Thread: Isla Margarita
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07-18-22 15:38 #302
Posts: 3279Originally Posted by JustTK [View Original Post]
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07-18-22 12:07 #301
Posts: 1945Originally Posted by Elvis2008 [View Original Post]
One cannot blame this on scoialism, or Chavez, or Maduro bcos they inherited a totally fkd up situation. You might not like their policies, but it was no better before for the majority. Runaway inflation has existed since 1983 (Chevez came in 1999) and the currency has lost value against the USD 500 fold since then. Chavez got it under control for a while in the 2000's, but it span out of control again by 2012. The socialist governments have introduced minimum wage, re-set its value, nationalised various primary industries, reduced poverty, extreme poverty, and improved illiteracy. They didn't get everything right. Maduro seems to have a particular poor record. Lack of regard to the law. Has always been the case in the ruling classes in Venezuela, as it has in most countries. How do you think they got rich in the first place? - by saying "hey, I got here first (which they didn't), this is mine, get the FK out!
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07-17-22 19:46 #300
Posts: 4201Originally Posted by Combo [View Original Post]
And the attitude in Venezuela is we are a rich country and the reason we are poor is we have been stolen from and we are going to steal back. That is the culture, and you just described it like I did.
Originally Posted by Combo [View Original Post]
I do really hope that nation gets its shit together and they pull their heads out of the ass. I really do. It has so much potential and on an individual basis I like a lot of Venezuelans too. It is just their culture is shit.
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07-17-22 18:03 #299
Posts: 1846Please don't judge a people by the few you have interacted with. While I agree with much of your post (specifically property rights), many, if not most, Venezuelans are very good people (just like anywhere). I was engaged to a Venezuelan girl in the USA A long time ago. Upper middle class family and as nice and decent as could be. We visited her family in Caracas a few times and they were very nice, hardworking people. This was when the country was just starting to fall apart. Eventually all her family ended up selling their property / business and leaving the country. Really fucked up -- if they were out of town or out of the country, the government would not penalize people who moved into their property. They had to sell and get out. The government's attitude was more or less "if you're not occupying your property, you must be rich and poor people should be able to move in. ".
I saw so many hot-looking women there that I ended up going back as a single guy. Both Isla Margarita and Caracas.
Originally Posted by Elvis2008 [View Original Post]
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07-17-22 16:05 #298
Posts: 162Originally Posted by JustTK [View Original Post]
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07-17-22 13:40 #297
Posts: 1945Originally Posted by GeneHickman [View Original Post]
Going back to the first implemtation of the minimum wage in Venezuela in 1974, It was Perez who did it. It was his first term in office. One of the most radical aspects of Pérez's program for government was the notion that petroleum oil was a tool for developing countries like Venezuela to attain first world status and usher a fairer, more equitable international order. Drastic increases in petroleum prices led to an economic bonanza for the country just as Pérez started his term. His policies, including the nationalization of the iron and petroleum industries, investment in large state-owned industrial projects for the production of aluminium and hydroelectric energy, infrastructure improvements and the funding of social welfare and scholarship programmes, were extremely ambitious and involved massive government spending, to the tune of almost $53 billion. His measures to protect the environment and foster sustainable development earned the Earth Care award in 1975, the first time a Latin American leader had received this recognition. The party he represented was Democratic Action. A left wing party too. And nationalising key industries is certainly a left wing policy. So Chavez was not the first left wing president. During Perez's second time in office he was fired for embezzlement.
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07-17-22 08:05 #296
Posts: 4201Originally Posted by RamDavidson84 [View Original Post]
My experience with Venezuela was through their national phone company. GTE bought by Verizon put in all the wiring and towers in Venezuela. They moved Venezuelan communication into the 21st century, and they made money. When I bought shares, the company was 75% publicly traded and 25% owned by Verizon. It was in Venezuela's constitution that publicly traded companies pay 50% of profits out in the form of dividends but when I went to the share holder meeting, the Venezuelan share holders were furious that ANY money was being given to Verizon. They were actively telling management to screw the law and fuck over Verizon.
The company IMO was way undervalued. They had like $6 a share in cash and were making $4 a share and giving out $2 a share in dividends, and it was selling at $20. Given its numbers and growth, it should have been $100. The reason it was $20 was Chavez and fear of nationalization and of course, that is what he did. He bought the company for $17 a share. In essence, if the company just kept making the same money it did, he would get the thing for free in 3 years, $12 in earnings and $6 in cash. It was pure theft and of course, the company's #1 criteria for being hired or keeping their job was not competence but loyalty to Chavez.
