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Catherina

(35,568 posts)
Thu May 2, 2013, 07:33 PM May 2013

The ironies of the Venezuelan opposition, part 10 - Using Student Groups 4 Violence Denounced in Mar

The ironies of the Venezuelan opposition, part 10
March 28, 2013 — Sabina Becker



Howdy, folks. In today’s episode of VenOpIronía, we get something really interesting: an opposition deputy giving an interview not only on state TV (VTV), which allegedly “censors opposition voices”, but he reveals something the Chavistas among us have already long known or at least suspected. And it’s a source of great consternation, at least for him. So, let’s hear what he has to say:

Opposition deputy Ricardo Sánchez, who withdrew his support from the right-wing presidential candidate on Tuesday, accused Henrique Capriles Radonski and his campaign command of trying to use student groups only to create violence and thus destabilize the country.

“We uphold the right to protest. What we don’t uphold is trying to manipulate the movement, like they did in 2007, to generate situations with lamentable outcomes,” Sánchez said during an interview on VTV’s Dando y Dando.

“There were interests and actors who wanted to take advantage, and we prevented that from happening. We want to prevent what happened to us from happening now to the young people. They’re trying to use the students as cannon fodder in a plan that began on March 12. A plan of agitation, with demonstrations in the regional seats of the National Electoral Council, in an attempt to discredit the electoral system.

The plan “has an international component with the declarations of the US Undersecretary of State, Roberta Jacobson. They’re trying to use the parliamentary tribune so that they can attack Venezuela from abroad. Now we see deputies of the National Assembly traveling out of country to contribute to that component, which is trying to clear the path for the non-recognition of the electoral process.”

...

Sánchez responded: “The one responsible is Henrique Capriles Radonski. In everything the student movement did, during the year 2007, we never saw [the opposition leaders] Julio Borges, Henry Ramos Allup, or Capriles Radonski. It’s really irresponsible, daring to say that we have to contradict the revolution with someone else’s skin.”

...

I’ve added the links so you can see exactly what’s going on here. This is an old, old tactic of the State Dept., one that hasn’t changed since Dubya tried and failed to derail the Bolivarian project of Hugo Chávez in the noughties of this not-so-”American” century. It’s still trying to use the “student movement” of the Venezuelan opposition (the oligarchy, really) to generate violence, as they did in 2007, when Chavecito was re-elected to his third term. The violence is not the product of “insecurity”, as it is often presented. It is orchestrated and directed all the way from Washington, and its purpose is to derail the Bolivarian Revolution, so that all the good it has done can be undone as quickly as possible.

...

But of course, the State Dept. is tone-deaf to all this; its own actions reveal as much. It’s had to let the Venezuelan opposition import right-wing paramilitaries from Colombia in repeated efforts to destabilize Venezuela, all to no avail. The Bolivarians have not fallen to the provocations as expected. They have maintained their composure. Time and again, with and without Chavecito, they have stood their ground peacefully, and laughed as the destabilization plans, one after another, lost their wheels and veered off the road, coming to rest ignominiously in the ditch.

This one is bound to fare no differently. After all, the functional definition of insanity is to keep doing the same thing over and over again, expecting the results to just miraculously change. And yet, the gringos think the Bolivarians are crazy, for repeatedly electing and re-electing a certain brown-skinned working-class campesino from the plains who used to be in the army, and getting good results out of him?

The irony of all this may be lost on the State Dept., but it isn’t lost on me.

http://www.sabinabecker.com/2013/03/the-ironies-of-the-venezuelan-opposition-part-10.html
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The ironies of the Venezuelan opposition, part 10 - Using Student Groups 4 Violence Denounced in Mar (Original Post) Catherina May 2013 OP
Outstanding comments here: so glad to read them. Judi Lynn May 2013 #1
K&R idwiyo May 2013 #2
I agree with Catherina's and Judi Lynn's posts above. Peace Patriot May 2013 #3

Judi Lynn

(160,620 posts)
1. Outstanding comments here: so glad to read them.
Thu May 2, 2013, 08:33 PM
May 2013

Doesn't hurt a bit to get some respectable information from an opposition deputy! Very decent of him to admit the truth of this.

