bring against a person who managed to arrest and detain Eric Holder in a rebellion? Manning got 35 years just for releasing documents.

http://articles.latimes.com/2006/jul/19/world/fg-venezuela19

Lopez is an enemy of people who believe in democratic governance.
 

FerDS

Member
Lopez played a role in the 2002 coup. Had he done that in the US, he would have been in prison since that time and for the rest of his life. Could you imagine what charges the US would bring against a person who managed to arrest and detain Eric Holder in a rebellion? Manning got 35 years just for releasing documents.

http://articles.latimes.com/2006/jul/19/world/fg-venezuela19

Lopez is an enemy of people who believe in democratic governance.


And Chávez came into popularity by playing a role in a coup...
 
^
Damn you! Haha

Lopez played a role in the 2002 coup. Had he done that in the US, he would have been in prison since that time and for the rest of his life. Could you imagine what charges the US would bring against a person who managed to arrest and detain Eric Holder in a rebellion? Manning got 35 years just for releasing documents.

http://articles.latimes.com/2006/jul/19/world/fg-venezuela19

Lopez is an enemy of people who believe in democratic governance.
Well argued rebuttles to his points.

I especially liked the non sequitor and shift to criticism of another country which is not named Venezuela, and another criminal whos crimes have nothing to do with the topic at hand.

I also agree that crimes just on accusation (or even conviction) should permanently disbar a person from any political activity. They should permanently be ignored.

I'm hope you will join me in calling Chavez an enemy of the people and ignore all statements for his illegal activity against the democratically elected government of Venezuela in 1992. We mustn't forget. I know he was responding to widespread abuses of power but as you've so articulated in this thread the protestors sometimes committed illegal activities and their goal was the overthrow of a democratic government. They could have waited till 1993 and voted out his party but instead they removed the president from power. I think you can agree that some action to preserve the peoples choice was warranted. Even if it meant elimination of certain human and basic rights.

That's obviously sarcasm, but a lot of it I think can help illustrate how your position isn't based on principles but politics. Accuse me of not having principles, fine. I disagree but I'm not really ashamed of the hope that even if Maudro survives this and continues as president it's only a set back for human rights and democracy in Venezuela 'por ahora'.
 

mantidor

Member
Lopez played a role in the 2002 coup. Had he done that in the US, he would have been in prison since that time and for the rest of his life. Could you imagine what charges the US would bring against a person who managed to arrest and detain Eric Holder in a rebellion? Manning got 35 years just for releasing documents.

http://articles.latimes.com/2006/jul/19/world/fg-venezuela19

Lopez is an enemy of people who believe in democratic governance.

In that line of thought Chavez should have never seen the presidency, much less be a free man, after his coup attempt against Perez in 1992.

Edit: beaten to oblivion lol
 
I especially liked the non sequitor and shift to criticism of another country which is not named Venezuela, and another criminal whos crimes have nothing to do with the topic at hand.

The point was to add sorely lacking perspective. There is a double standard being applied out of ignorance, and I am trying to educate you. On the one hand, there is a double standard with respect to how the current Venezuelan government is being treated vis-a-vis the American government, which is of course the relevance of talking about the United States. On the other hand, there is the double standard of how the current Venezuelan government is being treated vis-a-vis prior Venezuelan governments. Venezuela has historically been marred by political turbulence and the bottom line is that this is a class struggle in which people are choosing sides. The appeals to principle and criticisms of the Venezuelan government made by the Venezuelan opposition are obviously empty rhetoric. Chavez spent a year in prison after the 1992 coup, and the neoliberal Venezuelan government did not hesitate to use force to quell the rebellion, including summary executions. By contrast, Lopez didn't go to prison at all, and the Venezuelan government has refrained from the kind of systemic terror that previous governments engaged in (and which the Venezuelan opposition is now engaged in). Maduro, for his part, has never played a part in any coup. So the question becomes what is the cause of your inconsistent treatment?

