Venezuela expels U.S. embassy officials

Those are the things that separate the 3rd world from the 1st world. The first world nations can invest in their workers and mandate that all workers be insured both in terms of employment and health.

And that is how we know the US has a third world economy. That and the wealth distribution profile - looks like Zimbabwe!
 
And that is how we know the US has a third world economy. That and the wealth distribution profile - looks like Zimbabwe!

Zimbabwe has been under the benevolent socialist leadership of Robert Mugabe since 1980
 
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"We will guarantee everyone has a plasma television." --Nicolas Maduro el presidente

a plasma TV, but no toilet paper ...
 
Hopefully they are arresting the right people. America could really use a dose of this sort of thing too. Plenty of parasites leeching off of the workers and breaking multiple laws while doing it. But in the US they are worshipped.

Just as the animals prepare to vote, however, Napoleon gives a strange whimper, and nine enormous dogs wearing brass-studded collars charge into the barn, attack Snowball, and chase him off the farm. They return to Napoleon’s side, and, with the dogs growling menacingly, Napoleon announces that from now on meetings will be held only for ceremonial purposes. He states that all important decisions will fall to the pigs alone.

“Napoleon is always right”
“I will work harder.”
 
Maduro has declared 2014 “the year of the ultimate triumph in the economic war,” announced a new team of economic managers and decreed a law capping business profits at 30 percent.

“There’s nothing to buy where we live,” said Maria Valencia, a preschool teacher from the oil-producing hub of Maracaibo, near Venezuela’s western border, while shopping at a government-run Bicentenario supermarket where products sold by recently nationalized companies carried little heart symbols and the phrase “Made in Socialism.”


Venezuela, a socialist utopia
 
Student protests in Venezuela continue (despite President Maduro's proclamation that the nation is in "absolute calm"), with both the government and the opposition holding rallies

 
Venezuela's Opposition Defeats Socialists in Landslide

Voter turnout was a stunning 74 percent, the highest for a parliamentary vote since compulsory voting ended in the 1990s, as Venezuelans punished Maduro's government for widespread shortages, a plunging currency and triple-digit inflation that has brought the economy to its knees
 
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