Wednesday 26 January 2011

¡Viva la Revolución!


What happens when the legislature turns against the executive, a question that doubtless has engaged Barack Obama since last November? That’s easy: abolish the legislature. If that’s too radical consider the next best thing: get the old legislature to pass an Enabling Act before the new legislature meets.

Ah but American presidents are tied by the safeguards built into the constitution, unlike, say, the president of Venezuela, where the constitution can be set aside with ease. Taking a well-trodden path, Adolf, sorry, Hugo Chavez now has enabling power to protect him and his Communist Reich from the new parliament, recently sworn in following the September election.

Under the new powers the Venezuelan parliament has become something of a political irrelevance, rather like the Reichstag in Hitler’s Germany. Chavez now has the power to rule by decree, while the assembly has been sidelined, meetings now reduced to four days a month. But to make assurance doubly sure all parliamentary commissions have been placed under government control, while speeches in the assembly itself have been limited to fifteen minutes per member. I suppose, on reflection, that’s not a completely bad idea if only it could be applied to El Presidente, who has a tendency to witter on interminably.

Thus it is that dictatorships are built, piece by piece, not just by hamstringing the legislative branch of government but by controlling the media and packing the judiciary with placemen, all part of Chavez’ recent gleichshaltung, which has even extended so far as higher education. He also intends to neutralise the advance of the opposition in local government, having the power to transfer its functions to ‘socialist communes’, bodies packed, of course, with a lot of chavs.

Control of broadcasting and telecommunications has even been extended to cover the internet and mobile phones, just in case someone says something nasty about the government, the said nastiness, incidentally, being on their own heads. According to a report in The Economist punishments will be meted out for promoting disrespect for the country’s institutions or “alarm” among the population. So I guess Chavez is a fat communist pig is out!

Meanwhile, in reference to this, the opposition is calling for peaceful but energetic resistance against government tyranny and the attempt to install a communist system. It’s a cause that has a wide base of support, with labourers joining farm owners to prevent further Mugabe-style land grabs by the chavistas in the area around Lake Maracaibo. Those who have taken to protesting against Chavez’ coup have been attacked by government thugs, injuring many.

If there is any doubt that democracy is dying in Venezuela one should take heed of the pronouncements of Chavez and one of his senior military commanders on the coming presidential election, scheduled to take place in 2013, in which the dear leader is seeking another six year term of office. An opposition victory, they said, will not be tolerated. Revolutions, after all, can only ever go forward on the tracks laid down by history…and by tweets on Twitter.

11 comments:

  1. The next step is to foment war with a neighbour in order to justify a roundup of 'enemy sympathisers' and 'foreign agents.' If I were Colombia, Brazil, or Guyana, I would be asking the CIA if they would like to park a couple of Reapers on my territory for a while.

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  2. This one will have to be drug out kicking and screaming . At the very least the parrot should crap on him.

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  3. Calvin, he's been mouthing off against Colombia for some time now.

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  4. Anthony, oh for the days of old Henry at the State Department! Yes, I hope the bird did the business.

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  6. It is not fair to compare Chavez with Hitler. He is much more like Berlusconi, a court jester playing to be the king.

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  7. Not all of Hugo's people seem too happy to be part of his budding socialist utopia. Gulag Bound reports on January 23:

    At the time of this posting, tens of thousands of nonviolent protesters are taking to the streets in Venezuela’s capital, Caracas, demanding Hugo Chavez, recently given dictator status, be deposed. It has been reported that Chavez’ Marxist military forces, including those of Cuba and FARC, have quartered in private houses. They are presumed ready to attack and potentially to apprehend the protesters, while wearing street clothes, thus disguised as a civilian counter-demonstration. At the same time, protests have been arranged for major cities in America and around the world.

    This Gulag Bound entry serves as a Live Blog with updates given in the Comments section, below. Visitors are invited to comment as well. We require all messages and language to be civil (i.e., appropriate for public viewing, not necessarily what America’s neo-Marxists are hoping “civil” means to you). Update, scroll to bottom of entry for periodic video — things look peaceful, thus far, thank God. Chavez and the Powers that Be seem to have decided to amass a communist counter-demonstration, with whatever government workers, etc., to show a pro-Chavez presence as “the whole world watches.” The average American would never know any of it, though, thanks to America’s Powers that Be Media — which may, it seems even include Fox News. Lots of footage on the US weather, there, also a fine shot of a reporter talking on an empty street about the Tucson shootings of two weeks ago.


    Stay tuned.

    Bob Mack

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  8. Adam, he may have compromised it; he certainly didn't 'abolish' it.

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  9. Jean Paul, I actually agree with that. I merely used the Adolf analogy because of the Enabling Act.

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  11. Bob, excellent! Thanks; I will. Oh, just to let you know, I should have my Nam piece ready next week, barring unforeseen mishaps and interventions! Thanks again for your memoir and the other papers, which have gone a long way to help me build up a picture from the ground, so to speak.

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