Only Hugo Chavez is allowed to stage a coup in Venezuela

August 15, 2009

(Este post en español aquí)

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For at least seven of the last ten years, universities have represented the biggest frustration for Hugo Chavez. Except for some small victories during his first three years in power, Venezuelan universities whose authorities are elected in elections, have rejected Hugo Chavez over and over.

And it is getting worse. Chavista backed candidates seem to get fewer votes in elections for either authorities or student body leaders. Who can forget the new President of the Central Bank, Nelson Merentes, getting whipped when he ran for the only office he ever aspired to as President (Rector) of Universidad Central de Venezuela? He did not even manage to go to the second round, coming in third of the two possible candidates that went to the second round and he was the only one that represented Chavismo.

And university elections are fairly open affairs, Professors vote and so do students and in some cases even employees. But it does not matter Chavismo loses time after time.

Which in the end is the sole driver behind the recently and unconstitutionally approved Educational Law. Sure they took advantage of it to impose more control over the educational system, but the goal, the main driver was simple: take control of the only place where ideas can be discussed freely in Venezuela, the only institution where you can criticize someone without being censored, ostracized or banished, no matter which side you are on: The Venezuelan truly autonomous universities.

And despite the lack of transparency in the way the law was approved, how the ultimate end was hidden behind the noise, the treachery and the under the table approval, this just happens to be Hugo Chavez’ latest coup.

Because anytime the opposition says or does anything the Government in unison accuses of staging a coup, in a country where it is clearly Hugo Chavez the only person allowed to stage one. And the Venezuelan President does not hide it, he openly says it:

“Chavez calls on to take apart the structures of power in the universities…we should not recognize any authority which does not originate in a legitimate process”

Funny, I don’t recall any of the pro-Chavez candidates ever saying that they were participating or defeated in an illegitimate process. They all participated and graciously acknowledged they had lost. What else can you say when the opposite side gets over 80% of the votes as has recurrently happened in all the elections in Venezuelan universities?

The difference is that Chavez has no scruples whatsoever to violate the law and the Constitution and lie in the process. He is the Master Coupster, starting in 1992 (twice), the 1999 referendum, the “Congresillo” in 2000, the PDVSA trap (2002), the 2004 referendum, the 2008 enabling Bill, the shutdown of RCTV and radio stations and this year’s referendum (among others). Chavez has staged all these armed an unarmed coups, no scruples, whatever it takes and the new Education Law is just the last one.

It’s just the way of Dictators and the doublespeak of fascists. The world has seen it before.


A day for open fascism by the Chavez Government and its supporters…

August 13, 2009

(Este post en español aquí)

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Perhaps nothing can summarize today better than the sequence of pictures above showing reporters from Cadena Capriles marching peacefully near the building that houses the company they work for as seen on the top left panel, they are intercepted by a bunch of Chavista supporters and beaten up without mercy. As many as twelve reporters were injured in the attack. Curiously, some of those hurt work for pro-Chavez newspaper Ultimas Noticias. And this attack is being reported by Chavista media as “twelve employees of Cadena Capriles”, skipping the all important fact that these were reports. Fascism was very much alive and in full force deployment in Venezuela today!

And those pictures are simply a continuation of a day of abuse of power and discrimination by Chavista authorities, as the new Education Bill, the “stealth” version introduced by Chavez between the first and second discussion in the National Assembly. Because a completely different project had been discussed for months in the National Assembly and actually approved in its first discussion. As established in the Venezuelan Constitution, that same project had to come a second time for fine tuning and discussion and to everyone’s surprise, a dramatically different document was introduced.

And while part of those protesting were objecting the proposed law, other were simply asking that the new Bill be discussed further, so that some points could be changed. I saw in the oppo media, pro-Chavez teachers who were simply asking that the project be discussed further because while it had what they considered to be positive points, others were inadequate in their opinion. And while the Minister of Education told the world we could go to the Supreme Court to change those aspects that blatantly violate the Constitution, the Chavista Deputies proceeded to open the discussion for the sceond approval, rejecting any delay.

And you have to wonder when all of the Presidents of Venezuela’s most important universities object the Law of Education and show up to protest.

And a student led demonstration had received the permits to go to the National Assembly today and they were quickly intercepted by Chavista thugs brought by buses which were all parked in front of PDVSA. And no sooner had the marchers arrived to within three blocks of the National Assembly, that the cops started gassing them without mercy, followed by the water truck, the so called “whale”, which was used together with the tear gas all afternoon.

Then came the attack on the reporters, some discussion in the Assembly thanks to the Podemos Deputies who are no longer supporting the regime and then they withdrew and the Bill is being  approved as we write.

