Warning: VERY LONG POST
For the last two days I've been trying to write a post bitching on how Chavez and his protege Nicky Ripe managed to waste the biggest income boom in our recorded history: our second (and probably last) chance to break out of being what is known these days as a "Developing Country" (translation: THIRD WORLD BANANA REPUBLIC), and managed to make the "Democratic boys" (known is this country as the "Pacto de Punto Fijo" people) look austere and forward thinking (hint: they weren't, their incompetence was what brought Chavez to office).
Here (and to make it hurt more, data from the empire
) you can see the average yearly price of our oil since 1973 till 2013
The 1980s were terrible, starting in 1983 our economy went down the drain. However up till '86 the price of oil was relatively favorable (to us that is). In 1986 Opec discovered that reducing production to keep the price of oil high just helped Non-Opec oil producing countries to remain profitable. So, they stopped doing that stupidity and of course the price of oil dropped almost 50%. It's been said lately (making parallels with the current Russian Economic Disaster) that OPEC stopping their quota system to reduce production was the "coup de gräce" to the USSR. How much did the OPEC quota system did to keep us from collapsing as well ( as we did in 1989) is unknown to me. Don't know where to find the numbers, much less how to analyze them to reach a conclusion on that. However consider this (yes, a rehash of stuff I have said before):
Oil prices on 1989 were on the rebound. (50% over what they were in 1986) yet we found ourselves unable to pay our foreign obligations and support the country. That forced us to go to the IMF and beg for help. In order to lend us money the IMF required us to liberalize the economy, reduce subsidies, remove exchange control restrictions, raise taxes, allow the Central Bank autonomy to do its job, raise the price of gasoline (sounds familiar?). The 1989 riots supposedly were the direct consequence of the increase in the price of gasoline. The cost of that adjustment was the collapse of the "quasi-democratic" system.
I don't question the need for that adjustment. Nor do I have any sympathy for the old regime. Unfortunately, what rose to replace the old order was Chavez and his cronies. And they're much worse than what the "Democratic boys" have been,
How much worse? forget their bullshit Extreme Left Wing/Anti-West rhetoric, their courting of countries like Russia, China, Iran or Libya, their collusion with the Cuban Regime, if those things cause concern or irritate the US State department (probably not much, we're a speck of dust compared to Brazil, or Argentina, or even Chile, those are the Heavyweights of the region. Hell, our oil is so heavy you gringos use it for heating, and besides, it's just the portion you don't buy from Canada), it's really (speaking as a Venezuelan of course) not my main concern, DESPITE my sympathy for the US and my well known bias for Western Culture in general.
Just take a look at the price of oil in the 1998-2013 period.
We had the largest income boom in our history.
When our economy started to decline in 1983, it was because despite the price of oil, the quotas set in place to keep the price up didn't allow us to sell enough to sustain our economy. It was still OUR fault though, we had an economy that relied almost exclusively on the high oil prices to finance a string of incompetent left wing governments (starting mostly 1973 with
this son of a bitch, what a coincidence just at the start of the first price boom ).
What makes the current disaster much worse is not only the size of boom that was (once again) wasted, or the lost opportunities. Is that since 2007 our oil production has been declining steadily because Chavez & Co refused to invest in keeping our Oil production infrastructure updated and wasted a very important share of our revenues in his "Oil Diplomacy" for his "Latin American Integration" ambitions (which once again I must say, if THAT favors anyone, it favors Brazil and possibly Argentina, just like IMHO the EU in the end just mostly favors Germany and France). The rest went to his subsidies and creating a Bureaucracy that makes your US Federal Government look like a model of efficiency.
So, now where does that leave us:
Here.
Turns out that on monday, there was a pro-government rally to celebrate the 15 years of that 300 article hack job we call The Constitution. It was hastily "refocused" as a rally to protest the unfair sanctions the evil imperialist infidel gringo empire is apparently about to dump on our hard working patriotic socialist doo-gooders.
This is how the government media showed the people who attended the rallythis is (apparently) an aerial viewI don't know how true that is, but the traffic jams were rather light that day.....