I think Lopez is an enemy of democracy for far more reasons than his participation in the 2002 coup. He seeks to advance the economic interests of Venezuela's economic elite (of which he is a member) at the expense of average Venezuelans, and is willing to use deceit to accomplish those ends. For what it's worth, you should know that Lopez is like the Ted Cruz of the Venezuelan opposition movement, disliked even by a significant faction. You should know who you are gong to bat for and not champion a person just because he is an enemy of a government your own government has indoctrinated you to despise.
 
The point was to add sorely lacking perspective. There is a double standard being applied out of ignorance, and I am trying to educate you. On the one hand, there is a double standard with respect to how the current Venezuelan government is being treated vis-a-vis the American government, which is of course the relevance of talking about the United States. On the other hand, there is the double standard of how the current Venezuelan government is being treated vis-a-vis prior Venezuelan governments. Venezuela has historically been marred by political turbulence and the bottom line is that this is a class struggle in which people are choosing sides. The appeals to principle and criticisms of the Venezuelan government made by the Venezuelan opposition are obviously empty rhetoric. Chavez spent a year in prison after the 1992 coup, and the neoliberal Venezuelan government did not hesitate to use force to quell the rebellion, including summary executions. By contrast, Lopez didn't go to prison at all, and the Venezuelan government has refrained from the kind of systemic terror that previous governments engaged in (and which the Venezuelan opposition is now engaged in). Maduro, for his part, has never played a part in any coup. So the question becomes what is the cause of your inconsistent treatment?

I think Lopez is an enemy of democracy for far more reasons than his participation in the 2002 coup. He seeks to advance the economic interests of Venezuela's economic elite (of which he is a member) at the expense of average Venezuelans, and is willing to use deceit to accomplish those ends. For what it's worth, you should know that Lopez is like the Ted Cruz of the Venezuelan opposition movement, disliked even by a significant faction. You should know who you are gong to bat for and not champion a person just because he is an enemy of a government your own government has indoctrinated you to despise.

That's obviously sarcasm, but a lot of it I think can help illustrate how your position isn't based on principles but politics. Accuse me of not having principles, fine. I disagree but I'm not really ashamed of the hope that even if Maudro survives this and continues as president it's only a set back for human rights and democracy in Venezuela 'por ahora'.

Continue your defense of a government which
has refrained from ... systemic terror
. The rest of us will live in the real world.

BTW: Stop trying to 'educate' people its condescending
 
The Perez government sold the country out to the IMF and were preparing to enact austerity measures on an already poor country. The same austerity measures that have destroyed Greece, Spain, Portugal, etc. The quality of life for all Venezuelans rapidly declined. The Perez government then went on to abduct, disappear, and murder approximately 3000 people went massive protests broke out from all classes of Venezuelan society.

This is what prompted the coup attempt in 1992 and these are the people who the current rigidly class divided protesters are demanding put back into place. It's not a 1:1 comparison as the PSUV still has immense support and standards of living have not fallen for Venezuela's poor, whom the PSUV claims to represent and is their power base.

You're defending a group that is not wholly popular, divided by class, and at least at this moment, materialistically worse than the people they want to replace.

Why?
 
The Perez government sold the country out to the IMF and were preparing to enact austerity measures on an already poor country. The same austerity measures that have destroyed Greece, Spain, Portugal, etc. The quality of life for all Venezuelans rapidly declined. The Perez government then went on to abduct, disappear, and murder approximately 3000 people went massive protests broke out from all classes of Venezuelan society.

This is what prompted the coup attempt in 1992 and these are the people who the current rigidly class divided protesters are demanding put back into place. It's not a 1:1 comparison as the PSUV still has immense support and standards of living have not fallen for Venezuela's poor, whom the PSUV claims to represent and is their power base.

I am not defending the Perez government, I'm just claiming EV has no problem with the things he's decrying the opposition for doing when they are done by anti-western and socialistic groups.
 

