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Thread: Venezuela's "Ministry of Happiness"

  1. #11
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    waltky's Avatar Senior Member
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    Angry

    Maduro threatens to dissolve Venezuelan Parliament...

    Venezuelan opposition threatens to remove justices after parliament dissolution threat
    June 29, 2016 -- Venezuela's National Assembly President Henry Ramos Allup has threatened to remove 12 justices of the high court after President Nicolas Maduro's ruling government threatened to dissolve parliament.
    Allup said the opposition-controlled National Assembly will begin efforts next week to revoke the "unconstitutional" appointment of 12 justices with the goal of appointing new justices for the positions on Venezuela's highest court, the Supreme Tribunal of Justice. Allup said the Supreme Tribunal of Justice met early Tuesday to discuss the "developing" plot against parliament. The unicameral National Assembly was won with a qualified majority, or supermajority, by the Democratic Unity Roundtable, or MUD, opposition coalition in December parliamentary elections.

    On Tuesday, Didalco Bolívar, a spokesman for the coalition of Maduro's ruling government, said there is an ongoing "discussion to request consultation with the Supreme Tribunal of Justice" in order to ask for "the abolition of the National Assembly." Bolívar accused the opposition-controlled National Assembly of usurping government functions in domestic and foreign affairs, referencing its involvement in the recent meetings by the Organization of American States about Venezuela.

    The OAS held meetings over Venezuela's alleged erosion of democracy that is partly attributed to the Supreme Tribunal of Justice, which has been repeatedly criticized as acting as an extension of the socialist regime established under former President Hugo Chavez. The MUD has been working to hold a recall referendum that would ask citizens if Maduro should be removed from power.

    Bolívar, former governor of Venezuela's Aragua state, said parliament's actions are treasonous and unconstitutional. "We ask that the abolition will be accompanied by the call for parliamentary elections, so it will be for the people to say" if the "obstructionist" National Assembly that is "violating the constitution" should continue to operate, Bolívar said.

    http://www.upi.com/Top_News/World-Ne...?spt=sec&or=tn

  2. #12

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    It seems like the Ministry of Magic - sorry, "Happiness" - isn't doing their jobs very well.

  3. #13
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    They ran out of other people's money.
    ΜOΛΩΝ ΛΑΒΕ


  4. #14
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    Angry

    No food and they don't have a humanitarian crisis???...

    Venezuela's U.N. ambassador: We have problems but no humanitarian crisis
    Aug. 15, 2016 -- Venezuela's ambassador to the United Nations has denied U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon's comments that there is a humanitarian crisis occurring in the country.
    Last week, the secretary-general said he was "very worried" about Venezuela during a visit to Argentina where he met with Argentinian President Mauricio Macri. "I'm very worried about the current situation, in which basic goods and services such as food, water, health care and clothes aren't available," Ban said. "This triggers a humanitarian crisis in Venezuela which is created by political instability."

    Ambassador Rafael Ramirez called Ban's comments "wrong" and "strange," and questioned where the head of the United Nations received his information. "We have problems here, but it's nowhere near a humanitarian crisis," Ramirez said during an interview with Venezuelan broadcaster Televen, adding that Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro will speak to Ban in September during a summit in Caracas. "I do not know where he gets these figures and assertions," Ramirez said. Venezuela is facing a deepening economic crisis in which basic goods, such as food, medicines and toiletries, are in short supply or unaffordable. Tens of thousands have traveled outside the country, mainly to Colombia, to restock supplies as store shelves and kitchen cupboards are nearly empty.

    Maduro, who is facing efforts by the Venezuelan opposition to oust him, has blamed the country's financial woes on a U.S.-backed "economic war" carried out by political enemies and corporations. To combat the alleged "economic war," Maduro has taken steps including ordering the military to seize five ports as part of "war strategies" to more effectively distribute food and medicine. A recent labor decree signed by Maduro could draft Venezuelans in the public and private sectors who have the physical or technical capabilities into a government effort to work in the agriculture sector for up to 120 days to increase food production.

    http://www.upi.com/Top_News/World-Ne...?spt=sec&or=tn

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    Angry

    Granny says, "Dat's right - the system is rigged...

    Venezuela suspends recall campaign against President Maduro
    Oct 20,`16 -- Venezuela's electoral authority suspended a recall drive against President Nicolas Maduro on Thursday less than a week before it was set to start, throwing the opposition's key campaign to oust the socialist leader into disarray.
    Officials cited alleged fraud in a preliminary signature-gathering effort as justification for blocking the opposition from proceeding to the next stage of its push to hold a referendum on Maduro's removal. His critics blame the late President Hugo Chavez's heir for Venezuela's economic collapse, bare store shelves and the jailing of opposition leaders. The opposition immediately blasted the decision as unconstitutional. "We alert the diplomatic corps in our country that the government today is pushing toward a very dangerous scenario," former presidential candidate Henrique Capriles said on Twitter. The official announcement came as a shock to many Venezuelans, who were gearing up for the chance to sign petitions next week seeking the embattled leader's removal. To trigger a stay-or-go referendum, the opposition needed to collect and validate some 4 million signatures from 20 percent of the electorate in 24 states over three days next week.

