Venezuela's Collapse

Well… the Europeans tried to have their version if “sensible socialism”. Try and have a robust capitalist economy that they tax a great deal and regulate ALOT.

In return they get a massive safety net and a big public sector. That works briefly while there’s robust growth and the fiat currency is artificially lowered by the PIGS.

Forget austerity. Once you get people conditioned to 35 Hour Work weeks, 6 weeks paid vacation minimum, and full public pension at 55 you can’t roll it back.

While it’s nice to sit here and sneer at the EU about their pampered lifestyles and it all coming to ruin… If the EU falls, they’re a big trading partner. Not to mention they are the buffer between us and the Russia/mideast.

About Venezuela… only thing to do for those poor people is to evacuate. Maduro not letting food and meds into the country says all we need to know about Maduro. They are cracking down. It isn’t going to end pretty. But that’s how Marxism works, by design really.

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Sucks. I hate doctors. They are always so, nonchalant, arrogant. They don’t like to tell you what the diagnosis is or what the meds are for. Then you wait a week for this test, then you need another which takes another week.

“Here drink this disgusting pink shit before you come in, in the morning. Don’t throw any of it up or it will mess up the test. We mixed it with dogshit and mule-piss to give it that little extra something special.”, said the Doctor.

“Oh that didn’t work…hmmm, drink this concoction with the taste of spit and seaman mixed together and we’ll shove a giant tube up your ass and one down your thoat, maybe that will show us something” He said after the first test.

“Huh, looks like it was just a virus”, after you’ve been disemboweled.

I have a story about Venezuela, right after Chavez took over. The situation actually wasn’t his fault, but the country was vastly different back then when he first started. My experience…
Well google “Worst natural disaster in Venezuelan History” or the Floods and mudslides in 1999. 30,000+ people died. My plane was the last plane to land in Caracas before the airport was shut down. No food, no running water, no phones, no electricity, no planes leaving anywhere (believe me I tried), and no way out. That was about as screwed as you can get…

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Wow. Look at the numbers in that first article from the Indepedent UK! What a fine mess. Youth unemployment at 40%, right? And they are the 8th largest economy in the world. Look at all of their labor market rules, labor costs, rules about work weeks, Communist era labor rules, underfunded pensions. Gov not paying suppliers. Wow.

About corruption, it seems like we see it in the headlines everywhere. Brazil is just a nightmare. They’ve been putting government officials in jail there like crazy for graft, complex gov fraud schemes.

Thank you. At difficult doctors, we’ve been very blessed with some really wonderful physicians. Pat, good people consistently show up in her life. She’s like a magnet for goodness. Really. I’m sorry I mentioned it. But thank you. Some things can’t be fixed. Good thing I don’t believe in some kind of cosmic justice, right? That would ruin me. Sometimes bad things happen to the gentlest souls, and we have to bear witness to it. Thanks for your kind thoughts and prayers.

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Yuck, BTW. LOL! I’m really not looking forward to the colonoscopy that awaits me in a few years. So many graphic stories. Haha. No dignity. And I thought having my boobs smashed was bad. wink.

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Venezuela aside for a moment.

@pat. I can’t remember the exact quote, but it was something like this. “If you assume everyone you meet is going through some kind of crisis or is carrying a heavy burden, you’ll be right most of the time.” :slight_smile:

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Just the other day I heard this was a Buddhist proverb, but the internet say’s it’s Plato:

“Be Kind; Everyone You Meet is Fighting a Hard Battle”

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This was the Brazilian corruption article I was thinking of. They are the world’s sixth largest economy, by GDP rank.

When you get corruption of this magnitude, chaos, populism, and a military dictatorship are often just around the corner. They’ve literally had hundreds of mayors and local officials charged with misconduct and corruption there.

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“Many also argue that France has too large a public sector. It is one of the largest in the world, accounting for 57% of national income or GDP last year.”

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22 BILLION American taxpayer dollars are wasted every year in one of the most corrupt countries on earth: Afghanistan. If you are ever curious about the huge amount of corruption, waste, theft, and anything else you can think of, google up the “Special Inspection General for Afghanistan Reconstruction” quarterly reports and be amazed at the amount of money USAID, DOD, and DOS are pouring into this black hole of filth.

