http://www.sabinabecker.com/2013/02/how-sleazy-is-the-venezuelan-opposition-very.html

How sleazy is the Venezuelan opposition?
VERY.<http://www.sabinabecker.com/2013/02/how-sleazy-is-the-venezuelan-opposition-very.html>
February
20, 2013 — Sabina Becker

[image: somos-mas-payasos]

*“No to the Cirque du Soleil — we are bigger clowns!”*

And if you thought THAT was funny, get a load of the latest shenanigans
from MariCori:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=4KhP3cdM7nM


 Gee, what a load of unconvincing play-acting. Why, then, is she making so
much money doing
this?<http://www.patriagrande.com.ve/temas/venezuela/maria-corina-machado-paga-130-mil-bolivares-mensuales-en-la-universidad-de-yale-para-los-hijos-video/>

*A far-right deputy of the Venezuelan national assembly, and leading figure
in the coup d’état of April 11, 2002, María Corina Machado, pays 130,000
bolivars a month to Yale University, in New Haven, Connecticut (USA), for
the education of her children, according to Marío Silva, the host of VTV’s
La Hojilla program.*
*

The host called on the assembly to investigate Machado, since a
parliamentarian doesn’t earn so much money per month.

“This is serious enough for the National Assembly to investigate. Why does
Ms. María Corina spend 130,000 bolivars a month on her children’s education
at Yale?” said Silva, telephone in hand. “Why doesn’t she tell the country
where the hell she gets 130,000 bolivars a month? That’s the problem,”
Silva pointed out.

Silva called Machado “shameless” for speaking of the return of President
Chávez as a “virtual” return.

He added that there is a plan, led from abroad, to disqualify President
Chávez, but assured that “it will cost them dearly.”
*

*It is worth pointing out that María Corina Machado was received by US
president George W. Bush, on May 31, 2005, for a supposed business meeting,
which in fact gives evidence of the ties between the Venezuelan right and
the US government.*

Translation mine.

Remember how, years ago, the WaHoPo did a really fawning
profile<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A37649-2004Jul8.html>
of
MariCori, depicting her as a brave single mother battling all by her widdle
wonesome against the big, red machine of that evil, evil dictator, Chávez?
Well, her battling consists mainly of whining on camera to a very soft,
solicitous interviewer (who, like MariCori, makes way too much money doing
way too little actual *work*). And considering that the opposition media
(read: corporate, lamestream, sold-out, FUX Snooze of the South) spend all
THEIR time whining about how Venezuela is turning into a Cuban hellhole of
censorship, while their signals remain suspiciously on the air, and their
presses keep on rolling unimpeded, well…I’d say they deserve each other.
And they all deserve to be investigated by the National Assembly for
corruption, because they all get a LOT of *dinero* from
you-know-where.<http://www.globalresearch.ca/color-revolutions-washington-funds-venezuela-s-made-in-the-usa-opposition/25984>

And speaking of corruptos under
investigation<http://venezuelanalysis.com/news/7846>
…

*Venezuelan authorities announced on Saturday that they will reopen the
case against opposition politician Leopoldo Lopez in which he is accused of
diversion of public resources.*
*

Lopez, one of the founders of the center-right party Primero Justicia and
current head of opposition party Voluntad Popular, is accused of having
received a check for more than BsF. 60,000 (US$ 9,500) from the state oil
company PDVSA in 1998 when his mother was head of public relations in the
company.

Government supporters have long seen the case as an example of the type of
corruption that characterized the Fourth Republic, the political system
that preceded the Chavez government, in which it is often claimed that
state resources tended to circulate only among the elite.

Lopez was prevented from running for public office in 2005 under an
anti-corruption law due to this same accusation, and he and other leaders
of Primero Justicia have admitted receiving the money, but claim it was
legal.

Julio Borges, currently the head of Primero Justicia, has long maintained
that the check was received by the organization in 1998 as part of a
humanitarian project being carried out in Venezuelan schools and
communities.
*

*According to Borges, Primero Justicia at the time was not a political
party, but rather an NGO that received money from different sources such as
the World Bank and the European Union.*

“Humanitarian project”? “NGO”? They really ARE a shameless bunch. That
so-called party has been a political putschist mafia all along. The only
people ever to see any of that cash were the self-same greedy grubbers who
took it. ILLEGALLY, of course. Which is why Pretty Boy Leo is under
investigation.

And then there are these
“students”<http://http//venezuelanalysis.com/news/7864>,
who just make me cry laughing:

*Twenty-five opposition students who had been protesting in front of the
Cuban embassy wrapped in symbolic chains for four days, ended their protest
on Monday after President Hugo Chavez returned to the country from Havana.
They claimed he returned because of their protest.*
*

Central University of Venezuela student Emily Vera told El Carabobeno that
she appreciated the National Guard and national police protection their
protest had received. However other private Venezuelan media reported some
violence on Thursday and seven students briefly detained.

Also, in an incident on Monday, an older man who criticised the protest was
verbally abused, part of his pacemaker broken, and he was removed from the
site of the protest by protesters. The incident was caught on video, and it
went viral on the internet. The man responded to the protesters saying, “Is
this your idea of democracy?”

The key aggressor, later identified from the video as Antonio Peralta, is a
student at the University of the Andes (ULA), and a member of a group known
as the “20″. The group regularly organise tire burning road blockades in
Merida in order to disrupt city life or demand early vacations.

Another student protestor, Vilca Fernandez, told press the “student
movement” had shown it was “on the right path” and the “Cuban regime” had
been defeated because their “intervention [in Venezuela] will no longer be
accepted”.

“In five days we brought the Cuban government to its knees,” he said. In
2011 Fernandez, also an ULA student, sewed his mouth up with two stitches
as part of a hunger strike to protest what he referred to as the
“dictatorship” of Chavez and claimed that student protests were
“criminalised”.
*

*“We tell the Cubans to go home, we have enough Venezuelans here that are
able to govern,” said another protestor, Gabriel Velasquez.*

*Snurk.* Yeah. *Right.* And how much did Uncle Sam pay you to spout that
crap, kiddies?
(I don’t expect a straight answer to this one anytime soon.)


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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