Venezuela Coverage Takes Us Back to Golden Age of Lying About Latin America
FEBRUARY 22, 2019
Venezuela Coverage Takes Us Back to Golden Age of Lying About Latin America
MARK COOK
Venezuelan pharmacy at a time when Time (5/19/16) was telling readers, Basic medicines
like aspirin are nowhere to be found in Venezuela.
I was sitting in my apartment in Caracas, Venezuela, reading the online edition of Time magazine (5/19/16), which carried a report that there was not even something as basic as aspirin to be found anywhere in Venezuela: Basic medicines like aspirin are nowhere to be found.
I walked out of the apartment to the nearest pharmacy, four blocks away, where I found plenty of aspirin, as well as acetaminophen (generic Tylenol) and ibuprofen (generic Advil), in a well-stocked pharmacy with a knowledgeable professional staff that would be the envy of any US drugstore.
A few days after the Time story, CNBC (6/22/16) carried a claim that there was no acetaminophen to be found anywhere, either: Basic things like Tylenol arent even available. That must have taken the Pfizer Corporation by surprise, since it was their Venezuelan subsidiary, Pfizer Venezuela SA, which produced the acetaminophen I purchased. (Neither Time writer Ian Bremer nor CNBC commentator Richard Washington was in Venezuela, and there was no evidence offered that either of them had ever been there.)
I purchased all three products, plus cough syrup and other over-the-counter medications, because I doubted that anyone in the United States would believe me if I couldnt produce the medications in their packages.
More:
https://fair.org/home/venezuela-coverage-takes-us-back-to-golden-age-of-lying-about-latin-america/