DC
Banned
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- Mar 20, 2008
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Assuming the votes were even counted.
CT forum is that way ---->
Assuming the votes were even counted.
Do you think a free and independent press and judiciary is a requirement for a free and fair election?i dont know, i will know once i read the reports from the international observers.
i dont know, i will know once i read the reports from the international observers.
CT forum is that way ---->
Another defeat for capitalism... but another victory for Twoofers and moon landing deniers!
i dont know, i will know once i read the reports from the international observers.
I hope it isn't lost on people that if it weren't for richer, freer countries, he couldn't sit like Bane atop Gotham City handing out toys to people in front of cameras.
It will catch up. Dictatorships can't pump oil or do other sophisticated stuff without western help, once the seized stuff starts breaking down.
What are these "international observers" you speak of?
McHrozni
lotta freedom eagle butthurt in this thread post re-election...
Read the thread. Venezuela is a borderline dictatorship. When you run against Chavez you're playing poker with a guy who stuffs aces up his sleeve.
lotta freedom eagle butthurt in this thread post re-election...
Keane Bhatt said:[...] A LexisNexis search for all English-language news containing the terms “Jimmy Carter” and “Venezuela” between September 11, when Carter made those comments, and October 7, returned 45 results. In that same time period, 78 news items mentioning both the terms “Hugo Chavez” and “dictator” appeared. (To be fair, some of the 78 pieces refuted the notion that Chávez is a dictator, but even these articles are a reflection of the pervasiveness of the nonsensical topic.)
This contrast in the media’s priorities is symptomatic of the overwhelmingly disgraceful portrayal of Venezuela’s elections. The Hall of Shame that follows is a sampling of some of the most typical distortions, gratuitous slurs, and incorrect predictions that readers have been exposed to over the past few weeks: [...]
I don´t know where you´re getting that information from, but regardless, I´m not speaking merely of economic poverty, but mental poverty. Education has a lot to do with it.
If there´s something that can solve its problems it is not a single "thing". It´s not some President with his usual stereotypical slogans for peace and democracy. If anything, the solution would be the result of a long process that pertained the issue of education. The mentality of the common Venezuelan needs to change radically. Perhaps a horrible natural tragedy that almost destroys the country and that brings people together... I don´t know....