In the rally he bitched about you gringos as usual. I couldn't find an English version of the speech on a reputable source, so I'll have to settle for the
spanish version from a local newspaper (including video) and an
english version elsewhere The highlight of the speech was Nicky saying that "They can shove their U.S. visas where they should be shoved, insolent Yankees!"and the assistants chanting "Arriba, Abajo, Los Yankees pa'l Carajo" (Fisher, THIS time Carajo is being used in a pejorative way
)
The really pathetic part was a a pledge Nicky made at the end, grappling a replica of the sword of Simon BolivarHere's the pledge
Juro por el espíritu inmortal de los indios,
de Guicaipuro,
por el espíritu inmortal de la resistencia indígena.
Juro por el ejemplo eterno de los líderes afrovenezolanos,
Andresote, José Leonardo Chirinos,
juro por el Negro Primero,
juro por los libertadores,
juro por Miranda, por José Félix Rivas, por Urdaneta, por Sucre,
juro por Ezequiel Zamora,
juro por los mártires, juro por Leonardo Ruiz Pineda,
juro por Roberto Valera, juro por Jorge Rodríguez,
juro por Robert Serra,
juro ante la espada inmortal de Simón Bolívar que no daremos descanso a nuestra alma,
ni reposo a nuestros brazos hasta ver surgir en Venezuela una patria llena de prosperidad,
una patria de paz, una patria socialista.
Juro por el ejemplo del comandante Hugo Chávez que trabajaré por la unión del pueblo,
que trabajaré por la unión cívico-militar
y que lograremos con el compriso más grande,
que este juramento se transforme en la gran victoria del año 2015, del año 2019;
en la gran victoria de la Patria.
Así lo juro, así lo cumpliremos.
¡Qué viva Bolívar!
¡Qué viva su espada inmortal!
¡Qué viva el pueblo de Venezuela!
¡Hasta la victoria siempre!
Here is my attempt to translate it:
I swear by the immortal spirit of the indians,
of Guicaipuro,
by immortal spirit of indigenous resistance,
I swear by the eternal example of the afrovenezuelan leaders,
Andresote, José Leonardo Chirinos,
I swear by Negro Primero,
I swear by the liberators,
I swear by Miranda, by José Félix Rivas, by Urdaneta, by Sucre,
I swear by Ezequiel Zamora,
I swear by the Martyrs, I swear by Leonardo Ruiz Pineda,
I swear by Roberto Valera, I swear by Jorge Rodríguez,
I swear by Robert Serra,
I swear before the immortal sword of Simon Bolivar that we will give our soul no rest,
nor relief to our limbs until we see in Venezuela the rise of a fatherland full of prosperity,
a fatherland of peace, a socialist fatherland.
I swear by the example of commander Hugo Chávez that I will work for the union of the people,
that I will work for the civilian-military union
and that we will accomplish with the greatest compromise,
that this pledge will become the great victory of 2015, of 2019,
the great victory of the fatherland.
So I swear, so we will deliver.
Long Live Bolivar!
Long Live his Immortal Sword!
Long Live the People of Venezuela!
To Victory! Forever!
After my attempt to translate that pile of gibberish, here's a glossary so you know who they were swearing by:
-
Guaicaipuro was a Native Indian Chieftain that tried to resist the Spaniards in the 16th Century, he was killed by them
- Andresote was a black/indigenous slave that escaped and became a rebel leader against the Spaniards and the Spanish equivalent of the East India Company during the 18th Century
- José Leonardo Chirinos was another Black/indigenous leader that tried to revolt against the Spaniards in the late 18th century
-
Negro Primero was the only Black Officer in Bolivar's army.
-
Francisco de Miranda,
José Felix Ribas,
Rafael Urdaneta and
Antonio José de Sucre were revolutionary leaders during the independence wars, Miranda was betrayed by Bolivar, Sucre was Bolivar's protege and became the second president of Bolivia once it became an independent country (Bolivar was the first).
-
Ezequiel Zamora was a general during OUR civil war (as far as I am concerned we spent almost all of the 19th century in a century long civil war, but that's just me
)
-
Leonardo Ruiz Pineda was a resistance leader murdered during the time of our last right-wing military dictatorship
- I don't know who the hell are Roberto Valera or Jorge Rodriguez if he refers to Jorge Rodriguez (the former Vice President) I don't know what merits he has. As or Roberto Valera he is either a Cuban musician or a Baseball Player.
- And Robert Serra was the Chavista leader that was murdered a couple of months ago.
SO, after the extremely long rant, all I have to say is "WHAT A CLOWN"