VENEZUELA CONTINUES TO REAP THE FRUITS OF SOCIALISM
Chavez regime continues to do badly
Among Venezuelans, Chavez's popularity slipped below 50 percent in polls late last year.THESE ARE THE FRUITS OF SOCIALISM. EVERYWHERE EVERY TIME. ZIMBABWE. THE USSR. NORTH KOREA. VIETNAM. CUBA. CHINA.
The protest slogan "you struck out" recently appeared on banners held up during Venezuelan baseball games, which Chavez himself follows closely, and spread to signs and shirts during street demonstrations.
Last week, thousands gathered to denounce the government for yanking the anti-Chavez channel RCTV from cable television, and clashes involving riot police, government supporters and anti-Chavez students left two youths dead. Also last week, Chavez's vice president and defense minister, Ramon Carrizalez, resigned citing personal reasons.
State-imposed economic controls, meanwhile, have failed to contain 25 percent inflation, rapidly eroding the earnings of the poor who have been Chavez's core of political support.
... Latin America's worst inflation, increased blackouts, runaway violent crime and a scandal involving bankers close to his government.
... Chavez's devaluation of the currency this month - aimed at allowing the government finances to boost public spending - is expected to push prices even higher.
To counter that, Chavez deployed inspectors and soldiers to check, threatening to expropriate any businesses engaging in price-gouging. Some have been temporarily shut down. The government recently seized a French-controlled retail chain, Exito.
Chavez's foes say such measures will only further discourage private investment, which fell 7.6 percent last year amid the nationalization of banks, coffee producers and oil field service companies.
Critics also decry a banking scandal that broke in November in which several bankers with close government ties were arrested on charges of financial crimes.
Other problems weighing on Chavez include:
- A hydropower-dependent electrical grid at risk of a devastating collapse as drought pushes water levels precariously low. The government has imposed electricity rationing, but Chavez called off rolling outages in Caracas after complaints of mistakes, including power cuts to hospitals and stoplights.
- Declining output by the key oil industry caused in part, experts say, by inadequate investment and inept management.
- A crime rate so alarming that police no longer release complete murder statistics, even as Venezuelans consistently deem crime their No. 1 concern. The government reported 12,257 homicides in the first 11 months of 2009, putting Venezuela among Latin America's most violent countries.
SO WHY IS OBAMA TRYING TO TAKE USA DOWN THAT ROAD!?
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