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There’s a really good article in Foreign Affairs about Brazilian government’s culture of corruption … I’d provide the link but there’d be a paywall.

Six decades ago, long before the Brazilian Senate’s August 2016 vote to impeach President Dilma Rousseff and remove her from office, one of the most beloved leaders in the country’s history was besieged by scandals of his own. President Getúlio Vargas, a stocky, gravelly voiced gaucho from Brazil’s deep south, had granted new rights, including paid vacation, to a generation of workers in the 1930s and 1940s. But after Vargas returned to power in 1951, one of his top aides was charged with murder, and Vargas himself faced allegations that the state-run Bank of Brazil had granted sweetheart loans to a pro-government journalist. “I feel I am standing in a sea of mud,” Vargas lamented. After a late-night cabinet meeting on August 24, 1954, failed to solve the crisis, and with numerous generals demanding his resignation, Vargas withdrew to his bedroom, grabbed a Colt pistol, and shot himself through the heart.

Ever since, corruption scandals have continued to routinely upend Brazilian politics. In 1960, the mercurial Jânio Quadros won the presidency by campaigning with a broom, vowing to sweep away the thieving “rats” in Brasília—only to quit after eight tumultuous months in office. Following a 1964 military coup, widespread disgust at the corruption of civilian politicians helped Brazil’s generals hold on to power for two decades. In 1992, Fernando Collor de Mello—the first president to be elected following the restoration of democracy—was impeached over allegations that he and members of his inner circle had embezzled millions.

Last August, Rousseff, the country’s first female president, became the latest Brazilian politician to see her career wrecked in part by revelations of graft. The technical grounds for her impeachment were that she had manipulated the federal budget to conceal the scale of the country’s mounting deficits. In reality, however, the impeachment was driven by public anger at a president who had overseen the country’s worst recession in more than a century and by the exposure of a multibillion-dollar corruption scandal that made Vargas’ “sea of mud” look like a tiny pond. Operation Car Wash, as the investigation has come to be known, uncovered massive graft involving government officials, business leaders, and the state-controlled oil company, Petrobras—the board of which Rousseff herself had chaired before becoming president in 2011. Although Rousseff is not accused of personally profiting from the corruption scheme, prosecutors say that illegal proceeds were used to finance her electoral victories in 2010 and 2014 (Rousseff denies any wrongdoing). Several operatives from her Workers’ Party, including its former treasurer, Rousseff’s media guru, and a former senator, have been jailed on charges of money laundering and other crimes.

Rousseff’s successor, President Michel Temer, took office hoping to turn the page—to no avail. Some within Temer’s centrist Brazilian Democratic Movement Party (PMDB), including several members of Temer’s cabinet, were also allegedly involved in the corruption at Petrobras. Just weeks after Temer took office, his minister of transparency, Fabiano Silveira, was forced to resign after a secret recording was leaked in which he appeared to advise the president of the Senate, another member of the PMDB, on how to avoid prosecution. In a February poll, 65 percent of Brazilians surveyed said they thought Temer’s government was just as corrupt (or more so) than Rousseff’s. Just ten percent approved of his government’s performance, placing Temer’s own political survival in jeopardy.

With public anger on the rise and the economy still stagnant, Brazilian democracy is now at its most vulnerable point since the return of civilian rule three decades ago, and it risks lapsing into long-term dysfunction or the “soft authoritarianism” currently sweeping the globe. The struggles of Rousseff and Temer, like those of their predecessors, illustrate why it’s time for Brazil to take a radically new approach to preventing corruption. Only by renouncing their special privileges and committing to genuine reform will Brazil’s politicians be able to ward off disaster and regain the public’s trust.

WASHED AWAY

The history of corruption in Latin America has generally been one of dramatic headlines but few consequences for the guilty. While he was in office, Carlos Menem, Argentina’s president during the 1990s, proudly drove a bright red Ferrari that he had received as a gift from a businessman. “It’s mine, mine, mine!” he crowed. Menem’s brazen behavior reflected many politicians’ belief that they would be shielded from public anger, either by economic growth or by pliant institutions. In Mexico, for example, the long-dominant Institutional Revolutionary Party controlled the courts and the media, shielding the country’s presidents from career-ending scandals.

