Cross Post from Maggie’s Notebook
Note from LC: I was going to get to this, and via memeorandum I found Maggie’s excellent post and she agreed to cross post it here. Note how Chavez and his cronies are insulated from the misery they’ve inflicted upon the people of Venezuela.
Update: Bloomberg reported that Chavez will seize any businesses that raise prices following the devaluation of the currency.
Chavez said he’ll create an anti-speculation committee to monitor prices after private businesses said that prices would double and consumers rushed to buy household appliances and televisions. The government is the only authority able to dictate price increases, he said.
“The bourgeois are already talking about how all prices are going to double and they’re closing their businesses to raise prices,” Chavez said in comments on state television during his weekly “Alo Presidente” program. “People, don’t let them rob you, denounce it, and I’m capable of taking over that business.” …..
Think of Venezuela as a crystal ball – this could very well be our future if something doesn’t change.
*********
Venezuela’s president, Hugo Chavez, announced the devaluation of the country’s currency, the bolivar, by half, and just as bad news from the Obama administration is announced on weekends or late on Friday, Chavez delivered the startling proclamation during an important Friday night baseball game. Here is a good example of Socialism once it is on a roll:
The socialist Chavez believes the state should have a weighty role in managing the economy. During his 11 years in office he has nationalized most heavy industry, and business and finance are tightly regulated.
The devaluation is politically risky but means every dollar of oil revenue puts more bolivars in government coffers. That allows Chavez to lavish cash on social projects and fund salary increases ahead of parliamentary elections in September.
Opponents were quick to criticize the socialist, who a year ago promised the global financial crisis would not touch “a hair” of Venezuela’s economy. He announced the devaluation on Friday night during an important baseball game.
“By establishing the exchange rate at 4.3 bolivars per dollar, the quality of life for Venezuelans is automatically devalued since we now have half the money we had before,” said Caracas Mayor Antonio Ledezma, a Chavez opponent.
Government workers and those on the government dole will be the benefactors, thus increasing the loyalty vote for Chavez…which gives him a few more years to increase his chance of being elected dictator-for-life.
…for a currency renamed the “strong bolivar” two years ago when Mr. Chavez chopped three zeros off the old currency and declared the beginning of an era of monetary fortitude.
With inflation in 2009 between 25% and 30%, Venezuela is home to one of the top ten oil reserves in the world. This is a wealthy country, but these are bleak times for the people.
In February, “the people” lifted term-limit restriction on the presidency. About 54% of voters approved the ban. How does that happen? How do the people vote to end their democracy, and why? Javier Corrales, a contributor to HuffingtonPost says “the systems of checks and balances has become inoperative.”
Government negotiations with opposition forces are nonexistent; the judiciary rarely restrains government actions; state employees are forced to act as campaign props and vote for the government; electoral authorities disregard the law; and the ruling party is allowed to make use of state resources that are systematically denied to the opposition.
And Corrales says “Chavismo” has gone beyond the normal “garden-variety electoral autocracy,” by “enabling” “the promotion of disorder” and “chaos.
Then, after the referendum:
Opposition leaders who won regional elections in December have been denied funding to run their governments or pushed into self-exile-to avoid arrest under selectively applied corruption laws. Other leaders have been jailed. The government has begun to ban books from libraries. With the help of the military, it has also accelerated the arbitrary nationalization of private assets. Chávez has repressed independent student groups, and is attempting to shut down Globovisión, the most critical television news channel left in the country.
Long before the ban on term limits, Chavez began seizing farm land – “forced land redistribution” – and once seized, the plan was to be “utopian farming villages for squatters. Army commandos stood by and watched as squatters did the devil’s work back in 2007, and after, and threatened farm owners with machetes, rifles and their lives.
The redistribution of wealth did not work, of course. This report from May 2009:
The 32,000-acre (12,950-hectare) El Charcote Ranch in central Venezuela was meant as a showcase for President Hugo Chavez’s agrarian revolution, turning a country with food shortages and runaway inflation into one that could feed itself. But since troops and peasants seized the land from a British agribusiness company four years ago, beef production has dropped from 2.6 million pounds (1.2 million kilograms) annually to zero.
The ranch and many like it across the country raise the concern that the dream of a Venezuela living off its own land is just one more socialist promise heavy on rhetoric and light on results. The Chavez government says it has taken over more than 5.4 million acres (2.2 million hectares) of farmland from private owners. Yet food imports have tripled since 2004, the year before Chavez began his aggressive reform program.
The reality of a government-promised utopia:
This vast ranch used to be filled with grazing herds of cattle, but the green pastures are now overgrown with weeds and dotted with patches where poor farmers grow corn and beans. The cows have vanished.
The Chavez plan went astray as oil prices plummeted and funding for his bloated social programs, and vote purchasing, was not sustainable…without devaluing the monetary holding of the people. What a sad story…and a word of warning to America. Oh, and a reminder to America too: President Obama and Hillary Clinton congratulated Chavez on his un-term-limited future, along with the Castro brothers. Do ya think there’s an agenda here?
Venezuela’s president, Hugo Chavez, announced the devaluation of the country’s currency, the bolivar, by half, and just as bad news from the Obama administration is announced on weekends or late on Friday, Chavez delivered the startling proclamation during an important Friday night baseball game. Here is a good example of Socialism once it is on a roll:
The socialist Chavez believes the state should have a weighty role in managing the economy. During his 11 years in office he has nationalized most heavy industry, and business and finance are tightly regulated.
The devaluation is politically risky but means every dollar of oil revenue puts more bolivars in government coffers. That allows Chavez to lavish cash on social projects and fund salary increases ahead of parliamentary elections in September.
