cid wrote:"...aporrea..." -- isn't there a new medicine for that?
Sure there is, the commercial name is B-61.
Here you can see a simulation of how it works.
cid wrote:"...aporrea..." -- isn't there a new medicine for that?
Sigma_Orionis wrote:According to Aporrea.org (in Spanish) the CIA bribed the "bodyguard" so he'd defect.....
SciFiFisher wrote:Sigma_Orionis wrote:According to Aporrea.org (in Spanish) the CIA bribed the "bodyguard" so he'd defect.....
Of course they did. They probably promised him blue jeans, Jack Daniels Black Label, and free trips to the strip bars.
Sigma_Orionis wrote:SciFiFisher wrote:Sigma_Orionis wrote:According to Aporrea.org (in Spanish) the CIA bribed the "bodyguard" so he'd defect.....
Of course they did. They probably promised him blue jeans, Jack Daniels Black Label, and free trips to the strip bars.
Jack Daniels Black Label? Doubtful bub, we don't drink "American Whiskey" here in Bananaland, Johnny Walker Royal Salute is more likely
code monkey wrote:bi, sigma. fisher was expressing concern. btw, i've been wondering. is the word 'gringo' considered to be an insult? if so, how insulting?
Mr. Cabello did say, however, that last June he noticed that Mr. Salazar no longer would look him in the face and so he had him transferred.
“He deserted and decided to leave Venezuela and turn over his dignity to the American imperialists,” Mr. Cabello said, adding, “This is part of the infamy, of the calumnies, the war that all of us comrades who are part of the revolution have been subject to.”
He went on to question whether Mr. Salazar might have somehow been involved in the death of Mr. Chávez, who had terminal cancer. Mr. Maduro has previously suggested that Mr. Chávez’s illness might have been induced by enemies, saying that the United States government might have developed the capability to use cancer as a weapon.
The public is aware of the police murders via media and talk on the street, but sympathy does not run deep because of disgust at well-known corruption and crime within police ranks.
“In the U.S., if one policeman is killed, there is an outcry. Here, no-one raises a voice to support policemen,” said Jackeline Sandoval, a former police lawyer and public prosecutor who heads Fundepro. “If there’s no security for police, what does that say for the rest of us?”
Sigma_Orionis wrote:One more thing about the term "Gringo", WHY do we use it? Well, as you know, most of the world (including yourselves) refers to the US as "America". Collectively (I mean most of the region), we were never too happy with that. It's about the only piece of Latin American Insecurity I agree with. So, obviously we NEVER refer to people from the US as "Americans", that's why we tend to use Gringo.
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