Sunday, January 1, 2017

A Nation Divided

These are desperate times in Caracas, Venezuela. This nation is divided due to the excessive amounts of brute force, sheer destruction, and limited amounts of freedom and understanding towards the residents of the country. With this rising in conflict it is hard to ignore the turmoil these people endeavor. With the dismissal of their economic crises by the local governing bodies, those who have since been deemed terrorists, are only getting more and more hostile because their cries and pleas for help go unnoticed by the people they put the utmost faith into. These hostile protests break out in the streets of Caracas, making it an extremely hazardous place to even walk around in.

An extreme amount of loss floods this entire conflict. Gunshots can be heard daily, resulting in the loss of "roughly about 350 deaths monthly", which, put into perspective by Alex Miller of VICE News as he follows the violent and angry protests, that in London, there were only 99 deaths in the past year. These people cry out for the right to be free, to not live under the oppressive thumb of their newly appointed President. They long for a country that is not divided and to be able to have their requests for a more understanding and equal-standing government not be belittled. These feelings of isolation from the Venezuelan government are rife with tension. Those who protest seem to have drifted away from the apparent manipulative ways of their own bastion.

With the level of disagreement between these two sides, it seems like this is truly a division of preposterous amounts. With every civil conflict, such as this, there is undoubtedly destruction and death for many. With death and destruction, come guilt and despair. Why wasn't it me? What could I have done to prevent this? Where was I when this happened? Where were you? Why didn't you help them? Why didn't you help me? These are just a collective amount of a hundreds of questions that are asked during these tragic events. The only way to silence the gunfire and the cries of those in need of help the most is more open-mindedness and consideration. Those surely go farther than anyone can expect.

2 comments:

  1. If you read into Moduro's predecessor, Victor Chavez, you will find that he was just as corrupt as him.

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    1. True, but it seems the country is more divided now than it ever was.

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