Chavez Dies.

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Re: Chavez Dies.

Postby FourthBase » Wed Mar 06, 2013 11:05 am

Great post, Jack. But: If that article's author had merely posted all that here, as a post, would you have maybe given him more of the benefit of the doubt? I mean, this is all true:

This is true of anyone and everything. When it has to be underlined, one has to wonder why. Not that there sometimes aren't good reasons to find the middle way. But Chavez was attacked in an either/or way by the world's most powerful imperialist powers. When your tax money is paying for a covert war on a foreign nation - when it is paying for a war on democracy there - there can be no either/or. The question becomes, which side are you on?

Some of the criticisms of Chavez are self-evident; he could play the clown, and he did have an autocratic style, but the substance? In most countries, the 2002 coup plotters and their private media collaborators would have been lined up against the wall. If NBC had participated in a failed coup attempt against Bush, it wouldn't have lost its license after five years. Brian Williams would have been shipped to Guantanamo the next day.


When it has to be underlined, it might just mean the subject really is a mixed bag to some extent, and that resorting to defending one side of the false either/or in order to assist the false dichotomy's target is actually detrimental to your aim. Yes, in a sense one always has to take a side, because if it's all indeterminate equivocation, then you can never feel the appropriate will-for-there-to-be-a-winner it takes to join a protest, to send a check, to heckle your congressman, etc. Such endless equivocation is itself a counter-revolutionary tactic. On the other hand, lol, equivocation is sometimes an imperative dictated by the truth. Partisan blinders will not do your cause any favors in an argument with a right-winger, whom you may not care about converting, but there might be undecided spectators, and if you handwave the bad, no matter how justified it is in comparison to enemy tactics, it still winds up casting an untrustworthy stink over one's whole presentation. The side everyone should be on is the truth. Nothing but.

Opprobrium?


Imagine he's an RI regular who basted that sentence with morbid understatement marinade.
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Re: Chavez Dies.

Postby gnosticheresy_2 » Wed Mar 06, 2013 12:50 pm

Convenient cancer does seem to be the worst sort of cancer doesn't it?
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Re: Chavez Dies.

Postby hanshan » Wed Mar 06, 2013 1:18 pm

...

gnosticheresy_2 wrote:Convenient cancer does seem to be the worst sort of cancer doesn't it?



:rofl:


...
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Re: Chavez Dies.

Postby thurnundtaxis » Wed Mar 06, 2013 1:27 pm

Kevin Barrett thinks its awfully convenient as well:

Chavez: Another CIA assassination victim?

The Venezuelan president himself, before he died yesterday, wondered aloud whether the US government - or the banksters who own it - gave him, and its other leading Latin American enemies, cancer.


A little over a year ago, Chavez went on Venezuelan national radio and said: “I don’t know but… it is very odd that we have seen Lugo affected by cancer, Dilma when she was a candidate, me, going into an election year, not long ago Lula and now Cristina… It is very hard to explain, even with the law of probabilities, what has been happening to some leaders in Latin America. It’s at the very least strange, very strange.”

Strange indeed… so strange that if you think Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez, Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff, Paraguayan Fernando Lugo, and former Brazilian leader Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva - Latin America’s top anti-US empire leaders - all just happened to contract cancer around the same time by sheer chance, you must be some kind of crazy coincidence theorist.

Am I 100% certain that the CIA killed Hugo Chavez? Absolutely not.

It could have been non-governmental assassins working for the bankers.

But any way you slice it, the masters of the US empire are undoubtedly responsible for giving Chavez and other Latin American leaders cancer. How do we know that? Just examine the Empire’s track record.

Fidel Castro’s bodyguard, Fabian Escalante, estimates that the CIA attempted to kill the Cuban president an astonishing 638 times. The CIA’s methods included exploding cigars, biological warfare agents painted on Castro’s diving suit, deadly pills, toxic bacteria in coffee, an exploding speaker’s podium, snipers, poison-wielding female friends, and explosive underwater sea shells.

