Hillary blasts Hugo

March 5, 2007

So it turns out that Hillary and I do have one thing in common, she blasted Chavez out of the water today:

“If we said, ‘Turn off that light because we don’t want to send any
more money to Chavez in Venezuela,’ that would make a difference.”

“The former first lady assailed the Venezuelan president for fomenting “anti-Americanism across Latin America””

I guess they ran a poll on what issue would favor her, and Dear Hugo came out at the top. Bloggers must be getting the message out. (Thanks M.)

Now waiting for Obama to join the fray…I guess Hugo will not have it easy if the Democrats win either…


The banner that irked Chavez

March 5, 2007

Being so Bolivarian, Hugo Chavez was truly irked (He has mentioned it three times in public already) by this banner hung around many places in Caracas by Ciudadania Activa with a quote from Simon Bolivar in reference to Chavez’ intention of changing the Constitution to allow his indefinite reelection:

“Nothing is more dangerous than to allow the same citizen to stay in power a long time. The people get used to obeying  him and he gets used to telling them what to do which originates tyranny and  usurpation”


Scandal Du Jour: Venezuelan Ambassador to Colombia video

March 4, 2007

Globovision is showing a video of Venezuela’s Ambassador to Colombia Pavel Rondon, criticizing Uribe’s liberal party and clearly intervening in that country’s affairs. In the video, some of the Colombians present shout against President Uribe and they are told not to worry about the possible death of Fidel Castro as the revolution will continue and Rondon calls for the socialist revolution to continue.

Another scandal from the not so diplomatic revolutionary diplomatic core of Hugo Chavez. This from the Government of a man that calls any mention of Venezuela an intromission in the country’s affairs.

Stay tuned to the scandal du jour!


Economist Gustavo Garcia on the economy: It’s the economy s…

March 4, 2007

There is a good interview with economist Gustavo Garcia in today’s El Universal, who has just returned from a year and a half at Oxford. Garcia simply blasts the Government in all fronts and tells you pretty much what Ihave been saying in these pages for months.

Garcia blasts inflation indicators and how the Government hailed the February numbers, which showed inflation rising more slowly going from the 2% in January to 1.4% in February. Garcia points out that the Central Bank did not publish the percentage of food items not available in February as is customary. I might also note that in every month’s report, the Central Bank notes which food items went up or down, but this month that statistic was curiously missing from the press release. I wonder why?

Even worse, the Central Bank says that one reason for the drop in inflation in February, was the drop in the VAT tax. Well, that is truly a miracle, given that the tax went into effect March 1st.

Garcia calls the drop in the VAT unsustainable, because the Government ended 2006 with a 4% deficit and the price of oil is below 2006 prices. Thus, only a jump in oil prices can save the Government from a deficit that can blow up in its face.

The most interesting part, to me, of the interview is that Garcia thinks that Chavez will use the removal of the three digits from the Bolivar as a way of “packaging” , in his own words, a devaluation, by taking three digits off, but making it Bs. 3 per dollar or something like that. What I find amazing about this prediction, is that I don’t think that given the current numbers, the Government can last until then. With the cut in the VAT and if spending continues, we will see huge pressures in the parallel exchange market and the difference between the official and parallel rate may become too big to ignore until the end of the year. Either the Government slows down spending or its going to get truly scary.

Garcia notes what I predicted here, that the Bono del Sur would not help at lowering the parallel rate. In fact, when it was announced that rate went down, but as you can see here, all that rate has done this week is go up and up. I am not too optimistic that it will even go down with the much promised (since June!) supposedly upcoming PDVSA issue.

Unfortunately, Garcia is one of those true experts, which is disliked by the Government, but whose advice would do wonders towards avoiding or at least reducing what is likely to be a very bad crisis for the Venezuelan economy.


Marketing gimmick or patriotism?

