Archive for August, 2007

A nice set of flowers, mostly species.

August 5, 2007

I am now back with some of my own plants below. Did not have much before, but things are beginning to bloom.

Above left my prize winning Cattleya Jenmanii Castro x Rosa, I repotted it and had stop flowering, but it ahs clearly come back with force. On the right is a Cattleya Gaskelliana Alberto x Hot Fire. Both are Venezuelan species.

Above is this fantastic specimen plant of Dendrobium Insigne. Over 100 flowers like that one the right. The bad news, they are only open for two or three days. This is its best flowering so far.

Above is a nice picture of a bunch from a Brassia Datacosta. It is hard to get it all in focus but it worked this time. On the right, one flower up close. Each flower is like six seven inches in size because of the spindly sepals.

Nothing that repetitive in today’s news from the robolution

August 5, 2007

—In El Nacional, I read that the Venezuelan Supreme Court in all its screwed up wisdom, ruled that foreigners do not have the same rights as Venezuelans on the economic front. The merits of the case are irrelevant to the decision, the Court simply said that the protection given by the Land Bill to those exploiting land for agriculture does not apply to foreigners. So much for Venezuela being a country of immigrants.

—And speaking of that Court, what was that Venezuelan Justice doing in the Miss Universe contest as part of the jury? Did the Court pay for the trip to that revolutionary event? And is it true that one of the Justices was not born in Venezuela, as required by the Constitution?

—And how about Deputy Iroshima Consolacion Bravo telling us in El Nacional that the new foreign exchange Bill is aimed at “minimizing the existence of the parallel market” because it has been going up so much. Maybe the Deputy should look at this story in El Universal today if she wants to understand why the parallel exchange rate keeps moving up. In the printed version there is a graph and it is absolutely scary. Bs. 5,000 per US$ or more by Xmas? You can bet on it!

—And how about funny man Deputy Julio Moreno, President of the Comptrolling Committee of the National Assembly telling us that there is more control than ever, but later admitting not one person has been sanctioned for corruption in this Government?

—And the cable car has been free since the Government took it over. I think everything in the country should be free from now on. Gas already is, but food, electricity and cellular phone service should all be free too.And we shouldn’t have to pay for RCTV.

—And the Government authorized the import of 500 million eggs, that’s 20 per citizen. Maybe local producers will be undercut in price by the imports, they will go under and next time we will have to import a billion eggs. (BTW, I had fried quail eggs yesterday, not a bad substitute, plenty of them here, but you have to fry a bunch to make a dent!). Will they be free?

—And Chavez’ nose keeps getting bigger and bigger. First he says that his support of Kirchner’s wife as a candidate for the Argentinean Presidency is not an intromission in that country’s affairs. And then he claims he never gave an ultimatum about Venezuela’s entrance to Mercosur. I guess he does not know what intromission or ultimatum means.

—Finally, my brother and others wonder that if it is true, as Chavez says, that Venezuela and Cuba have become one Nation, does that mean that any Venezuelan that steps into US land can stay? The US Coast Guard is going to be busy.

Venezuelan Electoral Registry on the web

August 5, 2007

If you are so inclined in this webpage you can find and download the complete Venezuelan Electoral Registry. You need Access to handle the data.

Nice talk, cool Internet

August 5, 2007

The Internet is cool, because on a Sunday morning I can watch this interesting talk from the comfort of my living room (also below, but there are many more in the link, like this other one by Rosling on Poverty!). And I can stop it. Or watch it again…

Five years of the Devil and here for at least a while longer…

August 4, 2007

Today is the fifth anniversary of this blog. I must confess that during the past month I have considered whether to shut it down on this date.Why? Because I get the feeling that everything I say is simply repetitive. That I am not saying anything new. What was a suspicion a few years ago, has become a certainty. Everything bad thing about Chavez and his Government has become institutionalized. The Government no longer even attempts to hide its abuses in the gray area of the law. Even Chavez challenges the CNE and the Courts to stop him from violating the law and defends the fact that the President of PDVSA blatantly violated it during last year’s election.

But I will leave the blog open, not so much out of duty or need to do so, it is almost irrelevant given the hold on power of the autocrat/dictator on all institutions, but because things are going to get much worse and as long as I am allowed to, I might as well leave it alive and continue recording what Chavze is doing to the Venezuelan people and the country.

Everything has become absurd. A Minister suspends a concession just because…she felt like it. A foreigner is invited to the National Assembly to say that any reporter ever invited to her country by the local Embassy is a traitor to Venezuela and the National Assembly not only takes it seriously, but calls the reporters to testify. Corruption is so rampant that on Thursday “some” banks, those friendly to the Government and willing to pay a “fee” , were sold US$ 400 million in structured notes at an equivalent prices of Bs. 3,100 to 3,200 and they quickly turned around and sold it in the parallel market at Bs. 4,200 for a tidy one day US$ 95 million in profits (minus “fees”) to those lucky enough to be selected. A Congressional Committee shows a decision from the PDVSA Board “forgiving” some companies from fulfilling contracts for a few hundred million dollars, because they backed the Government during the strike. a billion dollars in drilling rig contracts is given to 12 companies, 7 of which only exist on paper. Two years later only the five that were real delivered. A pro-Chavez reporter/priest says that he knows things going on at PDVSA that are so bad they will make the Government “fall”, thus, he says, he can’t reveal what he knows, but the Prosecutor does not call him to ask what it is he knows. The Minister of Communications says Venezuelans have a right to “control” media produced by Venezuelans in Venezuela and aimed mostly at Venezuelans, which implies this blog can be “controlled”. A CNE Director agrees with Chavez that what happens at PDVSA is a “private” matter. Public telephones become free. Dozens of jets belonging to the friends of the revolution land daily in Caracas’s military airport where private planes are banned from landing. The Government buys a company on sale a year ago for US$ 15 million, for US$ 103 million. Venezuela will import US$45 billion in 2007, up from US$ 12 billion in 1998. Structural inflation was over 24% annualized in July, but the Government pays for ads saying the Government anti-inflation plan is working. RCTV was closed and rules were invented to shut down RCTV International, just because…A new Constitution has been rewritten and the Government of “participation” has yet to tell its people what it says.

