Hugo Chavez was a perfect example of leftist populism, who could rule by dividing the Venezuelan society by similar polarization that is going on in the US. Populism always starts with the division of 'us the people' and 'they, the elites' and Chavez used the leftist approach to this. Some leftists in the West went along with his populist approach to socialism. He had loyal supporters, so that the next president has been able to ride on that support too.what do you think of Hugo Chavez? — universeness
I assume that the objective is to have prosperity among all the people.So how would you ensure that all the people of Venezuela, get an equal share of the resources that Venezuela has? — universeness
Well, Venezuela under Maduro is getting rid of Venezuelans:I feel bad for the Venezuelan people because it seems difficult to get rid of this rotten system. — javi2541997
There are 7,1 refugees now out from Venezuela. So naturally the best option is to start a war.The Venezuelan refugee crisis, the largest recorded refugee crisis in the Americas,[6] refers to the emigration of millions of Venezuelans from their native country during the presidencies of Hugo Chávez and Nicolás Maduro because of the Bolivarian Revolution.
They are a bit different issues. Because if you have sovereign wealth fund, to have UBI is actually far more easier. What you don't want to have is the country borrowing more debt in order to pay for UBI. That isn't sustainable in the long run.I like the idea of 'national funds' but I far prefer a UBI as a human right of being a citizen of a nation. — universeness
As @javi2541997 stated, now the rich elite is the people closest to Maduro.Are you okay with individuals in these 'oil companies' you describe, becoming personally very rich? — universeness
Venezuela), seems to be looking at wanting more of those resources. And a distraction for the economic woes. — ssu
Adding Guyana's oil, plus making Guyana's citizens bitter and resentful, won't help Maduro. — BC
The Spanish had to endure years of horror under a fascist pig like Franco, because the German Nazis prevented the Spanish people from winning their struggle, even with the help of the international brigades. — universeness
Like all revolutions of the past, we often start with the intention to enforce the foundation that 'all people are equal, and must be treated as such,' and we end up with 'all people are equal but some people deserve more resources and power than any other person.' When the people get rid of a nasty system, they often fail to prevent their good work from getting corrupted by the nefarious that still exist amongst them. — universeness
Oh dear. This is not a good analysis. If all people are morally equal, then it is an error to divide them into the nefarious and the righteous. — unenlightened
That is what must result in the inequality, when the nefarious are brought down and the righteous exalted. Because it follows, after the revolution that the righteous are in charge and deserve all the benefits. — unenlightened
This is the pattern we are trying to stop from repeating, yes?So the revolution just turns round and round getting nowhere, because the righteous become the nefarious - there is no difference. — unenlightened
So make a law that the people in charge of every institution must live in the accommodation for the homeless, and receive the minimum wage, and have no private wealth at all, and as long as this law is enforced you will never have a greedy politician, banker, or company director, and the wealth will be very well distributed. — unenlightened
Well, at least we have common ground in our wish that a war between Venezuela and Guyana does not happen. — universeness
Invasion as distraction I can understand, but Venezuela already has huge oil reserves of which it doesn't seem to be able to make effective economic use. Adding Guyana's oil, plus making Guyana's citizens bitter and resentful, won't help Maduro. To paraphrase Martin Luther, stupid presidents sink ever deeper into stupidity. — BC
However how well this would in the end work for him is doubtful. The scary part is if Maduro thinks that he can use military force, that the US and UK somehow will not intervene or that Venezuela could fight a war like Russia does. Well, Venezuela isn't Russia.
At least there are talks scheduled this week. — ssu
KINGSTOWN, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Dec 14 (Reuters) - Guyana and Venezuela are committed to ensuring their region remains peaceful, Guyanese President Irfaan Ali said on Thursday during meetings with his Venezuelan counterpart President Nicolas Maduro, amid high tensions over a dispute involving a potentially oil-rich border area.
The two leaders met at the airport in Kingstown, in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, alongside representatives from CARICOM, the Caribbean political and economic union, Brazil, the United Nations and the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC).
Britain is warned 'don't mess with Venezuela' as President Maduro slams 'decadent, rotten, ex-empire of the UK' for sending a Navy warship to protect Guyana.
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