International Venezuela, The Socialist Dystopia, v4: Legislative election leaves Venezuela in political standoff

To Survive, Venezuela’s Leader Gives Up Decades of Control Over Oil
Faced with a severe economic crisis, the country’s leader, Nicolás Maduro, is letting foreign firms take over daily operations of its oil fields. It’s a break with core tenets of his socialist revolution.
By Anatoly Kurmanaev and Clifford Krauss | Feb. 8, 2020
https://www.nytimes.com/by/clifford-krauss
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CARACAS, Venezuela — After decades of dominating its oil industry, the Venezuelan government is quietly surrendering control to foreign companies in a desperate bid to keep the economy afloat and hold on to power.

The opening is a startling reversal for Venezuela, breaking decades of state command over its crude reserves, the world’s biggest.

The government’s power and legitimacy has always rested on its ability to control its oil fields — the backbone of the country’s economy — and use their profits for the benefit of its people.

But the nation’s authoritarian leader, Nicolás Maduro, in his struggle to retain his grip over a country in its seventh year of a crippling economic crisis, is giving up policies that once were central to its socialist-inspired revolution.

Under Venezuelan law, the state-run oil company must be the principal stakeholder in all major oil projects. But as that company, Petróleos de Venezuela, or Pdvsa, unravels — under the weight of American sanctions, years of gross mismanagement and corruption — the work is unofficially being picked up by its foreign partners.

Private companies are pumping crude, arranging exports, paying workers, buying equipment and even hiring security squads to protect their operations in a collapsing countryside, according to managers and oil consultants working on the country’s energy projects.

In effect, a stealth privatization is taking place, said Rafael Ramírez, who ran Venezuela’s oil industry for more than a decade before breaking with Mr. Maduro in 2017, in a video address this week.

“Today, Pdvsa doesn’t manage our oil industry, Venezuelans don’t manage it,” said Mr. Ramírez. “In the middle of the chaos generated by the worst economic crisis suffered by the country in its history, Maduro is taking actions to cede, transfer and hand over oil operations to private capital.”

Pdvsa did not respond to requests for comment on its recent concessions to private partners.

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The haphazard changes to the oil sector, which have accelerated in recent months, are remaking the oil industry in a nation whose assertive energy policies had, since the 1950s, served as an example to developing countries of how to take control of natural resources.

And they are a stark retreat from the vision of Hugo Chávez, who was Mr. Maduro’s mentor and predecessor. Mr. Chávez nationalized in 2007 the giant holdings of Exxon Mobil and ConocoPhillips and packed Pdvsa’s leadership ranks with political allies dedicated to his socialist-inspired “Bolivarian revolution.”

But Mr. Maduro’s transformation of Venezuela’s oil industry has stemmed the collapse triggered by an American embargo. Sanctions imposed in January 2019 had wiped out about a third of Venezuela’s oil production, bringing it down at one point to the lowest level since the 1940s, according to data from the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries.

Oil production now is still less than a third of the total in 1998, when Mr. Chávez took power. By late 2019, Venezuela had stabilized exports at about a million barrels per day, according to Bloomberg’s tanker tracking data.

The dribble of oil exports has provided Mr. Maduro with foreign revenue at the most critical moment of the country’s economic crisis, allowing him to adjust to sanctions and consolidate his rule.

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In the country’s main oil export hub, José, key processing plants and piers are slowly coming to life after near total paralysis in the summer, when Pdvsa was cut off from the global financial system and struggling to cope without its biggest market, the United States, according to shipping agents and oil managers.

Manuel Quevedo, a National Guard general with no known oil experience who was appointed by Mr. Maduro to head Pdvsa.

General Quevedo broke with the nationalist rhetoric of his predecessors to hand over operational control of joint oil projects to partners that include Chevron, Russia’s state-run company, Rosneft, some European and Chinese companies and groups of Venezuelan magnates.

“With Pdvsa in crisis mode, they are increasingly handing operational responsibilities and decisions over to the partners,” said Lisa Viscidi, a specialist in Latin American energy issues at Inter-American Dialogue, a Washington-based research group.

The concessions are gradually reducing Pdvsa to little more than a holding company collecting the state’s share of oil field revenues, with most of financial and strategic decisions taken by private partners.

This is a startling decline from just a decade ago, when Pdvsa was the pride of Venezuela and the cornerstone of its economy.

