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Venezuela update -- it's still a mess
Dan Miller's Blog ^ | March 8, 2014 | Dan Miller

Posted on 03/08/2014 10:52:16 AM PST by DanMiller

Little new information escapes from Venezuela, beyond that protests and repression by the Chavista/Cuban regime continue.

circular-firing-squad

As Daniel reported today (Saturday), the Organization of American States (OAS) produced a resolution about the situation in Venezuela.

The regime scores because not only the OAS will not send any mission or observation, not only the OAS will not go beyond an exhortation but the OAS also writes "Its appreciation, full support, and encouragement for the initiatives and the efforts of the democratically-elected Government of Venezuela ...". there is an "and" after that to include other sectors but the first part is the one that counts, the one where Maduro is considered democratically-elected when we all know the gigantic fraud that was committed last April 2013. [Emphasis added.]

The OAS has continued its march for sycophantic deference toward Venezuela, no matter how obscenely repressive may be its actions.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pwFQWijd_hg]

Video link

The OAS position is consistent with the reactions of such leftist states as Argentina. In an article titled Why do the left support the Chavistas in Venezuela, I quoted from an article in the Buenos Aires Herald that begins with this lede: "The situation that Maduro has to handle emerges as a risk for every president in the region." It concludes with this:

Argentina’s absolute support for the Venezuelan government is thus consistent. Because what happens in Venezuela can happen anywhere. [Emphasis added.]

That seems likely to be true of many other Latin American governments: even to appear to favor freedom and to discourage repression by the Venezuelan regime could endanger their own situations.

Venezuelans able to leave are doing so.

According to an article posted at ABC News on Friday, the nature of the migration of Venezuelans to Miami has changed in recent years. Earlier, those leaving tended to be of the upper or upper middle class and to bring with them resources permitting them to live well. Many returned to Venezuela. Now, less affluent members of the middle class are leaving Venezuela, with insufficient resources for better than a tenuous survival. They are unlikely to return while Venezuela remains a Chavista colony of Cuba.

"Before people would come, study and go back," said Manuel Gomez, a law professor at Florida International University. "And people weren't willing to sacrifice their social and professional status for a lesser life. People wouldn't be willing to live in a small condo and share a car, whereas now it seems that people are willing to do that."

The contrast has come to the fore in recent weeks as protests erupted throughout Venezuela over a long-brooding list of woes: Food shortages, soaring inflation, and a heavy-handed government that has shut off spaces for dissent. At least 21 people have been killed. [Emphasis added.]

Immigration attorneys who work in Miami's Venezuelan community said they have been flooded with inquiries from families seeking political asylum or wanting to find a way to try and get their relatives out. Most are middle-class families with limited finances.

"In the last two weeks I'm seeing an enormous uptick," said Stephanie Green, a Coral Gables attorney who specializes in asylum.

. . . .

The violence and demonstrations in Venezuela over the past three weeks haven't yet provoked a new surge in migration to Miami, but there has been a slight increase in the number arriving in Florida. Some 19,800 Venezuelans arrived at Miami International Airport between Feb. 15 and 28, up from the 18,500 who arrived during the same period in 2013. [Emphasis added.]

Those who are coming reflect the shifting demographic of Venezuelans choosing to start over in a foreign country and the deteriorating conditions they are fleeing.

Fourteen hundred Venezuelan arrivals per day, should the pace continue, amounts to more than half a million per year. That's a lot and it will likely continue or perhaps accelerate until hope revives for Venezuela or most of those who are able to leave have done so.

New arrivals from Venezuela most likely bring knowledge of how unjustly and incompetently the Venezuelan "socialist democracy" works and a corresponding revulsion for it. Some may well have skills that might be useful in the United States if they are permitted to use them. As Venezuela continues to make it difficult if not impossible to use those skills there, she loses those having them. That augurs ill for revival of the moribund Venezuelan economy, because those left in Venezuela are increasingly fit only for menial employment or for non-productive employment by a massively corrupt, inefficient and otherwise incompetent government. Nor, to the extent that they leave behind an increasingly high proportion of unproductive Venezuelans willing to rely on necessarily diminishing governmental largess, does their departure augur well for restoration of the freedoms Venezuela also needs if she is to have an economic revival. As deprivation even of necessities worsens, freedom becomes increasingly less important than necessities, spiced a bit with occasionally free goodies that can be looted, with governmental acquiescence if not encouragement, from the remaining stores that still have them.

