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View Full Version : That crazy Chavez, he's at it again!



Gan
01-10-2007, 04:45 PM
CARACAS (Reuters) - Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez was sworn in on Wednesday for a new six-year term that he vowed to use to press a radical socialist revolution including nationalizations that have roiled financial markets.

Emboldened by his landslide re-election win, the typically combative anti-U.S. leader has gone on the attack, deciding to strip a private opposition TV channel of its license and take over some major companies owned by foreign investors.

"Fatherland, socialism or death -- I take the oath," Chavez said.

The man who calls Cuban President Fidel Castro (http://search.news.yahoo.com/search/news/?p=Fidel+Castro) his mentor changed tradition by draping the presidential sash from his left shoulder instead of his right in what he says is a symbol of his socialist credentials.

Legislators at the ceremony in Congress chanted "Long live socialism."

Investors took fright this week at the leftist drive that further consolidates power in the hands of a former coup leader who already controls Congress, the courts and says he has total support in the army and the giant state oil company.

As the United States criticized Chavez's moves against private property, the stock market lost almost a fifth of its value on Tuesday, debt prices tumbled to a six-week low and the currency changed hands at nearly twice the official rate. Still, buoyed by strong oil revenues and high popularity, Chavez is expected to ride out any economic and political storm.

In his political career, the former army officer has survived jail, a coup and a recall referendum.

A leading anti-U.S. voice in the world and in the vanguard of a shift to the left in Latin America, Chavez now wants to scrap presidential term limits and lead the OPEC (http://search.news.yahoo.com/search/news/?p=OPEC) nation for decades.

Chavez, who rode to Congress for the swearing-in ceremony in an open-top car waving at crowds of supporters, has said his new term's plans include stripping the central bank of its autonomy and taking on special legislative powers.

The opposition has accused Chavez, in power since 1999, of seeking to transform the fourth-biggest oil exporter to the United States into a Cuban-style centralized economy.

BLANK CHECK FROM VOTERS?
Chavez, who won 63 percent of the vote in December, has amplified comparisons with Castro by creating a single party to steer his revolution, but insists he will always tolerate opposition.

By now focusing on the media and utilities in his new term, he is homing in on two sectors that could complete his state control.

"Chavez interprets the election result as giving him a blank check to develop a program that runs against the interests of Venezuela and only serves to benefit himself," Omar Barboza, a leading opposition official, told Reuters.

Chavez insists he needs more power to save Venezuela from exploitation and even attack by capitalist countries, particularly the United States, whose President, George W. Bush, he has labeled "the devil."

Chavez's nationalization plans remain hazy and the utilities and foreign investors want to know whether he plans to take a 51-percent governing stake or seize all of their enterprises.

Chavez has already confiscated large cattle ranches. But his decision to nationalize the country's biggest telecommunications company CANTV and power firms represents a bold new policy.

Still, investors have generally stayed in Venezuela while Chavez has been in office because the country has high revenue as one of the world's top exporters.

Investment bank Morgan Stanley said in a research note, "We continue to see oil prices as ultimately the key driver" of investments.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070110/ts_nm/venezuela_dc_8
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Wow.... when this guy falls, its going to be the landing thats heard for decades.

Sean of the Thread
01-10-2007, 04:58 PM
Wow.. This continues to amaze me. He's more stupid than Kranar and HN combined. I wonder how many "votes" he really won in the first place..

Parkbandit
01-10-2007, 05:00 PM
I'm certain that Jimmy Carter would go down there and certify the elections again.

:lol:

Sean of the Thread
01-10-2007, 05:13 PM
Rofl.

Hulkein
01-10-2007, 05:30 PM
Backlash will find some silver-lining in this.

Back
01-10-2007, 05:32 PM
Backlash will find some silver-lining in this.

He was democratically elected?

ElanthianSiren
01-10-2007, 05:40 PM
I wonder if Chavez thinks he'll live forever, or if he doesn't think as soon as he's ripe to be ousted that the system that he is creating will form the back of a new coup d'état, under a leader he may consider less responsible than himself. There are reasons for checks in government.

-M

Sean of the Thread
01-10-2007, 05:41 PM
He was democratically elected?

If by democratically you mean "fixed". Been much discussion over that from his own people. (who get pwnt for talking about it.)

Gan
01-10-2007, 05:50 PM
If by democratically you mean "fixed". Been much discussion over that from his own people. (who get pwnt for talking about it.)


Ask CANTV about questioning the validity of Chavez' elections.

:whistle:

Back
01-10-2007, 09:14 PM
If by democratically you mean "fixed". Been much discussion over that from his own people. (who get pwnt for talking about it.)


Ask CANTV about questioning the validity of Chavez' elections.

:whistle:

Does that sound at all familiar to anyone?

When you scream democracy for all then turn around and try and place doubt on the system you supposedly support because you don’t like who was elected doesn't that make you... I don’t know? Retarded?

Gan
01-10-2007, 10:39 PM
Does that sound at all familiar to anyone?

When you scream democracy for all then turn around and try and place doubt on the system you supposedly support because you don’t like who was elected doesn't that make you... I don’t know? Retarded?

When Bush takes over the local networks that decry him a cheater in order to silence them then you have room to talk.

Back
01-10-2007, 10:47 PM
When Bush takes over the local networks that decry him a cheater in order to silence them then you have room to talk.

Granted, its not the same, but its getting close when you have an Executive branch claiming to be transparent then doing everything it can not to be to the point of publicly chastising America’s leading news outlets and threatening leakers with litigation.

Gan
01-11-2007, 08:50 AM
Granted, its not the same, but its getting close...

No, despite your socialist best efforts, America will NEVER get close to whats going on in Venezuela. Bush's actions will NEVER get close to what that clown Chavez's are.

Parkbandit
01-11-2007, 08:53 AM
Granted, its not the same, but its getting close when you have an Executive branch claiming to be transparent then doing everything it can not to be to the point of publicly chastising America’s leading news outlets and threatening leakers with litigation.

You really, REALLY need to go to another country. You are as clueless as you are retarded if you think there are any close parallels between our government and theirs.

Do some fucking research.

And leakers SHOULD face litigation. I realize they don't have many secrets at the Burger King you work at, but many places of work have confidentiality clauses... especially in the government. The leakers of government classified information should face long jail terms because what they are doing is tantamount to treason.

Kefka
01-11-2007, 09:58 AM
Is this the same station that had a hand in the failed coup against Chavez?

Gan
01-11-2007, 03:42 PM
Is this the same station that had a hand in the failed coup against Chavez?

No mention of any media corp. having a hand in the failed coup against Chavez. Now the group that tried to overthrow him initially, called CTV, sounds like the network name CANTV. That might be what your thinking of.

:shrug: