Che Guava
The Juicy Revolutionary
Still seems a far cry from hating america, IMHO, but then again I'm just a lowly canuck...
It's funny, if President Bush abolished term limits, restricted opposition media outlets for any reason, etc, etc the entire world would scream "dictator!" and "tyrant!" But in Latin America they scream "liberator!"
Yeah, ten years ago you guys would be defending Castro, and twenty years ago the Soviet Union in general, and 60 years ago Stalin. In ten years you will recognise that Chávez is/was a tyrant, but you will support a new guy.It seems any thread about Venezuela ends with this discussion... I'll abstain from repeating myself in future threads, but I'll answer here one last time.
Eh, I still don't see any endorsement of violence, just reporting the facts. Didn't a general strike happen? Was Venezuela not at the brink of an institutional collapse?A look back to the news published in the days before and after the April 11 coup will present a different scenario. Lets just use the short news from the BBC archives about the situation:
March 21st, 2002: the CTV has already set in motion the creation of a crisis situation, that would later be used as a justification to overthrow the government.
April 9th, 2002: a "general strike" where business leaders order their employees not to go to work. Original, no doubt.
April 12th, 2002: Chavez ousted, written off by the Venezuela's media...
April 12th, 2002: the media takes care of justifying the coup...
April 15th, 2002: the coup failed, suddenly a series of journalists seem to have forgotten what they wrote just 3 days earlier.
The news about the shootings were manipulated, as the release of videos after the days of the coup showed. But they were the main propaganda piece used to justify the coup.
Yes, and it is also more than junior officers. But if you gather enough support among them, you can win regardless of how the rest of the army feels. This is a lesson that any Latin American should know, but I guess Carmona didn't.Well, I guess Carmona and his co-conspirators found out that an army is more than just generals, then.
OK, so he did. It is very grave, of course, but ultimately what else could he do? The Congress is 100% controlled by Chávez (I repeat, 100%), and so is the Supreme Court. Without shutting them both down, he would not be able to rule, and thus there would be no point in a coup. A coup is anti-democratic by nature, but it can restore democracy.He didn't last long enough to carry it out, but he did order it. Here's the decree he had time to announce. Notice these points:
How many working democracies in the entire world have a Congress 100% controlled by the government? None.As for comparing the National Assembly of Venezuela with a "congress of North Korea", are there free elections in North Korea? No, I don't think so...
But we now know just how much you respect democracy: its good so long as the people vote for the candidates you like. Kind of like... the "Democratic" People's Republic of Korea?
It wouldn't have if Chávez was killed...Right, that was why his movement immediately collapsed when he was sequestered in 2002. Oh, wait...
Except that the license is always renewed, and the text is ambigous. Many argue that the license would only expire in many years.Those media outlets were not shut down even after the coup. The license of one television network was not renewed when it came up for revision. Not quite the same thing.
As for rule for life and rewriting the constitution, it doesn't look good, I'll grant you that, But it has been both legal and democratic, so far.
You, on the other hand, would "defend democracy" by overthrowing the legitimately elected president and government, and replacing it with a murderous dictator (Carmona doesn't qualify for the job because he wasn't murderous enough, I see).
Frankly, I'd take Chavez democracy over yours any day.
It's like Simon Bolivar is the now revered in the same way as Karl Marx, Ronald Reagan, and Jesus.
It's simple, you don't depose a tyrant working within the democratic framset. If you wanted to oust Hitler, would you organize a rally in Berlin or a plant a bomb in his desk?
(a point that you still have not addressed, the shootings by Chávez militiamen).
A ruler that arms militias to scare and kill the opposition loses the right to life in my book.
Uh, because there is no more democratic frameset in Venezuela?Please tell me, how can one be a tyrant while working within the democratic frameset? Can't you notice the absurd of your claims?
I could have brought up Castro, but than maybe someone would say "Castro is a hero!". At least we can all agree that Hitler was bad. And of course Hitler has the particularity, that you did not notice, of having risen to power within the democratic frameset. Of course he eventually created a brand new constitution (much like Chávez...), but anyway...He is not a tyrant - and note that he, unlike Hitler (you had to bring up the Hitler, we may as well close the thread), has run for and won several election with absolute majorities. Hitler was the one raised to power in the manner you suggest (the Carmona way).
I don't believe in fair election when Chávez militia go around harassing people... And I don't believe in democracy without opposition in Congress, with a packed SC, with rule-by-decree...There has been an attempt to oust him within the democratic frameset. It failed, within the democratic frameset. He is still president, within the democratic frameset. Now you propose to overthrow him by force, and dare accuse him of being a tyrant? Forgetting that to keep him or his movement barred from power you'd have to... put an end to democracy and install a tyranny!
Indeed. It's very easy to support a latin-american tyrannete while comfortably enjoying an european liberal democracy... Chávez looks good on distance, huh?There are none as blind as those who refuse to see. It’s pointless to continue arguing.
This is worth commenting, because it’s a recurrent tactic when overthrowing governments. Whoever plans to overthrow a ruler always needs an excuse, and producing propaganda accusing the government of arming militias and shooting opponents is an ever-popular tactic.
The claims made against Chavez during the coup were lies, and have been shown to be lies. In fact I don’t even have to address them, because I’m not the one making claims about armed militias killing the opposition. You made those claims, yours is the burden of proving them.
Any reasonably intelligent person would anyway know that a true tyrant in power doesn’t have to set up militias, he has the national army, police and secret services to do whatever dirty works he wants, in a far more competent way.
Later in the day, pro-Chavez gunmen shot randomly at a crowd of opposition supporters, killing one and injuring several others
Some 150,000 people rally in support of strike and oil protest. National Guard and pro-Chavez gunmen clash with protesters - more than 10 are killed and 110 injured.
So, uh, you'd rather keep spouting these indoctornated neoliberal mantras?
First of all, Chavez's economic policies are not far from Nordic ones...
Chavez's economic policies are not far from Nordic ones...
Heritage Foundation on Sweden said:Residents and non-residents may hold foreign exchange accounts. There are no controls on payments and transfers or repatriation of profits...
Heritage Foundation on Venezuela said:The government controls key sectors of the economy, including oil, petrochemicals, and much of the mining and aluminum industries. Expropriation is likely. The government controls foreign exchange and fixes the exchange rate. Special regulations exist for a range of transactions including foreign investment, remittances, foreign private debt, imports, exports, insurance and reinsurance, and the airline industry...
Heritage Foundation on Denmark said:Starting a business takes an average of five days, compared to the world average of 48 days. Obtaining a business license is very simple, and closing a business is easy. Transparent regulations are applied evenly and efficiently in most cases. The overall freedom to start, operate, and close a business is strongly protected by the national regulatory environment, giving the nation a powerful competitive advantage...
Heritage Foundation on Venezuela said:Starting a business takes an average of 141 days... Obtaining a business license can be difficult, and closing a business is very difficult. Complicated regulations are sometimes inconsistent, causing unreliability of interpretation. The overall freedom to start, operate, and close a business is seriously restricted by the national regulatory environment.
Heritage Foundation on Norway said:Private property is safe from expropriation. Contracts are secure, and the judiciary is of high quality.
Heritage Foundation on Venezuela said:Property rights are weakly protected. The judiciary is influenced by the executive, and the government routinely backs off from "inconvenient" contracts, particularly in the oil sector.
Heritage Foundation on Finland said:Corruption is perceived as almost nonexistent. Finland ranks 2nd out of 158 countries in Transparency International's Corruption Perceptions Index for 2005.
Heritage Foundation on Venezuela said:Corruption is perceived as widespread. Venezuela ranks 130th out of 158 countries in Transparency International's Corruption Perceptions Index for 2005.
So let's see here...
Chávez rules over a country where 100% of the Congress is controlled by the government. He wants to abolish term limits for president, but not for governor and mayor (because the last vestige of opposition in Venezuela is a couple of mayors and a governor). He has armed a militia that on different occasions has shot and killed oppositioners. He is shutting down all dissent on the media (RCTV is only a case, he routinely harasses Globovisión and the newspapers). His regime is one of the most corrupt in the world.
There is nothing good about the guy. Our resident Chávez lovers would never tolerate to live under his reign of terror, they only admire him by distance while enjoying the comforts and liberty of a bourgeouis democracy.
I'm still waiting for innonimatu to comment on my links about Chávez' gunmen shooting oppositioners, or Princeps backing his comments about how Chávez is a scandinavian-style democrat... I guess I'll have to wait forever.
Adebisi, let's have a little fun with this post, with information courteously provided by the Heritage Foundation.
Indeed. It's very easy to support a latin-american tyrannete while comfortably enjoying an european liberal democracy... Chávez looks good on distance, huh?
How short some people's memories are... let's refresh it! Two interesting links that show how well democracy works with Chávez:
http://www.pbs.org/frontlineworld/elections/venezuela/
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/country_profiles/1229348.stm
Then came the coup de grace. A Venevision camera crew managed, through an outstanding bit of bravado, to get actual images of some government supporters shooting down into Avenida Baralt from Llaguno Bridge (this "bridge" is really an overpass that crosses over Avenida Baralt.) The images were the only direct evidence of people shooting available that night. In the atmosphere of sheer confusion, it was not immediately evident that anyone was shooting in the other direction. The private TV stations repeated the footage again, and again and again, giving the impression that the opposition march had been ambushed by government supporters.
One of the gunmen was identified as Richard Peñalver, a pro-Chávez municipal council member in the district where I lived - in fact, an elected official. The footage showed him emptying his gun with glee towards the south of the bridge, the area where the opposition march had spent much of the afternoon. At the time, the footage seemed incredibly damning, and whatever support Chávez still enjoyed within the armed forces quickly crumbled.
Now, viewers of The Revolution will not be Televised know that as far as chavistas are concerned, the footage of Puente Llaguno was a blatant manipulation. Amateur video taken from a different angle and made public later showed no protesters on the southern part of Avenida Baralt while the chavistas fired.
The argument, presented as definitive on the film, is hardly enlightening. The film suggests, but does not quite say, that the opposition march had not yet reached Avenida Baralt at that point. It entirely glosses over the question of who shot the civilian marchers who were killed or wounded on the southern part of the avenue. Though witness statements suggest the Llaguno Gunmen only got their guns after the shooting had started, and were filmed shooting well into the gun battle, while the opposition marchers who died appear to have fallen in the first few minutes of the shootout, one must regard their official excuse - that it's okay because they were shooting at the opposition-led Metropolitan Police - as borderline nonsensical.
Do you also believe that N. Korea is a Republic? Do you think Saddam was really elected with 99% of the vote? Do you think elected officials choose the Supreme Leader of Iran?
There's a bridge in San Francisco I'll sell cheap...
I also have some beachfront property in Arizona you might be interested in...