Submitted by Tyler
Durden on 13/05/2016 17:57 -0400
Over the last several years we have documented with
clockwork regularity Venezuela's collapse into failed state status, which was
cemented several weeks ago when news hit that "Venezuela had officially
run out of money to print new money."
At that point the best one could do was merely to step back and watch as
local society and civilization turned on itself, unleashing what would
ultimately turn into Venezuela's own, sad apocalypse.
Last night we showed what Caracas, looks like this week:
As we wrote then these are simply hungry Venezuelans
protesting that their children are dying from lack of food and medicine and
that they do not have enough water or electricity. As AgainstCronyCapitalism
added, this is a country with more oil than Saudi Arabia, and the government
has stolen all the money and now they bottleneck peaceful protesters and
threaten them with bombs (or haul them to prison and torture them).
As pure desperation has set in, crime has becomes
inevitable. A man accused of mugging people in the streets of Caracas was
surrounded by a mob of onlookers, beaten and set on fire, who published a
pixeled-out but still graphic video of the man burning as mob justice is now
the supreme arbiter of who lives and who dies:
"Roberto Fuentes Bernal, 42, was reportedly caught
trying to mug passersby in the Venezuelan capital, and before police arrived at
the scene, the crowd took the law into their own hands." The video can be
seen here.
Now, in the latest shocking development, Venezuela saw a new
wave of looting this week that resulted in at least two deaths, countless
wounded, and millions of dollars in losses and damages.
According to Panampost, on Wednesday morning, a crowd sacked
the Maracay Wholesale Market in the central region of Venezuela. According to the testimonies of merchants,
the endless food lines that Venezuelans have been enduring to do groceries
could not be organized that day.
¡VENEZUELA TIENE
HAMBRE! #Video Saquean Mercado Mayorista Maracay #11May
pic.twitter.com/DGRZ1bgkgI vÃa @venezolanodecen #CNERevocatorioYA
— El llanero
(@llaneroVen) May 11, 2016
Over the last two weeks, several provinces have hosted
scenes of looting in pharmacies, shopping malls, supermarkets, and food
delivery trucks. In several markets, shouts of “we are hungry!” echoed. On
April 27, the Venezuelan Chamber of Food (Cavidea) reported that the country’s
food producers only had 15 days left of inventory.
PanamPost adds that lootings are becoming an increasingly
common occurrence in Venezuela, as the country’s food shortage resulted in yet
another reported incident of violence in a supermarket — this time in the
Luvebras Automarket located in the La Florida Province of Caracas.
Venezuelans lost control this week when offered small
portions
Videos posted to social media showed desperate people
falling over each other trying to get bags of rice. One user claimed the
looting occurred because it is difficult to get cereal, and so people “broke
down the doors and damaged infrastructure.”
In the central province of Carabobo, residents ransacked a
corn warehouse located in the coastal city of Puerto Cabello. They reportedly
broke down the gate because workers were giving away small portions.
"There’s no rice, no pasta, no flour,” resident
Glerimar Yohan told La Costa, “only hunger.”
Social Collapse Is
Inevitable
With the economy dead, the only thing remaining is to watch
as society implodes. To that end, Oscar Meza, Director of the Documentation
Center for Social Analysis (Cendas-FVM), said that measurements of scarcity and
inflation in May are going to be the worst to date. “We are officially
declaring May as the month that [widespread] hunger began in Venezuela,” he
told Web Noticias Venezuela. … “As for March, there was an increase in yearly
prices due to inflation — a 582.9 percent increase for food, while the level of
scarcity of basic products remains at 41.37 percent."
“We are officially declaring May as the month that hunger
began
in Venezuela,” says an NGO that measures inflation and
scarcity
Meza said the trigger for the crisis is the shortage of
bread and other foods derived from wheat.
“Prices are so high that you can’t buy anything, so people
don’t buy bread, they don’t buy flour. You get porridge, you see the price of
chicken go up and families struggle … lunch is around 1,500 bolivars… People
used to take food from home to work, but now you can’t anymore because you
don’t have food at home."
The is why, Español Ramón Muchacho, Mayor of Chacao in
Caracas, said the streets of the capital of Venezuela are filled with people
killing animals for food. "Muchacho reported that in Venezuela, it is a
“painful reality” that people “hunt cats, dogs and pigeons” to ease their
hunger."
Subsquently, Muchacho warned that Caribbean islands and
Colombia may suffer an influx of refugees from Venezuela if food shortages
continue in the country.
“As hunger deepens, we could see more Venezuelans fleeing by
land or sea to an island,” Muchacho said.
And that is how all socialist utopias always end.
* * *
Meanwhile, as civil war appears inevitable, as previously
reported there are factions vying to oust Maduro, although we are confident the
dictator will hang on for dear life (literally) and force his population to
endure more of this socialist nightmare. One can only hope that these shocking
scenes remain relegated to the streets of offshore socialist paradises,
although Americans should always prepare for the worst in case they eventually
manage to make their way into the country.
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