Venezuela continues to "progress" into poverty. A repetitive history...

Pete7469

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Mar 23, 2013
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Another example of the results "progressive" policy.

Venezuelan supermarkets are increasingly being targeted by looters as swollen lines and prolonged food shortages spark frustration in the OPEC nation struggling with an economic crisis.

Shoppers routinely spend hours in lines to buy consumer staples ranging from corn flour to laundry soap, turning lines into venues for shoving matches and now more frequent attempts to plunder shops.

Unsurprisingly the people responsible for the deteriorating state of affairs sound just like the moonbat messiah's sycophants in the media.

Several looters were arrested after the fracas, which Perez blamed on "ultra-right-wing sectors of the opposition" seeking to sow violence.

Funny how angry victims of poverty spreading, equal misery regressivism always turn out to be "right wing extremists" no matter what country on the road to failure they're in.



Looting, violence on rise in Venezuela supermarkets...
 
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UN gonna wipe out poverty...

UN summit to approve 15-year blueprint to eradicate poverty
Sep 25,`15 -- World leaders on Friday unanimously approved an ambitious and costly 15-year blueprint to eradicate extreme poverty, combat climate change and address more than a dozen other major global issues.
Presidents, prime ministers and diplomats from the U.N.'s 193 members stood and applauded loudly after General Assembly President Mogens Lykketoft gaveled approval of the development roadmap. Discussions on how to implement the new goals - expected to cost between $3.5 trillion and $5 trillion every year until 2030 - is expected to dominate the three-day summit that will include speeches by U.S. President Barack Obama, China's President Xi Jinping and the leaders of Egypt, India, Iran, Germany, Britain and France. U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told the General Assembly that the test will be implementation, calling for action from all people, everywhere, and high-level political commitment.

The agenda "embodies the aspirations of people everywhere for lives of peace, security and dignity on a healthy planet," Ban said. The goals "are a to-do list for people and planet, and a blueprint for success." The document - called "Transforming our World: The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development" - sets out 17 broad goals and 169 specific targets. Its overarching aims of reducing poverty and inequality and preserving the environment got strong support from Pope Francis who addressed the General Assembly immediately before the summit opened. The non-binding goals will succeed the eight Millennium Development Goals adopted by world leaders 15 years ago.

Despite significant progress, however, the only one achieved before this year was halving the number of people living in extreme poverty, due primarily to economic growth in China. The broad new goals include ensuring "healthy lives," quality education for all, clean water, sanitation and reliable modern energy - and achieving gender equality, making cities safe, reducing inequality within and among countries, and promoting economic growth. Critics say they are too broad, lack accountability and will lead to disenchantment among those in the world most in need of hope. Supporters say there is no choice but to go big in a world of expanding population, growing inequality, dwindling resources and the existential threat from global warming.

Kenya's U.N. Ambassador Macharia Kamau, one of the facilitators of negotiations, insisted in early August when the goals were agreed on by U.N. member states that the $3.5 trillion to $5 trillion needed annually is "not unattainable" because most money will come from domestic resources raised in countries, complemented by international development assistance. But Microsoft co-founder and philanthropist Bill Gates said Thursday that "there's certainly no chance that that amount of money will be available next year," adding that "we'd be doing very well to have anywhere near that amount of money available by 2030." Gates said, however, that if there is new innovation, for instance in nutrition by getting better seeds or a vaccine against tuberculosis, as well as economic growth, "we still think we can meet the goals, even though that specific number will be very, very hard to reach."

News from The Associated Press
 
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UN gonna wipe out poverty...

UN summit to approve 15-year blueprint to eradicate poverty
Sep 25,`15 -- World leaders on Friday unanimously approved an ambitious and costly 15-year blueprint to eradicate extreme poverty, combat climate change and address more than a dozen other major global issues.
Presidents, prime ministers and diplomats from the U.N.'s 193 members stood and applauded loudly after General Assembly President Mogens Lykketoft gaveled approval of the development roadmap. Discussions on how to implement the new goals - expected to cost between $3.5 trillion and $5 trillion every year until 2030 - is expected to dominate the three-day summit that will include speeches by U.S. President Barack Obama, China's President Xi Jinping and the leaders of Egypt, India, Iran, Germany, Britain and France. U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told the General Assembly that the test will be implementation, calling for action from all people, everywhere, and high-level political commitment.

The agenda "embodies the aspirations of people everywhere for lives of peace, security and dignity on a healthy planet," Ban said. The goals "are a to-do list for people and planet, and a blueprint for success." The document - called "Transforming our World: The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development" - sets out 17 broad goals and 169 specific targets. Its overarching aims of reducing poverty and inequality and preserving the environment got strong support from Pope Francis who addressed the General Assembly immediately before the summit opened. The non-binding goals will succeed the eight Millennium Development Goals adopted by world leaders 15 years ago.

Despite significant progress, however, the only one achieved before this year was halving the number of people living in extreme poverty, due primarily to economic growth in China. The broad new goals include ensuring "healthy lives," quality education for all, clean water, sanitation and reliable modern energy - and achieving gender equality, making cities safe, reducing inequality within and among countries, and promoting economic growth. Critics say they are too broad, lack accountability and will lead to disenchantment among those in the world most in need of hope. Supporters say there is no choice but to go big in a world of expanding population, growing inequality, dwindling resources and the existential threat from global warming.

Kenya's U.N. Ambassador Macharia Kamau, one of the facilitators of negotiations, insisted in early August when the goals were agreed on by U.N. member states that the $3.5 trillion to $5 trillion needed annually is "not unattainable" because most money will come from domestic resources raised in countries, complemented by international development assistance. But Microsoft co-founder and philanthropist Bill Gates said Thursday that "there's certainly no chance that that amount of money will be available next year," adding that "we'd be doing very well to have anywhere near that amount of money available by 2030." Gates said, however, that if there is new innovation, for instance in nutrition by getting better seeds or a vaccine against tuberculosis, as well as economic growth, "we still think we can meet the goals, even though that specific number will be very, very hard to reach."

