Saturday, January 29, 2011

Fluid In Cervix Ultrasound

BULLETS THE VENEZUELAN PEOPLE WANT TO BE AN OWNER, NOT A PEOPLE EXPROPRIATED ...

80% of Venezuelans supports private property, according to results of an investigation by the company data (an interviewer, of course, that very little is dedicated to the political issue, and usually focus on marketing research). Friends of Government put their hands on the head when they see this information, and they say "How is that possible? My president has 12 years speaking ill of "private," saying that "private" are selfish. We have expropriated all we've been, and continue on that. The rich are a bit ... Why then do most of the country, that is, THE PEOPLE, continues to support private property? Ah, I know! Must be because the people are manipulated through the media ... blah, blah, blah ... "


But despite the propaganda gobiernera, the reality is this: Eight out of ten Venezuelans are in favor of owning and not to be expropriated! And if you think about it in this compelling data come to conclusions very different from the official ideological bias. Let's see what has become Catia Industrial Zone, where (among other companies) were the factories that made millions of shoes, good shoes that were sold Venezuela in Latin America and the world? What has become The Industrial Zone Yaguara where, among other companies were some of the major spinning and weaving of this continent? What happened, for the love of God, Industrial Zone Guarenas-Guatire? All those "Industrial Zones" were transformed into industrial graveyards. The sheds that were once factories are now deserts, are dens of criminals or homeless shelters . What happened to the jobs, the jobs that these industries generated? Well, simply disappeared. To understand this should not be an economist or sociologist. Enough to have eyes, and memory ...


But the statistics that economists and sociologists handle match what you see and feel in the neighborhood: A third of companies that existed in Venezuela in 1998, not today there. Closed, went bankrupt or left the country. It is as difficult to open a business and producing in a country where the government goes around talking straw employers, threatening or expropriated. Like any other human activity, there are good employers and bad employers and some politicians, cobblers or chicheros good and bad. But the government has tried convert the status of employer in a bad word. "Being rich is bad", said the government bureaucrats, as you see them getting fatter, richer, displaying the trappings of wealth for which they have never worked and how badly they speak in public. Most of the companies that have closed or have been maintained almost in suspended animation: "What we grow, we will hire more people, if at any time it is the crazy and we expropriated? We stayed here and did not close because we Venezuelans and bet on the country, but the truth is that every day is more difficult ... "


But while the number of private enterprises has decreased, and the state rather than personal use is now conducting massive layoffs, the fact is that people have to live. And to experience the vast majority choose to work, rather than resign himself to being a kept in a "social program" of government. That is why Venezuela's barrios have become major centers of economic activity. no longer just about the house where they sell ice creams, or the lady who hit zippers and buttons ...

In every street, every corner there are all sorts of economic enterprise initiatives: Garages of autobody and painting, appliance repair, are everywhere in the neighborhood. "Paraguitas" hire and local phones are popular versions of "cyber-cafes" alternate in the geography of the neighborhood with other more traditional businesses such as shops and hairdressers. Minibus, taxi drivers and mototaxistas risk their lives every day to bring sustenance to their homes as private providers of public services. Seven out of ten homes in the neighborhoods have at least one tenant, since the coordinates of the popular house is not only a place to live but also a space to live, especially considering the precariousness of social security in our country. And all this is free enterprise, private property popular, family heritage that builds and enhances each day in the harsh conditions of the neighborhood.

out! Let no one mistake this huge effort of the Venezuelan poor with what the Sabiondo called "survival strategies", ie a "resolved", a "Meanwhile, a" bread for today, hunger tomorrow! No, sir: Those who started a business today, however humble, has aspirations to grow that business, and give support to the family (and the families of those who work there) in the future! Something, therefore, to let the children ... Ah! But this requires a state and a government that respects private property that protects and encourages the free initiative of citizens. Popular entrepreneur who yesterday rode a cart to sell orange juice in the street, and now fifteen years later is a business that sells juices, smoothies and food, and which employs ten people more, needs a government and a state to come and congratulate you on creating jobs and wealth, rather than a group of thugs with power being accused of "operator" and threaten to take your business to become a "arepera socialist. "

For those living and struggling in the neighborhoods to defend private property, free enterprise, free enterprise and freedom of work is not "defending the rich." In fact, the rich (those before and now) they defend themselves. In the neighborhood, and from the neighborhood to the country, defend private property is to defend our right to progress, prosperity. The poor people do not want a government "Livable poverty there." No! What we want is to stop being poor. we strive for. And that effort will be pointless if, after much struggle we have a government that (a communist, as arbitrary, or as Chief Bureaucrat said recently: "Because I can expropiarte whenever I want") processing that effort at all.

why the Civil Partnership Radar de los Barrios'll join 30 other civil associations (perrocalenteros, transportation, newsstand, property owners, town, anyway ...) on Wednesday February 2 at 10 am in the auditorium Chamber of Commerce of Caracas, Los Mahogany, to give birth to the alliance "VILLAGE OWNER!": A defense against the popular private property and a space to promote the building of a prosperous all Venezuela. There we are!

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