Corporate media outlets have pulled a muscle patting themselves on the back over the fancy titled "Pandora Papers". Will the world's mighty tremble w/ bombshell "revelations"? No, not really. Whatever it is they're selling, we're not buying. Here's a thread on it 💸🧵
In Latin America we've discovered things that weren't hard to guess. Billionaire Chilean president Piñera has used tax havens. As have Chicago boy Paulo Guedes (Brasil) and Colombian ex-presidents. Also some Russians so Putin can be used on the cover
Unlike Wikileaks revelations where wrongdoing by the world's most powerful actors was laid bare for all to see, the Pandora Papers (like other "papers") reach us after going through the digestive tract of the corporate media. So don't expect the status quo to be challenged at all
Outlets like the NYT, WaPo or the Guardian have cheerled every imperialist war in recent history, while the "chosen" Venezuelan media run on USAID+NED money (it's a guess). These outlets are gatekeepers of the global capitalist system and their mission is to shield it from danger
If transparency and accountability was the goal we'd be able to search this database freely, not rely on corporate journalists that half of the time work as stenographers for western governments and the other half for western intelligence agencies
In what concerns Venezuela, we know that if there was anyone who could be remotely tied to Maduro, his mustache will be all over corporate media. Instead, we hear about a corruption scheme we've known about for years involving former oil minister Rafael Ramírez (cont)
(cont) Not just that, but some of the people involved in the Andorra money-laundering scheme are in jail as part of a state-led investigation, others have outstanding extradition warrants. So the best they can get on Maduro (so far) is a case the Maduro govt itself is prosecuting
This of course is not proof of innocence, it does not demonstrate that high-ranking officials are not involved in corruption schemes. But given how little "evidence" is needed to produce "charges" against empire enemies, it speaks volumes
It's no coincidence that this "investigation" is just looking for someone who can be tied to Putin or other "evil" actors. A few sacrificial lambs are thrown in to make it look credible and rigorous, like this legendary buffoon that is the king of Jordan (a western favorite btw)
The goal of this stunt is to "change everything so everything stays the same." That's why you have these hilariously hypocritical displays like senile-in-chief Joe Biden saying the US is going to crack down on wrongdoing. Like a mob boss worried about illegal gambling
First of all, tax havens are legal. Capitalism encourages corporations/people to not pay taxes. Operations like the Pandora Papers are smokescreens to divert attention towards a few "rotten apples" so no one realizes this is a *system* built on exploitation and inequality
Corruption is of course a huge issue,but the discourse that overplays it as an ethical issue and overlooks all else is also a problem. It means placing all the focus on the "illegal" stealing of public wealth so we'll ignore all the ways in which public wealth is "legally" stolen
We'll be forgiven for not buying that an investigation funded by (among others) the Ford Foundation and Open Society is about "speaking truth to power." It's a magic trick. Soon enough corporate lobbyists will deliver legislation on tax haven reforms and the media will applaud
It's independent outlets like Venezuelanalysis and lots of others that actually challenge the corporate plutocracy status quo. A monster might pretend to slap its own wrist, but it won't kill itself. To donate visit: venezuelanalysis.com/donate
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#whatsappdown#facebookdown#instagramdown With Zuckerberg's stuff having some (ahem) technical difficulties, why not check out some VA content you might have missed?
Our latest interview featured anthropologists Iraida Vargas and Mario Sanoja. In a really interesting conversation, they make the case that Venezuela's modern-day popular power efforts build on a long history of rebellious and communal roots. Read it here: venezuelanalysis.com/interviews/153…
Venezuela still has one of the continent's most backward penal codes when it comes to abortion. Feminist movements have been organizing to make sure that changes soon. Find out more in this report: venezuelanalysis.com/news/15336
No love lost between puppet groups #1 and #2. We're close to an open war between the more mainstream opposition parties and the extremist faction led by Guaidó and his mentor Leopoldo López. Exhibit A: an interview (in Spanish) by Humberto Calderón Berti elnacional.com/venezuela/cald…
Calderón Berti is an operative from the old days, former minister and PDVSA president in the 80s and 90s. He feels the US interests should be served with a bit more decorum, as opposed to the rampant thievery and buffoonery of this circus known to some as the "interim govt"
Though he should have known better, Calderón Berti accepted to serve as pretend ambassador to Colombia in 2019. He resigned over disagreements over the handling of Monómeros, Colombia-based Vzlan agrochemical company that has filed for bankruptcy. He returns to it in this itw
🇻🇪🇮🇷 Venezuela's PDVSA and Iran's NIOC reportedly struck a crude-for-condensate swap deal that could shake Washington's illegal sanctions against both countries.
🇻🇪🇮🇷 According to Tanker Trackers, 2.1M barrels of Iranian condensate have reportedly arrived in Venezuela to boost oil output as part of a swap deal.
Venezuela is betting on economic recovery despite US sanctions. Iran has provided expertise and fuel swaps.
Venezuela rolled out its new digital bolívar amid the recent inflation slowed-down. The gov't’s goal is to boost digital operations and avoid cash scarcity. However, a speculative frenzy followed swiftly, with officials calling it a "political operation." venezuelanalysis.com/news/15338
[Thread] When we thought we had seen it all, @jguaido and his band of buffoons manage to surprise us. And not in a good way, of course. Oil giant ConocoPhillips just got the green light to enforce an $8.5B arbitration award because Guaidó's team... failed to show up in court
That's right, ladies and gentlemen. This ragtag circus troupe that Washington "recognizes" as the legitimate Vzlan govt (can anyone say this w/ a straight face?) failed to "plead or defend" itself for more than a year. Is it a case of criminal negligence or working for the enemy?
The background here is that disgraceful oil multinational ConocoPhillips won an $8.5 billion arbitration award for assets nationalized by the Hugo Chávez govt when the firm refused to comply with new legislation. Funny how these "tribunals" tend to rule in favor of corporations?
🧵🧵Venezuela has been mired in a serious economic crisis for years. In this infographic we shed some light on this complex topic, as an oil price crash and deadly US sanctions created a perfect storm that has imposed tremendous hardships on the Venezuelan people #SanctionsKill
📉The economic downturn has seen Venezuelan GDP contract by more than two-thirds. The recession was triggered by the 2014 fall in oil prices and later compounded by wide-reaching unilateral coercive measures by Washington and its allies which also blocked any solutions
📈High inflation has been a constant in recent years, mostly fueled by currency speculation. The Maduro government has managed to slow down the devaluation-inflation spiral in the past few months, but with sanctions in place recovery or even stability remain an uphill battle
Don't take our word for it. Here's a Citi executive saying the bank blocked a PDVSA payment to a creditor. He was testifying in a court case that might demonstrate how far-reaching US sanctions are. But it's the US justice system, so don't hold your breath reuters.com/world/americas…
Of course, right at hand was an "expert witness" to say that PDVSA could have just used another bank. Sure... The US threatened an asphalt company from Thailand against dealing w/ PDVSA, but a US bank would have done it, no questions asked. Surely Citi were being paranoid...
Of course @Reuters can't avoid its "Maduro says" trick. Copying and pasting is no excuse for dishonesty. Even US representatives and the freaking US Chamber of Commerce attest to the sanctions' economic damage. But corporate media will ride the imperialist train into the sunset