March 4, 2007

This gas station in Nebraska is the first one to offer gas from only either the US or Canada and call it “Terror free”. Of course, if all gas stations in the US did this, cars would not run, so it is unlikely to spread. widely The question is whether this is a marketing gimmick or true patriotism.


The beginning of rationing?

March 4, 2007

The wonderful people of Mercal in Tachira state announced with great fanfare a new system for the distribution of scarce goods such as chicken, meat and milk from now on. The will give tickets to the communities that entitle people to receive a limited number or quantity of each item. These tickets will given to the communal councils so they can not only assign them, but also so they can oversee the food distribution network and the sale of products.

I guess the revolution has now discovered rationing and they think it’s good management!


Nice moon show!

March 3, 2007

Yeap! We saw it too down here, great show!


So many headlines, so little time

March 3, 2007

—Minister of Interior and Justice Carreño accused the US Drug Enforcement Agency of being a new drug cartel yesterday.

I guess the CIA must have lent him the Direct TV controls through which we are spied on daily according to the Minister and he discovered this new cartel. Watching Carreño is going to be an interesting sport going forward.

—Day before yesterday President Chavez was speaking about why it was good to be poor for about ten twenty minutes, he then went on to his next story and said: “When I was poor…”

Uups!!

—Pro-Chavez party “Podemos” decided not to dissolve itself and join Chavez’ “Unique” party for now.

Wait until Chavez fires them all from their Government jobs.

Two women in Ciudad Bolivar denounced that a local Mercal market, when you buy a chicken, they stamp your belly with ink to indicate you already got one.

I don’t know what the scandal is all about, at least they did not use numbers.

—Four years ago I wrote about Judge Mikael Moreno, a convicted murdered that Chavismo named as a judge. Well, this week the honorable judge was suspended for “grave conduct” and disobeying and order from the Supreme Court.

I feel sorry when someone like that “suddenly” goes stray of the law.

—President Chavez said that the CIA was infiltarting his communal councils.

Never had the CIA been as efficient as in it is in Chavez’ Venezuela, I guess all opposition members of the councils will be labelled CIA and jailed. they deserve it!

—President Chavez assured us that taking three digits off the Bolivar will make the currency stronger. “Just think-he said-a dollar will now be worth Bs. 2.1 instead of Bs. 2,150”

Umm, I wonder why they don’t just take four digits off, make it twenty Bs. cents to the US$ and a Bolivar would be worth more than the British pound and much more than the currency of the Evil Empire!


Some humor on a lazy Saturday morning: The high price of gas

March 3, 2007


An intriguing tale of Venezuela/Iran/Argentina triangulating the purchase of a nuclear reactor for Iran.

March 1, 2007

There is this intriguing article in Argentinean news site total news, which also appeared in in an Argentinean investigative reporting site called “Tribuna de Periodistashere, which contends that an Argentinean -made nuclear reactor arrived in Iran via a triangulation in which the Venezuelan Government participated.

The article says that it is not clear whether Argentina’s President Kirchner knew the true destiny of the reactor, stating that it was taken to Iran in a Venezuelan ship which was being repaired in Rio Santiago, Argentina.

Venezuela is known to have expressed interest in buying an Argentinean nuclear reactor in 2005, when meetings between the Ministry of Energy and Argentina’s INVAP took place both in Caracas and Buenos Aires.

If this news is confirmed, which should happen shortly given the fact that so many people would have participated in it, it is significant for the case of Physicist Claudio Mendoza, who is still under the threat of being fired from his tenured position at IVIC. This is because supposedly, Claudio injured the prestige of IVIC, where “all” nuclear activities of Venezuela supposedly take place. If it can be proven that the Ministry of Energy purchased a nuclear reactor from Argentina, to send to Iran, IVIC’s claim to centralized nuclear activities in Venezuela would be proven incorrect and Claudio could not be fired for the reasons given.

Of course, if this story proved out to be true, which the author has assured fa friend of mine that it is, it would have important repercussions for the three countries involved in the triangulation, which I will discuss when we have more information on the matter..