placeholder
header

home | Archive | analysis | videos | data | weblog

placeholder
news in other languages:
placeholder
Editorials in English
fr
Editorials in Spanish
esp
Editorials in Italian
ita
Editorials in German
de

placeholder

The sum of all fears

By Aleksander Boyd

Harvey Keitel said once in a TV commercial "you either learn to overcome your fears or spend your life on your knees". Indeed fear is one of the most moving sentiments experienced by mankind. In order to overcome my fears I should start my wording them. First and foremost I fear for my family, a telephone call at midnight to learn that one of my beloved ones has been killed, thanks to Chavez' smashing idea of converting the formerly rowdy police forces into sitting ducks preventing the little balance that existed between them and common criminals, triggers my anxiety. Then there is the latent possibility of them being kicked out of our small farm (7 acres) owing to presidential rants against landowners, such thought is quite disturbing. Education is another crime; people whom do not speak the slang characteristic of the assorted rabble supporting the president can arouse suspicion. Ergo conversations in chavista-dominated areas ought to be kept to the bare minimum. Allow me to remind you that nowadays being white is considered an affront to the Bolivarian dream, which makes them worthy of attacks.

Similarly, the revoking referendum fuels my angst. It is a known fact that Hugo Chavez has no intentions whatsoever of suffering an electoral defeat whatever he may have said in international tribunes. He has been flirting with the concept of becoming a contemporary hero of Latin America since he was a tot and convincing him about how harmful his megalomaniac dream is, is an impossible task. That alone can be perceived as a declaration of war for Venezuelan society does not seem to be content with the idea of having him in the presidency until 2007. I read in horror constant reports about the deteriorating conditions of the country at all levels and the growing restlessness among otherwise calmed people.

The utter ignorance of facts and the lack of interest portrayed by the international community is another reason for panic. I keep debating on the reasons why we do not want Chavez as president anymore, the importance of having fresh and clear elections, the total rejection that most Venezuelans feel towards opposition politicos, however it has proven to be a lost cause. Europeans continue to judge us from a medieval perspective, in their eyes we are nothing but a group of Indians in a rather funny struggle to decide which cacique will rule our destinies next. The more chaotic the dispute the better for some to get good "contracts". Prime example is Mr Jack Kemp involved in a $1 billion transaction to supply millions of barrels of crude oil to the U.S. Free Market Petroleum LLC is putting the deal together with the involvement of Mr Kemp, a former U.S. congressman and the Republican Party's vice-presidential candidate in 1996.

Another case is the refusal by most of the international news agencies to show the Venezuelan crisis from our perspective. Meaning not by ours the stance of John Doe who sells counterfeited products in downtown Caracas but rather the thousands of dismissed workers from PDVSA, the victims of crime and land invasions at the hands of government sponsored thugs, the unemployed graduates from universities whom have no prospects of earning a decent living, the flood victims of Vargas, the sick and handicapped persons, the nurses and doctors in hospital whom have to work wonders without medical supplies, the humiliated army corps whom have to obey orders from Cuban "advisers" invited by the president. All these people ought to have a revealing version of the crisis.

Summarizing, there is very little I can do at this moment in time to overcome my fears. Feelings of uselessness invade me constantly; it is so frustrating to see one's family as characters of such pandemonium. What can we do? What argument have we got to put forward to convince Hugo Chavez, his sycophants and the world at large that Venezuela cannot survive under his mandate? The word on the street is that my countrymen will not spend their lives on their knees, would someone react to that?



send this article to a friend >>
placeholder
Loading


Keep Vcrisis Online






top | printer friendly version | disclaimer
placeholder
placeholder