An article posted on Saturday at Devil's Excrement notes

The Government seems to control the centers of power (the Military, Congress, the Supreme Court, the National Elections Board and most of the governors and city mayors). However, a critical piece such as the economy is completely out of control. Inflation is at an all times high (55%), the parallel market rate of exchange of the national currency is ten times that of the official rate fueled by an obvious shortage of US dollars, and the supply chain of consumer goods is completely disrupted with the consequent shortages of vital consumer goods in the supermarket shelves. There seems to be a mix of improvisation and ignorance with the end result of very poor management of the economy. In addition, oil production seems to be declining, which is the most important source of revenue of foreign currency. Furthermore, the Government has not be able to honor the debts to most suppliers from neighboring countries and the international airlines. These are just some of the serious imbalances of the economy that may lead Venezuela to be a failed state. [Emphasis added.]

. . . .

The whole argument of this article is that the Government is not in control of the economy (the main source of the problem as admitted by Chavista Governor of Tachira State, Jose Vielma Mora), the militias are out of control, and the guarimbas are out of control. So who is in control in Venezuela? Is Venezuela at the verge of becoming a failed state? Is chaos going to reign in Venezuela? That is why the help of OAS is badly need in Venezuela. The human rights and freedom of speech pieces are pale next to the real challenges that Venezuela faces. [Emphasis added.]

I disagree only to the extent that without the human rights now absent in Venezuela -- including not only economic freedom but also reasons at least to hope that other lost freedoms are returning -- economic and other indicia of regime failure will continue to worsen.

Venezuela may well be unable to recover without those who left and are continuing to leave because they can not tolerate what Venezuela has become.


TOPICS: Government; History; Politics
KEYWORDS: cuba; hugochavez; leopoldolopez; migration; nicolasmaduro; oas; repression; russia; venezuela

1 posted on 03/08/2014 10:52:17 AM PST by DanMiller
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To: DanMiller

and without toilet paper


2 posted on 03/08/2014 11:02:13 AM PST by molson209 (Hillary Clinton)
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To: AdmSmith; AnonymousConservative; Berosus; bigheadfred; Bockscar; cardinal4; ColdOne; ...

Thanks DanMiller.


3 posted on 03/08/2014 11:02:54 AM PST by SunkenCiv (https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
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To: DanMiller

This is why our founding fathers hated democracy. Venezuela is not a dicatorship, it is a democracy of 51% voting to loot the other 49% until there is nothing left.


4 posted on 03/08/2014 11:10:32 AM PST by Vince Ferrer
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To: DanMiller
But the country was blessed with oil reserves, what happened to them? How much does it produce nowadays?

I recall an attempt (when Hugo was still alive) to nationalize the oil industry, how did that work out? How many oil companies still work there, and how many are state-owned? Shouldn't those resources be redistributed to those who have needs?

Shouldn't socialism adhere to its own rhetoric?

5 posted on 03/08/2014 11:24:52 AM PST by ZOOKER (Until further notice the /s is implied...)
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To: ZOOKER
Oil production by the state oil monopoly, PDVSA, is down largely due to lack of investment in oil infrastructure.

Rafael Ramirez, the Venezuelan Energy and Economy Minister, is the president of PDVSA; hence, PDVSA is under government control. With the current and worsening cash crunch, resulting in minimal infrastructure investment, oil revenues are lower.

Having used too much of Venezuela's oil wealth to persuade Venezuelans to keep the Chavistas in power at the expense of infrastructure maintenance and improvement is among the many reasons why Venezuela is no longer able to sustain the poor in the style to which they had been accustomed.

6 posted on 03/08/2014 12:29:40 PM PST by DanMiller (Dan Miller)
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To: DanMiller

Looks already like a failed state.


7 posted on 03/08/2014 2:13:29 PM PST by attiladhun2 (The Free World has a new leader--his name is Benjamin Netanyahu)
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To: Vince Ferrer
"Democracy" was equivalent to socialism according to the Founders, which is why they established a republic. The Progressives of the 19th and early 20th Cen. undermined the republic. The Progressives adopted many of the policies outlined in the Communist Manifesto.
8 posted on 03/08/2014 2:18:11 PM PST by attiladhun2 (The Free World has a new leader--his name is Benjamin Netanyahu)
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