Authorities say delays in several initiatives designed to boost electricity output are partly to blame. But they also have suggested that government foes have sabotaged the grid
Sigma_Orionis wrote:Ahhh, it hit the news:
Blackouts hit nearly half of Venezuela
And of course...Authorities say delays in several initiatives designed to boost electricity output are partly to blame. But they also have suggested that government foes have sabotaged the grid
cid wrote:RE: your recent postings...
...keep the low profile, sport, lest ye become a headline yerself.
All available protuberances crossed in yer general direction...
SciFiFisher wrote:My friend you would make a great psychic!
Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro blamed the opposition for "sabotage" to power transmission lines.
The Venezuelan government has announced the creation of a security unit to defend the country's electrical system, a day after a blackout that affected 70% of the country.
One woman has told the Associated Press news agency she did not believe "this tale about sabotage".
"We all know who is to blame,'' said Adriana Montoya, a housewife who said she was stuck for hours in traffic jams that formed as traffic lights went dark in Caracas, which lost power for five hours on Tuesday.
Sigma_Orionis wrote:...If this lady disappears I'll be on the next boat to Miami pretending to be a Cuban Refugee....
But ever since Mr. Maduro was elected by a narrow margin in April to replace Mr. Chávez, his mentor, he has cranked the discourse of conspiracy to an ever higher pitch, darkly warning of plots that seem to lurk around nearly every corner, aimed at killing him, destroying the economy or wrecking Mr. Chávez’s socialist-inspired revolution.
Few people are ever arrested and none have been convicted of any of the schemes Mr. Maduro has warned of in recent months.
Still, he makes it clear who he holds responsible: his political opposition and the United States, which he paints as an imperial enemy bent on subjugating Venezuela.
He also claimed to have information of a meeting in the White House in late July in which officials from the State Department, the National Security Agency, the C.I.A. and the Pentagon came up with a plan called “Total Collapse” intended to destabilize Venezuela.
Sigma_Orionis wrote:He also claimed to have information of a meeting in the White House in late July in which officials from the State Department, the National Security Agency, the C.I.A. and the Pentagon came up with a plan called “Total Collapse” intended to destabilize Venezuela. See? it's all your fault, you damned Imperialist Gringo Infidels! Patria, Socialismo o Muerte! Venceremos!
Sigma_Orionis wrote:It was from the 1920s to the 1950s
SciFiFisher wrote:Sigma_Orionis wrote:It was from the 1920s to the 1950s
I think this is why that particular paranoia works so well for your noble leader. There are probably people who remember when we evil capitalist imperialists actually did do these things.
With a large influx of foreign "invaders", the effects of a xenophobia that had not been seen before became apparent. Novelist Jose Rafael Pocaterra described the oilmen as "the new Spaniards". He wrote in 1918:
One day some Spaniards mounted a dark apparatus on three legs, a grotesque stork with crystal eyes. They drew something (on a piece of paper) and opened their way through the forest. Other new Spaniards would open roads…would drill the earth from the top of fantastic towers, producing the fetid fluid…the liquid gold converted into petroleum.
Popular resentment of the foreign oil companies was also evident and expressed in several ways. Rufino Blanco Fombona, a Venezuelan writer and politician, accounts for the conflict between Venezuelan workers and their foreign bosses in his 1927 novel, La Bella y la Fiera:
The workers asked for a miserable salary increase and those blond, blue-eyed men who own millions of dollars, pounds and gulden in European and U.S. banks, refused.
These strong sentiments towards foreign oil companies in many ways never went away, and it was the thought that Venezuela’s natural resources were being exploited by foreign countries that convinced the government it needed to gain more control over its oil industry. This led to the eventual nationalization of the oil industry in 1976.
SciFiFisher wrote:And if we did it before who's to say that we won't just do a more subtle version of the same thing? Updated for the 21st Century. :
SciFiFisher wrote:Say, would you like to buy these wonderful hackproof whizbang voting machines from us? Guaranteed to help you elect a true democratic leader.
Sigma_Orionis wrote:In my last post I said that you were partly right,
The part you're missing is this, the part that shows that our problems were NOT caused by the Oil Multinationals, or the Foreign Policy of the US. Those were caused by ourselves.
My point is, we are extremely unpractical as a culture. We got lucky because undeneath this country we have the largest oil reserves in the world. Bravo Fox Delta, we have shown to be too incompetent to manage it. If this was the 19th century (or even the early 20th century) we would have been invaded and taken over by a bigger country (hint: it's NOT the US, it's BRAZIL).
SciFiFisher wrote:Sigma_Orionis wrote:In my last post I said that you were partly right,
The part you're missing is this, the part that shows that our problems were NOT caused by the Oil Multinationals, or the Foreign Policy of the US. Those were caused by ourselves.
My point is, we are extremely unpractical as a culture. We got lucky because undeneath this country we have the largest oil reserves in the world. Bravo Fox Delta, we have shown to be too incompetent to manage it. If this was the 19th century (or even the early 20th century) we would have been invaded and taken over by a bigger country (hint: it's NOT the US, it's BRAZIL).
It reminds me of the 50 year old person who still blames his or her parents for why they are screwed up. At some point don't you have a responsibility to take charge of your own life and do the best you can?
President Nicolas Maduro said the diplomats have 48 hours to leave the country, saying "Yankees, go home!"
Mr Maduro says he has evidence that the trio took part in a power-grid sabotage in September and had bribed Venezuelan companies to cut down production.
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