Brazilian democracy is at its most vulnerable point since the return of civilian rule three decades ago.
Only in Brazil has corruption toppled one government after another. Some analysts blame Brazil’s continental size and its strong regional power centers, which have produced a large number of political parties—at one point, Rousseff’s coalition in Congress included more than 20. The parties themselves have weak ideological identities and little power to enforce loyalty among their members, which often compels presidents to bargain with legislators individually to get laws passed. This, in turn, creates strong incentives for politicians to resort to bribery to help forge alliances.

Other scholars argue that Brazil is no more crooked than its regional peers, pointing to surveys such as Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index, which ranks Brazil as less corrupt than Argentina and Mexico. Brazilian corruption is simply more likely to be detected, they claim. Brazil has an especially vigorous free press, an independent and well-resourced judicial branch, and a large and historically marginalized working class that, amid levels of inequality that are high even by Latin American standards, is almost always ready to turn on its leaders at the drop of a hat.

Whatever the truth, in recent decades, Brazil’s systemic corruption has become more unsustainable. The country’s 1988 constitution granted extraordinary autonomy to Brazilian prosecutors, leaving them free to investigate and imprison members of the business and political elite with little fear of reversal or retribution. As in other parts of the world, technological changes, including the rise of Facebook and Twitter, have made it easier for watchdogs to collect evidence, publish allegations, and mobilize anticorruption demonstrations. And the economic boom Brazil enjoyed in the first decade of this century, fueled in part by Chinese demand for its commodities, created a new, educated middle class that demands better governance from its leaders. A decade ago, unemployment and hunger ranked at the top of most voters’ concerns; today, corruption does, especially among voters under 40.

Brazilian President Michel Temer at his inauguration ceremony in Brasilia, Brazil, August 2016.
UESLEI MARCELINO / REUTERS
Brazilian President Michel Temer at his inauguration ceremony in Brasilia, Brazil, August 2016.
These factors have come to a head in the Car Wash scandal. In 2013, Brazilian police discovered an illegal money-transfer business hidden behind a gas station. In exchange for a plea bargain, one of the money launderers they arrested, a man named Alberto Youssef, told investigators about his role in a scheme that had funneled billions of dollars from Petrobras and other corporate giants to Brazilian politicians and their associates. Since then, a team of prosecutors has built evidence based on additional plea bargains, as well as an extensive web of domestic and international bank records. Many of Brazil’s most famous tycoons have been jailed, including the oil magnate Eike Batista, the seventh-richest person in the world in 2012, according to Forbes magazine. The prosecutors, most of whom are in their 30s and 40s, come from Brazil’s first generation to know nothing but democracy in their adult lives and value the rule of law over deference to authority.

Meanwhile, Brazil’s old political establishment has consistently underestimated both the tenacity of the prosecutors and the support they enjoy from the Brazilian public. On taking office, the 76-year-old Temer could have appointed aides who were untainted by the Car Wash scandal. Instead, he assembled an all-male, all-white cabinet (despite the fact that more than 50 percent of Brazilians define themselves as black or mixed race) that included numerous politicians already under investigation for corruption. The idea, it seems, was that by assembling an all-star team of experienced, if unpopular, politicians, Temer would be able to pass legislation, including a reform of Brazil’s overly generous pension system, that would restore investors’ confidence. Once economic growth returned, Temer and his aides believed, public anger over corruption would recede.

Perhaps predictably, this approach has backfired. Amid a relentless torrent of new allegations stemming from the Petrobras case and other investigations, five more ministers from Temer’s cabinet, in addition to Silveira, have resigned or otherwise lost their jobs. In December, large street demonstrations broke out after Brazilian politicians gutted an anticorruption bill. The political instability has hampered Temer’s ability to execute his legislative agenda and has scared off many domestic and foreign investors, and most economists now expect Brazil’s economy to barely grow in 2017. The only public figure in Brazil whose approval rating consistently stands above 50 percent is Sérgio Moro, the 44-year-old judge overseeing Operation Car Wash.

Only in Brazil has corruption toppled one government after another.

