In today’s Wall Street Journal, Kejal Vyas and Carlos Becerra have a brutal, engrossing feature about what happens to a small community in Portuguesa, when the government seizes the assets of a big local employer, and replaces it with nothing.
Baseball_Venezuela

Crisis Puts Little Leaguers’ Big Dreams Cruelly Out of Reach

For kids in Venezuela’s hard-scrabble areas, it used to be the dream: get noticed by a pro scout and leave the barrio behind for the Big Leagues. But try as they might to hang on to the dream, the crisis is wringing the hope out of a new generation of peloteros.

In Buttoned-Down Mérida, Despair Sets Off a Wave of Suicides

Suicides are spreading across Venezuela: the latest iteration of a comprehensive public health crisis. In the Andean state of Mérida, with its more reserved culture, the problem is at its worst.

Sabino Romero, the Chavista Yupka Chieftain Who Turned on the Revolution

Sabino Romero, son of the eponymous indigenous leader murdered in 2013, talks to CC about expropriated lands, State negligence and native employment rates.

Crypto vs. Exchange Controls. Crypto Wins.

The barriers to sending money to people in need in Venezuela seem overwhelming...until you get the hang of Crypto. Then it’s easy.

The Venezuelan Digital Crackdown Gets An Emergency Call From Freedom House

The report, Freedom On The Net, finds the internet mostly doesn’t work in Venezuela. And when it does, you get punished for using it.

The Government Says Guayana’s Floods Are Over, But the Rains Are...

The government has started shutting down the shelters set up in Bolívar, after 3,351 people were displaced by out-of-season flooding along the Orinoco. The thing is, people's homes are still under water, and the actual rainy season just started.

Previous Posts

A Complex Emergency With a Simple Explanation

With Barrio Adentro Mission now handling 96% fewer patients than in its heyday and public hospitals no longer stocking even aspirine, Venezuela is on the verge of a Complex Humanitarian Emergency.

ADIÓS TEODORO

Today, Venezuela lost a giant. Teodoro Petkoff, who died today at the age of 86, morphed from communist guerrilla to conscience of the nation.

Ghoul Nation Part IV: Everything You Wanted to Know About Venezuelan...

Each of the Venezuelan States has its own specific set of idiosyncrasies, their own very distinct way of communicating, eating, living and handling their affairs. Particular ghosts, monsters and creatures roam each region, as an army of dead that remind us of the violence, misery and dispair within each community.

The Radical Plan to Hack Militarism and Democratize Venezuela that Worked

When the leaders who signed the Punto Fijo Pact sat down to draft a governability agreement, they had no blueprint to work from. Behind them stretched 130 years of militarism, instability and chaos. Here's the story of how three men managed to cut the deal that made democracy possible in Venezuela for decades.

Google Takes on Chavista Censorship

These days, if you're a news giant and you need to roll-out a brand new anti-censorship system, you know where you go first.

Read the Comments

Comments are back, but different. We’re actively moderating them, under a new comments policy. It’s going to be way better this way.

Maria Corina Machado Gets a Beating, Maduro’s Credibility a Mauling

When thugs roughed up María Corina Machado in Upata, the regime tried to blame the low level guys who carried out the orders. Let’s see how that’s working out for them.

Bordering Fascism

Yesterday, Brazilians were called to choose between two catastrophes...not surprisingly, what they chose is a catastrophe.

“Like a Futurist Madhouse”: Lorent Saleh Draws a Shocking Portrait of...

In an interview with El Mundo, Lorent Saleh tells the story of the four years he spent behind bars in Venezuela. A dystopian tale that highlights the inhuman treatment that political prisoners are forced to endure in our county.

The Sadness of Coming Back Home on a Plan Vuelta a...

The government copied Pérez Bonalde and named it Plan Vuelta a la Patria. They caused the crisis that forced people to leave and now they offer a free service to get them back to Venezuela. The thing is, this journey is everything but poetic.