Until the start of the economic crisis in 2013, the company was the source of virtually all of Venezuela’s hard currency. It was also its biggest employer and penetrated all aspects of life in the country, running everything from supermarkets to parks.

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Workers at the state-run oil company, Pdvsa, salute Nicolás Maduro in 2013 after he took office, and before the country sank into crisis​


Today, oil fields wholly owned by Pdvsa account for less than half of the nation’s remaining oil production, and their output continues to plummet.

Chevron has become the single largest foreign producer of oil in Venezuela, and a crucial part of the country’s stabilization over the past few months.

Its four joint ventures in the country are pumping a gross total of about 160,000 barrels per day, according to two industry sources familiar with the company’s projects, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to speak publicly.

Chevron quickly responded to the impact of American sanctions — such as the loss of American light oil that was used to blend with heavy Venezuelan crude to help it move through pipelines — by switching to Venezuelan light oil. By September, the company was able to restart its Petropiar heavy oil processing plant, which has formed the backbone of Venezuela’s oil export recovery.

A senior official with the Trump administration said the activities of Chevron and other foreign oil companies in Venezuela “are clearly of concern.”

But the U.S. government has given Chevron exemptions from sanctions, as recently as last month. “If Chevron is forced to leave Venezuela, non-United States companies will fill the void and oil production will continue,” said Ray Fohr, a company spokesman.

On the export side, Pdvsa’s biggest ally has been Russia’s Rosneft, which over the past year has grown to sell about two-thirds of Venezuela’s oil. Rosneft has quickly replaced Pdvsa’s American sales routes by diverting its oil to Asia, often obscuring the cargo’s source and destination to bypass sanctions, according to companies that monitor tanker traffic.

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From left, Manuel Quevedo, Venezuela’s oil minister, with the CEO of Russian-owned Rosneft, Igor Sechin, and a Venezuelan minister, Tareck El Aissami.​


Barred from the global financial system, Pdvsa has also been forced to cede control to foreign partners in organizing exports, which goes against the country’s energy laws. Over the past few months, Chevron, Rosneft and Italy’s Eni have all directly exported Venezuelan crude.

Pdvsa’s opening of exports — oil cargoes worth millions of dollars — to anyone who can bypass sanctions to line up a vessel, insurance and a customer for the crude has even created a small cottage industry among Venezuela’s elite.

Now, the only thing that matters is that oil continues to flow, said one partner at a joint oil venture, as he scanned his phone, viewing the state company’s cargo offers.

“The historical struggle for resource sovereignty is being sacrificed for operational expediency,” said Antero Alvarado, an energy consultant in Caracas.

Venezuela’s new oil production has allowed the country to import essentials like food, medicine and fuel to keep the country running.

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Potato farmers at work. Gasoline shortages have forced farmers to set aside machinery and plant and harvest manually​


And there are indications that Mr. Maduro’s government wants to take the underhand liberalization further, even rolling back the watershed nationalization of the oil industry that took place in the 1970s.

A group of lawmakers installed at the head of the National Assembly by Mr. Maduro in January — amid an international outcry — has proposed changing energy laws to allow greater private investment.

“In these times of declining output, we have to give space to a national proposal that, first of all, shall give private capital greater participation in exploration, production and marketing of oil,” Leandro Domínguez, a lawmaker, said in a statement.

Mr. Domínguez’s proposal is not recognized by the United States and most European and Latin American countries, who continue to support a rival, opposition-led congressional leadership. The opposition lawmakers oppose any changes to energy laws under Mr. Maduro, creating a legal limbo for foreign oil companies.

Despite the recent changes, there are many reasons to believe Venezuela’s best days as an oil superpower are over, according to Amy Myers Jaffe, an oil expert at the Council on Foreign Relations, and other experts.

Venezuela could gradually recover production to 2.6 million barrels a day over 10 years, but only with investments of over $200 billion, according to projections by IPD Latin America, a consulting firm.

At a time when many oil companies are struggling with declining profits, executives are looking for cheaper and cleaner sources of oil. Even if a political settlement eventually lifts sanctions, Venezuela’s dirty oil, laden with sulfur and other impurities, may find far fewer investors.

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/02/08/world/americas/venezuela-oil-maduro.html
 
Too bad Trump failed miserably here. Winning?
 
