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Then there are the government chavistas - Chávez's cronies. These soi-disant representatives and enforcers of popular power are making millions, even as they rail against the wealthy oligarchy against whom they say they must protect the Venezuelans. Chávez's former Vice-President, José Vicente Rangel, denounces those who live in the prosperous area of Altamira - but he lives in Altamira himself, surrounded by 20 bodyguards. Not for them the state schools, in which they profess so much faith. Their children attend the most prestigious private academies in Caracas, including the German, American and British schools.

A lot of money is also flowing to the opportunistic chavistas. Although not directly in government, these are the contractors, bankers and distributors who profit from the regime. They overcharge the government, or the end client, or both, pocket the difference and give a kickback to the minister in charge. Everyone is happy as the public coffers are emptied into their personal bank accounts and the sale of cars and luxury goods breaks all records. No better than British chavs, they'll buy anything as long as the logo is big enough.

But it is behind the crumbling walls of the Country Club mansions that the most pathetic chavistas are bred - the secret ones. They can no longer afford to keep up appearances since Chávez is nationalising estates of 100,000 acres or more. The Country Club used to name and shame those members remiss in their subscriptions on a wall. Now, the list is so embarrassingly long that the club has stopped. In order to restore their fortunes, some covert chavistas have grovelled to the government. At the same time they masquerade as principled members of the upper class and mock the heathen and gauche chavistas while playing golf or sipping a whiskicito at a drinks party. Yet they fret that the secret source of their restored glory will be discovered and they will be reviled by their old-money friends in the opposition.

After all, conspicuous consumption is no longer an option for non-chavistas, for among them Orwellian paranoia has set in. That
includes the Country Club set, which has retreated into a fortress mentality. The built-up walls surrounding their mansions now have electric wires above the spikes and are surveyed by video cameras and armed guards in fortified cubicles with bulletproof glass. But the guards themselves are often suspected as part of the problem, as probable chavistas. So arming your security guards, as my brother has done at his dairy farm, is no guarantee. He has stayed away in recent months for fear that he may land at the airstrip one day and find his weapons used against him. This fear and class hatred is part of Chávez's design. At the end of his TV speeches, there is a graphic incitement to violence - footage of the poor setting cars on fire, looting and throwing Molotov cocktails. It's no wonder the prices of apartments have skyrocketed while those of houses have remained flat.

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Anonymous
January 4th, 2009
4:01 PM
I wonder if Ms. Neumann ever saw her wealthy family as part of the problem: The country's wealth managed by about five families, while the rest of the people are bereft of hope. Everyone in the 1970's oil boom, may have "felt" rich, but obviously that was an illusion. When people have no chance of building their own wealth it leaves a country open to the Castros and Chavezes and Stalins of the world. People who can leave; people who can't stay and pay the price.

Anonymous
January 4th, 2009
4:01 PM
That is what it is happening in Latin America, the red wave of populismo or the socialism moreno. In Brazil is not different wt Mr Lulla, a populist government full of corruption and scandals in all levels of his admnistation. The maximum example of this is Mr. Lulinha, son of him, from a simple doorman of Zoo, turned a wealthy man in Tele Communication in only 4 years government of his father. Of course all that in name of the moreno socialism. The poor Marx is revolving in his grave seeing what his ideas become. As he said the brazilan poet, who likes poverty is intellectual, not the ex syndicalist Mr. Lulla very close friend of Mr Chávez.

Anonymous
January 4th, 2009
3:01 PM
The above comments are made by people who would not live under Chavez. Easy to talk, easy to make left-wing points. But people in Venezuela have to live under the ridiculous and ferocious Chavez.

Alejandra
January 4th, 2009
2:01 PM
Great work! I think it's very important to get the truth out in the open. Reading this has been like looking in a mirror.I live in Caracas since 1994 and I have seen the decay first hand. People in other countries are fooled by Chavez's lies and it's important to set them staight.

Anonymous
January 4th, 2009
2:01 PM
Trickle down economics has long been disproved but the wealthy keep appealing to its theories as a strategy to avoid true economic reforms. The racism of the egregious "blue eyes" shows. The corruption and cronyism of which she writes is no different from the corruption and cronyism of the wealthy, say, e.g., the Bush regime in the U.S.

Anonymous
January 4th, 2009
1:01 PM
A remarkably one sided and disingenuous article. I'm surprised it got published.

Cornfusion
January 4th, 2009
12:01 PM
Witty but vacuous, Monica.

J. P. Ward
January 4th, 2009
11:01 AM
Following the defeat of Napoleon I the Aristos might have felt and written much the same about France on their return from England after what seemed so few years but which saw such real change.

Monica Renton
January 3rd, 2009
8:01 PM
is this a pamphlet?

Lucia
December 31st, 2008
3:12 PM
Vanessa, it is good news that Venezuelans are talking about politics and want to work together. Participatory democracy returns! please visit these two sites for a glimpse at how Venezuelans are working together http://www.europeancourier.org/Democracy_in_Venezuela_Blog.htm http://www.facebook.com/pages/Diego-Arria/103324305197 ¡Feliz Año!

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