News from The Associated Press

If the UN gets involved the whole world is fucked.


 
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and if anyone wants to know what its like living in Venezuela, take a vacation in Oakland California,,,but bring your own weapons.


You should be ashamed for comparing Caracas to that hell hole. There are police in Caracas.

Not really good ones though...

Oh yeah and if you go to Caracas bring your own toilet paper too. Bring extra, you can make some money.





 
maybe U2 needs to do a major concert in Venz, like they were doing in 1985 for aids,,,,but what do u call a concert to bring in 4 trillion rolls of TP to the resident of Venuzuela?
 
well if there is no toilet paper in venuzuela, what do they use? Yesterdays newspapers and ferrets?
The same thing our ancestors used...what evah you could find...
you mean leaves and your left hand?
If that's all you gotz...the shitting is more important than the aftermath....
i wonder what cavemen did? make thier hildabeast wives do all of the wiping?
 
well if there is no toilet paper in venuzuela, what do they use? Yesterdays newspapers and ferrets?
The same thing our ancestors used...what evah you could find...
if the TP crisis gets any worse, its going to resemble that Brown Noise episode of South Park.

Heheh....The time I spent in the Army, when you are in the field and have no shit tickets, you are fucked....
well at least the 789 Quardrillion flies in South America wont go starving.
 
well if there is no toilet paper in venuzuela, what do they use? Yesterdays newspapers and ferrets?
The same thing our ancestors used...what evah you could find...
if the TP crisis gets any worse, its going to resemble that Brown Noise episode of South Park.

Heheh....The time I spent in the Army, when you are in the field and have no shit tickets, you are fucked....
well at least the 789 Quardrillion flies in South America wont go starving.
Gotta support the cycle of life...I am more worried about guys trying to eat out women...
 
UN gonna wipe out poverty...

UN summit to approve 15-year blueprint to eradicate poverty
Sep 25,`15 -- World leaders on Friday unanimously approved an ambitious and costly 15-year blueprint to eradicate extreme poverty, combat climate change and address more than a dozen other major global issues.
Presidents, prime ministers and diplomats from the U.N.'s 193 members stood and applauded loudly after General Assembly President Mogens Lykketoft gaveled approval of the development roadmap. Discussions on how to implement the new goals - expected to cost between $3.5 trillion and $5 trillion every year until 2030 - is expected to dominate the three-day summit that will include speeches by U.S. President Barack Obama, China's President Xi Jinping and the leaders of Egypt, India, Iran, Germany, Britain and France. U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told the General Assembly that the test will be implementation, calling for action from all people, everywhere, and high-level political commitment.

The agenda "embodies the aspirations of people everywhere for lives of peace, security and dignity on a healthy planet," Ban said. The goals "are a to-do list for people and planet, and a blueprint for success." The document - called "Transforming our World: The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development" - sets out 17 broad goals and 169 specific targets. Its overarching aims of reducing poverty and inequality and preserving the environment got strong support from Pope Francis who addressed the General Assembly immediately before the summit opened. The non-binding goals will succeed the eight Millennium Development Goals adopted by world leaders 15 years ago.

Despite significant progress, however, the only one achieved before this year was halving the number of people living in extreme poverty, due primarily to economic growth in China. The broad new goals include ensuring "healthy lives," quality education for all, clean water, sanitation and reliable modern energy - and achieving gender equality, making cities safe, reducing inequality within and among countries, and promoting economic growth. Critics say they are too broad, lack accountability and will lead to disenchantment among those in the world most in need of hope. Supporters say there is no choice but to go big in a world of expanding population, growing inequality, dwindling resources and the existential threat from global warming.

Kenya's U.N. Ambassador Macharia Kamau, one of the facilitators of negotiations, insisted in early August when the goals were agreed on by U.N. member states that the $3.5 trillion to $5 trillion needed annually is "not unattainable" because most money will come from domestic resources raised in countries, complemented by international development assistance. But Microsoft co-founder and philanthropist Bill Gates said Thursday that "there's certainly no chance that that amount of money will be available next year," adding that "we'd be doing very well to have anywhere near that amount of money available by 2030." Gates said, however, that if there is new innovation, for instance in nutrition by getting better seeds or a vaccine against tuberculosis, as well as economic growth, "we still think we can meet the goals, even though that specific number will be very, very hard to reach."

News from The Associated Press

Good thing the USA has had a 50 Year War on Poverty. They can learn from us
 
well if there is no toilet paper in venuzuela, what do they use? Yesterdays newspapers and ferrets?
The same thing our ancestors used...what evah you could find...
if the TP crisis gets any worse, its going to resemble that Brown Noise episode of South Park.

Heheh....The time I spent in the Army, when you are in the field and have no shit tickets, you are fucked....
well at least the 789 Quardrillion flies in South America wont go starving.
Gotta support the cycle of life...I am more worried about guys trying to eat out women...
 
well if there is no toilet paper in venuzuela, what do they use? Yesterdays newspapers and ferrets?
The same thing our ancestors used...what evah you could find...
if the TP crisis gets any worse, its going to resemble that Brown Noise episode of South Park.

Heheh....The time I spent in the Army, when you are in the field and have no shit tickets, you are fucked....
well at least the 789 Quardrillion flies in South America wont go starving.
Gotta support the cycle of life...I am more worried about guys trying to eat out women...
well hey, all those farms in Californa need compost manure,,,maybe they can work out a deal with Venuzuela.
 

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