"Every two hours the company Movistar sends millions of messages to (subscribers) via telephone and internet," Maduro said of the Spanish company.
Spanish-owned mobile phone operator Movistar faces an investigation by Venezuela's socialist government after it was found to be sending mass text messages to subscribers in support of mobilization efforts by right-wing forces in the country, according to President Nicolas Maduro.
Venezuela faces increasingly violent mobilizations by anti-government protesters, who have looted private businesses, attacked pediatric hospitals and public housing projects, and disrupted life in a country already struggling with Washington-backed efforts toward “regime change.”
"Every two hours the company Movistar sends millions of messages to (subscribers) via telephone and internet" in support of the so-called “mother of all marches” launched by the right-wing opposition, Maduro said in a televised broadcast.
“Your kids are playing (mobile) video games and ‘march, April 19, lets go against Maduro,' appears,” he said.
“Movistar de Venezuela joined the coup forces and that's not its job, they should know this,” Maduro said, adding that more than US$100 million has been invested in efforts to mobilize citizens to answer calls by opposition forces to challenge his government.
"I denounce (Movistar) and have asked for an investigation," Maduro said. "They joined the call for a coup against the country," he added, noting the unprecedented nature of the Spanish telecom company's spam attack on Venezuelans.
Adding that the Bolivarian government had recently created a cyberwar unit to deal with online espionage and hacking threats, Maduro noted how “"Venezuela has been subjected to a tremendous cyberwar by the media and by the internet."
The company has not responded to media requests for comment.
The country's authorities have accused the U.S. government, through its State Department, of backing attempts to overthrow the government and undo the gains of the Bolivarian Revolution ahead of Venezuela's 2018 presidential elections.
http://www.telesurtv.net/english/news/Movistar-Spams-Venezuela-Mobile-Phones-With-Opposition-Texts-20170421-0021.html
Gee uhh where did I hear this one before? Sounds kinda familiar
On September 20, 2009, thousands of Cubans gathered at Revolution Plaza in Havana for Colombian rocker Juanes' "Peace without Borders" concert. It was the largest public gathering in Cuba since the visit of Pope John Paul II in 1998. Under the watchful gaze of a giant sculpture of revolutionary icon Ernesto "Che" Guevara, the Miami-based Juanes promised music aimed at "turning hate into love."
But for the ZunZuneo team, the concert was a perfect opportunity to test the political power of their budding social network. In the weeks before, Bernheim's firm, using the phone list, sent out a half a million text messages in what it called "blasts," to test what the Cuban government would do.
The team hired Alen Lauzan Falcon, a Havana-born satirical artist based in Chile, to write Cuban-style messages. Some were mildly political and comical, others more pointed. One asked respondents whether they thought two popular local music acts out of favor with the government should join the stage with Juanes. Some 100,000 people responded — not realizing the poll was used to gather critical intelligence.
Paula Cambronero, a researcher for Mobile Accord, began building a vast database about the Cuban subscribers, including gender, age, "receptiveness" and "political tendencies." USAid believed the demographics on dissent could help it target its other Cuba programs and "maximize our possibilities to extend our reach."
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/apr/03/us-cuban-twitter-zunzuneo-stir-unrest
And I betchya he just loves how easy it is to manipulate messaging. All the old farts at the CIA always talk about the good ol days where they had to design convoluted plans planting agents all over the place to influence different organizations, politicians, businesses etc. Now Paul just presses a button and BOOM... you can do whatever the fuck you want. cell phones, twitter, drones, facebook, brown moses, rhizzone, jon stewart. it's all too easy these days.
Oh wait these are US liberals we're talking about and we're talking about democracy in a darker skinned, left wing government.
i dont think the world is boycotting & divesting from the West fast enough
i hope we can have a decent discussion on imperialism soon with up to date info on trade patterns of the global south with the West vs Brics, and towards a better theory of imperialism with an accounting for effects & value of 'social imperialism' of brics/socialist countries on the world system
https://venezuelanalysis.com/news/13072
https://venezuelanalysis.com/analysis/11915
Just read the URL tbh and you get the picture
People are literally falling out of trees there. When are we going to do something?
Especially since its a huge tropical country and Cubans are explicitly helping them with collective farming.
Has anyone researched it?
Edited by walkinginonit ()
xipe posted:Since they repeat the same accusations for Venezuela as they use for Cuba (condom pizza etc), and since Cuba has one of the best diets and is food self sufficient I guess that its also lies with Venezuela.
Especially since its a huge tropical country and Cubans are explicitly helping them with collective farming.
Has anyone researched it?
this is from last summer but my understanding is that the basic situation it describes--serious, genuine shortages of staples, but not necessarily of calories as a whole--is still pretty much what's going on
in any case, if that's true, then 2016 stands as an exceptional year of food crisis in Venezuela, given the stable 2015 figure in thirdplace's link
worth mentioning also: in 2009, 3/4 of the population of india couldn't afford 2200 calories/day. this was not an exceptional year, but rather part of a longer-term worsening trend that to my knowledge hasn't reversed. the difference is, is they're nice to billionaires
mediumpig posted:I had a conversation with a friend online about Venezuela that ended with him thinking I accused him of hating the poor (I wasn't) and that I wasn't calm (I was). He also won't admit any sources critical of the western narrative because they are socialist, and biased. So I guess we are kind of at an impasse.
You would say this because ur a commie. Im with your friend on this one
mediumpig posted:I had a conversation with a friend online about Venezuela that ended with him thinking I accused him of hating the poor (I wasn't) and that I wasn't calm (I was). He also won't admit any sources critical of the western narrative because they are socialist, and biased. So I guess we are kind of at an impasse.
did you try telling him that you were calmer than he was?
To the point, I guess his point was that Maduro and anyone in government that oversaw the crisis should never hold office again. I explained that the oil crash would have ravaged the country no matter who was in power, to which he said currency and price controls made it worse. Which I might agree with, but I don't get why that means Maduro and his government are unfit to rule.