Venezuela Vs Guyana

Bold is my emphasis.

Venezuela - The World Factbook

Social investment in Venezuela during the CHAVEZ administration reduced poverty from nearly 50% in 1999 to about 27% in 2011, increased school enrollment, substantially decreased infant and child mortality, and improved access to potable water and sanitation through social investment. "Missions" dedicated to education, nutrition, healthcare, and sanitation were funded through petroleum revenues. The sustainability of this progress remains questionable, however, as the continuation of these social programs depends on the prosperity of Venezuela's oil industry. In the long-term, education and health care spending may increase economic growth and reduce income inequality, but rising costs and the staffing of new health care jobs with foreigners are slowing development.

While CHAVEZ was in power, more than one million predominantly middle- and upper-class Venezuelans are estimated to have emigrated. The brain drain is attributed to a repressive political system, lack of economic opportunities, steep inflation, a high crime rate, and corruption. Thousands of oil engineers emigrated to Canada, Colombia, and the United States following CHAVEZ's firing of over 20,000 employees of the state-owned petroleum company during a 2002-03 oil strike. Additionally, thousands of Venezuelans of European descent have taken up residence in their ancestral homelands. Nevertheless, Venezuela has attracted hundreds of thousands of immigrants from South America and southern Europe because of its lenient migration policy and the availability of education and health care. Venezuela also has been a fairly accommodating host to Colombian refugees, numbering about 170,000 as of year-end 2016. However, since 2014, falling oil prices have driven a major economic crisis that has pushed Venezuelans from all walks of life to migrate or to seek asylum abroad to escape severe shortages of food, water, and medicine; soaring inflation; unemployment; and violence. As of September 2022, an estimated 7.1 million Venezuelans were refugees or migrants worldwide, with almost 80% taking refuge in Latin America and the Caribbean (notably Colombia, Peru, Chile, Ecuador, Argentina, and Brazil, as well as the Dominican Republic, Aruba, and Curacao). Asylum applications increased significantly in the US and Brazil in 2016 and 2017. Several receiving countries are making efforts to increase immigration restrictions and to deport illegal Venezuelan migrants - Ecuador and Peru in August 2018 began requiring valid passports for entry, which are difficult to obtain for Venezuelans. Nevertheless, Venezuelans continue to migrate to avoid economic collapse at home.

Huh. Bad economic policies at home and unchecked immigration can destroy a country? Socialism doesn't work? Weird. Glad we don't have that problem.
 
Venezuela just wasn't doing it right - American socialists will be able to iron out all the kinks and make that shit work for them...
...for them of course - not the rest of us - just them.

Then again, the TRUE beauty of socialism is how well it works for the administrators of the system.
 
Kinda confused how a broke ass country, with stupid oil can't keep the bread on the table but is still playing circuses?


Their chicks are hot though...

They’ve got oil but the infrastructure needed to turn it into money is in a sad state of disrepair. That’s because their socialist bureaucracy is, oh, I dunno, fucking inept like most socialist bureaucracies.
 
Don't drink any Kool-aid.

That shit's delicious.

Orange-you glad we won the recompete?
Fuck, it's a divorce Fruit Punch
Raspberry retirement
Makin' bank Electric Blueberry
Tax exempt Iced Tea
You won't fire me Grape
 
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