The CIA’s assassination attempts against Castro were like a Tom and Jerry cartoon, with the CIA as the murderously inept cat, and the Cuban president as a clever and very lucky mouse. Some might even argue that Castro’s survival, in the face of 638 assassination attempts by the world’s greatest power, is evidence that El Presidente’s communist atheism was incorrect, and that God, or at least a guardian angel, must have been watching over “Infidel Castro” all along.

Theology aside, the CIA’s endless attempts on Castro’s life provide ample evidence that US authorities will stop at nothing in their efforts to murder their Latin American enemies.

John Perkins, in his bestselling book Confessions of an Economic Hit Man, supplies more evidence that the bankers that own the US government routinely murder heads of state, using private assassins as well as CIA killers.

Perkins, during his career as an “economic hit man,” gained first-hand knowledge about how the big international bankers maintain their empire in Latin America and elsewhere. Perkins’ job was to visit leaders of foreign countries and convince them to accept loans that could never be paid back. Why? The bankers want to force these nations into debt slavery. When the country goes bankrupt, the bankers seize the nation’s natural resources and establish complete control over its government and economy.

Perkins would meet with a targeted nation’s leader and say: “I have a fist-full of hundred dollar bills in one hand, and a bullet in the other. Which do you want?” If the leader accepted the loans, thereby enslaving his country, he got the payoff. If he angrily chased Perkins out of his office, the bankers would call in the “asteroids” to assassinate the uncooperative head of state.

The “asteroids” are the world’s most expensive and accomplished professional killers. They work on contract - sometimes to the CIA, sometimes to the bankers, and sometimes to wealthy private individuals. And though their specialty is causing plane crashes, they are capable of killing people, including heads of state, in any number of ways.

This isn’t just speculation. John Perkins actually knows some of these CIA-linked professional killers personally. And he has testified about their murders of Latin American leaders. Confessions of an Economic Hit Man is dedicated to Perkins’ murdered friends Gen. Torrijos of Panama and President Jaime Roldos of Ecuador. Both were killed by CIA-linked “asteroids” in engineered plane crashes.

Do CIA-linked killers sometimes induce cancer in their victims? Apparently they do. One notable victim: Jack Ruby (née Jack Rubenstein), a mobster who was himself a professional killer, and whose last hit was the choreographed murder of JFK-assassination patsy Lee Harvey Oswald in the basement of the Dallas Police Department. Ruby begged to be taken to Washington to tell the real story of the JFK murder, but instead died in prison, of a sudden and mysterious cancer, before he could reveal what he knew.

Have the CIA-bankster “asteroids” ever tried to kill Latin American leaders with cancer? The answer is an unequivocal “yes.”

Edward Haslam’s book Dr. Mary’s Monkey proves what JFK assassination prosecutor Jim Garrison had earlier alleged: Child-molesting CIA agent David Ferrie, one of President Kennedy’s killers, had experimented extensively with cancer-causing viruses for the CIA in his huge home laboratory. The purpose: To give Fidel Castro and other Latin American leaders cancer. (Ferrie himself was killed by the CIA shortly before he was scheduled to testify in court about his role in the JFK assassination.)

To summarize: We know that the bankers who own the US government routinely try to kill any Latin American leader who refuses to be their puppet. We know that they have mounted thousands of assassination attempts against Latin American leaders, including more than 600 against Castro alone. We know that they have been experimenting with cancer viruses, and killing people with cancer, since the 1960s.

So if you think Hugo Chavez died a natural death, I am afraid that you are terminally naïve.
http://www.presstv.ir/detail/2013/03/06 ... y-the-cia/
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Re: Chavez Dies.

Postby The Consul » Wed Mar 06, 2013 3:31 pm

Anyone who dares speak for the people
Must stand before the banks and the steeple
A man who tries to bring his class in
Is soon made familiar with the assassin

Beware of the lies that speak in the name of gold
Do you your best not to think what your are told
It is only a three thousand dollar suit who says
This is a better world without Chavez

Never could bury a man too deep
Who asked why all this labor’s so cheap
Bow down your head and cover your heart
& Throw your flowers at the funeral cart
" Morals is the butter for those who have no bread."
— B. Traven
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Re: Chavez Dies.

