SciFiFisher wrote:So... they are screwing up the implementation of the Petro. You can admire their consistency I suppose.
Sigma_Orionis wrote:SciFiFisher wrote:So... they are screwing up the implementation of the Petro. You can admire their consistency I suppose.
Hopefully they'll panic now and start running for the exit. It would be the best thing that could happen to this country.
SciFiFisher wrote:Sigma_Orionis wrote:SciFiFisher wrote:So... they are screwing up the implementation of the Petro. You can admire their consistency I suppose.
Hopefully they'll panic now and start running for the exit. It would be the best thing that could happen to this country.
I will cross any number of appendages in the hopes that it will assist you.
Sigma_Orionis wrote:Apparently he thinks he can still Bullshit his way out of this.
Venezuela aims for crypto alchemy with new 'petro gold' token
Sean Walsh, founder of crypto-asset investment firm Redwood City Ventures, said it was difficult to reach conclusions about the petro gold without seeing specific details. But he said he had little interest in tokens backed by physical assets.
“Rather than buying a cryptocurrency backed by gold, I’d just go buy the gold,” said Walsh in a telephone interview. “Gold is a physical thing that you want to be able to hold in your hands, because that’s the point.”
grapes wrote:Sigma_Orionis wrote:Apparently he thinks he can still Bullshit his way out of this.
Venezuela aims for crypto alchemy with new 'petro gold' token
Petro gold?Sean Walsh, founder of crypto-asset investment firm Redwood City Ventures, said it was difficult to reach conclusions about the petro gold without seeing specific details. But he said he had little interest in tokens backed by physical assets.
“Rather than buying a cryptocurrency backed by gold, I’d just go buy the gold,” said Walsh in a telephone interview. “Gold is a physical thing that you want to be able to hold in your hands, because that’s the point.”
I'm thinking the logical next step would be the petro bolivar, so you can hold it in your hand, but it's not heavy.
“Well, unfortunately, I will not be able to go to Chile (…) I have a tour of Asia and I am going to fulfill my agenda in Asia, with several agreements, very important elements such as the Petro,” said the Venezuelan president in an interview with former Chilean presidential candidate Marco Enríquez-Ominami, which was broadcast on the Telesur channel.
With the petro, Venezuela has something new to sell. It has “pre-mined” 100m petros, all that will ever be created, promises the white paper. State television showed outdated personal computers supposedly poised to mine the new currency. The “pre-sale” brought $5bn, Mr Maduro claimed, without providing evidence. At the government’s reference price for oil of $60 a barrel, the total value of the new currency is $6bn (so, if Mr Maduro is telling the truth, almost all the petros have been pre-sold). That is a useful sum, but less than half the amount the country must pay to service its foreign debt this year. The United States Treasury has warned that investors who buy petros with dollars may be violating its sanctions. That makes the currency less useful as a sanctions-buster.
SciFiFisher wrote:And the fact that Venezuela is behind Somalia in happiness is mind boggling.
Sigma_Orionis wrote:Right now, this is the biggest crisis there has been in this country in over a century.
geonuc wrote:Sigma_Orionis wrote:Right now, this is the biggest crisis there has been in this country in over a century.
Do you predict armed revolution?
The recent batch of demotions and arrests within the Armed Forces has been so noisy that Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino López had to publicly refuse any calls to lead coups d’état, because he disagrees with them, because nobody can split the Armed Forces and because military uprisings “have no place in this century.” The minister claimed that the brass is satisfied with the country and with their obligations, that the Armed Forces is cohesive and that’s why he asked “desperados” to be at ease. Padrino López conditioned the possibility of opening a humanitarian channel to the lifting of sanctions, blaming food and medicine shortages on them.
SciFiFisher wrote:So... the rats are squirming, trying to figure a way out of the trap, they devised?
So instead of putting the ruble at risk, Russia encouraged its ally in Latin America to run the experiment on itself, the banker says. “Venezuela has nothing to lose. For them it’s the only chance.” Indeed, the value of the Venezuelan currency, the bolivar, has been decimated by official mismanagement and the impact of U.S. sanctions, which were imposed last year to punish Maduro for his deepening authoritarianism. The crisis has also made Maduro’s regime deeply dependent on Russia for loans and investments.
“So Russia made its stronghold here in Venezuela,” says Armando Armas, an opposition member of the nation’s parliament, the National Assembly, which has tried in vain to block the creation of the petro. “Now they are using Venezuela as a guinea pig for their experiment,” Armas tells TIME by phone from Caracas.
Well, imagine that.China would have no concern about abandoning Maduro as it did Mugabe when he was ousted, the source said, but does not expect China to take an active role in pushing him out.
“China looks at Venezuela as another Zimbabwe: a poor return on its investment,” he said.
Thumper wrote:Heard about a big fire at either a large jail or prison. Apparently started during an inmate uprising, many inmates perished. Then there were some nasty conflicts outside the facility as people heard about the tragedy and showed up trying to find out information about victims. Sounds awful. But the commentator admitted this would probably be just another blip on Maduro's record.
Sigma_Orionis wrote:I really REALLY have no tolerance for PSFs
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