Then, how can I be worried if everything is so rosy?

Because the country is a basket case and only oil prices going higher all the time will be able to sustain the madness.

For example…It went unnoticed that in the last three weeks, bolivar denominated Government bonds, mostly in the hands of the banking system, dropped 20-30% in value.

Or that Venezuela’s Global 27 bond fell 30% since March and gyrated 8% on a single day last Friday.

And that Fonden’s indiscriminate sale of its Venezuelan and Argentinean bonds, destroyed the market for some of them and increased spreads by 300% due to the amateurish way in which this was done.

And this all spells trouble in the economic front at a time when oil prices are at an all time high…imagine if they happened to go down

And that is precisely why I will keep writing, because all sorts of external reasons will be blamed when the whole thing collapses, but I plan to record how it all happened and how this is the result of ignorance, arrogance and the belief that the laws of economics can be manipulated at will.

And I will also report for as long as I am allowed to how this Government is not democratic, it has fascist tendencies and is run by a bunch of of people who simply suck up to the autocrat/dictator while they enrich themselves.

Not that I think I will have any effect by writing about it. I am very pessimistic about the future of this country under the current administration, which I think is here to stay, whether the “people” want it or not. And I believe the damage is so severe, that I don’t think changing administrations will help much anyway, except that maybe, just maybe, we could get someone who has respect for human rights and the rule of law.But there will only be change when the mess becomes chaos and by then it will be that much more difficult to fix things.

So, you can count me in for a while. I will be here. Off and on. Pessimistic. But I will be chronicling the destruction and will try not to be too repetitive. But sometimes, it is just impossible. Like in this post.

Gustavo Corononel’s blog

August 4, 2007

Gustavo Coronel has his own blog, check it out!

Government terminates cable car concession disregarding the law

August 3, 2007

In another arbitrary act by the Chavez administration, the Ministry of Tourism today took over the concession of the Avila Magica cable car system, operated under concession by a local consortium. That consortium had a 30 year contract with the Government which was unilaterally rescinded by the Government in violation of the contract itself. There was no due process, no right to defense, the autocratic Government of Hugo Chavez did what it wanted without regards for the rule of law. There was no decision by a judge, no audience, no chance for the operators to defend themselves.

The cable car concession was given out nine years ago. At the time the system did not work and was completely replaced and rebuilt thanks to a credit of US$ 90 million by the company that rebuilt the system. The cable car was built in the 50’s but by the late 60’s it began having difficulties because of the lack of maintenance. One of the companies in the consortium trades in the Caracas Stock Exchange. The Minister said that the Government will not compensate the operator of the concession and that the operators actually owed money to the Government.

Another step by the robolution to guarantee no investment in the country by the private sector.

International Olympic Committee adopts Chaz method

August 3, 2007

On his Sunday program Alo Presidente, attempted to manipulate the truth using his customary convoluted logic he uses for everything to try to show that Venezuela’s terrible performance at the Panamerican games in Brazil was actually a victory. His Chavezian argument suggested that Venezuela did better than arch-enemy the US because the number of medals per inhabitant was higher for Venezuelan than for the gringoes. Today Simon Bocanegra in Tal Cual takes Chavez to task with this fake news item on the issue:

International Olympic Committee adopts Chaz method by Simon Bocanegra in Tal Cual

Geneva.-The International Olympic Committe, following the recommendation made by the President of Venezuela, decided to adopt the novel method proposed by hos excellency for the calculation of sports medals. It immediately recalculated the medals from the Panamerican Games. The new standings changed radically the overall view of the games. The small islands
in the Caribbean of Antigua and Barbuda took the top place for the first time with 12.08 medals per one million inhabitants, defeating other continental sports powerhouses like Bahamas (6.19) and the Netherland Antilles (5.47). Cuba occupied the fourth place (5.24). The biggest disappointment was Venezuela which from the eight place it occupied under the old calculation method, fell to tenth place with the one proposed by its President with 0.37 medals per million inhabitants. Countries considered up to now as sports powerhouses in the Continent, such as Brazil. Mexico and Argentina, to which one should add Colombia, came in the last places overall.

The United States, that had been usurping first place in 13 out of the 15 Panamerican Games that have taken place, occupied the 12th. place, showing its mediocre standing in sports, masked up to now by an imperialistic calculation, which originates in the Greek empire and perfected later by the Roman Empire.

Penn’s visit: Not a coincidence?

August 3, 2007

I was hoping last night’s silly post would be my only mention of Sean Penn’s irrelevant visit to Venezuela. But I could not pass up the opportunity to note that maybe Penn’s visit has something to do with the fact that Chavez and Penn were forever linked and joined last January when Hannity inducted Penn into his enemy of the state’s list, joining Chavez, Castro and Kim Il Sung and other practitioners or sympathizers of fascism. (Thanks D.!)

Simple logic

August 3, 2007

Let’s see: Sean Penn, Danny Glover and Harry Belafonte…

Are men stupid or what?