1. [image: Hands Off Venezuela]*Hands Off Venezuela*
@*HOVcampaign*<https://twitter.com/HOVcampaign>

   Today in Miranda National Gathering of Communes and Socialist Cities to
   discuss struggle for socialism via @*FNCEZ* <https://twitter.com/FNCEZ>
   https://twitter.com/FNCEZ/status/336815835165388800
…<https://t.co/GZ227qdoqR>

   This is a two day conference 500 people have 100 communes, some
   resolutions past this evening.

   [image: FNCEZ]*FNCEZ* @*FNCEZ*
<https://twitter.com/FNCEZ>11m<https://twitter.com/FNCEZ/status/337009645329715201>

   en las instalaciones de la escuela de formación Simón Rodríguez


   
#*LAJUVENTUDCONMADURO*<https://twitter.com/search?q=%23LAJUVENTUDCONMADURO&src=hash>rodilla
en tierra con la revolucion No pasaran


   <http://yfrog.com/oej40azj#VYmbw9yrscHp5i7l.01>
   <http://yfrog.com/oej40azj#VYmbw9yrscHp5i7l.01>
   Inicia Encuentro de Comunas San antonio Altos, CRBZ Chavismo es comuna o
   nada http://twitter.yfrog.c

   <http://yfrog.com/oej40azj#VYmbw9yrscHp5i7l.01>
   <http://yfrog.com/oej40azj#VYmbw9yrscHp5i7l.01>




   2. [image: Hands Off Venezuela]*Hands Off Venezuela*
@*HOVcampaign*<https://twitter.com/HOVcampaign>

   Worth re-reading "Venezuela: Price regulation, food scarcity,
   speculation and socialism" http://bit.ly/10Jk46M <http://t.co/Ez6h968zt8>via
   @*marxistcom* <https://twitter.com/marxistcom>


http://www.sabinabecker.com/2013/05/the-ironies-of-the-venezuelan-opposition-part-26.html
The ironies of the Venezuelan opposition, part
26<http://www.sabinabecker.com/2013/05/the-ironies-of-the-venezuelan-opposition-part-26.html>May
20, 2013 — Sabina Becker

Hey! Remember how the Venezuelan opposition used to snipe at Chavecito for
being a former military officer, calling him a “dictator”, even though he
was democratically elected (and re-elected, and so on, and so on) as a
civilian? Remember how they used to squall under his extremely lenient rule
about all the “censorship” and “repression” there was not? Remember how
ironic that was? Well, get ready, because here comes Rafael Poleo —
opposition propagandist, media owner, soi-disant “journalist”, and
all-around poor excuse for a human being, laying a big steaming pile of
smelly brown irony all over the place:

[image: poleo-dirty-war]

So what does that mean? Let me translate:

*Dirty War*
**

*General Videla was not a soldier who sold food. He was born of a breed of
warriors that began with the independence of the Republic of Argentina.
When his country was on the verge of falling into the hands of Montonero
and ERP terrorists, he took on the tremendous responsibility of leading the
dirty war which the terrorists were winning. General Videla won that dirty
war by applying the hard formulas of his military office. Who knows what
would have happened if the military had lost that war. (During a meeting of
the Socialist International in Caracas in 1975, [Rómulo] Betancourt said
that military men don’t always take power because of ambition and avarice,
but because often they are rescuing it from the river where the politicians
let it fall. When Betancourt died, the brave generals who defeated
Russo-Cuban intervention under his command asked for permission to wear
their old uniforms. Thus attired, they were the ones to carry the casket
and bury the great man.)*

This bit of diarrhea was occasioned by the recent death of the ex-dictator
of Argentina, ex-general Jorge Rafael Videla. In it, the irony-impaired
Rafael Poleo not only praises a real, unelected, antidemocratic military
dictator and human rights abuser, he shits all over the grave of an
elected, humanistic and extremely popular socialist president.

