Thursday, May 20, 2010
Chavez, ETA, FARC and other assorted terrorism
2 comments:
Comments policy:
1) Comments are moderated except for the first day of the post publication where they will appear immediately. If you comment after the first day it may take up to a day or two for your note to appear.
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3)COMMENT RULES:
Do not be repetitive.
Do not bring grudges and fights from other blogs here (this is the strictest rule).
This is an anti Chavez blog, with 95% anti Chavez readers that have made up their minds over fourteen years and thus trying to prove us wrong is considered a troll. Still, you are welcome as a chavista to post, in particular if you want to explain us coherently as to why chavismo does this or that. Though I am not holding my breath.
Of course insults and put downs are frowned upon and I will be sole judge on whether to publish them.
Human Rights violations in Venezuela, from the Tascon list to political prisoners.
- Amnesty International Venezuela's page
- Human Rights Watch Venezuela's page
- COFAVIC page (in spanish)
- Tell Chavez you will not accept his having political prisoners
- A review of the video "La Lista" detailing all the abuses of the Tascon list
- Miguel's compilation
- A summary of 20 lies about the video "The Revolution will not be televised"
- The video debunking the April 11 2002 governmental lies
- "La Cadena", a video explaining how Chavez tried to hide the reality of April 11 2002 by bloc king TV news


It's good to see that the wheels of Spanish justice keep churning on in spite of the Spanish government's efforts to derail it.It's interesting that Chavez is responding by threatening his beloved buddies of the Spanish government that their billions of investments will be at risk if this keeps on going on.It looks like this spineless and greedy government is caught between a rock and a hard place.Maybe for them justice will be served when they will have to pay the political price for cozying up to Chavez.
ReplyDeleteSpain seems to be passing an important test of democracy where political pressure is not enough to derail justice from being carried out.
'"This government does not endorse nor support any terrorist group," Chávez said.'
ReplyDeleteNo, not by your warped definition of terrorism (shared by a miniscule portion of the world) where someone who kills or kidnaps civilians is not a terrorist (because if their goal is ousting Uribe, anything goes, since ends justify means) whereas someone who encourages voting against you might be.