Thus, today we witnessed fascist act after fascist act, by a Chavismo no longer under control and without any pretense of democracy. The “people” that were brought in by the gigantic PDVSA resources supposedly were there to support a Bill that restricts their rights, castrates universities and imposes a single view in all education matters.

A terrible day when the regime went for a totalitarian grab on the educational front, the only Government funded area of the country, where Chavismo had received defeat after defeat in all electoral processes for the last few years. It was as symbolic as it could get, open fascism, no discussion no democracy, no respect for anyone, whether pro or against.

It was indeed a sad day…


This is what is good about having a permit to march in our “democracy”

August 13, 2009

(Este post en español aquí)

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The left is now full of rightwing

August 12, 2009

(Este post en español aquí)

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Bernard Henry Levy is interviewed by Argentinean newspaper La Nacion. He is asked if Chavez is left wing or not and here is his answer:

Is Chávez left wing?

-Obivosuly not. How can a man who exercizes personal power, dreams of having power forever, muzzles the media in his country, sits  on a mountain of gold that the population does not take advantage of and who is the ally of Ahmadinejad in the war being fought between democrats and anti-democrats, be left wing? There is a left that thinks that Chávez is family, the turbulent kid of the family. Not me. I am left wing and consider Chávez to be my adversary.

Read the whole thing, it is in Spanish, but worth trying…


Sort of raining in Caracas

August 12, 2009

(Este post en español aquí)

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Altamira overpass at 4 PM today, picture taken by Twitter user tukeke

Autopista de Pdos a la altura de Campitos

Distribuidor Los Campitos, same time today. Unknown author

(Of course, according to Jacqueline Farias, thanks to the work she did, there are no “lagoons” nor has any street collapsed. I guess this is just a “sensation”, a “feeling” that we have that there is lots of water, but it just ain’t there)


Chavez announces he will fight “distortions” with the same team and ideas that created them

August 11, 2009

(Este post en español aquí)

You have to give it to Chavismo, despite ten years of screwing up, they still talk like they just got to power and announce plan after plan that will make something better, but somehow it never seems like it does. Even with the oil windfall of the last few years, the Venezuelan economy has more distortions that it ever did in the past fifty years, there are few economic indicators that anyone can point out to even suggesting there has been an improvement and Venezuela’s industrial production is almost dysfunctional. But for Chavez and his Ministerial buddies, the beat goes on, let’s see what we can announce this week they seem to think, because nobody will remember it a year from now, we don’t have a Teflon President, we have a Teflon Government.

And they proceed to act accordingly, announcement after announcement, which attacks one problem without taking into consideration what or whther it causes an impact somewhere else. Take this picture as an example:

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Chavez signs an agreement with Argentina to buy a billion dollars of Argentinean junk. You can imagine how Cristina is laughing all the way to the bank. Venezuela wants to buy anything that used to be imported from Colombia, so offer them trinkets from the list and at any price. Maybe even a relative of Cristina can make a buck or two in the process.

Because there is nothing worse in international trade to have not alternative, to say I buy from you because I like you, and I dislike the other guy or whatever. In the end it is going to cost me more if I have a single supplier or I urgently need to replace another source. Venezuelans will pay it with higher prices and inflation, as if we needed some more.

And then we have that economic genius Eduardo Saman, nobody knows what type of tree they found him under, but he dared to say today that it is cheaper to bring things from Argentina by ship than from Colombia by truck. Where do these guys invent such “Bosta de Toro”? Has Saman ever been to one of the ports here like La Guaira or Puerto Cabello?

Imagine the process in Colombia, you make enough widgets to fill a truck, load them on and then get the truck rolling. Six hours to the border, poor driver has to wait twelve hours for customs to let him through (some bribes along the way) and then you are almost home free, A couple of National Guard posts on the way and in eight more hours you may be at the Valencia plant ready to have the widgets distributed and sold.

Imagine now the same widgets made in Argentina. (The best widgets in the world!) First of all, salaries are higher there, but we will ignore it. Then let’s load the truck to take the widgets to the ship. Damn! There is no ship to Venezuela till Saturday. Driver waits two days, the union does not want to load the stuff on a weekedn, ship does not leave till Monday.