La Vida de Nos Makes Venezuelans Make Sense Too

Through an independent project that started years ago, Héctor Torres and Albor Rodríguez reconcile and describe the realities of all Venezuelans, uniting us in our differences.

Gender-Based Political Violence Against María Corina Machado’s Commitment and Resilience

This week, a group of chavistas attacked María Corina Machado and her team in Bolívar State. We know that nothing scares chavistas more than a brilliant, courageous, educated woman who threatens to overthrow a dictatorship with conviction and the power of her ideas of prosperity, peace, democracy and a better future for Venezuelans.
Clap_Indigenous

Indigenous People’s Health and Traditions Threatened by CLAP and Mining

For centuries, Native Venezuelan communities had been able to self-sustain. This has changed, they’ve become increasingly more dependent on the government, and it has brought all kinds of problems for the different indigenous ethnicities of Zulia, Delta Amacuro, Amazonas and Bolívar states.

Maduro Remains in Power Thanks to a Ruthless System

We thought it’d be easier to get rid of him because “Maduro is no Chávez” and yet, five years later, there he is. “How’s he still there?” is the question on everyone's mind. The answer is painfully obvious.

Maduro Takes Important Steps in Social Espionage

Taking a few pages from the Cuban playbook, the Network of Articulation and Sociopolitical Action (Raas), picks up where the Ley Sapo left off. Big Brother and your next-door neighbors are watching.

Underinvestment and Corruption Destroyed the Venezuelan Electric Grid

As blackouts wreak havoc on the country once again, it’s hard to remember that Venezuela once had a stable and functional electric system. There’s nothing that decades of underinvestment and rampant corruption can’t destroy.

Ghoul Nation Part III: Monsters from the Far West

In Western Venezuela, monsters, spirits and ghosts abound. Some of them roam our land to escape oblivion, keep trespassers at bay and communicate with the nature around them and protect it.

Nobody Knows Why Saleh Was Released (But We Can Guess)

Lorent Saleh is a rebel who didn’t need political parties, he fought cops and claimed he’d use snipers. No one backed him up then, and nobody knows why he’s out of jail. Or do we?
Comfort_Refugees

Venezuelan Doctors Sail Away to Help in a Very Political Humanitarian...

12 Venezuelan doctors residing in the United States volunteered for the USNS Comfort’s journey to South America, hoping to help some of their compatriots flooding the region, in a humanitarian mission labeled by the Venezuelan government as a disguised invasion plot.

The Crypto Talk: Why the World Needs Digital Cash

Moisés Naím wrote a piece for El País about the disappearance of physical cash and how cryptocurrencies are challenging our notions of what money is. Alejandro Machado takes on these two complex issues and goes deeper into the discussion.

Rebars and Cement Thieves Destroy What’s Left of Caracas

The Venezuelan crisis affects every sphere of everyday life and it’s not strange that, in a city where there’s less and less of everything, it’s impossible to find construction supplies. The result? Decay and vandalism.
Chacal_Ilich

‘Carlos The Jackal’ Would Use Genocide to Run for President

Some men just want to watch the world burn. Ilich Ramírez, known as Carlos The Jackal, our most bloodthirsty, infamous terrorist has a dream for Venezuela. He sits behind bars, and will never make those dreams come true, but how would Venezuelans react to his offer?

When They Spoke of the Hombre Nuevo, They Meant ‘Child Beggars’

Every day, dozens of children and teenagers roam freely on the streets of Chacao municipality. They form gangs, beg for food or something to sell, steal what they can from shops and rob people. The government, of course, denies this happens so they won’t have to fix it.
Corker_Venezuela

It’s Yet TBD If Senator Corker’s Plans Are a Backchannel or...

The Boston Group and Republicans Bob Corker and Caleb McCarry, among others, have committed to the task of negotiating to solve the Venezuelan crisis, with a little resistance from certain opposition factions. Why? Because there’s no guarantee they won’t make it worse.