Venezuelans take to streets for rival mass rallies
Source: AFP
Tens of thousands of supporters and opponents of Venezuela's government took to the streets of Caracas Saturday amid fears of more violence in the bitterly divided country.
The competing mass rallies in the Venezuela-- the second in days -- follow weeks of often bloody marches that have claimed at least nine lives and injured 140 others.
Heeding the call of opposition leader Henrique Capriles, governor of Miranda state and former presidential candidate, anti-government protesters massed near a shopping mall in the Caracas neighborhood of Sucre.
They were expected to demonstrate both in the capital and country-wide against armed groups accused of intimidating and even attacking demonstrators.
Read more: http://news.yahoo.com/venezuela-threatens-cut-off-fuel-protest-areas-205822959.html
jwirr
(39,215 posts)The U.S. has it's long intentionally intrusive nose in this and it's check book.
springchick
(137 posts)it appears that this is frustration towards the crumbling economy, high violent crime rate and the lack of the govt to address the problems.
Perseus
(4,341 posts)The reason the government doesn't address the problem is because they created the problem.
DeSwiss
(27,137 posts)Always.
fasttense
(17,301 posts)the US and their anti-socialist government fears are all over these protests against the current president.
Our tax dollars are supporting anti-government protesters. There is a line item in Obama's budget for support to opposition parties. And they are widely using that money to stir up upper middle class students.
Ok cyber stalkers, all of you, come get me.
Perseus
(4,341 posts)freshwest
(53,661 posts)DeSwiss
(27,137 posts)...don't produce ''facts'' just bodies.
WTFU
fasttense
(17,301 posts)You were the 1st to reply. You just can't help yourself, can you? Got to get your digs in and your post count up.
Get the rest of them to reply so I can get all their screen names .
Thanks
penultimate
(1,110 posts)and you're making political posts, and that people will not always agree with you, right?
springchick
(137 posts)there's a group of "us" that are dedicated to just attack any post of his/her on this subject.
dixiegrrrrl
(60,010 posts)EX500rider
(10,891 posts)"The current problems have more to do with the successes rather than the failures of Chavismo."
Wow, takes chutzpah to say that with a straight face..
Over 50% inflation, highest murder rate in South America by far, 10 TIMES the US rate, shortages of basic necessities and electricity and medicines...currency controls that limit you access to foreign currency, brain drain and capital flight...
And those are the successes? What the heck do the failures look like?
Coyotl
(15,262 posts)Tens of thousands is "I'm not impressed." But, I'm impressed with the way the wing-nut propagandistas are all up in arms and screaming for anarchy after losing two recent elections.
zeemike
(18,998 posts)They want that oil...the way they see it it is there oil money being distributed to the unwashed brown people and that is just an outrage.
Perseus
(4,341 posts)Do you even speak Spanish?
If you don't, then find a translator who can tell you what the people on this blog are saying, some of these people are from "El 23 de Enero", and I won't tell you what that is because if you are so knowledgeable then you must know what it is. If you speak Spanish then read it and become informed.
If you are a Chavista then I know I am wasting my time with you.
These are people from all social levels writing very well and with sense, without the hate just looking for solutions, the suffering of the people from Venezuela is not a joke, and the lack of support that Maduro and his regime have is what has them scared and why they prefer violence.
LINK:
http://www.panfletonegro.com/v/2014/02/17/sobre-el-23-de-enero/?fb_action_ids=10151936274156889&fb_action_types=og.likes&fb_source=other_multiline&action_object_map=[626204894101893]&action_type_map=[%22og.likes%22]&action_ref_map=[]
Zorra
(27,670 posts)the unrest.
"Heeding the call of opposition leader Henrique Capriles, governor of Miranda state and former presidential candidate, anti-government protesters massed near a shopping mall in the Caracas neighborhood of Sucre."
Perseus
(4,341 posts)Capriles has been against the protests, this started because in Merida students came out to have a peaceful protest, the regime incarcerated and tortured some of the students, so things got bigger.
Leopoldo Lopez became involved to give his support to the students who started this, if you like "ground root" movements, then this is it, these student were not incited by anyone, people are just fed up of the corruption, the insecurity and the lack of basic needs.
Venezuelans are scared to go out of their homes after 06:00pm because the criminals, although they operate 24/7, are in abundance at night. Most people have been robbed and many killed, there is no impunity. The government during the first years of Chavez armed these militia, and most of these people had criminal records. I am not making this up, people get killed there everyday by common criminals.
Hospitals do not have medicines, many doctors have fled the country, there is not enough food and basic needs in the supermarkets, no toilet paper, the electricity goes out almost everyday, the regime is extremely corrupt.
Do your homework and then make a decision of what you think the truth is, but make sure that you find the facts. The regime has put out some information out there to make it look like nothings is happening and they used pictures from other places to "prove" that the opposition is making things up, it is all a lie.
Everything Fidel Castro did to Cuba is what Chavez/Maduro have done to Venezuela, talk to anyone from Cuba who came to the USA, and the will confirm the symptoms are the same.
Anyway, you believe whatever you want to believe.
Zorra
(27,670 posts)Pretty soon there will be a full battalion of them.
EX500rider
(10,891 posts)Perseus
(4,341 posts)Total hypocrisy and false rhetoric, this is how Chavez daughters and friends live:
Se picó porque le dijeron burguesita en #DebateCNN y tiene sus FOTOS en Ferraris y yates
febrero 21, 2014 3:37 pmPublicado en: Curiosidades, Titulares
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La estudiante bolivariana María Gabriela Pulido se molestó con sus compañeros opositores durante el debate que CNN en Español realizó en la noche de este jueves por haberla llamado burguesita.
Como todo joven que gusta sacarse fotografías cuando se acerca a la dolce vita, María Gabriela también tiene las suyas y en el mundo web, todo lo que se comparte se hace público.
Aquí la vemos viajando en peñeros fashion, montada en la maleta de una flamante Ferrari y, como no, viajando fuera del país.
Conocer no es un delito, que te digan burguesito tampoco, ¿o sí?
Delito es llamar al ataque fulminante y que mueran venezolanos, y nada.
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Not sure that the photo can be copied, just go to Facebook and find "María Gabriela Pulido"