Ship stops on the way in Recife for a couple of days and finally gets to Puerto Cabello a week later. And the nightmare begins. The new Bolipuertos Cuba-Venezuela company has not hired back all the estivadores. The National Guardsman go on board, a few bribes and the stuff proceeds to the deposit where it gets checked again by the tax office and the National Guard. After having the truck on hold for two days at the port, finally the stuff gets loaded (at a cost). A few hours later, the truck, after a some two to three weeks from departure gets to the distribution center and we can sell the stuff. Cheaper? In your dreams, Saman! Too many unpredictable steps, too much time, too many times loading and unloading and Argentineans are not more competitive (or honest!) than Colombians. Particularly, because Colombians have picked their spots of where to compete and they know their business and have fewer unions to deal with.

But recall that this is a Government fighting daily with shortages from coffee to sanitary napkins to milk. So you are going from right in time inventory management to whenever it is possible and at a higher cost. Recipe for disaster, if you ask me.

But there is another angle that I have not heard Saman or his illussionary buddies mention: Over half the junk that come from Colombia, its produced by multinationals. Multinationals that left Venezuela over the last ten years, figuring out that it would be cheaper and easier to produce in Colombia and export to Venezuela than to invest in a very unfriendly environment, under regulations and price controls. You move to Colombia and if the Government regulates the price of an antibiotic, you simply don’t export it anymore. Nothing Chavez and his gnomes can do about that. And it began with pharmaceuticals, continued in paper products and ended up with toothpaste and cleaning products. And the point is that none of these companies are going to allow its Argentinean subsidiary or affiliate to ship a single item to Venezuela.

And the same goes for the infamous Argentinean cars that will be imported now. 10,000 of them Saman told us. Well, the worldwide car business works the same. A major corporation makes or gives out licenses to make cars somewhere else. But when you are allowed to make or sell Fiats in Zambia and Mozambique, you can only sell or make cars for Zambia and Mozanbique. Nothing can go to Kenya! As simple as that! So, bring a brand that does not exist in Venezuela, a sure guarantee for no spare parts and spotty service.

And today Saman had an brighter idea: No more imports of pharmaceuticals to promote local production! I guess except computer chips, it is hard to think of another area where you can decide that on day and not be faced with a nightmare two months from now than pharmaceuticals. An industry that has not invested in the last ten years, that has actually desinvested is not about to change their minds just because some ignorant Minister wants it. And taking over Pfizer’s plant will not allow you to produce Viagra next week! Because Silnedafil Citrate is not produced anywhere but at Pfizer’s main plant in Connecticut. And even some of the most “pedestrian” pharmaceuticals sold in Venezuela have components not made in Venezuela and if anything, Chavez and his Combo Bolivariano have promoted exactly the opposite for ten years and now they want to turn on a dime overnight! Sure!

And there was also Rafael Ramirez saying today that we don’t need Colombia’s natural gas either, because “we could easily switch”. Well, why didn’t we switch before you may wonder? Can we really switch Maracaibo’s natural gas supply that easily? Or find gas to inject into the Western wells to keep up production. Somehow it seems hard to believe.

But no tale from the imagination of the robolution would be complete without the participation of Chavez himself who said today that he was ready to remove the “disequilibriums’ and “distortions” created in the foreign currency markets during the last two years (The latter is in Bloomberg, but no link yet on the public system). Let’s see, over the last two years, Chavez has had three Ministers of Finance, Rodrigo Cabezas, President of PSUV in Zulia, Rafael Isea, currently Governor of Aragua and for the last 14 months…drum roll…Ali Rodriguez, who happens to be the current Minister of Finance.

Thus, the distortions and disequilibria were created by the same geniuses that continue to run the country and the economy. But Chavez makes it sound like this was done by the oligarchs of the IVth. Republic, his enemies, rather than the ignorant fellows that he handpicked to create the distortions and disequilibria. But somehow, because Chavez met with them (at last!) some night up to the wee hours of the night, things will turn out to be different this time around.

Because Chavez refuses to remove the biggest distortion, that of the overvalued “official” currency which has half the country looking to arbitrage the Government every single day, whether by buying bonds at a special cheap rate to the rich, or get cars at subsidized prices or everyone’s dream, import any widget, whether from Argentina or Colombia at Bs. 2.15 and sell it as if you had bought them at Bs. 7 per US$.

But come announcement time, we are likely to hear the same old and tried formulas of intervening the swap market, maybe a second swap rate (double arbitrage!) and nothing more. So that, we can spend another 10-15 billion dollars experimenting with Chavez’ or Merentes’ theories and hopefully, just hopefully, oil prices will bounce back in time. And if they don’t, Chavez will announce a year from now, that he is ready to stop the speculation with the Bs. 15 per $ swap rate and he had to import coffee in order to be able to stay awake and hear the proposals from his economic Cabinet which by then will be presided by Jesse Chacon  and the current Minister of Culture, or something like that.

