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  Vaccine & Vaccination  ·  Vacuum  ·  Valour & Valor  ·  Value  ·  Vampire  ·  Vanity  ·  Variety  ·  Vatican & Vatican City  ·  Vegetables  ·  Vegetarian & Vegan  ·  Venezuela & Venezuelans  ·  Venice  ·  Venus  ·  Vexation & Vexed  ·  Vice  ·  Vice-President  ·  Victim  ·  Victoria, Queen  ·  Victory  ·  Video  ·  Vienna  ·  Vietnam & Vietnam War  ·  Vikings  ·  Village  ·  Villain  ·  Violence & Violent  ·  Virgin & Virginity  ·  Virginia  ·  Virtue  ·  Virus  ·  Vision (Dream)  ·  Vision (Eyes)  ·  Vitamins  ·  Voice  ·  Volcano  ·  Voodoo  ·  Vortex & Vortices  ·  Vote & Voter  ·  Vow  ·  Vulcan  

★ Venezuela & Venezuelans

Venezuela & Venezuelans: see South America & Central America & United States of America & US Empire & US Foreign Relations

Simon Reeve TV - Joe Biden - Iraqi Christian HRC online - Michael Krenn - Hugo Chavez - John Pilger TV - Jim Fleischer - Ana Eisa Osorio - Frontline TV - Robert Scheer - Noam Chomsky - The Revolution Will Not Be Televised: Chavez: Inside the Coup TV - Abby Martin & The Empire Files - Our World: Venezuela TV - FALN short 1965 -   

 

 

 

I’m in a remote corner of Venezuela.  I’m travelling the length of the Americas.  The two continents put together form more than a quarter of the Earth’s land surface.  Simon Reeve’s South America I, BBC 2022

 

Venezuela: perhaps the most troubled country in South America.  It’s said to have experienced the single largest economic collapse outside war in decades.  ibid.

 

Venezuela has the biggest oil reserves of any country on Earth.  ibid.

 

 

Look what’s going on in Venezuela right now … Millions of people are crossing the border destabilizing Bolivia.  Joe Biden, December 2020, cited Washington Examiner    

 

 

John Bolton states regime change in Venezuela is about the country’s oil.  ‘It will make a big difference to the United States economically if we could have American oil companies invest in and produce oil capabilities in Venezuela.’  Iraqi Christian HRC online, Bolton statement Fox News

 

 

Until the Venezuelan people could be trusted to make the right decisions concerning their political and economic direction, and that time was deemed to be in the very distant future – it was best for all concerned that they be kept safe from democracy.  Michael Krenn, US Policy Toward Economic Nationalism in Latin America

 

 

Democracy, as I said recently, before our people (as Lincoln said) has a simple definition – the difficulty is making it a reality.  We are making it a reality: a government for the people, by the people and for the people.  A society where people are included and are equal, where there is no exclusion, there is no poverty, where human values reign.  Hugo Chavez, Venezuelan president, interview John Pilger

 

 

I always say that we don’t want to be rich.  Our aim is not material wealth.  It is to live with dignity.  Of course to come out of poverty, and to come out of extreme poverty, above all.  And to live, to live with dignity, this is the objective ... The issue of poverty affects us deeply.  It’s most of our daily struggle.  Hugo Chavez

 

 

Im a man with many defects.  I love.  I sing.  I dream.  I was born in the poor countryside.  I was raised in the countryside, planting corn and selling sweets made by my grandmother.  My children, my two daughters are with me and I want a better world for my grandchildren, for your grandchildren.  Hugo Chavez

 

 

Mr Obama decided to attack us.  Now you want to win votes by attacking Venezuela.  Don’t be irresponsible.  You are a clown.  A clown.  Leave us in peace ... Go after your votes by fulfilling that which you promised your people.  Hugo Chavez

 

 

Venezuela is a free country and we will not be blackmailed by anyone.  We will not accept being told what to do over Iran; we will not accept being anyone’s colony.  Hugo Chavez

 

 

The BBC described Chavez as not so much a democrat as an autocrat, echoing the Foreign Office minister Denis MacShane, who abused him as a ranting demagogue.  Alex Bellos, The Guardians South America correspondent, reported, as fact, that pro-Chavez snipers had killed at least 13 people and that Chavez had requested exile in Cuba.  Thousands of people celebrated overnight, waving flags, blowing whistles …’ he wrote, leaving the reader with the clear impression that almost everybody in Venezuela was glad to see the back of this playground bully, as the The Independent called him.

 

Within 48 hours, Chavez was back in office, put there by the mass of the people, who came out of the shanty towns in their tens of thousands.  Defying the army, their heroism was in support of a leader whose democratic credentials are extraordinary in the Americas, south and north.  Having won two presidential elections, the latest in 2000, by the largest majority in 40 years, as well as a referendum and local elections, Chavez was borne back to power by the impoverished majority whose lot, wrote Bellos, he had failed to improve and among whom his popularity had plummeted.

