Thread: President Hugo Chávez has died after a long battle with cancer

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  1. #1
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    Default President Hugo Chávez has died after a long battle with cancer

    CARACAS, Venezuela — President Hugo Chávez has died after a long battle with cancer, the government announced Tuesday, leaving behind a bitterly divided nation in the grip of a deepening political crisis that grew more acute as he languished for weeks, silent and out of sight in hospitals in Havana and Caracas.

    His departure from a country he dominated for 14 years casts into doubt the future of his socialist revolution. It alters the political balance in Venezuela, the fourth-largest foreign oil supplier to the United States, and in Latin America, where Mr. Chávez led a group of nations intent on reducing American influence in the region.

    Mr. Chávez changed Venezuela in fundamental ways, empowering and energizing millions of poor people who had felt marginalized and excluded.

    But Mr. Chávez’s rule also widened society’s divisions. His death is sure to bring more changes and vast uncertainty as the nation tries to find its way without its central figure.

    With the president’s death, the Constitution says that the nation should “proceed to a new election” within 30 days, and that the vice president should take over in the meantime. The election is likely to pit Vice President Nicolás Maduro, whom Mr. Chávez designated as his political successor, against Henrique Capriles Radonski, a young state governor who ran against Mr. Chávez in a presidential election in October.

    But there has been heated debate in recent months over clashing interpretations of the constitution, in light of Mr. Chávez’s illness, and it is impossible to predict how the post-Chávez transition will proceed.

    Mr. Chávez’s supporters wept and flowed into the streets in paroxysms of mourning.

    Mr. Chávez was given a diagnosis of cancer in June 2011, but throughout his treatment he kept many details about his illness secret, refusing to say what kind of cancer he had or where in his body it occurred. He had three operations from June 2011 to February 2012, as well as chemotherapy and radiation treatment, but the cancer kept coming back. The surgery and most other treatments were done in Cuba.

    Then on Dec. 8, just two months after winning re-election, Mr. Chávez stunned the nation by announcing in a somber televised address that he needed yet another surgery.

    That operation, his fourth, took place in Havana on Dec. 11. In the aftermath, grim-faced aides described the procedure as complex and said his condition was delicate. They eventually notified the country of complications, first bleeding and then a severe lung infection and difficulty breathing.

    After previous operations, Mr. Chávez often appeared on television while recuperating in Havana, posted messages on Twitter or was heard on telephone calls made to television programs on a government station. But after his December surgery, he was not seen again in public, and his voice fell silent.

    Mr. Chávez’s aides eventually announced that a tube had been inserted in his trachea to help his breathing, and that as a result he had difficulty speaking. It was the ultimate paradox for a man who seemed never at a loss for words, often improvising for hours at a time on television, haranguing, singing, lecturing, reciting poetry and orating.

    As the weeks dragged on, tensions rose in Venezuela, and the situation turned increasingly bizarre. Officials in Mr. Chávez’s government strove to project an image of business as usual and deflected inevitable questions about a vacuum at the top. At the same time, the country struggled with an out-of-balance economy, troubled by soaring prices and escalating shortages of basic goods.

    The opposition, weakened after defeats in the presidential election in October and elections for governor in December, in which its candidates lost in 20 of 23 states, sought to keep pressure on the government.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/06/wo...mats.html?_r=0
    I just hope the revolution continues.

  2. #2
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    Very upsetting news.... one of the few leaders that stood up to America. R.I.P

  3. #3
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    Hugo Chávez was a populist. His politics were inconsistent, his "socialism" nothing like the Marxian conception, and his foreign policy nationalist (which obviously brought him into some antagonism with the USA.)

    That being said, Venezuelan politics will obviously shift rightwards now that the pillar of the country's "left" is gone.
    * h0m0revolutionary: "neo-liberalism can deliver healthy children, it can educate them, it can feed them, it can clothe them and leave them fully contented."
    * rooster: "Supporting [anti-imperialism] is reactionary. How is any nation supposed to stand up [to] the might of the US anyway?"
    * nizan: "Fuck your education is empowerment bullshit, education is alienation, nothing more. You indulge in a dying prestige for a role in a bureaucratic spectacle deserving of nothing beyond contempt."
    * Alexios: "To the Board Administration: Ismail [...] needs to be eliminated from this forum."

