The Suicide of Venezuela
Joel D. Hirst
I have watched the suicide of a nation; and I know now
how it happens. Venezuela is slowly, and very publically, dying; an act
that has spanned more than fifteen years. To watch a country kill itself
is not something that happens often. In ignorance, one presumes it
would be fast and brutal and striking – like the Rwandan genocide or
Vesuvius covering Pompeii. You expect to see bodies of mothers clutching
protectively their young; carbonized by the force or preserved on the
glossy side of pictures. But those aren’t the occasions that promote
national suicide. After those events countries recover – people recover.
They rebuild, they reconcile. They forgive.
No, national suicide is a much longer process – not product of
any one moment. But instead one bad idea, upon another, upon another and
another and another and another and the wheels that move the country
began to grind slower and slower; rust covering their once shiny
facades. Revolution – cold and angry. Hate, as a political strategy.
Law, used to divide and conquer. Regulation used to punish. Elections
used to cement dictatorship. Corruption bleeding out the lifeblood in
drips, filling the buckets of a successive line of bureaucrats before
they are destroyed, only to be replaced time and again. This is what is
remarkable for me about Venezuela.
[…]
Tonight there are no lights. Like the New York City of Ayn Rand’s
“Atlas Shrugged”, the eyes of the country were plucked out to feed the
starving beggars in abandoned occupied buildings which were once luxury
apartments. They blame the weather – the government does – like the
tribal shamans of old who made sacrifices to the gods in the hopes of an
intervention. There is no food either; they tell the people to hold on,
to raise chickens on the terraces of their once-glamorous apartments.
There is no water – and they give lessons on state TV of how to wash
with a cup of water. The money is worthless; people now pay with
potatoes, if they can find them. Doctors operate using the light of
their smart phones; when there is power enough to charge them. Without
anesthesia, of course – or antibiotics, like the days before the advent
of modern medicine. The phone service has been cut – soon the internet
will go and an all-pervading darkness will fall over a feral land.
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