QUOTE(Amlord)
According to my friend whose mother is from Venezuela, Chavez is a dictator. Talking out about him will earn you a visit from the local street gang. Although these gangs are not technically associated with the government, nobody misses the message. Chavistas I believe they are called.
And according to a friend of mine who has spent a lot of time in Venezuela, the Bolivarian revolution ongoing there is the best thing since sliced bread. Gangs visit you when you talk out about Chavez? Is this more reporting from your friend whose mother is Venezuelan? Sounds like a reliable source. Seems weird though... I mean, the majority of the media in Venezuela is still controlled by the opposition. The two big papers, El Nacional and El Universal, regularly run strongly anti-Chavez editorials. The government runs 2 radio stations, but the majority of the rest of the radio there is strongly anti-Chavez. Do you suppose these gangs of Chavistas (a general term that Chavez supporters have taken, by the way) visit these big media companies? Strange that this oppositional voice, available in the two biggest daily papers, hasn't yet been silenced, either through intimidation or through legal means...
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Chavez rules with a communist "bottom up" control structure.
Explain this, please. A dictator who rules with a "bottom up" structure. Interesting. I'd love to hear how this works. Isn't dictatorship by definition a "top down" sort of thing?
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In this type of atmosphere, how can elections be "fair"? The old saying that it isn't the votes that count but it's who counts the votes that counts applies directly to Venezuela. Chavez is head of the national election board.
International monitors declared it a free and open election. The US elections in 2000 and 2004 weren't internationally monitored. Key states in 2004, particularly in Ohio, had it set up prior to the election that the votes would be counted by Republicans. You don't provide any real analysis of the elections there. You just say they couldn't possibly be fair because... you heard from your friend's mother that Chavez was a mean bad guy.
Let's look a bit at the 2004 referendum election. The opposition's claims of fraudulent results were based around the use of electronic voting machines. There was no observable evidence of fraud, however a team of Computer Science folks from Princeton and Johns Hopkins voiced a general concern about electronic voting, after concluding there was no observable fraud in the Venezuelan elections:
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After the August 15 referendum in Venezuela on whether or not to recall president Chávez, opposition groups examined the polling data and made accusations of fraud due to statistical anomalies in the reported election results that they claim could not have occurred if the election were run fairly. However, our analysis of the same data, based on simulations, did not detect any statistical anomalies that would indicate obvious fraud in the election.
We emphasize that a lack of statistical evidence does not imply the absence of fraud. Rather, it rules out certain classes of fraud. In any case, the fraud that is alleged is not the type that we would expect a cheating government to employ. In particular, we believe that the forms of election fraud that are most likely to succeed, such as voting machines silently switching some fraction of Yes votes to No votes inside the computer, would not produce observable statistical anomalies.
Electronic voting is more susceptible to widespread fraud than less automated mechanisms. The fact that the opposition is highly suspicious of the outcome is due, in part, to the choice of electronic voting machines in a simple Yes/No election. While we did not find any statistical evidence for the claims of caps on the machines or other specific accusations of fraud, we are concerned that wide scale unobservable fraud is much easier to realize in electronic voting machines than in, for example, precinct based paper systems.
(
source)
In other words, the same concerns about election results as we have here.
QUOTE(Amlord)
Why would some poor slub in a slum in Caracas care about US policy? Ah, because El Presidente blames all their problems on the Americanos. The place is Nazi-esque.
Wow, that's a bit of a leap, wouldn't you say? And hardly a generous portrayal of the average Venezuelan. Tell me, in Nazi Germany, was the majority of the media privately owned and anti-Nazi? Tell me, in Venezuela, are some ethnic groups being rounded up and killed off? Is Venezuela invading all its neighbors? What, exactly, is "Nazi-esque" about a country in the midst of a social-democratic reform?
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I find it funny that with all Chavez's talk of raising the poor, over 50% remain poor. He continues to pander to them, using rhetoric that the Americans and middle and upper classes are to blame. Chavez has done nothing to help these people and he is running his country into the ground.
I find it funny that with all your authoritative language in this post, you failed to fact-check.
QUOTE(CIA world fact book)
Population below poverty line: 37.9% (end 2005 est.)
QUOTE(Amlord)
Chavez has done nothing to help these people and he is running his country into the ground.
I wanted to focus on this a bit. This is an interesting thing to say. He has done nothing for them.... mmmhmmm. "Nothings" like free health care clinics in the slums - reaching 18 million people. Literacy programs - the 'mobile libraries' - that have increased literacy by over 1 million people in a few short years. Almost eliminating hunger through subsidised grocery stores that service some 13 million people. The co-ops that have been making significant inroads against unemployment. The highest minimum wage in Latin America (286$/mo). A 2006 GDP growth rate of 10.3%. A GINI index of 49.1.
I respect your intellect and reasoning on this board to a large degree, Amlord. Yet this post seems to be nothing but the hearsay from your friend's mother, and the repeating of the types of talking points we see every day in the conservative media. You may not agree with Chavez. You may think socialist reforms are the purest form of evil. You may have an excuse - I mean an explanation - for every number I have written here. But those numbers are, ultimately, the only real "facts" we have. The rest is just arguing about whether we like the methods or not.