How socialism turned oil-rich Venezuela into a basket case

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
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Watch Venezuela, Because Food Shortages, Looting And Economic Collapse Are Coming To America Too


What a disaster Venezuela is.

American moles are disrupting Venezuela, the evils of socialism is a simple minded excuse to cover up American Made regime change.


The American Disaster is already being Televised.

All the body bags hand cuffs and leg irons are made in China.

Canada goes into the history dumpster as well so you won't be alone.

Now lets work together and stop climate change.
 

MHz

Time Out
Mar 16, 2007
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School of the Americas Phase II by the look of Brazil's latest coup. Want to bet the outcome is the same for the people, disaster if you 'resist' as in Venezuela , disaster if you don't resist as is about to happen in Brazil. If someplace was being set up for 'an event' it would be Brazil during the Olympics.
Usually the best solution to avoid starvation is to grow your own food. What is being done with their farmland as that should be the first thing to be 'nationalized' in a nation emergency involving food for the masses. The old guard that hightailed it to Miami when Hugo took over are still there getting their 6 meals a day.

American moles are disrupting Venezuela, the evils of socialism is a simple minded excuse to cover up American Made regime change.
Notice how when they control an area the news about what is going on just ends? Iraq for instance, Afghanistan and Iraq are two more places that were blacked out as far as what went on inside when the US had control of those areas. Now it becomes clear just why that was, it wasn't that there was no crime, it was because of the huge rise in certain crimes. So much for anybody having a whire horse to ride.
 

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
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School of the Americas Phase II by the look of Brazil's latest coup. Want to bet the outcome is the same for the people, disaster if you 'resist' as in Venezuela , disaster if you don't resist as is about to happen in Brazil. If someplace was being set up for 'an event' it would be Brazil during the Olympics.
Usually the best solution to avoid starvation is to grow your own food. What is being done with their farmland as that should be the first thing to be 'nationalized' in a nation emergency involving food for the masses. The old guard that hightailed it to Miami when Hugo took over are still there getting their 6 meals a day.


Notice how when they control an area the news about what is going on just ends? Iraq for instance, Afghanistan and Iraq are two more places that were blacked out as far as what went on inside when the US had control of those areas. Now it becomes clear just why that was, it wasn't that there was no crime, it was because of the huge rise in certain crimes. So much for anybody having a whire horse to ride.

Nonsence the people of Irag continue to shower the American liberators with rose peddels. The country has never had it so good despite the mysterious premature death figures. I understand the Irag people have embraced baseball and apple pie and country music is now so popular it is hard to find CDs.
 

MHz

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Mar 16, 2007
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News flash, those are not rose petals, they are what remains of a white flag after the bombing runs, blood soaked tiny pieces of cloth.

C&W??? I can understand some of their outrage. Bonanza being the American dream I gather.
 

MHz

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No, that was the way I read it. If you want perfection there is a price attached. This is the public domain version, hope it works for you.
 

MHz

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I wouldn't go so far as to say it would be a drag but perhaps our relatively short lifespan prohibits us from appreciating the benefits of nothing ever going wrong as being the best way to experience a 'normal day'.

That being said, perhaps a quick look at their history would show why they went from having a lot of money to being in the poor house.

Venezuela Foreign Trade - Flags, Maps, Economy, History, Climate, Natural Resources, Current Issues, International Agreements, Population, Social Statistics, Political System

In 1988 official imports totaled US$10.9 billion; the country also ran a trade deficit in that year of US$758 million, the first since 1978 (see table 11, Appendix). The country's imports peaked in 1982 at US$11.7 billion, before the 1983 economic crisis and the subsequent imposition of multiple exchange rates, higher tariffs, and greater nontariff barriers, all of which stifled new imports. These protective import measures caused imports to drop by 43 percent from 1983 to 1986, before imports surged again to the 1988 level. In 1988 raw materials represented 44 percent of all imports, followed by machinery (26 percent), transportation goods (16 percent), and consumer goods (15 percent). The United States, traditionally Venezuela's leading source of imports, supplied 44 percent of all foreign goods in 1988. Overall, Venezuela ranked as the sixteenth largest trading partner of the United States and was the largest export market for the state of Florida. In 1988 the Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany) trailed the United States with 8 percent of all imports, followed by Italy with 6 percent, and Japan with 5 percent. Brazil, France, Britain, and Canada were other notable suppliers. Imports from members of the Andean Common Market ( Ancom--see Glossary)--Colombia, Peru, Ecuador, and Bolivia--accounted for only a small fraction of total imports.

