Elections in Venezuela, the most important in the last years

El escritor de Mindenkié

Sultano

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Elections in Venezuela, the most important in the last years

Whoever wins, look at society from the bottom to up. The People first.

For those unaware, the Latin American region suffered various coups throughout the 20th century due to attempts to implement capitalism while the world was debating a new doctrine: socialism. The CIA, FBI, and different intelligence services worked in the region, engaging with political candidates to offer support through various global contacts to ensure the triumph of capitalism above all.

Coup d'etat in the Latin-American region during XX Century:

Venezuela: 1908 - Coup d'état led by Juan Vicente Gómez that overthrew President Cipriano Castro. 1945 - Coup d'état known as the October Revolution that overthrew President Isaías Medina Angarita. 1948 - Military coup that overthrew President Rómulo Gallegos. 1958 - Coup d'état that overthrew dictator Marcos Pérez Jiménez, ending his regime.

Argentina: 1930 - Coup d'état led by General José Félix Uriburu that overthrew President Hipólito Yrigoyen. 1943 - Military coup known as the Revolution of '43 that overthrew President Ramón Castillo. 1955 - Coup d'état known as the Liberating Revolution that overthrew President Juan Domingo Perón. 1962 - Military coup that overthrew President Arturo Frondizi. 1966 - Coup d'état known as the Argentine Revolution that overthrew President Arturo Illia. 1976 - Military coup that overthrew President Isabel Perón, starting a dictatorship that lasted until 1983.

Brazil: 1930 - Coup d'état led by Getúlio Vargas, which ended the Old Republic. 1937 - Getúlio Vargas established the Estado Novo, dissolving Congress and centralizing power. 1964 - Military coup that overthrew President João Goulart, starting a military dictatorship that lasted until 1985.

Bolivia: 1930 - Coup d'état led by Carlos Blanco Galindo. 1943 - Coup d'état led by Gualberto Villarroel. 1952 - National Revolution that brought Víctor Paz Estenssoro to power. 1964 - Coup d'état led by René Barrientos. 1971 - Coup d'état led by Hugo Banzer. 1980 - Coup d'état led by Luis García Meza.

Chile: 1924 - Military coup that overthrew President Arturo Alessandri. 1973 - Military coup led by Augusto Pinochet that overthrew President Salvador Allende. Cuba: 1933 - Coup d'état known as the Sergeants' Revolution led by Fulgencio Batista. 1952 - Coup d'état led by Fulgencio Batista.

Ecuador: 1925 - Coup d'état known as the Julian Revolution. 1961 - Coup d'état that overthrew President José María Velasco Ibarra. 1972 - Coup d'état led by Guillermo Rodríguez Lara. The Savior: 1931 - Coup d'état that brought Maximiliano Hernández Martínez to power. 1948 - Coup d'état known as the October Revolution.

Guatemala: 1954 - Coup d'état that overthrew President Jacobo Árbenz. 1982 - Coup d'état led by Efraín Ríos Montt. 1983 - Coup d'état that overthrew Efraín Ríos Montt.

Honduras: 1956 - Coup d'état that overthrew President Julio Lozano Díaz. 1963 - Coup d'état that overthrew President Ramón Villeda Morales. 1972 - Coup d'état led by Oswaldo López Arellano. 1978 - Coup d'état led by Policarpo Paz García.

Nicaragua: 1947 - Coup d'état led by Anastasio Somoza García. 1979 - Overthrow of the Anastasio Somoza Debayle regime by the Sandinista Revolution.

Panama: 1968 - Coup d'état led by Omar Torrijos.

Paraguay: 1954 - Coup d'état led by Alfredo Stroessner.

Peru: 1914 - Coup d'état led by Óscar R. Benavides. 1930 - Coup d'état led by Luis Miguel Sánchez Cerro. 1948 - Coup d'état led by Manuel A. Odría. 1962 - Coup d'état that overthrew Manuel Prado Ugarteche. 1968 - Coup d'état led by Juan Velasco Alvarado.

Dominican Republic: 1963 - Coup d'état that overthrew President Juan Bosch. 1965 - Military intervention that ended the Dominican Civil War.

Uruguay: 1973 - Civil-military coup d'état that dissolved Parliament and established a dictatorship.

Military dictatorships, some revolutionary and others influenced by the CIA.

During the latter part of the 20th century, new democracies began to emerge, some under the watchful eyes of intelligence services to reinforce capitalism. This marked the end and the beginning of the 21st century with this doctrine as the foundation of nations.

Consequently, various global companies established their headquarters in the region following the Washington Consensus, and accepted national companies as part of the deal to adopt the USD as a reference currency. Essentially, if you had dollars (as was increasingly the case in the region thanks to intelligence services), you could navigate the world with ease.

Why is democracy so difficult in Venezuela?

After the fall of military power under Hugo Chavez, a full transition to capitalism began, albeit combined with socialism, which did not sit well with many international North American entities.

Why?

Venezuela is the first country connecting with Central America that can influence the region and potentially solve the blockade against Cuba, thereby resolving the conflict.

Attempts were made, but various issues arose, resulting in significant consequences: Venezuela’s global isolation, economic sanctions similar to those on Russia, societal conflict, regional unrest, and many other challenges.

North American intelligence services must leave the region so that the countries can unite and achieve the greatness they deserve, under a classical capitalism—neither socialism nor rampant capitalism as a standard. We want peace and global harmony.