But the true distortion, is that the money supply (M2) in Venezuela is nearing US$ 100 billion at the official rate and international reserves stand at US$ 30 billion. This gives you an “implicit” exchange rate of 3.33  (M2/reserves)times the official exchange rate or Bs. 7.15 per US$, not too far where the “distorted” swap exchange rate currently is. Thus, spending resources in fighting what does not exist, in the best Sancho Panza style, will not help Chavez and his Teflon Government at all and will in the end create bigger and deeper distortions, until it all unravels.

And even then, it will never be “their” fault.

They will have a new plan to fight their newly created distortions. All said with a straight face.


From Chavez’ believe it or not…mouth

August 9, 2009

(Este post en español aquí)

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Chavez’ most recent gems:

The FARC guerrillas are not terrorists

We have to reduce the opposition using laws

I call on the people and the armed forces, let’s go, ready for combat

No country can compete with Venezuela on freedom of speech

Even if I sent the Ambassador back, Venezuelan relations with Colombia are in a “freezer”

Israel’s Foreign Minister is a thief, a criminal and an assasin

I could write a very long post on all of these, but just his words are sufficient to prove how irrational the Venezuelan President has become.


Seven Years of blogging…

August 8, 2009

(Este post en español aquí)

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Well, on the first anniversary of this blog, way back then, I wondered how long I could keep it up and somehow I am still around. I actually spent the day copying all of the files from my previous blog, as userland (Who made my old software) recently announced that it will be shutting down their service at the end of the year and any renewal to continue to have access had to take place today. Instead, I left a message there telling people to look for the orchids in the following blog pretty soon:

http://miguelorchids.wordpress.com

which was the only part of the old blog which I actually had not transferred from there. In fact, I haven’t transferred it yet, I copied all of the pictures and I have started transferring them, it will take a while. I am slowly going through 2003 so far. Take a look at that blog and if you have any suggestions let me know.I think it looks good, but I am not completely satisfied.

In this seven years, Venezuela and Chavez have gone from strange to bizarre. Somehow these guys defend themselves as if they were doing a great job,  but have done very little but promise and that is all Chavez knows how to do: Promise and then ignore what he said.

Meanwhile corruption has reached levels that are extremely obscene, with a new class of “bolibourgeois” rising. But if you are with the process, you are not only untouchable, but you have protection from the top. Witness these charges in Caracas Gringo, that Daniel has commented on. In what other country can a man go from 0 to  1.6 billion in ten years by having Government ties and everyone knows about it and nothing happens? And the charges go beyond simple corruption…

But Mr. Fernandez keeps adding properties and wealth, just this week he reportedly purchased Banco Canarias for a few hundred million bucks. Source of funds for this? Nobody really knows, because it would be very really hard to explain. And he is not alone in buying sprees of money losing, dysfunctional financial institutions, the robolution opens opportunities to all its supporters to get involved in these enterprises.

But that is why it is called the robolution, one that works with remarkable impunity and as long as they keep doing it, we will keep writing what we learn, until it seems to dangerous to continue, which appears to be closer and closer every day.


Trapped in the windmills of Chavez’ mind

August 8, 2009

(Este post en español aquí)

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Let’s see:

Chavez starts fighting with Colombia.

Chavez withdraws Ambassador.

Chavze holds press conference very bitter with Colombia.

Chavez says no mediation is possible unless Colombia does not allow US into its territory.

Chavez sends Ambassador back, no negotiations with Colombia, no contact whatsoever.

Can anyone explain it? Is this normal? Lithium? Prozac?

Does it mean we will not buy the Russian tanks?

We will stop importing and exporting to Colombia?

Are we friends again?

Or are we trapped in the windmills of Chavez’ mind?


The muzzled statue in front of CONATEL

August 6, 2009

(Este post en español aquí)

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I could not find any excuse to write a post and use the picture above, so here it goes the picture is simply too good and too symbolic to pass up. As a person I respect a lot told me once, if you want to be a Dictator, you have to run an efficient operation. But Chavismo is the furthest thing from being efficient, as hundreds of military officers have been thrown in to run things above their heads and everything goes up to the Autocrat to be approved.

So, as CONATEL has become the center of attention in the last few days, with daily protests in front of the telecom regulator which shut down 34 radio stations last Friday and everyone expects the promised 206 additional ones to be shut down at any time, you have to wonder how a bunch of students got through the guards and put on this handkerchief around its mouth indicating that the lady has been muzzled. Hats off to the students! and Thanks God Chavez has no clue on how to run an efficient Government.