This move, while needed to try and save what power the government has left, isn't going to be enough to fix the problems. Chavez, followed by Maduro, ran a successful and prosperous country into the ground through tinpot dictatorship actions. What sucks is that people still think Maduro and his party can bring the country back on course when the past few years have shown otherwise.

Also, CIA caused plants to overgrow their power line towers and neglect the needed repairs. Because reasons.
 
Long lines, confusion as Venezuela sells Iranian fuel under new price system
Sarah Kinosian | June 1, 2020



CARACAS (Reuters) - Venezuela on Monday launched a fuel pricing system that largely rolls back decades of heavy subsidies, creating long lines and leaving drivers confused as the government seeks to end chronic shortages with gasoline imports from Iran.

Cheap fuel was for decades considered a birthright in the South American oil producing nation, but service stations have run dry in recent months due to Venezuela’s dysfunctional refineries and U.S. sanctions meant to force President Nicolas Maduro from power.

Defying U.S. threats, Iran sent a flotilla of five tankers of fuel to Venezuela, which arrived last week, and Tehran said on Monday it would send more if requested by Caracas.

Maduro on Sunday created a two-tiered system in which drivers can buy up to 120 liters per month in local currency for the equivalent of $0.02 per liter, but have to pay $0.50 per liter above that amount.

The plan’s rollout confused workers and consumers across the country.

By 9 a.m. several stations in Caracas remained closed as staff and security forces meant to oversee the distribution awaited instructions from state-run oil company Petroleos de Venezuela [PDVSA.UL], known as PDVSA.

“We do have gasoline, but it is unclear if we are selling at subsidized (price) or dollarized (price),” said Jefferson Suarez, a military official managing pump lines at a station in eastern Caracas. “PDVSA workers have not shown up yet to explain, and I don’t have any idea what is going on.”

Outside Caracas, the start was even rockier. In the western border state of Tachira, many stations never opened. In many places, including the western cities of Barquisimeto and Maracaibo, stations quickly ran out of the subsidized gasoline.

PDVSA President Asdrubal Chavez acknowledged there were “still things we need to fix in this process.”

“We ask our people for a little bit of patience as we correct these small details,” Chavez, named interim PDVSA president last month, told state television.

BOLIVARS OR DOLLARS?

Payment for subsidized fuel, offered in rations of 30 liters per vehicle at most of Venezuela’s 1,800 stations, was complicated by malfunctioning payment machines and a dearth of local currency, forcing some stations to charge in dollars - a practice not authorized by authorities.

Many stations required an identification card and bank account to purchase fuel at the subsidized rate, while others required vehicles to be registered in the ‘Fatherland System,’ a database the government uses to administer welfare benefits.

After an initial 90-day introductory period, motorists wishing to benefit from the subsidy must pay with a 'Fatherland Card' affiliated with the system. Rights groups have raised concerns here the government uses the cards to track citizens' behavior as a means of social control.

Lines snaked around blocks at many stations in Caracas, even at those offering more expensive gasoline in dollars.

“Better to pay them officially at the gas station instead of pay whatever corrupt government officials decide on the black market,” said Julio Aponte, 36, a motorcycle delivery driver.

Scarcity has encouraged a black market forcing people to pay at least $2 per liter.

PDVSA did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Chavez said on Monday the new system would help combat “contraband” of fuel.

Others, while thankful gasoline has arrived, are concerned about how they would pay once they pass their quota.

“It’s a chain and everything is going to get more expensive,” said Julio Arrivillaga, 51, a lawyer. “With subsidies it is OK, but I cannot afford $0.50 a liter on my salary of less than $10 a month.”

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...ian-fuel-under-new-price-system-idUSKBN2383HX
 
Venezuela, the Oil-Rich Nation without Fuel
Years of economic mismanagement and corruption have combined with a poorly designed and inefficient system to create an unprecedented crisis.
By Jorge Jraissati | June 3, 2020



There are just a handful of countries as blessed as Venezuela. It has the largest oil reserves of any country on Earth. It has abundant reserves of natural gas, coal, timber, and gold. And as if this weren’t enough, it also has miles of fertile land and an ideal geographical location to export all of its blessings. Yet, there is a popular joke around here that says: “Why was God so generous to us? He gave us everything, even perfect weather, and beautiful beaches. Well, because he also gave us our politicians and a society that has not been capable of taking care of its nation.”