One of the first things Chavecito did when he came to power in 1999 was
send the army out to help the people, not to repress them. Under Plan
Bolívar, soldiers sold food at affordable prices in poor neighborhoods.
This pissed off the well-to-do shopkeepers, the same who had occasioned the
Caracazo ten years earlier by hoarding food and then telling those same
poor folks that there wasn’t any. And when those poor Venezuelans put the
dirty lie to that by breaking into the back rooms where the hoarded food
was being kept to be sold at inflated prices, and simply *taking* it, the
then-president, Carlos Andrés Pérez, sent the army out to repress them. The
death toll from those five days of rioting and repression was in the
thousands.

It was this that spurred Chavecito and his Bolivarian army buddies to rise
up against CAP three years later, after a clandestine recruitment drive
that drew disgruntled officers from all branches of the Venezuelan
military. None of them could bear the shame of being repressors in a
nominally democratic country, under a presumably elected president.

Bolívar once said: “Cursed is the soldier who turns his weapons on his own
people.” The 1992 uprising, despite its failure, was meant to expiate that
curse. As was Plan Bolívar, in which the military was placed at the service
of the people, rather than as mere bodyguards to capitalists and their
political lackeys.

And the Argentine junta were nothing if not bodyguards to the international
capitalists. Under them, Argentina became Milton Friedman’s wet dream, and
the corpses of 30,000 “disappeared” dissidents a small price to pay for
free-market “reforms”. The bulk of that repression took place under General
Videla’s iron fist. Never elected, never under the faintest illusion of
being a democrat, the pious hypocrite Videla did not “rescue” Argentina
from the socialist Montoneros and the ERP; he turned it into a human
slaughterhouse. There was literally no atrocity of which he and his
torturers, repressors and co-conspirators were not guilty.

And in the end, Videla proved Bolívar’s axiom correct. He died accursed, on
the floor of the washroom of his cell in the Marcos Paz penitentiary, a
convicted murderer, baby-thief and criminal against humanity. His death was
as undignified as can be imagined; he was stricken with diarrhea and on his
way to the toilet at the time. Karma took a flying dump all over his dogma.

And this is the man Rafael Poleo chose to praise and eulogize. Along with
the long-dead, unlamented Rómulo Betancourt, who stole his way to power via
the reviled Punto Fijo pact, and who waged a dirty war of his own against
Venezuelan leftists, who had been shut out of participation in the
elections, and some of whom had taken to the hills as guerrillas, after the
fashion of Fidel Castro and Che Guevara. Venezuelan leftists disappeared,
were tortured and killed, and thrown in the sea, more than ten years before
the Argentine junta seized power, with Videla as de facto “president” (note
the quotes). One corpse, that of PCV director Alberto
Lovera,<http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alberto_Lovera> washed
up on the beach at Puerto La Cruz, badly bloated and disfigured, but with
chains still attached:

[image: alberto-lovera-dead]

That was in 1965, seven years after the last military dictator of Venezuela
was deposed. And Lovera’s death, along with hundreds of others, was a
direct legacy of Rómulo Betancourt, the so-called “Father of Venezuelan
democracy”. Betancourt, like all the other Punto Fijo Pact beneficiaries,
was only nominally a democrat, and only nominally elected. And he, like all
of them, knew it…and took extreme measures to make sure that no serious
challenges to his leadership could ever come from the left. There was
literally nothing that they would not stoop to, from Betancourt on down, in
the name of preserving a “free market” capitalist “democracy” (again, note
the quotes).

This is what Rafael Poleo was praising and eulogizing when he called
Betancourt a “great man” and his hated, crooked military yes-men “brave
generals”. This ugliness, this rot, this repression, this medieval torture.

And yet he probably would not hesitate to ascribe all these horrors and
more to Chavecito, who was out of uniform for five full years at the time
of his first election of many, with a clear majority and a popular mandate.
Never mind that Chavecito never did anything of the sort, and indeed went
to great lengths to undo the damage that Betancourt and his successors had
done. Not to mention that he helped Néstor Kirchner, and later his widow,
Cristina Fernández, rescue Argentina from the clutches of the IMF…the same
that was all too enthused about General Videla and his ilk.

The mind boggles, does it not?


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



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