With Temer’s term set to end in December 2018, it is probably too late for him to relaunch his government in a more transparent mold. But his successor will have a golden opportunity to show that he or she has learned the lessons of Operation Car Wash. Only by prioritizing the fight against systemic corruption and making transparency a guiding principle of government policy can Brazil’s politicians regain the support of their constituents, inspire confidence among investors, and end the country’s crippling economic crisis. This strategy—call it “radical transparency”—holds the country’s best hope for recovery.

THE BEST DISINFECTANT

Radical transparency must start at the very top, and it requires deep reforms as well as symbolic measures aimed at regaining the public’s trust. For starters, Brazil’s next president should name a cabinet that is completely untouched by the scandals of recent years. To reinforce his or her commitment to bringing new figures into national politics, the president should reserve half of all cabinet positions for women and a smaller quota for people under the age of 40, following the lead of Colombia, which introduced this very policy in the early years of this century. The government should also publish statements listing each minister’s assets and recent income on the presidency’s official website.

But to significantly reduce corruption, Brazilian lawmakers must make deeper political reforms. The most obvious is to abolish Brazil’s so-called privileged standing, a law under which only the Supreme Court can judge senior government officials, including the president, cabinet ministers, and members of Congress, for alleged crimes. This provision, which has its origins in nineteenth-century Portuguese colonial rule, was designed to shield high-level public servants from politicized verdicts by lower courts. But given that the Supreme Court deals with more than 100,000 cases a year, trials of politicians usually drag on for several years—if they occur at all. The result is near impunity for the estimated 22,000 people who currently enjoy some version of this privilege, which helps explain why far more executives than politicians have been imprisoned so far in the Car Wash scandal. Withdrawing it, which would require Congress to amend the constitution, would dramatically improve the odds of corrupt politicians going to jail without inordinate delays.

Demonstrators protest against Brazil’s President Dilma Rousseff, in Sao Paulo, Brazil, March 2016.
PAULO WHITAKER / REUTERS
Demonstrators protest against Brazil’s President Dilma Rousseff, in Sao Paulo, Brazil, March 2016.
Brazil’s next president could complement this change by steering greater resources toward the Federal Police; the Ministry of Transparency, Supervision, and Controls; the Superior Electoral Court; and other bodies that investigate and prosecute graft and fraud. Brazil already has some of the region’s most stringent anticorruption legislation, including a 2011 freedom-of-information law, a 2013 law governing private-sector conduct, and a 2016 law mandating greater financial transparency at state-run companies such as Petrobras. But as the wry Brazilian expression goes, Algumas leis não pegam (Some laws don’t quite catch on), usually because the government fails to provide the resources to enforce them. According to their employees’ union, for instance, the Federal Police are so strapped for cash that they have only one agent for every 200 cases; the union has asked that the size of the force be doubled to keep up with demand. Other countries shaken by Operation Car Wash—the investigation has followed the money beyond Brazil’s borders into Colombia and Peru—have already taken similar steps: in February, Peru’s president announced that he would triple funding for anticorruption prosecutors.

If the government wishes to crack down on the kind of corruption uncovered at Petrobras, it should focus on places where the private and public sectors intersect. That means publishing all the terms, bids, and results for procurement and infrastructure projects and instituting harsher fines for companies when the projects go overtime or over budget. One proposal that Congress is considering would oblige government entities, including state-run companies, to dedicate at least ten percent of their advertising budgets to educating the public about the dangers of corruption and publicizing outlets for whistleblowers. This is a good idea, and the government should also work with Congress to draw up a new framework for campaign finance, following the Supreme Court’s 2015 decision to abolish corporate donations altogether until a more transparent system could be created.

Finally, the next government should work with Congress to pass legislation that would slash the number of political parties, and with it the opportunities for corruption. As of December 2016, 28 parties were represented in Brazil’s Congress, and applications were pending with electoral authorities to create an additional 52 parties. Introducing a minimum threshold of votes to enter Congress could reduce the number of major parties to, say, eight or ten, without unduly restricting political diversity.

CLEANING UP

Many Brazilian politicians dismiss these proposals as unworkable in the current political climate. They insist that the true source of public discontent is not corruption but the economy, which has contracted by almost ten percent on a per capita basis since 2014. The government should therefore save its political capital, the argument goes, for passing legislation that will boost job creation, simplify its notoriously Byzantine tax code, and better integrate Brazil—the most closed major economy in Latin America—with the rest of the world.

