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Zorro

(15,749 posts)
Wed Aug 2, 2017, 10:02 PM Aug 2017

Departing AP reporter looks back at Venezuela's slide

Last edited Wed Aug 2, 2017, 10:53 PM - Edit history (1)

The first thing the muscled-up men did was take my cellphone. They had stopped me on the street as I left an interview in the hometown of the late President Hugo Chavez and wrangled me into a black SUV.

Heart pounding in the back seat with the men and two women, I watched the low cinderblock homes zoom by and tried to remember the anti-kidnapping class I’d taken in preparation for moving to Venezuela. The advice had been to try to humanize yourself.

“What should we do with her?” the driver asked. The man next to me pulled his own head up by the hair and made a slitting gesture across his throat.

What might a humanizing reaction to that be?

http://thebaltimorepost.com/departing-ap-reporter-looks-back-at-venezuelas-slide

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Departing AP reporter looks back at Venezuela's slide (Original Post) Zorro Aug 2017 OP
The vast majority (not all) of the GNB and PNB are thugs... GatoGordo Aug 2017 #1
 

GatoGordo

(2,412 posts)
1. The vast majority (not all) of the GNB and PNB are thugs...
Thu Aug 3, 2017, 11:47 AM
Aug 2017

...recruited for Chavismo, not to represent the well being of Venezuelans. Their allegiance isn't to a Constitution, let alone the rule of law or even right/wrong. These scumbags are often colectivos who have proven their "loyalty" to Chavismo. And colectivos don't concern themselves with following any sort of professional practices. Maduro has even taken to supplementing the GNB and PNB with colectivos and putting them in uniform... minus the badges (we don't need to stinking badges!) and boots. The names of GNB and PNB officers have long since disappeared from their uniforms and been replaced with balaclavas and the truncheon. Sadly, these are just the foot soldiers who do the dirty work of those in power.

Viva la revolución!

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