Venezuela's Political Situation

Demagoguery and divisiveness may get a politician an electoral win but may also make the country ungovernable if the losers feel they are being abused. Having a majority of the votes does not justify doing anything you want. Chávez is seeking confrontation and is using demagoguery to get the support of the masses but the way things are going the result may be that in the end everybody loses including the masses. Majority support does not mean it is the intelligent thing to do. many countries have plunged into disaster when the majority were fanatical or blind enough.

No, the President’s opponents pressure him to resign, as happened with Nixon (who did so) and Clinton (who did not). Of course, as Mighty Girl points out, Venezuela does not have the additional pressure tactic of the threat of impeachment available. Venezuelans are using the only tactics they have available.

As I mentioned previously, Chavez’s own constitution enshrines the “right to rebellion” against an “anti-democratic” regime. Chavez obviously had this clause inserted in order to legitimize ex post facto his own previous coup attempt against a democratically elected government. But as Chavez’s “Bolivarian Republic” is much more coercive in its tactics than the government Chavez rebelled against, this clause can easily be used against him.

Okay, that makes sense, thanks. :slight_smile:

This is from the BBC:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/2580443.stm

If this isn’t a “dictator like” abuse of power, I don’t know what it is.

This is from the BBC:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/2580443.stm

If this isn’t a “dictator like” abuse of power, I don’t know what it is.

I’ve been reading updates on the situation in Venezuela at El Sur. My co-worker has lived in Caracas for several years (and his wife is Venezuelan) and just got back from there last week- he says that it’s a accurate summary of the events going on there. El Sur doesn’t use terms like “comrade” or “imperialist lackey pig-dogs” so I don’t think it will meet Chumpsky’s standards for an unbiased news source.

When not running his country’s economy into the ground, Chavez likes to spend his time writing sympathetic letters to Carlos the Jackal.