Reflections on Venezuela: A People Under Fire

darkbeaver

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Jan 26, 2006
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Reflections on Venezuela: A People Under Fire

By Fidel Castro

12/01/07 "
Prensa Latina " -- -- Venezuela, whose people are heirs to Bolivar's ideas which transcend his era, is today facing a world tyranny a thousand times more powerful than that of Spain's colonial strength added to that of the recently born United States which, through Monroe, proclaimed their right to the natural wealth of the continent and to the sweat of its people.

Marti denounced the brutal system and called it a monster, in whose entrails he had lived. His internationalist spirit shone as never before when, in a letter left unfinished due to his death in combat, he publicly revealed the objective of his restless struggle: "…I am now every day risking my life for my country, and for my duty -since I understand it and have the courage to do it- to timely prevent, with the independence of Cuba, that the United States expand over the Antilles and that they fall, with this additional force, over our lands in America…"

It was not in vain that he stated in plain verse: "With the poor of this earth, my fate I wish to cast". Later, he proclaimed categorically: "Humanity is homeland". The Apostle of our independence wrote one day: "Let Venezuela call on me to serve her: I am her son".

The most sophisticated media developed by technology, employed to kill human beings and to subjugate or exterminate peoples; the massive sowing of conditioned reflexes of the mind; consumerism and all available resources; these are being used today against the Venezuelans, with the intent of ripping the ideas of Bolivar and Marti to shreds.

The empire has created conditions conducive to violence and internecine conflicts. On Chavez's recent visit last November 21, I seriously discussed with him the risks of assassination as he is constantly out in the open in convertible vehicles. I said this because of my experience as a combatant trained in the use of an automatic weapon and a telescopic sight. Likewise, after the triumph, I became the target of assassination plots directly or indirectly ordered by almost every United States administration since 1959.

The irresponsible government of the empire does not stop for a minute to think that the assassination of Venezuela's leader or a civil war in that country would blow up the globalized world economy, due to its huge reserves of hydrocarbons. Such circumstances are without precedent in the history of mankind.

Cuba developed close ties with the Bolivarian government of Venezuela during the hardest days resulting from the demise of the USSR and the tightening of the United States economic blockade. The exchange of goods and services grew from practically zero level to more than 7 billion dollars annually, with great economic and social benefits for both our peoples. Today that is where we receive the fundamental supplies of fuel needed for our country's consumption, something that would be very difficult to obtain from other sources due to the shortage of light crude oil, the insufficient refining capacity, the United States' power and the wars its has unleashed to seize the world oil and gas reserves.

Add to the high energy prices, the prices of foods destined by imperial policy to be transformed into fuel for the gas-guzzling cars of the United States and other industrial nations.

A victory of the Yes vote on December 2 would not be enough. The weeks and months following that date may very well prove to be extremely tough for many countries, Cuba for one; although before that the empire's adventures could lead the planet into an atomic war, as their own leaders have confessed.

Our compatriots can rest assured that I have had time to think and to meditate at length on these problems.

Fidel Castro Ruz - November 29, 2007








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Dixie Cup

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Sep 16, 2006
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With the countries who have tried socialism and failed, I'm simply amazed that anyone would consider it at all. Baffling to be sure!
 

MHz

Time Out
Mar 16, 2007
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If it wasn't so superior to the US version of running things why is the US so against it? (Iceland is thriving, that is why they are not in the news very much since they broke free) Every example you can bring up has the US applying as much pressure as possible to blackball them so they cannot succeed. If it was a doomed program like advertised it would not need so much help, let alone decades and decades of it like Cube has endured. Just because they didn't like seeing the place turned into Vegas before Vegas would have been legal on US soil.

Add in the Orgy Island element and you have the reason the locals would rather endure endless sanctions than get the kind of help Puerto rico is getting since the last hurricane, which is more like the help Haiti got than not.

Why would you want to do business with somebody that is trying to exterminate you?

The United States announced fresh sanctions targeting Venezuela this afternoon as punishment for the country’s Sunday elections. The sanctions primarily target institutions that buy and sell the nation’s debt. The crackdown comes as Venezuelan president Nicolas Maduro won a second six year term. Alexander Maine from the Center for Economic Policy Research and RT America’s Anya Parampil have more.


Welcome to the Investors Trading Academy talking glossary of financial terms and events. Our word of the day is “Economic Sanctions” A way of punishing errant countries, which is currently more acceptable than bombing or invading them. One or more restrictions are imposed on international trade with the targeted country in order to persuade the target's government to change a policy. Possible sanctions include limiting export or import trade with the target; constraining investment in the target; and preventing transfers of money involving citizens or the government of the target. Sanctions can be multi*lateral, with many countries acting together, perhaps under the auspices of the united nations, or unilateral, when one country takes action on its own. How effective sanctions are debatable. According to one study, between 1914 and 1990 there were 116 occasions on which various countries imposed economic sanctions. Two-thirds of these failed to achieve their stated goals. The cost to the country imposing sanctions can be large, particularly when it is acting unilaterally. It is estimated that in 1995 imposing sanctions on other countries cost the American economy over $15 billion in lost exports and 200,000 in lost jobs in export industries. Widely considered a notable success was the use of economic sanctions against the apartheid regime in south Africa, although some economists question how big a part the sanctions actually played. Clearly important was the fact that the sanctions were imposed multilaterally by the international community, so there were comparatively few breaches of the restrictions. But, arguably, the most crucial factor in persuading the government in Pretoria to cave in was that foreign companies fearing that their share price would fall because their investments in south Africa would attract bad publicity voluntarily chose for commercial reasons to disinvest. By Barry Norman, Investors Trading Academy - ITA
 

MHz

Time Out
Mar 16, 2007
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Considering the US is starting to lose friends with money I wouldn't mock them too much as their oil didn't save them when they were attacked. Nobody will be coming to the aid of the US when her dollar tanks on the world stage. To put a country into ruins because they won't submit to you demands shows how small you are rather than how big you are.

When you are big you can last forever, when you are big because you are a bully you only last until your first stumble.