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Caribbean-Latin America
Venezuela heads toward disaster
2010-02-09
What little is left of Venezuela's democracy has taken a literal beating from President Hugo Chavez's uniformed goon squads -- again.

Police used a variety of weapons, from water cannons to plastic bullets, last week to disperse hundreds of student protesters who refuse to knuckle under to an increasingly desperate and unpopular president determined to remain in power at all costs.

While the president and his followers were celebrating the anniversary of the failed 1992 coup that first brought him to national attention, the students were protesting the deterioration of their country. It wasn't the first time that Mr. Chavez has resorted to force to quell peaceful political opponents, but the frustration level inside the country is rising as Venezuela's political and economic situation goes from bad to worse.

Rolling blackouts, currency devaluation and price inflation (the worst in Latin America), water shortages and scarce commodities -- this is what 11 years of a Chavez presidency have produced.

As if to underline the utter befuddlement of Mr. Chavez's inept government, an advisory team from Cuba, of all places, was brought in to improve the dismal energy program. Cuba? That's like asking Scott Rothstein for advice on legal ethics.

The problem with PDVSA, the oil company, as Venezuelans well know, is that Mr. Chavez turned it into a sinecure for political cronies, destroying its once admirable efficiency and productive value. Only by putting the experts back in charge can it hope to recover, but President Chavez is not about to hand authority over to anyone who is not a known loyalist.

The problems at PDVSA are emblematic of what's wrong with Venezuela and why his Bolivarian revolution is in trouble. Mr. Chavez has run the economy, and the country, into the ground, but that hasn't stopped him from making trouble wherever he can.

As the streets of Caracas were in turmoil, the U.S. director of national intelligence, former Admiral Dennis Blair, was giving Congress an unvarnished assessment of Mr. Chavez's presidency that underlines the danger he represents to the entire region.

He has cultivated friendships in all the wrong places, beginning with Iran, spent $6 billion to buy weapons from Russia, and provided covert support to the terrorist Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC).

All of this spells disaster for the people of Venezuela -- and the hemisphere. It can be avoided only by the concerted effort of other countries in the region to pressure Mr. Chavez to moderate his behavior and adhere to the rules of democracy.

Isn't that what the Organization of American States is for? Mr. Chavez has undermined, if not destroyed Venezuela's once vibrant, if imperfect, democracy. He has bullied his neighbors, fueled a regional arms race and brought political tensions inside the country to a boiling point. The region's leaders shouldn't wait for domestic bloodshed or a cross-border conflict to move them to act.
Posted by:GolfBravoUSMC

#9  Hold Hollywood responsible for aidingand abetting this destruction.
Posted by: Beldar Threreling9726   2010-02-09 17:27  

#8  Â“The trouble with socialism is that sooner or later you run out of OTHER PEOPLEÂ’S money.” - M. Thatcher
Posted by: ScottR   2010-02-09 17:01  

#7  How's about a benefit concert: Live Evil Aid.
Posted by: Perfesser   2010-02-09 14:12  

#6  I know it may not have turned out as well as it could have, like every other socialist government, but maybe we should let Bambi give it a try here in the good ol' U. S. of A.. I'm sure we'll be the lone exception. Somehow.
Posted by: gorb   2010-02-09 12:56  

#5  Dear Venezuela,

Socialism has been tried in many places. It has never worked in any of them. The places that still cling to it are in terrible condition with poverty and shortages of basic necessities common.

Nothing improves people's lives like unleashing individual choice. And really, capitalism IS a sort of socialism in that though millions of individual choices, the greater good is served.
Posted by: crosspatch   2010-02-09 12:42  

#4  and Bill Ayers has been there a number of times cheerleading for Chavez

also Kevin Spacey and Spike Lee

Ed Asner and Harry Bellafonte and Naomi Campbell

and of course Jesse Jackson has made pro Chavez speeches, but only in the US
Posted by: lord garth   2010-02-09 11:19  

#3  Hollywood needs to send them TARP (Terrorist Abetting Revolutionary President) money.
Posted by: Jack Salami   2010-02-09 11:16  

#2  Are you listening Sean Penn and Danny Glover? The glitter is fast leaving paradise.
Posted by: JohnQC   2010-02-09 10:59  

#1  I'm thinkin they are already there.
Posted by: JohnQC   2010-02-09 10:58  

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