Have you guys heard about this yet?
The Game Changed in Venezuela Last Night โ and the International Media Is Asleep At the Switch
Francisco Toro / 2 days ago | caracaschronicles.com

Dear International Editor: Listen and understand. The game changed in Venezuela last night. What had been a slow-motion unravelling that had stretched out over many years went kinetic all of a sudden. What we have this morning is no longer the Venezuela story you thought you understood. Throughout last night, panicked people told their stories of state-sponsored paramilitaries on motorcycles roaming middle class neighborhoods, shooting at people and storming into apartment buildings, shooting at anyone who seemed like he might be protesting. People continue to be arrested merely for protesting, and a long established local Human Rights NGO makes an urgent plea for an investigation into widespread reports of torture of detainees. There are now dozens of serious human right abuses: National Guardsmen shooting tear gas canisters directly into residential buildings. We have videos of soldiers shooting civilians on the street.
And thatโs just what came out in real time, over Twitter and YouTube, before any real investigation is carried out. Online media is next, a city of 645,000 inhabitants has been taken off the internet amid mounting repression, and this blog itself has been the object of a Facebook โblockโ campaign. What we saw were not โstreet clashesโ, what we saw is a state-hatched offensive to suppress and terrorize its opponents. Here at Caracas Chronicles weโre doing what it can to document the crisis, but thereโs only so much one tiny, zero-budget blog can do. After the major crackdown on the streets of large (and small) Venezuelan cities last night, I expected some kind of response in the major international news outlets this morning. I understand that with an even bigger and more photogenic freakout ongoing in an even more strategically important country, we werenโt going to be front-page-above-the-fold, but Iโm staggered this morning to wake up, scan the press and findโฆ Nothing.
As of 11 a.m. this morning, the New York Times World Section hasโฆ nothing. The Guardianโs World News has some limp why-are-you-protesting? piece that made some sense before last nightโs tropical pogrom, but none after it. Soโฆ basically nothing. . . . The BBC is still leading its Latin America section on a Leopoldo story, as though last night had been just business as usual. CNN is also out chasing the thing that was the story in the old Venezuela: Al Jazeera English never got the memo: Even places that love to hate the Venezuelan government are asleep at the wheel: The level of disengagement on display is deeply shocking. Venezuelaโs domestic media blackout is joined by a parallel international blackout, one born not of censorship but of disinterest and inertia. Itโs hard to express the sense of helplessness you get looking through these pages and finding nothing. Venezuela burns; nobody cares. Let me put this clearly. Yโall need to step it up.
The time to discard what you thought you knew about the way things work in Venezuela is now. Quico. (Damnit, thereโs just no way to stay retired in these circumstancesโฆ)







Not a lot of hmong would understand these kind of politics. Or the root cause of it.
Wow, that’s insane. Oppression at it’s worst. And the world looks the other way.
The rest is still asleep.
Internal affaird the world needs to stay out of other counyries affair
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