JustTK thinks that the capitalists shut the Venezuelans out of the world currency markets. It was the other way around. Venezuela had an official rate of 3 Bolivars per dollar while the black market rate was way higher than that by factors as high as 10. So anyone could get their paycheck, convert their money at an exchange to dollars, sell them on the black market and make 10 X your money. The answer to people doing this was limiting exchanges and ATM conversions.
The same happened with gasoline. In Venezuela, gas costs like 30 cents a gallon so trucks fitted themselves with huge tanks, filled up in Venezuela, and then sold gasoline in Colombia. The answer was again to limit gasoline sales but in both cases you can see that you could potentially pay people off for more dollars or gasoline. Either of these practices were far more lucrative than most Venezuelan jobs.
The idea with buying the Venezuelan telephone company was that all that money would be saved for Venezuelans. At least that is what Chavez said, yet for all Chavez's talk and bashing the USA and the rich, the daughters of Hugo Chavez embezzled billions of daughters out of the country and one of them lived in Miami. But then again that is what I expect from a leader of Venezuela.
Venezuela has or had the largest oil reserves in the world but it was always be a poor country. You cannot accumulate wealth when you do not have strong property rights, and there are none in Venezuela. Stealing and lying are part of their culture, and it is going to take generations for those attitudes to die.
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07-17-22 06:11 #295
Posts: 407Originally Posted by JustTK [View Original Post]
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07-17-22 05:07 #294
Posts: 1945Originally Posted by MaraCucho [View Original Post]
https://books.google.co.ve/books?id=z9OKMvILDcIC&pg=PA23&lpg=PA23&dq=chavez+increase+minimum+wage+1990s&source=bl&ots=cmIkBtY-v6&sig=ACfU3U07ab9pBaZ30ST734T8I11xQ1gtOg&hl=es-419&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjnuZ_yg__4AhUAoWoFHYzMBnQQ6AF6BAhZEAM#v=onepage&q&f=false
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07-17-22 00:16 #293
Posts: 162Originally Posted by JustTK [View Original Post]
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07-16-22 23:19 #292
Posts: 1945Originally Posted by RamDavidson84 [View Original Post]
And you cannot tie authoritarianism to socialism either. Its not part of the left-right vector. Thats the vertical liberty vector. Take a look at saudi or middle east for examples.
We now see a huge step to the left across all south america. Bcos the people want justice. They are tired of being victims of the rich.
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07-16-22 21:57 #291
Posts: 1945Originally Posted by DCups [View Original Post]
No need to be fearful. They are just people, same as anywhere else.
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07-14-22 23:28 #290
Posts: 3193Chicas
Is it still possible to get laid easily on this beautiful island? I few years ago I banged a drop dead gorgeous Venezuelan chick I met on Calle Conde in Santo Domingo, RD. 21 years old and face of an angel and an unbelievable busty, perfect body. Easily in the Top 5 in my All-Time 600+ conquests. Anyway she told me about this beautiful island and invited me to go there but I never did fearful of Venezuela in general.
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07-14-22 22:10 #289
Posts: 162Originally Posted by RamDavidson84 [View Original Post]
And through these years there have been several attempts to get rid of the government. The first time was during the events in 2002-2003, then the "guarimbas" of 2015 and 2017, and finally the big push behind Juan Guaido in 2019. There are several reasons why all of those failed so badly, but the chief two are: A) Chavez consolidated his power by making the military part of the corrupt government and their shady deals, thus making it impossible for them to rebel because by doing so they would be losing a good business. That process wasn't entirely done in 2002, which is why the coup was able to remove Chavez from power for a few hours, but the large factions within the military that were already pledged to be part of the "chanchullo" quickly reverted it. And B) the fact that the political opposition is hugely inept, their leaders either a bunch of clowns that have no idea of what they are doing, or worse, politicians that have established "being the opposition" as their business and have zero intention to actually change the status quo.
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07-14-22 17:49 #288
Posts: 7108Recollection
Well, I do recall that I fucked this blue-eyed, blonde Venezolana years ago in Costa Rica (she claimed to be from Isla Margarita). I remember that as I looked down at her smiling face and twinkling blue eyes I "nutted" far sooner than I otherwise would have liked to LOL!