Leave it to Reuters in this April 29 article, to express surprise that Hugo Chavez' planned economy, complete with “land reform,” price controls and forced production, is failing. Even worse, reporter Frank Jack Daniels relied on a Marxist outlook and socialist jargon to pretend that those tired policies weren't to blam.
Chavez wants to increase domestic food production; so, of course, the logical solution is to base the recovery on Marxist economics. After watching the failed totalitarian agronomics of Cuba and Russia, you'd think they could have invested a few bucks in a SimCity game so they could practice a little first.
Unbelievably, Reuters said Chavez “sheltered consumers from rising world food costs with subsidies and price controls,” and then in spite of all of that awesome planning, something surprisingly went wrong (all bolded portions mine):
Venezuela has promised to help other left-leaning governments in the region - like Bolivia, Nicaragua and Cuba - to increase their grain production, but it has run into difficulties at home.
Chávez, who says high food prices show that capitalism is a failed system, has sheltered consumers from rising world food costs with subsidies and price controls.
Even so, some products have been scarce as world supplies tighten, fixed prices distort the supply chain and a bonanza from record oil prices drives up domestic demand.
Worried by the shortages, Chávez this year cut bureaucratic limitations on imports and opened state-run food stores. The long lines for milk and other basic products shrank.
Reuters framed the article as if it had been cribbed from a social justice and peace studies textbook. Daniels listed the same practices that devastated the Soviet Union's economy and resulted in bread lines, and yet, without a trace of facetiousness, wrote “Even so, some products have been scarce” as if the policies aren't related to the problems. That takes either a total lack of basic economics, which means he shouldn't be writing about Venezuela's economy, or Daniels has ignored the news for the last 30 years and believes planned economies work.
Daniels documented classic examples of the funny follies and unintended consequences that tend to occur in Marxist economies. For instance, to try to reduce milk shortages, the government set up a shiny new dairy plant in Venezuela's “hot, swampy” “hinterlands” stocked with high-yield dairy cattle that are better suited for the climates of Germany or Wisconsin and are vulnerable to “sweltering heat,” jungle predators and tropical disease.
Then there's the farmer who was paid to grow tomatoes that he can't get to market in decent condition because the roads are too poor. I guess the “Communist Manifesto” doesn't say anything about letting the actual farmers decide what they want and what they need to beef up agriculture production.
Instead of unbiased and neutral reporting, when describing Chavez's recent push for increased farming, Reuters parroted the Orwellian socialist terms “land redistribution” and “agrarian reform” for what really is simply stealing private property and restricting freedom:
[Andrés]Tuesta, the peasant leader, helped organize Venezuelan farmers to receive land redistributed by Chávez's government under an agrarian reform in the past several years. Although he is a supporter of Chávez, he says there is a long way to go before Venezuela becomes self-sufficient in food.
Reuters used a quote from that “peasant leader” and Chavez supporter Tuesta to pretend that the shortages weren't from the Marxist economics, but the greedy “elites”:
He blames the shortages on sabotage and hoarding by Venezuelan élites opposed to Chávez, but corruption and bureaucracy have also slowed production increases.
"You ask for a credit in December and it comes in June, after the planting season. You end up in debt and without a crop, the worst of both worlds," he said.
I'm not sure why legitimate media outlets like Reuters still pretend that Marxist/socialist economies actually work, but they continue to prop up countries like Cuba and Venezuela by not treating them to the same critiques and candid evaluations that Western democracies like America face.
Good to know that Reuters is on board the Bolivarian revolution.
***Interestingly, Reuters issued another version of this article later that day, edited by two others, that was more critical of Chavez's planned economy.
Lynn contributes to NewsBusters. Email her with tips or even complaints at tvisgoodforyou2 followed by at-yahoo-dot-com, but in the standard form.















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Comments Policy
He looks like Robert DeNiro
May 3, 2008 - 22:07 ET by SchnikeysHe looks like Robert DeNiro in that picture.
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Grizzly Bear '08
Slap an eyepatch on him and
May 3, 2008 - 22:26 ET by taterSlap an eyepatch on him and you got Pirate Hugo.
"They need to have a course in college called common sense and everyone should take it. Problem is there isn't too many people that could pass or teach it." -my grandfather
With his face scrunched up
May 4, 2008 - 02:39 ET by SchnikeysWith his face scrunched up like that, all he needs is a milk mustache. Of course, if I saw that then I'd probably start boycotting milk.
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Grizzly Bear '08
Civilization
May 3, 2008 - 22:11 ET by RainsfordMaybe instead of playing SimCity, they played Civilization, where you get a food AND production bonus for switching to State Property!
Let's have some fun!
May 3, 2008 - 22:42 ET by AgentAmericanLet's p*ss off the media and station a carrier group just off their coast, and watch Olbermann's tiny glasses fog up!
Sean Penn wouldn't be able to stutter straight.
Kevin Spacey would flash his eyelids like a hairdresser that just got dumped...
Buzz their harbors with those F-18's and flip 'em the bird.
Chuck Favez!
Drill ANWAR
I Second that Motion
May 3, 2008 - 22:44 ET by bigtimerI Second that Motion AA!