Personally, I have always found this “joke” dangerously misleading, because it implies that Venezuela is a rich country in the first place. Countries are not rich because of their natural resources. Developed nations are rich because they have dynamic economies, with innovative private sectors, an impressive stock of human capital, and institutions that incentivize people to become responsible and productive citizens — plus governments willing to complement the market by providing infrastructure, collective security, a well-functioning educational system, and other public goods that are essential for economic development. In Venezuela, unfortunately, we have neither markets nor a well-designed and efficient public sector. This, rather than the gross mismanagement of our natural resources, is the reason we are undeveloped.

One need not look far for the proof. This year, Venezuela officially became the first resource-rich nation without fuel, in a crisis that has paralyzed the country like never before. Currently, fuel can only be procured on the black market, at a staggering price of nine dollars a gallon. This would be a worrisome situation for any country. But Venezuela’s minimum wage is less than five dollars a month, meaning virtually no Venezuelans can afford fuel. It’s the latest indignity in a years-long political crisis that has seen the country grow accustomed to daily power blackouts, an unreliable water supply, and chronic shortages of food and medicine.

According to the illegitimate Venezuelan government of Nicolas Maduro, Venezuelans should blame the United States for the fuel crisis. On repeated occasions, Maduro and his allies have declared that the United States’ financial sanctions have dramatically compromised Venezuela’s finances. Similarly, they say that sanctions have also blocked them from importing gasoline from abroad. This is an argument that has been used in the past to excuse other shortages. It ignores the fact that Venezuelans have been experiencing such shortages since 2013, long before the United States government even began talking about Venezuela.

To solve its fuel issue, the Maduro regime is partnering with another sanctioned nation. Just a couple of days ago, the Venezuelan government “welcomed” five Iranian vessels that sailed from the other side of the world just to bring about 1.5 million barrels of fuel to the country. This is an unholy alliance that the United States initially allowed but that it is now monitoring “with concern,” according to the head of the U.S. Military’s Southern Command, Admiral Craig Faller.

Washington’s “concern” is well-warranted, because Iran is not known for its geopolitical altruism; it usually has an ulterior motive for such actions. One hypothesis is that Tehran has designs on taking control of Venezuela’s oil industry, as it has already gained control of “El Palito,” the biggest refinery in the country. This would fit with Venezuela’s current Soviet-style “liberalization.” The Russians and Chinese are already operating in the Venezuelan oil industry. Perhaps Maduro has now added Iran into the mix.

Will the Iranian shipment solve Venezuela’s fuel crisis? Of course not. Iran’s 1.5 million barrels of gasoline will not last for long. If Venezuela maintains its current rationing system, which only supplies gas to officials, doctors, and privileged individuals, the shipment will be used up in 50 days. If the country attempts a return to the pre-rationing status quo, distributing the fuel more widely, it will last about two weeks. In both scenarios, the chronic Venezuelan shortage of fuel will continue after a brief interlude, and the Venezuelan economy will remain comatose.

The United States’ financial sanctions are not to blame for these intractable problems. The sanctions certainly decimated the finances of the Venezuelan regime, but they did not create this mess. Venezuela — with, again, the largest oil reserves on Earth — should be able to produce enough fuel not only for itself but also for regional export. Pre-sanctions, during the Hugo Chavez regime that lasted from 1998 to 2013, the oil revenues of the Venezuelan government exceeded 800 billion dollars. This is a staggering influx of capital for any developing nation of Venezuela’s size. Should we blame the United States for the mismanagement of those revenues also?

No. Instead, all roads lead to Nicolas Maduro, the corrupt elite that props him up, and the socialist economic system he inherited from Chavez and has done nothing to jettison. Venezuelans are now paying the price of years of corruption in their oil industry. Unless they find a way to achieve political change, the country will continue imploding, its migratory crisis will continue destabilizing Latin America, and its people, over 90 percent of whom already live in poverty, will continue to see their standard of living decline.

https://www.nationalreview.com/2020...c-mismanagement-oil-rich-nation-without-fuel/
 
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82 years and counting, that's how many years bolivarianism has costed Venezuela, if they keep going they may even go lower.
 
Control of Venezuelan gold held in London cast into doubt
By SCOTT SMITH | October 5, 2020​


A British court on Monday threw into question who controls nearly $2 billion in Venezuelan gold stowed in a London bank vault amid a power struggle between President Nicolás Maduro and his leading rival.

