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You're just cherry-picking examples. All the coverage I've seen over the past months has been universally negative of PSUV. And is that supposed to be some sort of weird slam against Op-eds? Do you understand how that sort of thing works?
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# ? May 4, 2017 22:58 |
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# ? Jun 2, 2024 02:31 |
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Mozi posted:You're just cherry-picking examples. All the coverage I've seen over the past months has been universally negative of PSUV. Coverage can be both negative and lazy; lazy coverage isn't good journalism. I've found op-eds are usually ideological welfare sections with lower standards. It would have been nice if it was instead a guest reporter feature, you know without the "these are the opinions of the writer" caveat.
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# ? May 4, 2017 23:51 |
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I would say it's finally started getting coverage. For example I heard about the "constitutional assembly" from my mainstream news aggregator before I read it in this thread (Reuters I think) and they weren't complimentary. Before that though, not really.
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# ? May 5, 2017 00:21 |
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I'm working full time on keeping track of developments in Venezuela and there's so much going on that I'm not able to cover it all. Here are some of the bigger news from today:
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# ? May 5, 2017 02:12 |
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Meanwhile the good dudes at telesur just released this aptly named Maduro propaganda documentary called : "Indestructible Loyalty" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rrLvKkk14AA
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# ? May 5, 2017 03:08 |
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Pity Party Animal posted:That's labelled as an opinion piece. Excellent reporting NYT. A good share* of articles on NYTimes about Venezuela in the past year and a half have been by Nicolas Casey, or in collaboration with Nicolas Casey: https://www.nytimes.com/by/nicholas-casey He absolutely is super critical of the regime while still being objective and not flying into Breitbart style reporting, which is the cherry picking you've been showing. He is incredibly not lazy, going far outside Caracas for his reporting, going to hospitals and regions that literally no other English-language journalist is doing, like to the pirates on the Caribbean coast, or to hospitals with abandoned, chained mental patients starving to death inside. He's probably the journalist I have the most respect for, as he seems to be doing it out of a genuine desire to report an untold story, and not for adrenaline fix like the Iraq war tourists/journalists. Edit: Source*: https://query.nytimes.com/search/si...ezuela/365days/ you'd have to do some serious cherry picking to find one there that wasn't overtly critical of the PSUV, and even more cherry picking to find one painting them in a positive light. Saladman fucked around with this message at 09:55 on May 5, 2017 |
# ? May 5, 2017 09:51 |
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Uncle Jam posted:El Hefe you better not be dead. He's probably in hiding. Considering the chavista defenders that used to stalk this thread he may have let something slip that let them identify and harass him. I have a suspicion several of them were connected to the regime. He's likely not coming back. Too dangerous
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# ? May 5, 2017 15:06 |
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None of the Chavista supporters had anything to do with Venezuela whatsoever, or at least not who posted in the past two years. Also none of the Venezuelas in this thread, nor the people in his F1 thread, knew how to contact him on Facebook or even by email, so I guess he hasn't let much "slip". Anyway he got probated here on Christmas for posting about Venezuelan poors being terrible people for ruining Venezuela, so most likely he got pissed and just found something else to do with his time. Hopefully.
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# ? May 5, 2017 17:09 |
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Most of the regime defenders have slunk off shamefully.
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# ? May 5, 2017 17:17 |
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I exchanged emails with him way back but unfortunately I used some dumb hotmail or yahoo mail account so that's gone. He also sent me a voice file of him saying Jaime Alguersuari so if during the riots some guy starts saying Jaime Alguersuari we could potentially ID him. Anyway if Caro can survive Syrian torture dungeons he's probably good, just maybe without data somewhere.
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# ? May 5, 2017 17:31 |
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I wonder how long until the EU and others suspend the visa free travel for venezuelans due to the exodus.
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# ? May 5, 2017 20:58 |
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Maybe El Hefe moved to Miami (where his father lives iirc) and just forgot his password.
