DUA BANGHAYA LATEN BUAT BANGSA?
Senin,4 des 2006

"We have to do something," said 36-year-old Dona Bavaro. 
"My country is being stolen. 
This is the last chance we have. 
Communism is coming here."
Chavez has built increasingly 
close ties with communist Cuba and 
dedicated his victory "to the Cuban people 
and to our brother, 
President Fidel Castro, comrade."
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

Hehehe,yang unik menangrik, di doniah inih,

khususnyah terlebih buat  Inulnesiah.,

adalah  dua banghaya laten

Yang mengancem keidupan bangsanyah

Yaituh BANGHAYA LATEN MERAH,KOMUNISMEH

SERTA BANGHAYA IJOH, ULER IJOH. ISLAMISMEH

Dan cungkup mengejutken pulak,

Kedua banghaya laten ituh, MENUDING AMERIKAH

SAKBAGAE DAJAL IBLIS YANG KUDU DIPERANGIN???

Sakhingga kadua kekuatan demonic inih,

JUSTRU BISAK MENGGABUNG JADI SATUU

DENGAN SIPAT MUTUALSIMBIOSEH,

Yaituh hubungan MESRAH KERJA SAMAH

JINGKALAO SALING MENGUNTUNGKEN?

Yaituh tamtunyah MENGHANCURKEN SETAN AMERIKAH!

Padahal kedua kekuatan demonic inih,

SAMA2 BERUPAYAH MENGHANCURKEN

SATU SAMA LAENNYAH?

Bukankah komunismeh dan ugamak (Islam) 

SALING MEMBENCIH AMPE TUJUH TURUNAN?

Inihlah yang kubilang unik,licik,serta menangrik di kajih!


Dan daku mencatet,

Adanyah 

INDIKASIH KEMENANGAN KOMUNIS VENEZUELAH ITUH

Adalah Dengan cara2 lihay,licin tur licik, sakhingga bisak

MENGNANCEPKEN KEKUASAANNYAH DI SAKMUAH LINI

PEMERENTAHAN SERTA PERUSAHAAN.

Perhatiken! CHAVEZ BISAK 

MENGONTROL PERTAMINANYAH VENEZUELAH.

Hehhee,

INIH PERTANDA KEKUATAN DIKTAKTORIAL MERAH?

SEDANG DIJALANKEN.

DAN PEMILU CUMANLAH KEDOK SUHARTON GOLKAR

NGENTHUTIN DEMOKRASIH BUKAN?

.Entah pigihmana 

Chavez bisak MENGOBAH KARAKTER BANGSA

JADI MERAH KOMUNIS? 

Memperalat JURANG MISKIN KAYAHKAH? 

MEMENANGKEN SIMPATIK KAUM KAYPANG NAN GEMBELKAH?

Atao memangke

JAWARAH2 MERAH MENGINTIMIDASIH BANGSANYAH?

Hehehe,

jingkalao Suharton mah dengan GOLKARNYAH BUKAN?

Sementara banghaya laten kaduah di Inulnesiah,

ADALAH ULER IJOH 

YANG BERNAPASKEN UGAMAK PADANG PASIR.

Walaopun banghaya laten inih,

Cuman baru dalem phase 

EMBRIOHNYAH JUTAAN TELOR2 ULER IJOH

YANG TINGGAL NUNGGU NETESNYAH HAJAH.

Heheh,

persis macem telor2 Gargoyle, mahluk setan,

YANG JADI LEGENDAH BANGSA ROMANIAH.

Jenis KELELAWAR PENYANTAP DAGING MANUNGSA?

Yang dikisahken bakalan netes dalem pilem 

GARGOYLE WINGS OF DARKNESS.

Directed by Jay Andrews

banghaya laten Uler ijoh di Nusantarahpun

begituh kentara,

SEDANG BERJOANG MEMENANGKEN CITAH2

HIDDEN AGENDAHNYAH,

Dengan MEMANCING SIMPATIK ATAWA DUKUNGAN

DARI SAKLURUH BANGSA YANG MAYORITASNYAH ISLAM.

LALU CARANYAH? 

Hehehe,kebetulan onta onta daerah udah disebarken,

Melaluin kedogolannyah Miss Megih.

LALU MEREKAH MENCUBA PULAK MEMPOSISIKEN ULER2 IJOH

DI PEMERENTAHAN PUSAT.

Sungpaya NANTINYAH BAKALAN MENJEPIT NUSANTARAH

DARI PUSAT SAMPE DAERAH?

Dan tamtunyah, 

KINI AMERIKAH DIJADIKEN TARGET KEBENCIHANNYAH, 

AGAR PERJOANGAN PAN ISLAMIK MEREKAH

BERHASIL MENYATUKEN KEKUATAN ULER IJOH

UNTUK MENGOBAH NAGARAKU JADI IJOH ROYO2,

MEYAINGIN VENEZUELAH YANG MEMERAH DARAH!!

Dan dibawah inih,cumanlah perbandingan kondisih bangsa kita,

Dimana  Venezuelah  menghadepin banghaya laten komunismeh??

