The Devil's Excrement





  The Devil's Excrement
Observations focused on the problems of an underdeveloped country, Venezuela, with some serendipity about the world (orchids, techs, science, investments, politics) at large. A famous Venezuelan, Juan Pablo Perez Alfonzo, referred to oil as the devil's excrement. For countries, easy wealth appears indeed to be the sure path to failure. Venezuela might be a clear example of that.
Last updated:
4/2/2007; 9:48:35 PM

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Friday, June 23, 2006



My fellow Venezuelans in the opposition:

I hope I can catch your attention for a few minutes now that the first stage of the futbol World Cup is over and before you immerse yourself in the next stage with the same passion, joy and dedication that you did in the first. I must say that I find such passion remarkable, given that the event is one month long, that Venezuela did not qualify and that futbol, as we call soccer in Venezuela, is not as much of an integral part of our heritage or our competence, as other sports are.

And I am impressed by the passion, I have seen cars and motorcycles with as many as four flags from different countries, I have seen stores in the streets with crowds watching on the plasma TV’s that have become ubiquitous both in stores and food places, whether areperas or fancy restaurants. I have also noticed how the horrible Caracas traffic simply dies out during games; buses run empty at those times and there as fewer people in the streets.


However, I would like to call your attention to a number of concerns:

First of all, while you were watching the Iran-Angola match, the CNE appointed the most mediocre universities in the country to audit the REP rejecting more prestigious and capable ones, Chavez dressed in military uniform and caressed the first 30,000 Kalashnikov rifles to arrive in Venezuela, the CNE ordered an additional 4,000 fingerprint capture machines for the December elections, the National Assembly threatened to impose even more ferrous controls over NGO’s that are already in place, Chavez said he would visit North Korea (and North Vietnam!), the Ministry of Finance bought U$ 242 million more of Argentinean bonds and 660 homicides occurred since the World Cup began.

My point is very simple: Yes, the World Cup is fun to watch, but by the time you watch the final match between Germany and England (bold prediction from someone that knows little here), a full month would have gone by. This means that we would have lost 30 days out of the 174 days we had left until the December Presidential election. It may not seem like much on the scale of the fourth time dimension implied. But it is a long time given what is at stake and how little time there is to change the outcome of the upcoming Presidential election.

You don’t think the election will be fair? You don’t think we have a chance? You think it is irrelevant? You may be right in one, two or three of these questions, I just don’t know. But what I do believe is that we just can’t give up. Everyone has to pitch in a little bit of his/her time, in his/her own way. You can work for a candidate; you can work for an NGO. You can talk to someone, you can send an e-mail. You can start your own goofball project. You can write an article. Nobody is going to come and solve our problems, we have to do it ourselves and we have to keep the same democratic spirit alive that we have had ever since the autocrat was first elected. The alternative is just not acceptable.

This Government is a gigantic failure. Yes, Chavez’s promises capture the imagination of the have-nots, convincing them that he really cares or that he will deliver something someday. But we all know it is all smoke and mirrors and that all he cares about is his personal project as leader of the third world, which is not what he was elected for. Meanwhile, he selects the unconditional but incompetent collaborators to run things, insuring that 99% of his projects will be a failure.

Thus, he can be defeated, even as he cheats. He is not as popular as the Government wants to convince us he is. His hard core support is as large as our hard core opposition. Those in between, those that have yet to see “el queso a la tostada” (the cheese in the sandwich) are wavering. And they need little to be convinced that the fake revolution is a sham. They see Chavez everyday giving away our wealth to other countries and other people before our own problems have even been tackled, let alone solved. They see him buying weapons, spending more than half his time abroad, reneging on almost all of his promises, they see the revolutionaries leaders and military officers in fancy cars, corruption rampant, security non-existent, housing starts at the lowest kevels of a decade despite a huge oil windfall, they see an intolerant Government using doublespeak at every turn, they see internal disputes over the bounty, they see people going hungry, kids dying of malnutrition, tropical diseases on the increase, they see more corruption, hospitals that don’t work, they see the poor protest, the students protest and even the revolutionaries protest. The poor may be hopeful, romantic, but most Venezuelans are intelligent and they realize that the revolution has not delivered and are doubting that it ever will. Thus we have a chance, but we have to work at it.

Thus, all I ask is that before July 9th. when the World Cup ends, you spend the time equivalent to the duration of a game doing something to help Venezuela become a better country, more democratic, fairer, convince someone we need change, work for someone campaigning for change, get involved. Once again, no magic solution will come out of nowhere, we are the solution, and we have to work at it. You can never have too much democracy, you can never have too much involvement, you can never allow the autocrat and his new very rich oligarchy take over to the extent that we are not heard, felt or controlled.

And after July 9th. double the time you devote to this cause. If each and everyone does that, we will surely be able to shake the ground on which the autocrat stands. Just think, we are committed, we believe that change is needed, but only 17% of the Chavistas are equally committed. If we all show up to express our dissatisfaction on December 3d. even if we really are a minority, which I don’t believe we are, we would still get more votes than the other side. But we have to work at it! Freedom is just not a gift, sometimes you have to earn it or fight for it

Thus, my fellow Venezuelans, before you go back to the games of the next round, think hard about the future, think hard about the possibilities, enjoy the games, but save something of that passion, dedication and joy for a more important, meaningful and higher cause.

Your friendly blogger

P.S. I hope you don't take my prediction for the World Cup final as serious as you take my letter

(The Spanish version is over at Cuentos Intrascendentes)


10:24:27 PM    comment []



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