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# ? May 5, 2017 21:15 |
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Uncle Jam posted:Anyway if Caro can survive Syrian torture dungeons he's probably good, just maybe without data somewhere. OT for this thread, but speaking of, if anyone casually keeps up with Caro news, he wrote the first part of his experience in Syria (from arriving in Turkey, up until getting captured) a few months ago. https://steemit.com/syria/@kpatrickdawes/glasshouse-a-true-story-of-the-arab-spring-part-1 https://steemit.com/syria/@kpatrickdawes/glasshouse-a-true-story-of-the-arab-spring-part-2-jabberwocky Unfortunately that back in August, about 4 months after we found out he was released from Syria. So, maybe there's no part 3 coming. It is nice and full of crazy Caro. I don't think anyone could fake that narrative style even if they wanted to. He'd make a great avant-garde author for college English classes to study. Maybe El Hefe can write about his Venezuela experience once he gets out of wherever he is.
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# ? May 5, 2017 23:00 |
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I bought Caro an account (after he got back) but he either hasn't been posting or is keeping a low profile
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# ? May 6, 2017 00:25 |
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This piece of poo poo bus driver is quickly rising the ranks of worst humans in history. This WSJ article is uber depressing. https://www.wsj.com/articles/venezuela-is-starving-1493995317 -- excerpt: quote:The most recent Caritas study of 800 children under the age of 5 in Yare and three other communities showed that in February nearly 11% suffered from severe acute malnutrition, which is potentially fatal, compared with 8.7% in October. Caritas said nearly a fifth of children under age 5 in those four communities suffered from chronic malnutrition, which stunts growth and could mark a generation.
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# ? May 6, 2017 01:43 |
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The protests in the street are quickly turning into something more than protests and riots. We are very close to a civil uprising of some kind and all our violence between both sides. Despite what naysayers say this is very possible. You don't even need guns. Machetes, Molotov cocktails, improvised incendiary devices will suffice. The government has done nothing to improve the situation in any way. Gas is cheap, I can see them combining it with styrofoam and napalming military tanks. People on Internet forums are already compiling guides on how to keep collectivos out of buildings. Focusing primarily on boiling water or oil.
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# ? May 6, 2017 03:30 |
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There's a women's march planned for Caracas and other cities starting at 10:00 AM. I'm not sure where the march is headed in Caracas, but look for pictures and videos of the National Guard brutalizing mothers and grandmothers later today. There were two protest-related deaths yesterday, and it looks like there's been one more this morning. The first death was a man named Miguel Medina, who died in Zulia state. He was shot at a protest there on April 26 and succumbed to his injuries yesterday. The second death was Hecder Lugo from Carabobo state, the man lying on the road in one of the videos I posted yesterday. Hecder was shot in the head with a projectile (either a bullet or a ball bearing/marble). Here's a video of the moment protesters recovered him from the road (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D9HFB7gzRzE). In the video, you can see protesters pleading with the National Guard soldiers to stop shooting so that they can go pick up Hecder. The third death that I'm just now hearing about is that of a two-month-old baby who died of respiratory failure in Valencia on Thursday. The mother took the baby to a local hospital with respiratory problems and when the baby died, the doctors attributed the death to tear gas. The official death count is starting to diverge quite a bit depending on the media outlet, but right now it ranges from 37-41. Some media outlets count a few more deaths in El Valle on April 20 than others, which I think is where the major point of divergence is. The estimate of deaths from the 2014 is almost exactly that range: 38-43. A statue of Chavez was torn down, smashed and burned in the city of Villa del Rosario in Zulia state. Here are two videos showing the event: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LhxtfB0TE7k and https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cQmIRC1WEfU In another bit of news, a pair of hackers known on Twitter as @YoSoyJustin and @HDPY0 appear to have hacked the website of the carnet de la patria (Fatherland I.D.), which is a piece of identification that gives people access to subsidized food and other regime "benefits". Justin was up most of the night releasing screenshots of what looks to be the website's entries for high-ranking PSUV individuals including Maduro's son, Diosdado Cabello, and Vladimir Padrino Lopez. The carnet de la patria website came down after Justin had been supposedly playing with it for maybe about an hour or so, and it's still down as of me typing this (8:30 AM EST). Justin also said that he'd be releasing more information on what he supposedly found in the hack this weekend, and that there were only 4.7 million people registered for the card and not the 12 million plus that the government claims. Arkane posted:This piece of poo poo bus driver is quickly rising the ranks of worst humans in history. This is why Maduro defenders are a dying breed, in this thread and elsewhere. ISeeCuckedPeople posted:The protests in the street are quickly turning into something more than protests and riots. I understand what you're trying to say, but I think we're working with different definitions of what is going on/what is likely to go on. We're already seeing a violent "civil uprising", but that is not a civil war. "All out violence between both sides", as in a civil war, is quite another thing. But your own description of what this conflict would look like (machetes and molotov cocktails vs. tanks and jet fighters) brings it right back to Labradoodle's point a while back: that it would be a massacre, not a civil war. In an earlier post I pointed to Chile's transition from Pinochet as an example of a strongman military dictatorship moving towards democracy without a civil war. I don't know why I didn't think of this at the time, but we have an example of that in Venezuela as well. Marcos Perez Jimenez was an army general who was dictator from 1952 to 1958. He was firmly entrenched in power and had the full and unconditional support of the military until after about a month of protests Perez Jimenez left the country and Venezuela had democratic elections that December.