"Never murder your opponent when he is committing suicide." ~ W. Churchill
Commies
May 3, 2008 - 23:35 ET by jefflebowskiLike they say, if communists owned the desert, there would be a shortage of sand. This Chavez needs a .45 caliber headache bad and soon. The entire planet would be better off.
mmmmmmmm
May 4, 2008 - 00:16 ET by bigpapaI'm a .45 fan....
when asked why I carry a .45.....
"it's because they don't make a .46..."
supposedly from a Texas Ranger....
but I do carry a .45
Another .45 Fan
May 4, 2008 - 01:34 ET by geoff.galeThe friend of mine who convinced on the merits of the .45 also taught me a useful motto - "an armed society is a polite society".
"All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing."
- Edmund Burke (1729 - 1797)
www.conservativeboot...
bigpapa, .45s are more than adequate, but...
May 4, 2008 - 02:15 ET by R D Helm...you have to admit that IMI makes a pretty nifty .50. :-)
What the American people are looking for is somebody who can solve their problems. - Barack Obama, April 27, 2008
Bigpapa
May 4, 2008 - 10:33 ET by jefflebowskiCount me along the fans of the .45. I love mine but carry a Glock .40 because of the size. They are both great to shoot and we are blessed to live in a country where we can carry and defend ourselves if needed. Go to hell liberals!
The press loves command economies.
May 3, 2008 - 23:58 ET by cbintnBecause the gov’t always does such a better job running
industry than the private sector. Always
creates shortages, which is why Hugo has
to seize land and food. http://tvnz.co.nz/view/page/536641/1555965. Which is also why Pelosi blocked the
Columbian free trade agreement as she is more aligned with Marxism than democracy.
I'd love to see someone take a shot at that parrot.
May 4, 2008 - 00:00 ET by R D HelmThen miss about eight inches to the left. :-)
What is it about totalitarian commies and agriculture? I mean, Stalin, Mao, Mugabe and the rest all took actions that resulted in the starvation of large numbers of their populace.
Was this all somehow deliberate?
What the American people are looking for is somebody who can solve their problems. - Barack Obama, April 27, 2008
MSM - Communism Connection
May 4, 2008 - 01:31 ET by geoff.galeI think I've figured out why the MSM supports communism. They believe that under a communist system, there would jobs aplenty for them. A state-run press/TV network needn't worry about declining readership/viewership because they're the only game in town. Plus, there wouldn't be any pressure to show a profit for those whining shareholders.
"All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing."
- Edmund Burke (1729 - 1797)
www.conservativeboot...
"He blames the shortages on
May 4, 2008 - 03:08 ET by Carl Kolchak"He blames the shortages on sabotage and hoarding by Venezuelan élites opposed to Chávez, but corruption and bureaucracy have also slowed production increases."
This sounds very similar to the Soviets blaming the kulaks for problems. The kulaks were wealthy peasants. Below is a link about the liquidation of the kulaks.
http://www.soviethistory.org/index.php?action=L2&SubjectID=1929collectivization&Year=1929
When I saw the pic...
May 4, 2008 - 03:49 ET by Army BratI thought of Musollini.
Is that my age showing?
Happy Trails...
Captionfest III - unsanctioned
May 4, 2008 - 06:02 ET by Parker1227Parrot talking: I'm the real brains in this outfit! The dope on my left is just there to fool my Yankee admirers! Baawk! Oops, I poopy."
that will change
May 4, 2008 - 08:30 ET by opnpt0When Hollywood makes a movie about Hugo they will change it so that it was wildly successful....until W screwed it all up.
Chávez, who says high food
May 4, 2008 - 08:58 ET by motherbeltChávez, who says high food prices show that capitalism is a
failed system, has sheltered consumers from rising world food costs
with subsidies and price controls.
Even so, some products have been scarce.....
Even so????? How about "Because of that?"
Sheesh.
Well, I guess we shouldn't be surprised; this is Reuters, after all.
Chavez and power
May 4, 2008 - 09:09 ET by AgnosticDid they ever mention the power outages that are becoming a great problem in the people's paradise. POwer loss=black out=looting by all those starv..if mean happy Chevez supporting people.
Hugo would have been closer
May 4, 2008 - 13:33 ET by dscottHugo would have been closer to the mark if he fingered Nancy Pelosi and the econuts for distorting the ag market with their ethanol mandates. Capitalism didn't fail to supply corn and wheat, government misdirected the corn and wheat from hungry mouths to thirsty fuel tanks. In fact, Hugo would be within his rights to say the evil US was conspiring to starve the world's poor while at the same time embargo Venezuelan oil. It's all the elitist's Nancy's fault, she's filthy rich you know!
Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid, starving the poor one gallon of ethanol at a time. Fill your tank with E85 and cull a village.
peter sellers pink panther
May 4, 2008 - 10:24 ET by lunaticcringeradioremember the scene where he is dressed as a pirate and has an inflatible parrot and he keeps flapping his arm to pump it up.
but looking at that pic is the parrot wearing a lil red beret too?
chavez you're an ass with a small penis and you smell like cabbage.
lunaticcringeradio