Opponents were quick to criticize the socialist, who a year ago promised the global financial crisis would not touch “a hair” of Venezuela’s economy. He announced the devaluation on Friday night during an important baseball game.
“By establishing the exchange rate at 4.3 bolivars per dollar, the quality of life for Venezuelans is automatically devalued since we now have half the money we had before,” said Caracas Mayor Antonio Ledezma, a Chavez opponent.
Government workers and those on the government dole will be the benefactors, thus increasing the loyalty vote for Chavez…which gives him a few more years to increase his chance of being elected dictator-for-life.
…for a currency renamed the “strong bolivar” two years ago when Mr. Chavez chopped three zeros off the old currency and declared the beginning of an era of monetary fortitude.
With inflation in 2009 between 25% and 30%, Venezuela is home to one of the top ten oil reserves in the world. This is a wealthy country, but these are bleak times for the people.
In February, “the people” lifted term-limit restriction on the presidency. About 54% of voters approved the ban. How does that happen? How do the people vote to end their democracy, and why? Javier Corrales, a contributor to HuffingtonPost says “the systems of checks and balances has become inoperative.”
Government negotiations with opposition forces are nonexistent; the judiciary rarely restrains government actions; state employees are forced to act as campaign props and vote for the government; electoral authorities disregard the law; and the ruling party is allowed to make use of state resources that are systematically denied to the opposition.
And Corrales says “Chavismo” has gone beyond the normal “garden-variety electoral autocracy,” by “enabling” “the promotion of disorder” and “chaos.
Then, after the referendum:
Opposition leaders who won regional elections in December have been denied funding to run their governments or pushed into self-exile-to avoid arrest under selectively applied corruption laws. Other leaders have been jailed. The government has begun to ban books from libraries. With the help of the military, it has also accelerated the arbitrary nationalization of private assets. Chávez has repressed independent student groups, and is attempting to shut down Globovisión, the most critical television news channel left in the country.
Long before the ban on term limits, Chavez began seizing farm land – “forced land redistribution” – and once seized, the plan was to be “utopian farming villages for squatters. Army commandos stood by and watched as squatters did the devil’s work back in 2007, and after, and threatened farm owners with machetes, rifles and their lives.
The redistribution of wealth did not work, of course. This report from May 2009:
The 32,000-acre (12,950-hectare) El Charcote Ranch in central Venezuela was meant as a showcase for President Hugo Chavez’s agrarian revolution, turning a country with food shortages and runaway inflation into one that could feed itself. But since troops and peasants seized the land from a British agribusiness company four years ago, beef production has dropped from 2.6 million pounds (1.2 million kilograms) annually to zero.
The ranch and many like it across the country raise the concern that the dream of a Venezuela living off its own land is just one more socialist promise heavy on rhetoric and light on results. The Chavez government says it has taken over more than 5.4 million acres (2.2 million hectares) of farmland from private owners. Yet food imports have tripled since 2004, the year before Chavez began his aggressive reform program.
The reality of a government-promised utopia:
This vast ranch used to be filled with grazing herds of cattle, but the green pastures are now overgrown with weeds and dotted with patches where poor farmers grow corn and beans. The cows have vanished.
The Chavez plan went astray as oil prices plummeted and funding for his bloated social programs, and vote purchasing, was not sustainable…without devaluing the monetary holding of the people. What a sad story…and a word of warning to America. Oh, and a reminder to America too: President Obama and Hillary Clinton congratulated Chavez on his un-term-limited future, along with the Castro brothers. Do ya think there’s an agenda here?











Hear that? *bump* *bump* *bump*
That’s me bang my head against the wall!
PEOPLE WAKE UP!
The Dems/Libs/Progs LOVE Chavez and his kind.
His kind you ask?
YES: Mao, Stalin, and even Mussolini back in the day. More than are willing to admit even liked Hitler at first.
We are headed down that road.
Beware the Ides of March!
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Chavez is far from perfect, but he is on the side of the people in the barrios, you folks just want the old elite who screwed the people for their own benefit back.
I have had the pleasure of meeting Chavez, wrong on Iran, but right on much else.
Hey try going to Caracas and talking to people about how the people in the barrios used to be treated.
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Yeah right Derek, “far from perfect”; the people that get screwed in reality are the populous, (far from perfect) capitalist producers that get up and go to work every day, used as drones by Chavez. You’re a classic, buying into Marx and Engels little rant publication that demonizes and proclaims everyone that has one thing more than another is unfair, playing off the emotions of jealousy and envy as a platform to hijack your liberty in trade for “them” making it fair for all, by controlling all. What a great tradeoff! How much fairness and equality will they have for themselves as ruling elite? Think about it Derek, don’t buy into the lie. Chavez uses the people in the barrios as an EXCUSE, not to truly help them, but to control all. The lives of those people in the barrios will NEVER change for the better with people like Chavez, because if it did, he’d be out of work. Capitalistic profits equal prosperity, so please give me an example where you think citizens lived, past or present, with individual freedoms and high standards of personal living using the political and economic structure you defend and post it here, I’m interested.
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Sad to see another country with so much wealth and so much promise go back down this road. I think it’s the water in that part of the world.
Heaven forbid, someone should work for a living and make something to leave to their families. Much better to let Hugo put you on the payroll.
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Many folks take this stuff for granted, and I feel that their money making ability suffers because of it. There is such a tendency to seek out quick solutions that the bulk of folds wind up destroying their own chances at success. An occasional look in the mirror helps everyone to maintain our bearing in a pitiless market.
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