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# ? May 6, 2017 13:49 |
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Chunks of the army are apparently turning against the government.
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# ? May 7, 2017 00:54 |
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I saw this but I'm skeptical because the soldiers could very well have been escorting the marchers: https://twitter.com/ThorHalvorssen/status/860706366931034112
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# ? May 7, 2017 01:04 |
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BrutalistMcDonalds posted:I saw this but I'm skeptical because the soldiers could very well have been escorting the marchers: So, Capriles tweeted today about eighty or so military members being detained for opposing the government. However, it's important to keep in mind the military in Venezuela is about 200,00 strong according to Wikipedia, which makes this news irrelevant. It's also worth remembering the Venezuelan government engages in overt espionage of opposition figures. As in monitoring texts, emails, and so on even without warrants. They even broadcast this stuff on national television without a second thought. If anything, they probably keep more close tabs on the military than on the opposition, which is the logical thing to do in their place now, as the military is the only body that can take them down.
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# ? May 7, 2017 01:26 |
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The Women's March went pretty well, considering the violence that we've seen at most demonstrations. The National Guard did stop the protesters from reaching the Ministry of the Interior, Justice and Peace in Caracas, but the protesters weren't hit with tear gas. Tear gas was used to disperse protesters in Maracay, but otherwise the rest of the marches went relatively well. In Caracas, the National Guard blocked the demonstration with mobile walls (I don't know what their actualy name is--I mean the trucks that open up to form walls): https://twitter.com/venezoIanos/status/860900993814417408 The women sat down and sang folk songs in front of the wall: https://twitter.com/unidadvenezuela/status/860917389306802176 At one point, a demonstrator took off her pants and threw them at the soldiers. In Venezuela, "ponganse los pantalones" [put on your pants] is similar to the expression "man up" in English. The woman is telling the soldiers to do the right thing and take a stand against tyranny: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cJRBqHzD_do The demonstrators in Maracay weren't so lucky as the ones in Caracas. They got tear gassed pretty quickly: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JMKq5k726-E https://twitter.com/venezoIanos/status/860903089309720577 In Barquisimeto, Lara state, protesters ripped a picture of Hugo Chavez off a wall and stomped on it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9xc2a49nHBc In other news, a two-month-old baby died of respiratory failure in a hospital in Valencia overnight on Thursday because the authorities had used tear gas around the hospital to disperse looters. The baby's death is the 41st protest-related fatality since the first death on April 6. Maduro was on TV yesterday at a farm somewhere and he had a prolonged interaction with a bunch of cows. He talked directly to them, asked them questions and then asked them to join him in his Communal Constituent Assembly project. The video is here and my translation is below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gk4IomJv99U quote:Maduro: [Starting at 0:10] Well, we have to multiply all of our achievements and think about the future. I’m calling on your right now for the [Communal Constituent Assembly]. I want the spokespeople, the producers and the leaders of the fields to become members of the [Communal Constituent Assembly]. Will you support me? Will you join me on the [Communal Constituent Assembly]? Or do you want guarimba [a derogatory word for “protest”]? Do you want violence? Do you want things to burn? Do you want death? Those of us who want peace and life, let’s go to the [Communal Constituent Assembly]! GlyphGryph posted:Chunks of the army are apparently turning against the government. Henrique Capriles announced yesterday that 85 army officers have been arrested for "voicing displeasure" at the ongoing repression. Minister of Defense Vladimir Padrino Lopez gave a bit of a weird statement on this today, saying that "this speculative figure doesn't exist. There's no such quantity of officers [arrested for] subversion". Of course he would say that if the story was true, but that was his official response. There's probably discontent in the army, but for anything to happen we'll probably need more than a couple of really high-ranking officers to show up at