Postby Sepka » Wed Mar 06, 2013 5:41 pm

Tyranny and oppression have lost a true and loyal friend.
- Sepka the Space Weasel

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Re: Chavez Dies.

Postby conniption » Wed Mar 06, 2013 5:46 pm

Sepka wrote:Tyranny and oppression have lost a true and loyal friend.


OMG! Did the Queen die, too?
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Re: Chavez Dies.

Postby FourthBase » Wed Mar 06, 2013 6:44 pm

The Consul wrote:Anyone who dares speak for the people
Must stand before the banks and the steeple
A man who tries to bring his class in
Is soon made familiar with the assassin

Beware of the lies that speak in the name of gold
Do you your best not to think what your are told
It is only a three thousand dollar suit who says
This is a better world without Chavez

Never could bury a man too deep
Who asked why all this labor’s so cheap
Bow down your head and cover your heart
& Throw your flowers at the funeral cart


Amen.
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that fills you up and makes you naturally want to do your best.” - Bill Russell
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Re: Chavez Dies.

Postby cptmarginal » Wed Mar 06, 2013 7:12 pm

Saw this: Chavez’s 681% Returns Mean Socialism Buoys Goldman Sachs

I'm not knowledgeable enough to make an intelligent comment on it, just throwing it out there because Kevin at cryptogon just linked to it.

On the topic of induced cancer, we pretty much know it's a very real technology possessed by the black world for a long time now. Considering the trend towards privatization of classified projects and even operational/intelligence duties across the board, wouldn't it be pretty likely that some major financial interest could just pay some contractors for such an attack to happen? Say, someone pissed about specific stuff like this: Chávez Seizes Assets of Oil Contractors

Although: "Particularly for large oil-services companies, like Schlumberger or Halliburton, opportunities still exist in Venezuela, where they have carved out a presence that has spanned decades. It was not immediately clear whether they could remain as minority partners with Petróleos de Venezuela or continue talks over debts they hoped to collect."

...maybe the defense privatization bonanza means that smaller companies (who still lost hundreds of millions because of what Chavez did there) can just pay for the clandestine poisoning, and also pay or placate those who are meant to guide foreign affairs to let the regime change happen.
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Re: Chavez Dies.

Postby JackRiddler » Wed Mar 06, 2013 9:57 pm

FourthBase wrote:When it has to be underlined, it might just mean the subject really is a mixed bag to some extent, and that resorting to defending one side of the false either/or in order to assist the false dichotomy's target is actually detrimental to your aim. Yes, in a sense one always has to take a side, because if it's all indeterminate equivocation, then you can never feel the appropriate will-for-there-to-be-a-winner it takes to join a protest, to send a check, to heckle your congressman, etc. Such endless equivocation is itself a counter-revolutionary tactic. On the other hand, lol, equivocation is sometimes an imperative dictated by the truth.


Agreed that equivocation is always demanded by the truth, but war forces decisions. The fact is, most of the English-language writing I've seen slamming Chavez has had little to do with real failings, and is little more than propaganda obedient to the current US patriotic line that holds him out as a villain. It's serving imperialism. Or, in the case of this text, the equivocation seems to aim for that sweet ideological spot of the "center" that makes a writer appear reasonable, rather than be equivocation to serve the truth. I mean, I get the sense if he looked at a case and it really was all one way, he'd still want to find the secure middle.
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Re: Chavez Dies.

Postby cptmarginal » Thu Mar 07, 2013 12:25 am

Pepe Escobar's initial take on this:

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Re: Chavez Dies.