The appeals court ruling set aside a British judge’s earlier decision granting control of the bullion to U.S.-backed opposition leader Juan Guaidó.

Britain recognizes Guaidó as Venezuela’s legitimate leader, while also holding diplomatic ties with Maduro. The appeals court has ordered a deeper investigation into the matter before either side is given access to the gold inside the Bank of England.

Maduro’s government has demanded the gold, saying it will transfer some proceeds from its sale to the United Nations Development Program for supplies to battle the coronavirus pandemic.

But the central bank for the United Kingdom had refused to hand it over to his government and a judge in July sided with Guaidó, who contends Maduro’s government is illegitimate and corrupt. Opposition leaders say the money would never reach patients fighting for life in Venezuela’s broken hospitals.

Sarosh Zaiwalla, an attorney who represents Venezuela’s Central Bank controlled by Maduro, praised Monday’s decision giving the case further consideration.

The dispute hinges on the British stance toward Venezuela, a country in economic and political crisis.

The U.K. recognizes the claim to the Venezuelan presidency of Guaidó, who heads the congress, as do the United States and dozens of other countries. Guaidó proclaimed himself the interim president in early 2019, months after Maduro declared victory in an election that his critics say was rigged in his favor.

Maduro, however, maintains the support of key allies, including Russia, China, Iran, Turkey and Cuba as well as the Venezuelan military.

Despite its support for Guaidó, the British government has not granted diplomatic credentials to Vanessa Neumann, the envoy that Guaidó has named ambassador to the U.K.

Maduro’s ambassador is recognized by the British government and has control of the Venezuelan Embassy in London, while the British ambassador remains in Caracas.

Neumann on Monday minimized the setback, saying that the appeals court asked for clarification from the judge who had already ruled in Guaidó’s favor.

“What remains clear is that the British Court is not yet going to hand over the gold that belongs to Venezuelans to the Maduro regime,” Neumann said in a call with reporters.

Enthusiasm has been fading at home in Venezuela for Guaidó. He has been unable to budge Maduro from power despite pressure that has included stiff U.S. sanctions against Venezuela.

https://apnews.com/article/london-venezuela-archive-united-kingdom-8aed97a3890f7a2cd7ffe09a71b6b050
 
Venezuela's Cardon refinery halts gasoline production, workers say
October 17, 2020​


CARACAS, Oct 17 (Reuters) - The catalytic cracker at Venezuela’s Cardon refinery, key to gasoline production, was halted on Friday due to equipment failure, two union leaders and two workers said.

Gasoline shortages persist across the OPEC nation, as U.S. sanctions on state oil company Petroleos de Venezuela have exacerbated problems caused by years of underinvestment and lack of maintenance at its refineries.

The shortages have led to snaking, sometimes days-long lines outside PDVSA gas stations. Together with unreliable water, power, and cooking gas supplies, the shortages have prompted a new wave of protests, particularly in Venezuela’s near-abandoned interior, where they have been more acute.

The new incident leaves the country without gasoline production after a fire affected the El Palito refinery’s cracking unit on October 9.

PDVSA has not commented on that incident or the re-start of the plant, but sources familiar with the issue said repairs would take about three weeks.

Union leader Ivan Freites told Reuters on Saturday the problem could be fixed within a few hours but they did not yet have the spare parts. “We estimate that it should take about three days with the catalytic,” he added.

PDVSA did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Another union leader, Eudis Girot, explained there were problems with the wet gas compressor, cooling fans and light unit.

“More catalyst was burned than gasoline produced,” he added.

Cardon’s fluid catalytic cracking (FCC) unit in the western state of Falcon was producing around 25,000 bpd of gasoline. Cardon has a 310,000 bpd capacity and, together with neighboring Amuay refinery, forms the Paraguana Refining Center (CRP), the country’s largest refining complex.

Recently three Iranian tankers unloaded some 820,000 barrels of gasoline to the country. The flotilla was the second group of fuel tankers Iran has sent this year to Venezuela.

https://www.reuters.com/article/ven...gasoline-production-workers-say-idUSL1N2H808P
 
Nearly 75% of residents in Venezuela's capital eat less than in 2019

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CARACAS (Reuters) - Some 75% of residents in Venezuela's capital Caracas eat less food than they did in December 2019, according to a survey released on Wednesday by opposition legislators, signaling that the COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated an existing hunger problem.