Miraflores with a letter of resignation for Maduro. I suspect that if this scenario does play out, we won't really see it coming. I wouldn't take this as a sign of anything yet. Officers have been arrested before for speaking out against the regime. BrutalistMcDonalds posted:I saw this but I'm skeptical because the soldiers could very well have been escorting the marchers: I wouldn't take that video at face value, and I think you're right. Notice that the soldiers aren't carrying signs, chanting anti-regime slogans, or doing anything to suggest they're actually a part of the demonstration. They're all in full gear and they look like they're working (in fact, one of them tells the person driving by to move along). The person at the beginning of the video says "The soldiers are marching with us!", but it seems to me like they were as you say escorting the demonstrators along the road. If I were at the front of that group of people and I wanted to mess with the soldiers, I'd also yell "These guys are with us! They hate Maduro!" at anyone I saw. However, the fact that the soldiers weren't shooting the demonstrators with tear gas is a nice step forward!
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# ? May 7, 2017 01:40 |
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About the march, I actually have a first hand perspective from this one, from the side of the government's protest today. Their march literally consisted of half a block of women, I walked right by them as they passed my block to go get a haircut. Literally nobody gave a crap, they closed a few blocks for a couple of hours and that was it. Sorry for the lack of pictures, but as you can imagine, I'm not keen on getting my cellphone out in the middle of Caracas.
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# ? May 7, 2017 01:47 |
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So, uh, why is Maduro demanding cows join his constitutional assembly?
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# ? May 7, 2017 01:46 |
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Night10194 posted:So, uh, why is Maduro demanding cows join his constitutional assembly? Because they're historically disenfrancheesed
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# ? May 7, 2017 01:47 |
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Labradoodle posted:About the march, I actually have a first hand perspective from this one, from the side of the government's protest today. Their march literally consisted of half a block of women, I walked right by them as they passed my block to go get a haircut. Literally nobody gave a crap, they closed a few blocks for a couple of hours and that was it. Sorry for the lack of pictures, but as you can imagine, I'm not keen on getting my cellphone out in the middle of Caracas. Maduro is struggling really hard to get any numbers at their demonstrations, even employees under threat of being fired aren't showing up. I think this is it. The momentum is there and the regime is losing supporters left and right, and the opposition, even if ideologically sparse, is unwilling to concede anything to the government. If they keep up the pressure, Maduro will have to leave. I've been trying to find out what I can do for help, people have been suggesting donating gas masks and medical supplies for protesters since those are the two most expensive items to find in Venezuela, but I haven't been able to find any trusted suppliers that can guarantee the items will make it to the right hands. I've been linked to this Amazon wishlist, linked by the First Aid association of the UCV, which seems pretty legit. If you guys can get people to collaborate with just a couple items that would be great.
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# ? May 7, 2017 02:12 |
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fnox posted:Maduro is struggling really hard to get any numbers at their demonstrations, even employees under threat of being fired aren't showing up. I can verify that Amazon list is legit, at least from the Reddit comments. Plus, nothing there screams of a scam although it'd be nice if someone who bought from there verified which address they're being sent to so I can corroborate if it's one of the companies that ships stuff to Venezuela.
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# ? May 7, 2017 02:39 |
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The full shipping address is hidden, and this is the only thing that comes up: "Habitat Residence Condo Hotel, Miami FL".
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# ? May 7, 2017 15:44 |
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Amazon deliveries to Venezuela are handled by a single, government-owned company in Miami, are they not? You order to there and they ship it on to you. At least that is how my colleagues in the IVIC explained it.