>>>>>>>>>>>>>>


Chavez wins re-election by wide margin 
By IAN JAMES, Associated Press Writer 1 hour, 23 minutes ago 
CARACAS, Venezuela - Leftist President Hugo Chavez won re-election 
in Venezuela by a wide margin Sunday, giving him free reign for a 
more radical turn toward socialism and six more years to counter 
U.S. influence in Latin America and beyond. 
Challenger Manuel Rosales conceded defeat but vowed to remain in 
opposition, resisting a leader he accuses of edging Venezuela toward 
authoritarian rule.
Minutes after the results were announced, Chavez appeared on the 
balcony of the presidential palace singing the national anthem. He 
pledged to deepen his effort to transform Venezuela into a more 
egalitarian society.
"Long live the socialist revolution! Destiny has been written," 
Chavez shouted to thousands of flag-waving supporters wearing red 
shirts and braving a pouring rain.
"That new era has begun," he said, raising a hand in the air. "We 
have shown that Venezuela is red! ... No one should fear 
socialism ... Socialism is human. Socialism is love," Chavez 
said. "Down with imperialism! We need a new world!"
He said his victory was a blow to 

President Bush, whose government he calls dangerously imperialistic.
"It's another defeat for the devil, who tries to dominate the 
world," Chavez said. "Down with imperialism! We need a new world!"
Since he first won office in 1998, Chavez has increasingly dominated 
all branches of government and his allies now control congress, 
state offices and the judiciary. Current law prevents him from 
running again in 2012 but he has said he plans to seek 
constitutional reforms that would include an end to presidential 
term limits.
He has increasingly posed a challenge to the United States while 
leading a growing bloc of Latin American leftists, influencing 
elections across the region, and allying himself with U.S. enemies 
like 

Iran and 

Syria.
Chavez also has used Venezuela's oil wealth to his political 
advantage. He channeled oil profits toward multibillion-dollar 
programs for the poor including subsidized food, free university 
education and cash benefits for single mothers. He has also helped 
allies from Cuba to Bolivia with oil and petrodollars.
He now promises an even more profound shake-up of society.
With 78 percent of voting stations reporting, Chavez had 61 percent 
to 38 percent for challenger Rosales, said Tibisay Lucena, head of 
the country's elections council. Chavez had nearly 6 million votes 
versus 3.7 million for Rosales, according to the partial tally.
Final turnout figures among the 15.9 million eligible voters were 
not available but an official bulletin of partial results showed it 
at 75 percent, making Chavez's lead insurmountable.
"We recognize that today they defeated us," Rosales told cheering 
supporters at his campaign headquarters. "We will continue in this 
struggle."
Some aides wept while others were angry.
"We have to do something," said 36-year-old Dona Bavaro. "My country 
is being stolen. This is the last chance we have. Communism is 
coming here."
Chavez has built increasingly close ties with communist Cuba and 
dedicated his victory "to the Cuban people and to our brother, 
President 

Fidel Castro, comrade."
Rosales, a cattle rancher who is now expected to return to his post 
of governor of the western state of Zulia, cast the election as a 
choice between freedom and increasing state control of people's 
lives. He decried rampant crime and corruption, widely seen as 
Chavez's main vulnerabilities. 
A top Rosales adviser, Teodoro Petkoff, said the voting was carried 
out in a "satisfactory manner." He said there were some 
irregularities but most were resolved. Another member of the Rosales 
camp had accused pro-Chavez soldiers of reopening closed polling 
stations and busing voters to them. 
Even before polls closed, Chavez supporters celebrated in the 
streets, setting off fireworks and cruising Caracas honking horns 
and shouting "Chavez isn't going anywhere!" 
The day began with Chavez loyalists jarring voters awake hours 
before dawn in Caracas with recordings of reveille blaring from 
truck-mounted loudspeakers. 
"We're here to support our president, who has helped us so much," 
said Jose Domingo Izaguirre, a factory worker who waited hours to 
vote. His family recently moved into new government housing. 
Rosales supporters accused Chavez of deepening class divisions with 
searing rhetoric demonizing his opponents. 
The campaign has been hostile, with Chavez calling Rosales a pawn of 
Washington and Rosales saying he was on the alert for fraud. More 
than 125,000 soldiers and reservists were deployed to safeguard the 
balloting. 
Conflict and ambition have marked the rise of Chavez, 52, from a boy 
selling homemade sweets in a dusty backwater to a failed coup 
commander in 1992 and now a leader who could set the tone of Latin 
American politics for years to come. 
Constitutional reforms he oversaw in 1999 triggered new elections 
the following year that he easily won. Loyalists helped him survive 
a 2002 coup, a subsequent general strike and a 2004 recall 
referendum. 
The president insists he is a democrat and will continue to respect 
private property — though he has boosted state control over the oil 
industry and has said he might nationalize utilities. Venezuela is 
the world's fifth largest oil exporter and soaring oil prices have 
made it the continent's fastest growing economy. 
Chavez has pledged at least $1.1 billion in loans and financial aid 
to Latin American countries in the past two years, and billions more 
in bond bailouts for friendly governments as well as generously 
financed oil deals. But the largesse has proved a weakness at home 
where many believe the aid comes at the expense of addressing 
domestic problems.



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