Good news from Sabina Becker regarding the recent events, in your link:


~snip~
Firstly, the Bolivarian Revolution did not begin with Hugo Chávez, it is not limited to him, and it will not die along with him. We are talking here about a liberatory struggle that is no less than 200 years old. Es larga, la lucha. Generations of Venezuelans (and other Latin Americans too) have fought and died defending their country against foreign direction and interference, be it from Spain, from Britain, or from the United States. Their fight did not end when Bolívar died; it had then only just begun. What makes ignorant, ahistorical pipsqueaks like Roberta Jacobson think it’s going to end now that Chávez is physically dead? It didn’t start when he was first elected in 1998, nor when he launched his failed civilian-military uprising in 1992, nor even when he was born in 1954. This revolution began when Simón Bolívar took up his sword against all empires. And by all empires, I really do mean ALL of them…including the sneak-thievish capitalist pillaging made possible by the Monroe Doctrine. Bolívar saw that one coming, too. And generations of Venezuelans have heeded that warning, and taken up the fight again and again. If anyone at the State Dept. thinks they have decapitated a snake and that the path is once again clear for whatever, they are in for a helluva shock. They are in a battle with nothing less than the collective spirits of two centuries of revolution. Good luck fighting against that!

Of course, they’re also dumb enough to think they can appropriate the name of Bolívar, to slap that on their sham of an opposition campaign, and basta. (Jorge Rodríguez made fun of that, and I found it pretty funny myself.) And therein lies another snag. The people of Venezuela are all literate and educated now, thanks to Chavecito’s efforts (and the tremendous support of Fidel Castro, who furnished the teachers). They have become intensely familiar with the reality of what Bolívar strove for, and they aren’t stupid. They won’t be fooled by this transparent bit of crapaganda that Capriles has put on. And apparently he knows it, too; hence the plans for violence.

But here, too, the plan hits a snag. As Nicolás Maduro himself noted the other day, there is no taste for violence among the Bolivarians. He feared a second “Bogotazo” following the death of Chavecito; that never came. Venezuela is not Colombia. History demonstrates as much; the betrayal of Bolívar by Santander prefigures all the profound differences between the two neighbor countries that exist today. Colombia seems condemned to violence as a direct result of that historic curse. Venezuela has taken a different path. Chavecito’s death, while every bit as tragic and untimely as that of Jorge Eliécer Gaitán, has NOT unleashed mass riots and decades of civil war. Nor will it, ever. That’s because, unlike Gaitán, Chavecito had power and time enough to put all the crucial and necessary constitutional changes into place, so that his country would be not only transformed, but able to go on transforming itself without him. And in turn that is because, of the two countries, Venezuela is and has long been the more rebellious. While the one falls easily to every manipulation the gringos devise and has dissolved into violence as a result, the other resists and, oddly enough, remains at peace from within, even despite profound internal changes. Venezuela is ready to take its own reins in hand and rebuild itself; Colombia, if it goes on as it has done up to now, may never get there. In fact, Colombia suffers more with Chávez dead, because he has done more than any of its own politicians, with the honorable exceptions of Piedad Córdoba and Gustavo Petro, to secure peace between the government and the FARC, and to bring about peaceful transformation from within.

Thank you, this really REALLY is welcome news. Whoo! They have a whole lot of supporters around the world.

Peace Patriot

(24,010 posts)
3. I agree with Catherina's and Judi Lynn's posts above.
Fri May 3, 2013, 12:29 PM
May 2013

The U.S. State Department and the black-hole agencies that are pulling its strings are like that drunken red-baiter Joe McCarthy. They don't know when to quit. They don't know when they've LOST. Their brains are pickled and stuck in their past 'glories' of throwing leftists out of airplanes and torturing pregnant leftist women, murdering them and stealing their babies to be raised by fascists.

They think, because they managed to pull off a putsch in Honduras, they can do it anywhere. They think they are "on a roll." They think their "glory" days are returning! They are delusional. Literally, 'non compos mentis.'

Can an entire government, upside and underside, be 'non compos mentis' while individuals within it appear to be sane? Yup, we saw that with the Iraq War. Can a government be out of its mind on one issue? Yup. Just look at U.S. policy on Cuba for the last half century. Or the U.S. "war on drugs"!

The mad can do egregious harm before they are restrained. And the U.S. government certainly has done that--including mass murder, illegal wars, numerous fascist coups, and numerous vile acts against Latin America's people and their democracies--recent and past. But they are so frenzied by all this blood on their hands they cannot see the end coming--the straightjacket that has been prepared--the massive empowerment and enfranchisement of the people of Latin America--which has ALREADY restrained U.S. government psychosis in many ways, and CANNOT be stopped. This region is going to be INDEPENDENT of the U.S. It is well on its way. And the ragged lashings out of our psychotic imperium--while dangerous and still cunning and devious--are only confirming the passion of the Latin American majority to be free of this beast, to pursue its own independent course toward sovereignty, social justice and real democracy--and, God bless them, SANITY. SANE government. Government for the common good. Peaceful government. Government that helps people. Government that is of, by and for the people.

We have this hideous distortion here--government of, by and for transglobal corporations and war profiteers. Latin Americans want the real thing--real democracy. That is what this is all about. And it's no wonder that the vicious McCarthy-like drunken sots in Washington DC are raving mad at this development.

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