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# ? May 7, 2017 21:14 |
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Vlex posted:Amazon deliveries to Venezuela are handled by a single, government-owned company in Miami, are they not? You order to there and they ship it on to you. At least that is how my colleagues in the IVIC explained it. Maybe for people working for the IVIC. Most people use private couriers, you basically deliver your order straight to their address, then they bring it into Venezuela and you collect it from them. From what I'm seeing from that address, it seems to be next to some docks which have a ton of courier offices, poo poo like FedEx or UPS. I'm also uncertain that they will reveal exactly who it is that is bringing them their shipments because the government would surely shut them down.
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# ? May 7, 2017 21:35 |
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Vlex posted:Amazon deliveries to Venezuela are handled by a single, government-owned company in Miami, are they not? You order to there and they ship it on to you. At least that is how my colleagues in the IVIC explained it. Not exactly. It's more that if someone in Venezuela want something sent to them from Amazon, they need to get through one of many shipping companies instead of the disaster we call Postal Service. And pretty much all of said companies had a Miami Middleman Address to take advantage of Florida's tax-less prices not straining the original Restrictions we had in Electronic Purchases through Local Credit Cards (until two years ago, where not even the ones from Government-owned banks can be used for any non-Venezuelan website at all) so any added cost like the shipping itself could be covered in Bolivares, a separate amount of Dollars or Amazon Giftcards depending of the company. On a unrelated note, I'm mostly lurking in this thread because usually anything I could report about Valencia ends up covered better by Chuck's compiling. AstraSage fucked around with this message at 02:42 on May 8, 2017 |
# ? May 7, 2017 21:59 |
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The big protest action of the day today was a musician's demonstration at the Plaza Francia in Altamira, Caracas. From the pictures and videos that I saw, the event seemed fairly light-hearted, specially in light of the violence that we've seen at other demonstrations. https://twitter.com/CATERINAV/status/861228397334278144 https://twitter.com/MariaCorinaYA/status/861256419953307648 https://twitter.com/CATERINAV/status/861242592784207872 The pictures of the children walking down the street playing their instruments reminded me of a Christmas tradition called patinata. Around Christmas time, a whole street would be closed to traffic one night (or was it a set of nights?), and everyone would go there for a street party. There was a real festival atmosphere about it. Kids would go to the patinata with skateboards, roller blades and bicycles and just hang out there. They were really cool because you'd get to play on a street that was normally really busy and you'd get to be out at dark after your bed time. Do those still happen? A couple of other news items:
El Estimulo is a newspaper out of Lara state, and it published an article on Friday profiling "the children of the resistance". These are kids who have been observed taking part in protests. The article profiles kids seen protesting in Caracas last week, and it is really difficult to get through. The article is worth a click for the pictures. I've translated about half of it here: quote:“We’re here because we want change and a better country. That’s why we have to fight, and this president doesn’t want to help us. We want change”, insists the 13-year-old. They refuse to give their names. They explain that they are from El Paraiso and that they came to Altamira on a bus. They’re prepared. The 15-year-old has a thick glove on his right hand–the one he uses to throw tear gas canister back–and a rock firmly in his left. He also uses a hat, goggles and a scarf. The 13-year-old has a helmet, but no gloves. He needs both hands free. They defend themselves with a slingshot. There, closer to the Francisco de Miranda avenue than to the skirmish, they’ve got it loaded. That’s what the marbles are for. Night10194 posted:So, uh, why is Maduro demanding cows join his constitutional assembly? AstraSage posted:On a unrelated note, I'm mostly lurking in this thread because usually anything I could report about Valencia ends up covered better by Chuck's compiling.