Postby MacCruiskeen » Thu Mar 07, 2013 12:38 pm

This is a wonderful piece. Photos and embedded links in the original:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/ma ... -tariq-ali

Tariq Ali: Hugo Chávez and me

Tariq Ali
The Guardian, Wednesday 6 March 2013 17.07 GMT
Jump to comments (399)

The late president of Venezuela, who I have met many times, will be remembered by his supporters as a lover of literature, a fiery speaker and a man who fought for his people and won

Once I asked whether he preferred enemies who hated him because they knew what he was doing or those who frothed and foamed out of ignorance. He laughed. The former was preferable, he explained, because they made him feel that he was on the right track. Hugo Chávez's death did not come as a surprise, but that does not make it easier to accept. We have lost one of the political giants of the post-communist era. Venezuela, its elites mired in corruption on a huge scale, had been considered a secure outpost of Washington and, at the other extreme, the Socialist International. Few thought of the country before his victories. After 1999, every major media outlet of the west felt obliged to send a correspondent. Since they all said the same thing (the country was supposedly on the verge of a communist-style dictatorship) they would have been better advised to pool their resources.

I first met him in 2002, soon after the military coup instigated by Washington and Madrid had failed and subsequently on numerous occasions. He had asked to see me during the World Social Forum in Porto Alegre, Brazil. He inquired: "Why haven't you been to Venezuela? Come soon." I did. What appealed was his bluntness and courage. What often appeared as sheer impulsiveness had been carefully thought out and then, depending on the response, enlarged by spontaneous eruptions on his part. At a time when the world had fallen silent, when centre-left and centre-right had to struggle hard to find some differences and their politicians had become desiccated machine men obsessed with making money, Chávez lit up the political landscape.

He appeared as an indestructible ox, speaking for hours to his people in a warm, sonorous voice, a fiery eloquence that made it impossible to remain indifferent. His words had a stunning resonance. His speeches were littered with homilies, continental and national history, quotes from the 19th-century revolutionary leader and president of Venezuela Simón Bolívar, pronouncements on the state of the world and songs. "Our bourgeoisie are embarrassed that I sing in public. Do you mind?" he would ask the audience. The response was a resounding "No". He would then ask them to join in the singing and mutter, "Louder, so they can hear us in the eastern part of the city." Once before just such a rally he looked at me and said: "You look tired today. Will you last out the evening?" I replied: "It depends on how long you're going to speak." It would be a short speech, he promised. Under three hours.

The Bolívarians, as Chávez's supporters were known, offered a political programme that challenged the Washington consensus: neo-liberalism at home and wars abroad. This was the prime reason for the vilification of Chávez that is sure to continue long after his death.

Politicians like him had become unacceptable. What he loathed most was the contemptuous indifference of mainstream politicians in South America towards their own people. The Venezuelan elite is notoriously racist. They regarded the elected president of their country as uncouth and uncivilised, a zambo of mixed African and indigenous blood who could not be trusted. His supporters were portrayed on private TV networks as monkeys. Colin Powell had to publicly reprimand the US embassy in Caracas for hosting a party where Chávez was portrayed as a gorilla.

Was he surprised? "No," he told me with a grim look on his face. "I live here. I know them well. One reason so many of us join the army is because all other avenues are sealed." No longer. He had few illusions. He knew that local enemies did not seethe and plot in a vacuum. Behind them was the world's most powerful state. For a few moments he thought Obama might be different. The military coup in Honduras disabused him of all such notions.

He had a punctilious sense of duty to his people. He was one of them. Unlike European social democrats he never believed that any improvement in humankind would come from the corporations and the bankers and said so long before the Wall Street crash of 2008. If I had to pin a label on him, I would say that he was a socialist democrat, far removed from any sectarian impulses and repulsed by the self-obsessed behaviour of various far-left sects and the blindness of their routines. He said as much when we first met.

The following year in Caracas I questioned him further on the Bolívarian project. What could be accomplished? He was very clear; much more so than some of his over-enthusiastic supporters: ''I don't believe in the dogmatic postulates of Marxist revolution. I don't accept that we are living in a period of proletarian revolutions. All that must be revised. Reality is telling us that every day. Are we aiming in Venezuela today for the abolition of private property or a classless society? I don't think so. But if I'm told that because of that reality you can't do anything to help the poor, the people who have made this country rich through their labour – and never forget that some of it was slave labour – then I say: 'We part company.' I will never accept that there can be no redistribution of wealth in society. Our upper classes don't even like paying taxes. That's one reason they hate me. We said: 'You must pay your taxes.' I believe it's better to die in battle, rather than hold aloft a very revolutionary and very pure banner, and do nothing … That position often strikes me as very convenient, a good excuse … Try and make your revolution, go into combat, advance a little, even if it's only a millimetre, in the right direction, instead of dreaming about utopias."