Import policy traditionally sought to protect local industry and agriculture from foreign competition and to substitute local production for imports. The government accomplished these goals through exchange rate manipulation, the imposition of tariffs, and through import licensing restrictions. In 1988 there were forty-one different tariff rates on more than 6,000 goods. Although tariffs sometimes exceeded 100 percent, the average was 37 percent. Fiscal policies, however, reimbursed as much as twothirds of these tariff payments through a complex system that favored priority development activities. Nevertheless, as part of the 1989 structural adjustment policies, the Pérez administration chose to liberalize the import regime to force local industries and farms to be more competitive with international counterparts, much to the displeasure of most local businessmen. In 1989 the government reduced the maximum tariff to 80 percent to simplify tariffs into a uniform structure, expected to include a maximum of 20 percent and a minimum of 10 percent tariffs by 1993. Import liberalization also addressed nontariff barriers, such as import licensing agreements, which further hampered the free flow of imports and often bred corruption. The government abolished most import licenses in 1989, including those of several state-owned enterprises. Economists expected that liberalization policies would hurt the country's balance of payments in the short run, but make the economy more competitive in the long run. Improved access for imports was also expected to increase trade flows from within the Andean region.
Exports declined in the early 1980s, then rose unevenly in the late 1980s, but still did not came close to the peak level of US$20.1 billion in 1981. Both export and import figures excluded substantial contraband trade along the Colombian border. Declining exports in the 1980s resulted almost entirely from lower oil prices. Traditional exports--oil, iron, coffee, and cocoa--averaged about 95 percent of total exports from 1980 to 1985, but fell as a percentage of total exports after the drop in oil prices in 1986. The role of nontraditional exports jumped from 4 percent of total exports in 1980 to 18 percent by 1988. Increased overseas sales of aluminum, steel, and petrochemicals also diversified the country's export base. The public sector produced nearly all the country's exports. The state also exported as much as two-thirds of all nontraditional goods in 1988, but the increasing role of private investment in basic metals and petrochemicals was expected to lower that percentage during the 1990s.
 

taxslave

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And the dippers are hoping to twin or steal the BC election so they can do the same thing here that they did last time. Namely destroy the economy and up pay and perks for government unions.
 

Jinentonix

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I suppose stating that Russia and China are "doing well" under socialism is an opinion that some people hold. However, I'm wondering if one was to actually speak to the people who live and work there who are educated enough to know about other "systems" (i.e. not brainwashed into thinking their system is nirvana), would agree.


Just askin....
Here's my opinion of China. Prior to communism, for thousands of years the Chinese were very inventive and innovative. Once they went communist, that inventiveness and innovation quickly stagnated. They stole other's ideas instead of creating their own. The stole plans for various things instead of designing them. Meanwhile, the Japanese were not only inventing new stuff, they were making existing products even better. While the Chinese could barely make a cheap copy of the original.

For the last 150 years, China had the world's second largest economy, almost all of which was internal/domestic. It's expanded outwardly more recently and could arguably be the worlds largest by now. If China fully shook off the shackles of communism, they could easily rule the world from an economic perspective. I have no doubt we'd see the inventive and innovative China of yesteryear return if they did. Of course that could also be a bad thing for the rest of the world but that's not really the point I'm trying to make.

We also see a similar phenomenon in highly socialized countries like Norway and Sweden, and to a lesser extent Denmark. Part of it is a result of the financial penalties for daring to be better off than your neighbours. Imagine getting paid only 40% of what you actually earned because the rest goes to taxes. And that's the average person. If you're doing better than the average person, the taxes on the extra can be as high as 80%. What's the incentive to perform at a higher level when all it does is penalize you financially?
 

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
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The important thing is to watch and enjoy the disintegration of the USA, Usary Screwed Airheads. Venezuela will outlive the American freak project so will Syria and Irag and Afghanistan and Lybia and North Korea and Russia and Vietnam.
 

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
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RR1 Distopia 666 Discordia
I was just wondering if you ever hear voices in your head.

You don't? Poor man you, the crickets have driven you insane then.


Kremlin advisor reveals 'cure for US aggression'
"The more aggressive the Americans are the sooner they will see the final collapse of the dollar as the only way for the victims of American aggression to stop this aggression is to get rid of the dollar. As soon as we and China are through with the dollar, it will be the end of the United States’ military might," Sergey Glazyev said in an interview with TASS.
RUSSIA ADDS ANOTHER HUGE PILE OF GOLD TO RESERVES IN MARCH

http://sputniknews.com/columnists/201704211052866086-washington-terrified-of-russia-china/

Why Washington is Terrified of Russia, China
Follow the money
Exhibit B centers on Russia and China quietly advancing their agreement to progressively replace the US dollar's reserve status with a gold-backed system.







 
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