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# ? May 8, 2017 01:29 |
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The march to the Ministry of Education office in Caracas today was (surprise) violently repressed by state security forces, and the demonstrators did not reach their destination. So far, today has been a near play-by-play repeat of the standard protests that we've been seeing since early April. Here are some highlights:
In another bit of news, National Assembly PSUV deputy Pedro Carreño gave an interview in the state-owned VTV network in which he said that the regime was working to strengthen militia "fighting units to support the regime". He gave a bunch of figures that, if accurate, suggest that there are approximately 203,000 militia organized into 10,176 Unidades de Batalla Bolivar Chavez (UBCh), which I suspect most Venezuelans would qualify as a colectivo armado. There's no way to verify this information, but it's troubling that Carreño would go on TV and boast about this. He said that the U.S. was going to invade Venezuela, and that when it did the UBCh would make sure that the U.S. would "find 13,682 Vietnams" in Venezuela. Again, I'm not sure where the math came from, but it's such a precise number of Vietnams that we can only assume that he arrived at the figure after careful calculation. Also, here's the obligatory picture of Pedro Carreño that must accompany any discussion of him. The man looks like a Bond villain. Yes, he has that look on his face all the time: Finally, here's a pretty video. I'm not sure when or where it was recorded, but it came up on Twitter today. I think it was recorded in Caracas. It shows a man driving along when he sees a man looking through a pile of garbage accompanied by a small boy. I've translated the video below: https://twitter.com/botellazo/status/861687443568898048 quote:Driver: Hey buddy–are you looking for food for the kid?
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# ? May 9, 2017 01:41 |
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AstraSage posted:Not exactly. So like most of the information we were given, it was bogus, gotcha.
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# ? May 10, 2017 16:44 |
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I just checked Carlos Latuff's twitter today and gee I wonder why he's so quiet about the situation in Venezuela.
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# ? May 10, 2017 22:17 |
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Highlights from the last two days: Tuesday May 9:
Wednesday May 10:
The death toll from the protests since the first casualty on April 6 is now 47, and is now greater than the death toll from the 2014 unrest. The opposition is planning a memorial march tomorrow in Caracas.
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# ? May 11, 2017 05:23 |
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tempted to make a poopootov GBS thread and become a superstar https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...m=.4d6c840c6df7 quote:The security forces, my colleagues report, “appear increasingly determined to choke the protest movement with brute force, including the use of copious amounts of tear gas. Several protesters have been killed or severely injured by gas canisters fired into crowds or allegedly dropped from government helicopters. Last week, a young man was injured when he was run over by an armored police vehicle that plowed through a melee.” the "revolting state of affairs" joke was bolded in the original article. perfect. Laphroaig fucked around with this message at 07:26 on May 11, 2017 |
# ? May 11, 2017 07:20 |
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Chuck Boone posted:Diosdado Cabello was on TV and said that Bracho was killed by the opposition. Just as he did after the death of Juan Pernalete on April 26, Cabello said that Bracho couldn't have been killed by authorities because there were none in Las Mercedes at the time. Cabello was lying when he said that about Pernalete and he is lying now. Cabello even said that the chief of a police agency told him that Braco and Pernalete looked similar, and that it's possible that the opposition is "looking for young people with those [physical characteristics]" to kill them for some reason. No, I am not joking, Cabello actually said that on television and I am now just a bit deader inside. So this guy is basically Trump without the business background.
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# ? May 12, 2017 06:06 |
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Fuschia tude posted:So this guy is basically Trump without the business background. Cabello is basically a Bond villain come to life. Seriously, google the guy. He's been involved with the whole Chavista movement since the beginning and now he's basically a drug kingpin. The whole country knows he's as rich as Croesus and that he didn't come by that wealth by chance. In the past, he was one of the major movers and shakers in Chavismo. These days he doesn't hold a high rank or keep a high profile, but he's still one of their most public figures and attack dogs.