There is more support now for sweeping political change than at any point in a generation.

It’s true that recapturing the dynamism that lifted millions of Brazilians out of poverty is critical. But the government would be reckless to dismiss the public’s outrage over corruption. In a 2016 survey, only 32 percent of Brazilians polled agreed that democracy is always the best form of government—a 22-percentage-point plunge from the previous year. If popular dissatisfaction with the political class remains so high, Brazilian democracy will face an existential threat. The risk is not a military coup; that era in Brazil ended with the Cold War. Instead, the public could be seduced by an authoritarian civilian leader who pushes Congress aside and restricts democratic freedoms. Alternatively, the country could remain trapped in a cycle in which unpopular politicians persistently resist transparency, even as new scandals continue to erupt—a recipe for long-term stagnation.

To be sure, an anticorruption drive would carry some risks. Presidents who pledge to stamp out corruption often resort to demagoguery and try to drive investigations themselves instead of empowering independent judicial institutions. Authorities must ensure that law enforcement agencies spend any additional funds effectively. After all, Brazil already spends more than its regional peers on the judicial sector, but too much of the money goes toward lavish salaries and perks for judges, even as police complain they can’t afford to fill their cars with gas. Finally, efforts to increase transparency often end in disappointment. Governments should thus manage public expectations; the goal is to significantly reduce corruption, not eliminate it altogether.

Nonetheless, Brazil’s leaders have an extraordinary opportunity. There is more support now for sweeping political change than at any point in a generation. Polls show that Brazilians are convinced that corruption caused the worst crisis of their lifetimes. In a nationwide survey at the end of 2016, 96 percent of respondents said they wanted Operation Car Wash to continue “no matter the cost”; 70 percent said they felt confident that, thanks to the investigation, corruption would decline in the future. Over the past 35 years, Brazil has defeated authoritarianism, hyperinflation, and hunger. Adding systemic corruption to that list would represent a historic accomplishment.

In the final months before Rousseff’s impeachment, as the Car Wash scandal erupted and the economy collapsed, she commissioned secret internal polls to gauge her political standing. Rousseff was surprised to learn that the most popular figure in Brazil was not her or Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva (known as Lula), her much-loved predecessor. It was Pope Francis, whose example of austerity and integrity resonated at a time of enormous moral crisis, and who, in 2015, had called on the Vatican to operate with “absolute transparency.” Brazil’s next leader should take note.

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If you need a:

then you aren’t very transparent. The lady doth protest too much, methinks.

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@polo77j - Thanks so much for sharing the Brazil article. Quite the history lesson. Democracy can never flourish under corruption like that, so it’s a bit amazing that Brazil has held onto being one of the world’s largest economies. Really. A representational democracy was never designed to rule a corrupt people.

Look at a more socialist country like France, and the deep protests we’re seeing in people who resist any reform, even though they know their labor policies and pensions are unsustainable.

@idaho - Nice to see you. Re: Afghanistan. For you, from the front page of the WSJ today. Long block of text. Paywall.

Taliban Broaden Their Reach in Villages Across Afghanistan

Insurgents consolidate power by administering schools and electricity, making dislodging them harder for government and coalition forces

MOHAMMAD AGHA, Afghanistan—The Taliban have expanded their military fight against Afghanistan’s government into a drive to govern villages across the country, deepening the formidable challenge U.S.-backed forces face in trying to uproot the insurgency.

The insurgents, once focused on waging guerrilla war from strongholds in opium-rich provinces like Helmand, are now emerging in a swath of districts to fill a governance vacuum left as foreign troops depart. As a result, millions of Afghans are once again having to adapt to life under Taliban rule.

More local Taliban groups are now functioning as governing entities, administering services for which the state pays, such as education and electricity, and collecting their own taxes from farmers and sometimes protection money from businesses. The growing influence is helping them generate revenue for recruits and spread distrust in Afghanistan’s shaky government.

The Taliban wielded significant control over 8.4 million Afghans—almost a third of the population—at the end of 2016, up from 5 million a year earlier, according to a confidential United Nations report reviewed by The Wall Street Journal. The report showed that the territory over which the insurgents have significant influence or control increased from 30% to 40% of the country over the same period.