Fyrion

Member
Today my city Puerto Ordaz was assaulted by an overwhelming amount of warfare army, police patrols, GNB, intelligence agents, etc. More than one hundred as far I can tell. They took control of residencial areas where the people were putting barricades. Locals reported several raids inside the buildings. Even there were a helicopter flying around over the area for a few minutes.

BjnYGFkCEAAMZvn.jpg


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BjqLWGEIMAAAr_L.jpg


This happened several hours ago. This morning.
 
I am not defending the Perez government, I'm just claiming EV has no problem with the things he's decrying the opposition for doing when they are done by anti-western and socialistic groups.

I am claiming (1) that the problems are not the same; (2) that critics of the Venezuelan government are not educated about what is happening in Venezuela; and (3) that defenders of the Venezuelan opposition and its violence, particularly of the Western sort, are applying a double standard (mostly, presumably, due to number (2), which is in turn mostly a product of a US public relations campaign by the US politico-economic elite against the current Venezuelan government.).
 
I am claiming (1) that the problems are not the same; (2) that critics of the Venezuelan government are not educated about what is happening in Venezuela; and (3) that defenders of the Venezuelan opposition and its violence, particularly of the Western sort, are applying a double standard (mostly, presumably, due to number (2), which is in turn mostly a product of a US public relations campaign by the US politico-economic elite against the current Venezuelan government.).

So your claiming "things are different", an argument you refuse to allow to your opponents (AKA double standard!), as well continued shifting the conversation to the US to argue a different point that's unrelated even if you claim its not.

That's exactly what I've claimed.

Today my city Puerto Ordaz was assaulted by an overwhelming amount of warfare army, police patrols, GNB, intelligence agents, etc. More than one hundred as far I can tell. They took control of residencial areas where the people were putting barricades. Locals reported several raids inside the buildings. Even there were a helicopter flying around over the area for a few minutes.

BjnYGFkCEAAMZvn.jpg


BjqGmZOIUAEOntC.jpg:large


BjqLWGEIMAAAr_L.jpg


This happened several hours ago. This morning.
But I'm told there is no 'systemic terror' and human rights violations by the government. I think you're a unreliable capitalist source.

(Sarcasm aside, stay safe dude. Your country should have to deal with this.)
 

mantidor

Member
The Perez government sold the country out to the IMF and were preparing to enact austerity measures on an already poor country. The same austerity measures that have destroyed Greece, Spain, Portugal, etc. The quality of life for all Venezuelans rapidly declined. The Perez government then went on to abduct, disappear, and murder approximately 3000 people went massive protests broke out from all classes of Venezuelan society.

Sounds awfully similar to the current situation.

Venezuela, even after unstopped 15 years of Chavismo, and peak oil prices, it's still a poor country, let that sink in.
 
So your claiming "things are different", an argument you refuse to allow to your opponents (AKA double standard!), as well continued shifting the conversation to the US to argue a different point that's unrelated even if you claim its not.

No, I am claiming that the right-wing's version of what is happening in Venezuela is factually false and that defenders of the Venezuelan right-wing operate under a double standard. Establishing double standards obviously requires reference to another standard (be it the US, the prior Venezuelan government, etc.).

But I'm told there is no 'systemic terror' and human rights violations by the government.

The person who told you that is correct. The government is trying to contend with right wing rebellion, violence, and terrorism, but it has done so with abundant restraint. I am sure that there have been abuses, as there is any law enforcement operation in any country on earth. The Venezuelan government has been dealing with those as well (probably better than the US government does). What I am wondering is why you believe a government's attempt to enforce laws, with its undoubted occasional abuse of law enforcement of power, should require that government's overthrow. I am wondering why you are not calling for the overthrow of the Obama Administration in view of its violent repression of the OWS protests and the law enforcement abuses that are rampant in the US. In short, I am wondering why you are applying a standard to Venezuela that you do not apply to the US.
 

FerDS

Member
I am claiming (1) that the problems are not the same; (2) that critics of the Venezuelan government are not educated about what is happening in Venezuela; and (3) that defenders of the Venezuelan opposition and its violence, particularly of the Western sort, are applying a double standard (mostly, presumably, due to number (2), which is in turn mostly a product of a US public relations campaign by the US politico-economic elite against the current Venezuelan government.).