 

The episode was a journalistic disgrace.  Most of what Bellos and others wrote, using similar words and phrases, turned out to be wrong.  In Belloss case, this was not surprising, as he was reporting from the wrong country, Brazil.  Chavez said he never requested asylum in Cuba; the snipers almost certainly included agents provocateurs; almost every sector of society [Chavez] antagonised were principally members of various oligarchies he made pay tax for the first time, including the media, and the oil companies, whose taxes he doubled in order to raise 80 per cent of the population to a decent standard of living.  His opponents also included army officers trained at the notorious School of the Americas in the United States.

 

In a few years, Chavez had begun major reforms in favour of the indigenous poor, Venezuelas unpeople.  In 49 laws adopted by the Venezuelan Congress, he began real land reform, and guaranteed womens rights and free healthcare and education up to university level.

 

He opposed the human rights abuses of the regime in neighbouring Colombia, encouraged and armed by Washington.  He extended a hand to the victim of an illegal 40-year American blockade, Cuba, and sold the Cubans oil.  These were his crimes, as well as saying that bombing children in Afghanistan was terrorism.  Like Chile under Allende and Nicaragua under the Sandinistas, precious little of this was explained to the western public.  Like the equally heroic uprising in Argentina last year, it was misrepresented as merely more Latin American chaos.

 

Last week, the admirable Glasgow University Media Group, under Greg Philo, released the results of a study which found that, in spite of the saturation coverage of the Middle East, most television viewers were left uninformed that the basic issue was Israels illegal military occupation.  ‘The more you watch, the less you know  to quote Danny Schechters description of American television news  was the studys conclusion.

 

Take US secretary of state Colin Powells peace mission.  Regardless of Americas persistent veto of United Nations resolutions calling for Israel to withdraw from the occupied territories, and regardless of Powell calling Ariel Sharon my personal friend, an American peace mission was the absurd news, repeated incessantly.  Similarly, when the United Nations Commission on Human Rights last week voted 40-5 to condemn Israel for its mass killing, the news was not this near-unanimous expression of world opinion, but the British government’s rejection of the resolution as unbalanced.

 

Journalists are often defensive when asked why they faithfully follow the deceptions of great power.  It is not good enough for ITN to say dismissively, in response to the Glasgow Media Group findings, that we are not in the business of giving a daily history lesson, or for the BBC to waffle about its impartiality when some recent editions of Newsnight might have been produced by the Foreign Office.  In these dangerous times, one of the most destructive weapons of all is pseudo-information.  John Pilger, article April 2002, ‘The response of Britain’s media to the conspiracy in Venezuela provided an object lesson in how censorship works in free societies

 

 

This is Hugo Chavez, President of Venezuela, the voice of the barrios.  Chavez and his supporters have won ten elections in eight years.  He is the symbol of an awakening of people power, driven by great popular movements that are unique to Latin America.  Its no surprise that Chavez with the help of an aggressive media coverage has become a hate figure in the United States, because what he represents is another way and a threat to American domination.  John Pilger, The War on Democracy

 

Ten years ago this clinic would not have been dreamed of.  Now all over Venezuelan people have free health care.  Many seeing a doctor for the first time in their lives.  For the first time children of the poorest have a full day at school, and at least one hot meal a day ... And all of this is free.  Under the constitution the poorest housewives are paid as workers.  There is now close to full literacy.  ibid.

 

Three years of modest democratic reform had been overturned.  The plotters and their friends had everything to celebrate, or so they thought ... But hope had not gone.  The truth began to emerge that the kidnap of Hugo Chavez had been faked.  And the people in the barrios started to fight back.  Down from the shanties they came to rescue their president ... Hundreds of thousands surrounded the palace, demanding the return of Chavez.  Faced by such people power, the army turned! ... Roared on by such huge crowds, the Presidential Guard who had gone into hiding retook the palace and the plotters fled.  Just forty-eight hours after being kidnapped, Chavez was back in power ... As ordinary Venezuelans celebrated the defence of their democracy, some of the leading plotters fled to Miami, and within days, it was clear that Washington had cast its shadow over the failed coup.  The Bush administration had gone along with the lies of the plotters ... Not only did Washington know about the coup but it was backing and funding the plotters indirectly.  ibid.

 

 

There are straightforward principles and dynamics at work here.  Washington wants to get rid of the Venezuelan government because it is independent of US designs for the region and because Venezuela has the greatest proven oil reserves in the world and uses its oil revenue to improve the quality of ordinary lives. Venezuela remains a source of inspiration for social reform in a continent ravaged by an historically rapacious US.  An Oxfam report once famously described the Sandinista revolution in Nicaragua as ‘the threat of a good example’.  That has been true in Venezuela since Hugo Chavez won his first election.  The ‘threat’ of Venezuela is greater, of course, because it is not tiny and weak; it is rich and influential and regarded as such by China.  The remarkable change in fortunes for millions of people in Latin America is at the heart of US hostility.  The US has been the undeclared enemy of social progress in Latin America for two centuries ...

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