The Trump administration is expected to approve a U.S. military request for more troops for Afghanistan, coalition officials said, and Pentagon officials said they expected to make a recommendation to the White House as soon as this week. But with 8,400 troops on the ground now—down from a high of 100,000 in 2011—even a somewhat fortified coalition would likely struggle to reverse the Taliban’s territorial gains.

A U.S. military spokesman in Kabul said the coalition planned to reverse the Taliban gains by continuing its mission to train, advise and assist Afghan forces. He said the Afghan government made a 3% gain in areas under its control in the first quarter of this year, while the Taliban increased its holdings by only 1%, suggesting the government has begun to win back lost territory.

The Taliban once opposed education for girls, but in places like Logar province they allow female students to attend primary school. Most girls are removed from school upon reaching puberty, as families in this area are very conservative and the Taliban wield significant influence over the population.

The spokesman’s comments last week echoed the testimony of U.S. Army Gen. John Nicholson, commander of U.S. forces of Afghanistan, before Congress in February, when he said Afghanistan was in “a stalemate where the equilibrium favors the government.”

The Taliban are seeking to extend their gains during their annual spring offensive. This year’s onslaught was announced in April after a brazen attack on the army’s regional headquarters that Afghan officials said killed at least 170 soldiers. The massacre exposed disarray in the government’s defenses and led to mass high-level departures. Afghanistan’s defense minister and army chief of staff resigned and four corps commanders were reassigned.

The Taliban said the spring offensive would focus on “foreign forces, their military and intelligence,” a reference to the U.S.-backed coalition, as well as its “mercenary apparatus.” In April, the Taliban produced a slick, 30-minute video promoting civic life under their rule, including clips of children in classes and competing at sports.

The Afghan government says it is progressing in its campaign to drive the Taliban out of its strongholds, killing dozens of senior insurgent leaders in the past month alone, including two shadow governors.

“Afghan security forces have been instructed to target the Taliban in their hideouts and take revenge,” said Sediq Sediqqi, a government spokesman. “It will be a bad year for the Taliban.”

Little evidence currently supports that prediction. In places like Mohammad Agha district, a part of Logar province around 25 miles south of the center of Kabul, the capital, government control is tenuous at best. Officials rarely venture off the main highway. Taliban flags flap in mud-brick villages in plain view of the Afghan forces that patrol the road during daylight hours.

Schools are supposed to offer a wide range of classes, but now many subjects are forbidden and taught at a teacher’s own risk—including music, culture and “other things that Taliban consider evil,” one teacher in the district said.

The war has split families, with some fleeing Taliban-controlled territory for work in the capital. A teacher in Mohammad Agha said his brother, a lawyer in Kabul, fears the Taliban would kill him if he returned. Other families have hedged their bets on who will control the district’s future, dispatching sons to both the police and the Taliban.

Families often are reunited only in death. In the village graveyards, police and Taliban lie side by side, sons of the same families.

Companies operating in territories the Taliban have newly overtaken are also caught between the rival administrations. The Taliban extort protection money for businesses in areas including mining and telecommunications, provincial officials said. In return, the businesses are allowed to operate, transport goods and maintain infrastructure.

Telecoms companies have been among the hardest hit, officials said, as insurgents can easily topple a telecom tower by detonating explosives at the base. The Taliban also force the companies to turn off cellphone towers at night, when signals could give away their positions during operations. One telecom company official estimated a quarter of its towers were off at any one time, because of either threats or attacks from the Taliban.

Mohammad Rahman Qaderi, a member of the provincial council in eastern Paktia province, says telecom, construction and mining companies “all give the Taliban money.” The financial burden of these payments has forced construction firms, for example, to skimp on the quality of materials, he said.

Narcotics remain the Taliban’s primary source of income, according to the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime. Sales from opium fields under the insurgents’ control yielded around $400 million last year, the agency’s 2016 survey estimated.

But territorial expansion is giving the Taliban access to fresh and more varied cash flows. Global Witness, an investigative nonprofit organization, says mining has become Taliban’s second-largest source of revenue. It found that in Badakhshan province alone, the Taliban raise several million dollars a year from illegal mining of lapis lazuli. The blue semiprecious stone is largely exported to China and Pakistan, traders say, helping to fund the insurgency.