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# ? May 12, 2017 07:05 |
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There was a memorial march yesterday in Caracas for Miguel Castillo Bracho. The march made it to the spot in Las Mercedes where Castillo was killed. The memorial started at Castillo's high school, where a children's band played the national anthem: https://twitter.com/JuanAndresMejia/status/862667428798529536 Then the mourners marched to Las Mercedes: https://twitter.com/CaraotaDigital/status/862692737165950980 https://twitter.com/EfectoCocuyo/status/862680673890578433 They placed flowers and wrote messages on the spot where he died: https://twitter.com/FreddyGuevaraC/status/862706798335336450 The march took place without incident because *gasp* when the authorities do not show up to a peaceful assembly to repress, the peaceful assembly tends to unfold peacefully and without incident! Yesterday, El Universal reported that Miguel Castillo Bracho was killed by a ball bearing that entered his body through his left arm and struck his heart. Here is a picture of the ball bearing that killed him: I've been seeing pictures and videos of protesters holding up ball bearings, nails and marbles that they say were fired at them by the authorities. I've also seen a picture of a protester with a marble lodged in his leg. This is the first confirmed fatality from one of these projectiles. There's supposed to be a march of elderly people today in Caracas titled "Por Nuestros Nietos" [For Our Grandchildren]. The march is setting off from Chacaito to the Public Defender's office starting at around 10:00 AM. I think that we'll probably see a repeat of the Women's March last Saturday. Optically it would be disastrous for the National Guard to tear gas and shoot at grandmas and grandpas, so I think that they'll just put up those big mobile walls and stop the march from happening. On what appears to be an unrelated note, someone put shipping containers blocking access to bridges in Las Mercedes and Bello Monte overnight: https://twitter.com/CarlosRaulHer/status/863000673423642624 https://twitter.com/Betticaa/status/863014171805462528 No one seems to know who put the containers there or why, but people on Twitter think it was the government. Anyway, Civil Protection showed up and started removing them just now: https://twitter.com/traffiCARACAS/status/863038862360064000 The Venezuelan embassy in Madrid tried to hold a pro-regime event there at a cultural centre yesterday, but the whole thing went belly up when hundreds of Venezuelans showed up to protest outside of the building: https://twitter.com/NTN24ve/status/862734340849094656 This is all hearsay, so take it with a grain of salt: I heard that the man who organized the protest only requested a permit (you need permits to protest in Spain) for about 20 people, because that's how many people usually turned up to the protests that he organized. The outrage against the regime from Venezuelan expats is such that all of those people ended up showing up essentially unannounced. This sort of thing has been happening all over, too: there was a scuffle at an anti-regime protest in Panama earlier this week, and I've seen pictures of consulates/embassies in Colombia, the U.S. and Belgium being the sites of protests and demonstrations. The Venezuelan consulate here in Toronto planned an event for this weekend that had a really dumb name: something like, "The Great Demonstration of Support for President Nicolas Maduro's Dialogue and Constituent Assembly". The official poster promoting the event on the consulate's website contained this image of heavily armed opposition protesters: People on Twitter immediately picked up the fact that the image is a really crappy photoshop of a picture taken by an EFE journalist. This is the original image: The consulate took the poster down from its website, and then replaced it with another image. Then, it took the poster down completely, and then later it put up an announcement on its website saying that it had been hacked and that it's staff had experience "endless threats, insults and sabotage". It's not clear if the event is still taking place, but there's a counter-event happening that I'll be attending. I'll come back with pictures later this weekend. A couple of other things that have slipped through the cracks in the last few days:
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# ? May 12, 2017 15:38 |
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# ? Jun 2, 2024 02:31 |
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I hope the protests continue until the regime is toppled, with minimal casualties of course...except maybe Maduro and his cronies, who are responsible for the deaths and suffering of so many. Stay safe and stay strong. Fados posted:Meanwhile the good dudes at telesur just released this aptly named Maduro propaganda documentary called : "Indestructible Loyalty" Downvoted this poo poo, and I hope you guys do too. Mind-boggling that you can have Western (non-Latin American) commenters talk about 'American warfare' when it's Maduro blatantly killing 'his' people both directly and indirectly. Chuck Boone posted:This is all hearsay, so take it with a grain of salt: I heard that the man who organized the protest only requested a permit (you need permits to protest in Spain) for about 20 people, because that's how many people usually turned up to the protests that he organized. The outrage against the regime from Venezuelan expats is such that all of those people ended up showing up essentially unannounced. This sort of thing has been happening all over, too: there was a scuffle at an anti-regime protest in Panama earlier this week, and I've seen pictures of consulates/embassies in Colombia, the U.S. and Belgium being the sites of protests and demonstrations. Next time there's a protest in Brussels, I'm down. Haven't seen anything for the time being, but if you're in the know you can keep me posted. Phlegmish fucked around with this message at 14:53 on May 14, 2017 |
# ? May 14, 2017 14:06 |