  4. #4
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    My condolences to the Venezuelan people. What a shame to die so young. He wasn't revolutionary in the way we would want him to have been, but he was a far better choice than the vultures of the Venezuelan right.

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    Just saw it on tv.

    That's bad bad news, fuck
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  7. #6
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    Whatever anyone thinks of the socialist/social democrat (whatever you want to call it) revolution in Venezuela, cancer is a terrible way to die.

    I hope that the Venezuelan people can continue forward despite this - the left is powerful there but it is obviously divided between those who want a real revolution and those who are using revolutionary politics to make themselves and their friends rich.
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  9. #7
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    RIP. He had more balls than anyone in the whole history of western mainstream politicians could ever even contemplate. * mainstream refers to 1980 onwards*
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    we lost a great troll.

    rip
    I'm on some sickle-hammer shit
    Collective Bruce Banner shit

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  13. #9
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    Will be interesting to see how the US reacts.
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    RIP commandante
    Segui il tuo corso e lascia dir le genti.

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  17. #11
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    Will be interesting to see how the US reacts.
    It'll hope the new leadership is more "realistic," "pragmatic," etc. like in any other similar situation and thus hope it will reverse most any of the reforms made under Chávez.
    * h0m0revolutionary: "neo-liberalism can deliver healthy children, it can educate them, it can feed them, it can clothe them and leave them fully contented."
    * rooster: "Supporting [anti-imperialism] is reactionary. How is any nation supposed to stand up [to] the might of the US anyway?"
    * nizan: "Fuck your education is empowerment bullshit, education is alienation, nothing more. You indulge in a dying prestige for a role in a bureaucratic spectacle deserving of nothing beyond contempt."
    * Alexios: "To the Board Administration: Ismail [...] needs to be eliminated from this forum."
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  21. #13
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    Will be interesting to see how the US reacts.
    Probably in the manner of a concerned parent addressing a troubled child.
    "Win, lose or draw...long as you squabble and you get down, that's gangsta."
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    I unfortunately believe that the Chavistas aren't going to be able to maintain power for long. It's essence was Chavez, and Maduro doesn't seem to maintain the relationship with the working class that Chavez had. And be certain that the bastards in the U.S. are going to try and set up a "ally of democracy" to obtain the valuable oil resources.
    [FONT=Georgia][FONT=Microsoft Sans Serif]Laws: We know what they are, and what they are worth! They are spider webs for the rich and mighty, steel chains for the poor and weak, fishing nets in the hands of government. - P.J. Proudhon[/FONT][FONT=Microsoft Sans Serif]
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  25. #15
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    Will be interesting to see how the US reacts.
    By using it's fingers to influence and control the neo-liberal parties.
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  27. #16
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    RIP Hugo Chavez
    "I have declared war on the rich who prosper on our poverty, the politicians who lie to us with smiling faces, and all the mindless, heartless robots who protect them and their property." - Assata Shakur
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  29. #17
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    I think it's somewhat ironic that he was outlived by his friend Fidel Castro.
    Any real change implies the breakup of the world as one has always known it, the loss of all that gave one an identity, the end of safety. And at such a moment, unable to see and not daring to imagine what the future will now bring forth, one clings to what one knew, or dreamed that one possessed. Yet, it is only when a man is able, without bitterness or self-pity, to surrender a dream he has long possessed that he is set free - he has set himself free - for higher dreams, for greater privileges.”
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  31. #18
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    R.I.P Chavez.
    Although he was not a Marxist, he was better than the right which is a capitalist puppet.
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  33. #19
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    Hugo Chávez was a populist. His politics were inconsistent, his "socialism" nothing like the Marxian conception, and his foreign policy nationalist (which obviously brought him into some antagonism with the USA.)

    That being said, Venezuelan politics will obviously shift rightwards now that the pillar of the country's "left" is gone.

    Forget your Stalinist-Hoxhaism a sec and try to realise that someone who actually stood for something similar to what we stand for without massacring thousands has just died.

    Disgusting, old fashioned, "comintern" politics.

  34. #20
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    Anyone see how the VP expelled two Americans? He seems to have accused them of doing something to undermine the country's stability, some outlets are interpreting his speech on the matter as accusing two Americans of either giving Chavez cancer or worsening it.

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-21674950

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