    Critics of Venezuela's 17-year left-wing administration have made the recall their central political issue after being sidelined in Congress and in virtually all other public institutions. But the campaign had already become mostly symbolic after elections officials in September said no vote would take place this year. That timing is crucial. A successful vote to oust Maduro this year would have triggered a presidential election and given the opposition a good shot at winning power. If Maduro is voted out in 2017, though, his vice president will finish the presidential term, leaving the socialists in charge. The electoral council's decision Thursday was in response to rulings earlier in the day by courts in four Venezuelan states that found there was fraud in the initial stage of the petition drive. During that stage the opposition had collected signatures from 1 percent of electorate.

    But in standing by those low-court rulings it appeared to be ignoring its own decision in August validating the signatures and allowing the process to move forward. It gave no indication if and when the process would be resumed. "In adherence with the constitution, the National Electoral Council abides by the decisions ordered by the tribunals and has sent instructions to postpone the process of signature gathering until new judicial instructions are known," it said in a statement. Although the government-stacked electoral board had already thrown a number of obstacles in the way of Maduro's opponents, many had hoped that the next stage of the complex process would have drawn onto the streets millions of Venezuelans who polls show overwhelmingly favor firing Maduro, who they blame for triple-digit inflation and long food lines. The ruling comes on the heels of another decision by the electoral council this week to suspend by about six months gubernatorial elections that were slated for year-end which the opposition was heavily favored to win.

    Polls say a majority of Venezuelans want Maduro gone. The opposition charges that in the face of overwhelming voter discontent, the socialist party has simply decided to put off elections indefinitely. The opposition staged its largest street demonstration in years on Sept. 1, with a rally in Caracas demanding a referendum against Maduro be held in 2016. But apart from that protest, most anti-government rallies this year have been relatively small and quick to disperse. On Thursday night, hard line leaders started calling for more massive street protests in the face of election authority's ruling. "This is the time for national unity," wrote former presidential candidate Maria Corina Machado on her Twitter account. "Every single person must take to the streets, with strength and without fear, to make the transition a reality."

    http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories...10-20-22-24-30

  6. #16
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    Quote Originally Posted by KC View Post
    It's patently ridiculous, but not in a humorous way. Venezuela is accelerating as it speeds toward a cliff on the road to serfdom.
    And something the Dumbocrats would love to see here.
    IT'S JUST BORIS!





  7. The Following User Says Thank You to Boris The Animal For This Useful Post:

    donttread (11-30-2016)

  8. #17
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    Red face

    Nicolas Maduro blamed by opposition for record Venezuelan currency devaluation... Venezuelan opposition blames Nicolas Maduro for record currency devaluation Nov. 29, 2016 -- Leaders of the Venezuelan opposition have blamed President Nicolas Maduro's regime of causing the bolivar to devalue to unprecedented levels against the U.S. dollar.
    According to data provided by the currency tracking website DolarToday, the Venezuelan bolivar fell to an all-time low against the U.S. dollar in the black market. DolarToday data provided early Tuesday shows 3,684.51 Venezuelan bolivars are worth $1 on the black market. The bolivar has depreciated about 60 percent in November -- an unprecedented amount seen by the crisis-stricken South American country.
    DolarToday is run by Gustavo Diaz, a 60-year-old Home Depot employee based in Alabama. He polls black market currency dealers in Caracas to arrive at his black-market rate. He also polls currency dealers in Colombia's Cucuta border city, where on Tuesday the bolivar is trading against the Colombian peso at a rate equivalent to 3,435.29 to the U.S. dollar. enezuela is facing an economic crisis in which basic goods such as food, medicine and toiletries are in short supply or unavailable. Goods are also unaffordable due to record-high inflation. The Venezuelan opposition has long-blamed the regime of President Nicolas Maduro of exacerbating Venezuela's problems through corruption and inefficiency. "Inflation galloping, the bolivar melts, unrest worsens and the government rectifies nothing," Henry Ramos Allup, president of Venezuela's opposition-controlled National Assembly legislature, said in a statement on Tuesday. "The currency exchange disaster in the country is the sole responsibility of the narco and corrupt government of Maduro! All else are pure excuses!" Henrique Capriles Radonski, governor of Venezuela's Miranda state and a key opposition leader, said in a statement on Monday. http://www.upi.com/Top_News/World-Ne...?spt=sec&or=tn

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    Quote Originally Posted by Adelaide View Post
    Venezuela Unveils Orwellian Ministry of Supreme Social Happiness - The Daily Beast

    Sounds like something from Harry Potter - the rest of Latin America is having a good round of jokes and creating parodies. So, do you think this is serious/helpful, or something to laugh about?
    If they are that poor right now where will they get the money to provide such high level assistance and care? It seems impossible, but I wish them luck. They still have oil right? I mean yeah the price has dropped , but they should be able to export some to improve this level of poverty. Something else is going on here

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    Quote Originally Posted by Boris The Animal View Post
    And something the Dumbocrats would love to see here.
    Historically it appears very difficult to maintain that third class.

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    Quote Originally Posted by waltky View Post
    Food protests in Venezuela as people go hungry...

    'We Want Food!,' Venezuelans Cry at Protest Near Presidency
    June 02, 2016 — Venezuelan security forces fired tear gas at protesters chanting "We want food!" near Caracas' presidential palace on Thursday, the latest street violence in the crisis-hit OPEC nation.
    Do you wonder why fat people are yelling for food?
    Call your state legislators and insist they approve the Article V convention of States to propose amendments.


    I pledge allegiance to the Constitution as written and understood by this nation's founders, and to the Republic it created, an indivisible union of sovereign States, with liberty and justice for all.

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