The government of President Nicolas Maduro in March created a strict quarantine that shuttered most businesses for months, though authorities have now allowed some economic activities during alternate weeks. The country has reported over 700 deaths and 87,000 infections from COVID-19.

The effects of the pandemic and restrictions have been much more pronounced in Venezuela than in other countries due to a lack of government support, said legislator Jose Guerra during a virtual news conference.

"In the case of Venezuela it is more acute... precisely because of the absence of complementary measures," said Guerra, of opposition party First Justice, which organized the survey.

The survey found that 73.9% of people had reduced consumption of beef and chicken, while 82.3% said their income was insufficient to buy food for their family.

"If that happens in the capital, which (the government) has tried to exempt from all the problems... what is left of the rest of the country?" said legislator Leonardo Regnault.

https://news.yahoo.com/nearly-75-residents-venezuelas-capital-235023472.html
 
Venezuela continues its spiral further down. Hope the people there are eventually able to find a government that cares about them.
 
Nearly 75% of residents in Venezuela's capital eat less than in 2019

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CARACAS (Reuters) - Some 75% of residents in Venezuela's capital Caracas eat less food than they did in December 2019, according to a survey released on Wednesday by opposition legislators, signaling that the COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated an existing hunger problem.

The government of President Nicolas Maduro in March created a strict quarantine that shuttered most businesses for months, though authorities have now allowed some economic activities during alternate weeks. The country has reported over 700 deaths and 87,000 infections from COVID-19.

The effects of the pandemic and restrictions have been much more pronounced in Venezuela than in other countries due to a lack of government support, said legislator Jose Guerra during a virtual news conference.

"In the case of Venezuela it is more acute... precisely because of the absence of complementary measures," said Guerra, of opposition party First Justice, which organized the survey.

The survey found that 73.9% of people had reduced consumption of beef and chicken, while 82.3% said their income was insufficient to buy food for their family.

"If that happens in the capital, which (the government) has tried to exempt from all the problems... what is left of the rest of the country?" said legislator Leonardo Regnault.

https://news.yahoo.com/nearly-75-residents-venezuelas-capital-235023472.html

Venezuela is the perfect example of how socialism is sold to people who think it’s going to improve their lives. Boy howdy we’re they wrong..
 
Maybe the people of Venezuela will have learned a valuable lesson about the panacea promised by socialism and its proponents and deal with them accordingly.
 
When Venezuela goes into a hard famine, I wonder if the leadership will block international aid. The people at the land borders of Venezuela will find reprieve, but the interior and those on the coastal border are probably going to die at high rates.
 
When Venezuela goes into a hard famine, I wonder if the leadership will block international aid. The people at the land borders of Venezuela will find reprieve, but the interior and those on the coastal border are probably going to die at high rates.

They will because in Venezuela in leadership they do not want to open their eyes.

They know things are bad but they do not want to focus on it. Chavez was the exact same. Since 2007 there was a lack of milk in stores. I lived there, I remember that you had to bride supermarkets to hold milk for you.

Today the problem just got so big they couldn't hide it anymore.

In all fairness as a Venezuelan opposition supporter, the opposition is guilty of ruining the country as well. They do deserve less blame than Chavez and Maduro but they also saw these problems coming. And instead of fixing it, they played the blame game.

Now living outside Venezuela honestly I believe Capriles was the only one who had a decent plan.

Sorry to rant.
 
"Not real socialism"
"Something something American influence, something something capitalism."
"At least they have universal healthcare"
 
They already had a fight over aid. Some got in, some got burned on the border and some turned away.
 
They will because in Venezuela in leadership they do not want to open their eyes.

They know things are bad but they do not want to focus on it. Chavez was the exact same. Since 2007 there was a lack of milk in stores. I lived there, I remember that you had to bride supermarkets to hold milk for you.

Today the problem just got so big they couldn't hide it anymore.

In all fairness as a Venezuelan opposition supporter, the opposition is guilty of ruining the country as well. They do deserve less blame than Chavez and Maduro but they also saw these problems coming. And instead of fixing it, they played the blame game.

Now living outside Venezuela honestly I believe Capriles was the only one who had a decent plan.

Sorry to rant.
You say they don’t want to open their eyes, I think what you mean is that they don’t care.

They have too much blood on their hands to risk opening up to the outside world and showing weakness.
 
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