I remember sitting next to an elderly, modestly attired woman at one of his public rallies. She questioned me about him. What did I think? Was he doing well? Did he not speak too much? Was he not too rash at times? I defended him. She was relieved. It was his mother, worried that perhaps she had not brought him up as well as she should have done: "We always made sure that he read books as a child." This passion for reading stayed with him. History, fiction and poetry were the loves of his life: "Like me, Fidel is an insomniac. Sometimes we're reading the same novel. He rings at 3am and asks: 'Well, have you finished? What did you think?' And we argue for another hour.'"

It was the spell of literature that in 2005 led him to celebrate the 400th anniversary of Cervantes's great novel in a unique fashion. The ministry of culture reprinted a million copies of Don Quixote and distributed them free to a million poor, but now literate, households. A quixotic gesture? No. The magic of art can't transform the universe, but it can open up a mind. Chávez was confident that the book would be read now or later.

The closeness to Castro has been portrayed as a father-son relationship. This is only partially the case. Last year a huge crowd had gathered outside the hospital in Caracas, where Chávez was meant to be recuperating from cancer treatment, and their chants got louder and louder. Chávez ordered a loudspeaker system on the rooftop. He then addressed the crowd. Watching this scene on Telesur in Havana, Castro was shocked. He rang the director of the hospital: "This is Fidel Castro. You should be sacked. Get him back into bed and tell him I said so."

Above the friendship, Chávez saw Castro and Che Guevara in a historical frame. They were the 20th-century heirs of Bolívar and his friend Antonio José de Sucre. They tried to unite the continent, but it was like ploughing the sea. Chávez got closer to that ideal than the quartet he admired so much. His successes in Venezuela triggered a continental reaction: Bolivia and Ecuador saw victories. Brazil under Lula and Dilma did not follow the social model but refused to allow the west to pit them against each other. It was a favoured trope of western journalists: Lula is better than Chávez. Only last year Lula publicly declared that he supported Chávez, whose importance for "our continent" should never be underestimated.

The image of Chávez most popular in the west was that of an oppressive caudillo. Had this been true I would wish for more of them. The Bolívarian constitution, opposed by the Venezuelan opposition, its newspapers and TV channels and the local CNN, plus western supporters, was approved by a large majority of the population. It is the only constitution in the world that affords the possibility of removing an elected president from office via a referendum based on collecting sufficient signatures. Consistent only in their hatred for Chávez, the opposition tried to use this mechanism in 2004 to remove him. Regardless of the fact that many of the signatures were those of dead people, the Venezuelan government decided to accept the challenge.

I was in Caracas a week before the vote. When I met Chávez at the Miraflores palace he was poring over the opinion polls in great detail. It might be close. "And if you lose?" I asked. "Then I will resign," he replied without hesitation. He won.

Did he ever tire? Get depressed? Lose confidence? "Yes," he replied. But it was not the coup attempt or the referendum. It was the strike organised by the corrupted oil unions and backed by the middle-classes that worried him because it would affect the entire population, especially the poor: "Two factors helped sustain my morale. The first was the support we retained throughout the country. I got fed up sitting in my office. So with one security guard and two comrades I drove out to listen to people and breathe better air. The response moved me greatly. A woman came up to me and said: 'Chávez follow me, I want to show you something.' I followed her into her tiny dwelling. Inside, her husband and children were waiting for the soup to be cooked. 'Look at what I'm using for fuel … the back of our bed. Tomorrow I'll burn the legs, the day after the table, then the chairs and doors. We will survive, but don't give up now.' On my way out the kids from the gangs came and shook hands. 'We can live without beer. You make sure you screw these motherfuckers.'"

What was the inner reality of his life? For anyone with a certain level of intelligence, of character and culture, his or her natural leanings, emotional and intellectual, hang together, constitute a whole not always visible to everyone. He was a divorcee, but affection for his children and grandchildren was never in doubt. Most of the women he loved, and there were a few, described him as a generous lover, and this was long after they had parted.