Maybe that's what you intended to do, but what was inferred from your post was that by participating in a coup, Lopez became an enemy of democracy and should have been imprisoned for life. While failing to acknowledge the fact that the current government came to power after Chávez participated in a coup (in a much more direct way than Lopez).

If the government had the proof to put Lopez in jail for his participation in the coup, they not only could, but SHOULD have done so. But, for whatever reason they didn't.
 
Maybe that's what you intended to do, but what was inferred from your post was that by participating in a coup, Lopez became an enemy of democracy and should have been imprisoned for life. While failing to acknowledge the fact that the current government came to power after Chávez participated in a coup (in a much more direct way than Lopez).

I did not imply that Lopez should have been imprisoned for life. I said if he had done what he did in the US, he would have been (and almost all Americans, but especially including APKmetsfan, would agree that he should be). This raises the question why APKmetsfan is championing a man who, if he had done the same actions in the United States, he would believe is a criminal who should be imprisoned for life and not somebody who deserves to be published in the New York Times and championed.
 

FerDS

Member
I did not imply that Lopez should have been imprisoned for life. I said if he had done what he did in the US, he would have been (and almost all Americans, but especially including APKmetsfan, would agree that he should be). This raises the question why APKmetsfan is championing a man who, if he had done the same actions in the United States, he would believe is a criminal who should be imprisoned for life and not somebody who deserves to be published in the New York Times and championed.

Fair enough on the beginning of this post. The rest seems to be directed more towards APKmetsfan, so I feel out of place saying anything about it
 
I did not imply that Lopez should have been imprisoned for life. I said if he had done what he did in the US, he would have been (and almost all Americans, but especially including APKmetsfan, would agree that he should be). This raises the question why APKmetsfan is championing a man who, if he had done the same actions in the United States, he would believe is a criminal who should be imprisoned for life and not somebody who deserves to be published in the New York Times and championed.

I'm glad you know what I would do. As you would say "the situations are different"

You're constant shifts to the US in ever post are telling. Argue them in a different thread, they have no barring on the abuses of the current Venezuelan government
 

FerDS

Member
Could someone get that monkey down from there already please.

I assume you mean Maduro. Unfortunately, he's not the problem himself, he's just the guy that's there right now, if anything I fear the day Diosdado Cabello becomes president and I hope he never does :(
 

Ahasverus

Member
What monkey down from where?
Nicolas Maduro.
I assume you mean Maduro. Unfortunately, he's not the problem himself, he's just the guy that's there right now, if anything I fear the day Diosdado Cabello becomes president and I hope he never does :(
I know :S but Maduro is dumb, like really really dumb, the world isn't taking him seriously. how the country is going into fire and the international community isn't doing anything is beyond me. That coul d be because arguing with maduro or trying to rationalize is like arguing with a monkey.
 
I am not defending the Perez government, I'm just claiming EV has no problem with the things he's decrying the opposition for doing when they are done by anti-western and socialistic groups.

The PSUV isn't really that socialist. Outside of the occasional Nationalization and co-op their entire "socialist" scheme involves the Mission Mercal, which is just funding local planning groups and their projects. We do that in the US. Theirs focuses on access to food and the like, but the system of delivery and funding is similar.
 

mantidor

Member
The PSUV isn't really that socialist. Outside of the occasional Nationalization and co-op their entire "socialist" scheme involves the Mission Mercal, which is just funding local planning groups and their projects. We do that in the US. Theirs focuses on access to food and the like, but the system of delivery and funding is similar.

It's pretty obvious chavistas and Chavez had little to no idea about actual socialism or actual fascism, they repeat buzzwords like parrots.

It is the chavistas themselves who use the term "socialism", from "socialism of the 21st century" to "homeland, socialism or death" in their speeches. It sticks unfortunately, even with the opposition.
 
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