Mr. Sediqqi, the government spokesman, said military efforts would focus on ensuring contested rural areas continue to receive education and basic services. “People need our support,” he said. “The Taliban are criminals—they are involved in drug trafficking, kidnappings, killings and extortion.”

When the government resists Taliban gains, however, locals are often caught in the middle. In Mohammad Agha district, police set up a checkpoint recently to stop teachers from attending a meeting with the Taliban. When some did anyway, police beat the teachers, said Mohammad Hanif Stanikzai, the district education chief.

“We administrate and compromise,” he said. “The employees of the education system are like chickens, caught between a tiger and rock.”

It’s the prep… The actual colonoscopy is a breeze. They knock you out with the good stuff…

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Thank you, I hope you and your family are well. I hang out on the Combat Forum most of the time, please come over and visit. If you have time, come over and read my “Paris Attack thread”. I believe you either work or teach on a major Calf. college campus, maybe a few suggestions would help if you ever encounter an active shooter. Please be safe, from what I have read in the past you are one hell of a mother and a good person.

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It’s like a bad car wreck. I can’t look away.

A friend of a friend wrote this for Nature. @Aragorn, thought of you. What’s going on in the universities there. This researcher recently had one of his grad students killed when a tear gas canister hit him in the chest at a protest.

http://www.nature.com/news/science-under-siege-how-venezuela-s-economic-crisis-is-affecting-researchers-1.20261

And just a stunning look at crime statistics. Numbers of homicides, kidnappings. Very Escape from New York.

"Venezuela had over 28,479 homicides in 2016…In Caracas… a rate of 140 homicides per 100,000 inhabitants.

…2016 was also a deadly year for law enforcement. Unofficial statistics indicate that 241 police officers and law enforcement personnel were killed countrywide, many of whom were victims of targeted assassination."

Look at the numbers of home invasion robberies, car jackings. This is what total financial meltdown and 700% inflation looks like, @idaho. Caracas is now the worlds most dangerous city, and Venezuela has a mortality rate higher than Afghanistan and Iraq. The military controlling the government and the drug cartels are really the same people.

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Think of how bad things would be if they didn’t have strong gun control policies to keep them safe. I still don’t know why Bernie Sanders doesn’t go down there and show them what they’re doing wrong with their socialisms. They can’t be more than a few dozen laws away from achieving Scandanavia.

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While it’s always funny to say “told you so” that’s allot of human suffering. Anyone who is for limited government and decries socialism is laughed at as a backward relic screaming “get off my lawn.” Or they are treated like McCarthy seing reds behind every corner.

There is real human tragedy behind excessive state power and control. It doesn’t matter what label you put to it.

Them not letting medicine and food in… that is straight evil. I hope they drag Maduro’s corpse through the streets like Mussolini when it all finally implodes.

I know that the US economy isn’t anywhere near as one-dimensional as Venezuela’s, but I was wondering what event short of world war 3 could lead to conditions like that here. Losing the Dollar as the world’s reserve currency came to mind. Anyone else have thoughts?

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While I don’t agree with the US right on many, many issues, I do believe that the availability of firearms to the general population is absolutely essential for preventing tyranny and dramatically increases the safety of both the individual and community in troubled times.

Not only that, but in case of a messy hybrid war - and all wars are messy affairs now - if the paramilitaries come to pillage/rape/kill/ethnically cleanse a certain geographical area, they’ll hesitate if the civilians are armed…

Armed civilians mean that pillaging and killing stop being “fun” and “safe” activities for the perpetrators and they realize they may incur casualties. Strangely enough, their enthusiasm suddenly disappears and volunteers for pillaging/raping/cleansing are few and far in between.

Trust me on this one, I speak from personal experience.

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The US right can’t agree with itself on many many issues. Lol

As for the firearms. Most people who own guns aren’t “joiners” so I don’t see an overthrow as a possibility. Especially not with the US military as powerful as it is.

In a shtf scenario with looters, an invasion etc… America would have the worst guerilla resistance force known to man. When you consider there are roughly 300 Million guns in private hands… only 1% of people taking up arms could shut down every intersection, airport etc. The casualties to a conventional force would make Vietnam look tame.

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