500,000 march against communism in Caracas

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500,000 Venezuelans marched against Cubanization in Caracas Saturday

Source: Aleksander Boyd, who has tons more photos here

In Caracas, a huge vast campaign rally, called an avalancha drew half a million people in Venezuela, all of whom have had about enough of castro’s little minime who’s trashing Caracas and stealing countless freedoms as he consolidates power and prepares to assume the castro mantle.

The people are speaking!

Their leader is Manuel Rosales, a decent governor from the western Zulia state, which has never been impressed with chavismo. It’s the last anti-Chavista stronghold left in Venezuela. Now, its governor is preparing to reclaim Venezuela for democracy.

What’s his party line? He doesn’t want Venezuela to turn into another Cuba. That’s his most powerful and resounding campaign message, the one that is attracting hundreds of thousands of people to the streets of Caracas. He talks about it all the time. Look at the kinds of things people are saying at this rally about Cubanization.

You gotta know that this rally has Hugo Chavez queasy. He has been planning to cheat in the coming election, December 3, where he planned to pull off a Saddam majority, but this huge rally is going to make that that much tougher. How can you argue with these numbers? How can you say anyone wants communism in Venezuela with pictures like this.

The thug is telling them all to go to Miami, believe it or not. Well, they aren’t going to Miami, they are bringing the freedom of Miami to Caracas.

Go see for yourself in Alek’s amazing 29 photos he took yesterday here.

And read Daniel’s excellent analysis, about the very Cuba-like racial composition of the crowds, which the mainstream media loves to claim is all just middle class whites of no consequence. The photos show different. Read Daniel’s analysis here.

2 thoughts on “500,000 march against communism in Caracas”

  1. Let’s hope Manuel Rosales wins so that democracy can be restored to Venezuela. It will be a hard hit for the regime in Cuba, and the dictator Castro may be close to his end along with his murderous gang.
    Viva Cuba y Venezuela Libre y Democratica!!!!

  2. The problem with Chavez is not Chavez. Yes, he’s a horrible person and acts accordingly, but that’s the way it works: garbage in, garbage out. The real problem is that enough people gave him enough support to get him where he is now. Considering how transparent it was all along that he was very bad news, how could so many people have had so little sense?

    If you hire a known pedophile as a babysitter and the predictable happens, who’s really at fault? If you have unprotected sex with a prostitute and you get HIV, who’s really to blame? If you take someone who looks and acts like a cheap thug, who tried to overthrow a legitimately elected government by force, who professes deep admiration for Fidel Castro, and you let him run the country, what do you expect?
    Who’s really at fault for the current situation in Venezuela? Blaming Chavez is like blaming a cobra for being poisonous after you chose to get close enough to it to let it bite you.

    Same goes for Ortega in Nicaragua. It’s perfectly clear what and who he is. If he gets elected anyway, those responsible deserve every bad thing that happens as a result. Unfortunately, those not responsible will pay just the same, and they have every right to hold the responsible ones fully accountable (should they ever get out of the hole again). There’s no real excuse for this sort of pathological behavior. It goes beyond stupidity; it’s truly perverse.

    Castro, in the beginning, was far more deceptive, deliberately so. He promised to do all the right things and denied being all the wrong ones. He did not look like a dumb animal with clothes. He did not go around saying how much he admired Mao or Stalin. He only put his cards plainly on the table after he was firmly entrenched in power, had secured Soviet backing, and JFK had disastrously botched up his job. Even so, Cubans should have known better; there were a lot of internal warning signs from the start which were ignored or rationalized. Too many Cubans, whether now dead or still living, remain accountable for what amounted to screwing over the whole country. If that’s true of Cuba, what can one say about Venezuela or Nicaragua?

    It would be wonderful if Rosales won the election, but regardless of how people actually vote, I seriously doubt the official results will fail to show Chavez as the winner. He cheated before, and he most certainly has no intention of leaving power now, or ever. I expect Jimmy Carter will be happy to back him up, again.

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