What of the country he leaves behind? A paradise? Certainly not. How could it be, given the scale of the problems? But he leaves behind a very changed society in which the poor felt they had an important stake in the government. There is no other explanation for his popularity. Venezuela is divided between his partisans and detractors. He died undefeated, but the big tests lie ahead. The system he created, a social democracy based on mass mobilisations, needs to progress further. Will his successors be up to the task? In a sense, that is the ultimate test of the Bolívarian experiment.

Of one thing we can be sure. His enemies will not let him rest in peace. And his supporters? His supporters, the poor throughout the continent and elsewhere, will see him as a political leader who promised and delivered social rights against heavy odds; as someone who fought for them and won.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/ma ... -tariq-ali
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Re: Chavez Dies.

Postby semiconscious » Thu Mar 07, 2013 1:02 pm

from bloomberg:

"In fact, President Chávez was a pioneer and one of the most adroit practitioners of a political strategy that became common after the Cold War in many countries that political scientists call competitive authoritarian regimes. These are regimes where leaders gain power through democratic elections and then change the constitution and other laws to weaken checks and balances on the executive, thus ensuring the regime’s continuity and its almost total autonomy while still retaining a patina of democratic legitimacy..."
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Re: Chavez Dies.

Postby Julian the Apostate » Thu Mar 07, 2013 2:01 pm

thurnundtaxis wrote:Do CIA-linked killers sometimes induce cancer in their victims? Apparently they do. One notable victim: Jack Ruby (née Jack Rubenstein), a mobster who was himself a professional killer, and whose last hit was the choreographed murder of JFK-assassination patsy Lee Harvey Oswald in the basement of the Dallas Police Department. Ruby begged to be taken to Washington to tell the real story of the JFK murder, but instead died in prison, of a sudden and mysterious cancer, before he could reveal what he knew.


Not to derail the thread, but there is something about this whole Ruby situation that I have never understood. It’s not like he died in 1963…he languished in that jail until 1967! In that period of time he didn’t have the chance to tell what he supposedly knew? Not sure about that…

The cancer itself may have been “sudden” but hid death was anything but sudden. If he was so worried about what might happen to him, and so anxious to tell his story, why did he sit on it for four years?
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Re: Chavez Dies.

Postby MacCruiskeen » Thu Mar 07, 2013 2:56 pm

AP: Chavez Wasted His Money on Healthcare When He Could Have Built Gigantic Skyscrapers

By Jim Naureckas

http://www.fair.org/blog/2013/03/06/ap- ... yscrapers/

Image
Makes Chavez's schools and health clinics look pretty sad, doesn't it? (Photo: Joi Ito)

One of the more bizarre takes on Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez's death comes from Associated Press business reporter Pamela Sampson (3/5/13):

AP wrote:Chavez invested Venezuela's oil wealth into social programs including state-run food markets, cash benefits for poor families, free health clinics and education programs. But those gains were meager compared with the spectacular construction projects that oil riches spurred in glittering Middle Eastern cities, including the world's tallest building in Dubai and plans for branches of the Louvre and Guggenheim museums in Abu Dhabi.


That's right: Chavez squandered his nation's oil money on healthcare, education and nutrition when he could have been building the world's tallest building or his own branch of the Louvre. What kind of monster has priorities like that?

In case you're curious about what kind of results this kooky agenda had, here's a chart (NACLA, 10/8/12) based on World Bank poverty stats–showing the proportion of Venezuelans living on less than $2 a day falling from 35 percent to 13 percent over three years. (For comparison purposes, there's a similar stat for Brazil, which made substantial but less dramatic progress against poverty over the same time period.)

Image
Souce: NACLA's Keane Bhatt

Of course, during this time, the number of Venezuelans living in the world's tallest building went from 0 percent to 0 percent, while the number of copies of the Mona Lisa remained flat, at none. So you have to say that Chavez's presidency was overall pretty disappointing–at least by AP's standards.

http://www.fair.org/blog/2013/03/06/ap- ... yscrapers/
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