CRISIS No food, no teachers, violence in failing Venezuela schools

Melodi

Disaster Cat
I am posting this one on its own because it shows just how dire the situation is for many children and teens and to show that many people there are actually starting to starve; no food in school and no food at home, plus robberies occuring inside the school, cafeterias attacked and staff murdered for food etc, etc - again my point has been that yes "socialism" may have made this worse but this was always a risk if the oil money ran out - also the crises just keeps going on and on - Melodi

No food, no teachers, violence in failing Venezuela schools

By HANNAH DREIER
Associated Press
No Food, No Teachers, Venezuela Schools in Chaos
AP

CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) -- Maria Arias slipped her notebooks into her backpack, scrounged for a banana to share with her brother and sister, and set off for high school through narrow streets so violent taxis will not come here for any price. She hoped at least one of her teachers would show up.

But her 7 a.m. art class was canceled when the instructor called in sick. History class was suspended. There was no gym class because the coach had been shot dead weeks earlier. And in the afternoon, her Spanish teacher collected homework and then sent the students home to meet a gang-imposed curfew.

"It's a trap," the slight 14-year-old with pink lipstick complained as she sat in the shade of a picked-over mango tree at the school's entrance. "You risk your life to be here and end up waiting around for hours doing nothing. But you have to keep coming because it's the only way out."

The soaring crime and economic chaos stalking Venezuela is also ripping apart a once up-and-coming school system, robbing poor students such as Maria of a chance at a better life. Officially, Venezuela has canceled 16 school days since December, including Friday classes because of an energy crisis.

In reality, Venezuelan children have missed an average of 40 percent of class time, a parent group estimates, as a third of teachers skip work on any given day to wait in food lines. At Maria's school, so many students have fainted from hunger that administrators told parents to keep their children home if they have no food. And while the school locks its gate each morning, armed robbers, often teens themselves, still manage to break in and stick up kids between classes.

"This country has abandoned its children. By the time we see the full consequences, there will be no way to put it right," Movement of Organized Parents spokeswoman Adelba Taffin said.

Venezuela is a young nation, with more than a third of the population under age 15, and until recently its schools were among the best in South America. The late President Hugo Chavez made education a centerpiece of his socialist revolution, using the riches from a historic boom in the price of oil to train teachers and distribute free laptops. The government even renovated Maria's 1,700-student school and installed a new cafeteria.

In just a few years, all of that progress has been undone. A fall in the price of oil combined with years of economic mismanagement has brought the country to its knees, along with many of its 7 million public school students. The annual dropout rate has doubled, more than a quarter of teenagers are not enrolled, and classrooms are understaffed as professionals flee the country.

Maria's school sits between a slum and what was once a middle-class neighborhood in the capital, Caracas. There is even less food, water and electricity outside Caracas, where schools shut down for weeks at a time.

Chatty and so studious that her classmates call her "Wikipedia," Maria started the year with dreams of becoming an accountant and moving to Paris. Her parents had saved up to buy her 12 new notebooks, one for each subject. Nine months later, most of the pages are still blank.

Maria has a two-hour free period instead of English. Her sister isn't being taught math.

Her accounting teacher recently went missing for a week and a half. When she returned one afternoon, teacher Betty Cubillan limited herself to correcting homework. Maria used a friend's phone as a calculator to try to figure out why her answers had too many zeros, while her classmates lay with their heads on their desks.

Cubillan says she comes to class as much as she can while hustling to get by on $30 a month.

"If I don't line up, I don't eat. Who's going to do it for me?" Cubil
lan said.

As many as 40 percent of teachers skip class on any given day to wait in food lines that snake through Caracas like spider veins, according to the Venezuela Teacher's Federation. School director Helena Porras has asked nearby supermarkets to let teachers cut in line. And she's disciplined staff for selling students passing grades in exchange for scarce goods like milk and flour.

But appeals to a teacher's sense of shame don't go far in a country that is now among the most violent and lawless in the world.

Maria has seen robberies, lootings and lynch mobs on her way to school. One day, she held her breath on the bus as a man jabbed a gun into the neck of the woman next to her and stole a wedding ring. Another time, she broke into a run toward the school as vigilantes pressed in on an accused thief lying bloodied on the ground.

The locked metal gate at the school's sole entrance makes the cavernous building feel like a prison, but students seem glad for the extra protection. One recent afternoon, dozens of kids waited patiently to get out. No one could find the worker with the key.

Robbers still find ways in, though, and students are quick to give each other up, pointing to friends who have valuables to shift attention from themselves. Maria was held up once by a boy so baby-faced that she assumed he was her 15-year-old sister's classmate. He leveled a gun at her sister's ribs and demanded the girls' phones.

Even the other students can be dangerous. One day a boy doused a classroom with a container of gas, planning to burn down the building. The smell was so strong that Maria was dizzy. Her mind went to the locked gate.

"I'm scared every day. Your heart leaps into your throat and you're like, 'Jeez, I thought a school was supposed to be safe,'" she said.

Maria's school looks less like a place of education than a downtown bus terminal; grimy, smelling of urine, and full of people waiting for something that may not come.

Classrooms with puddles are used as emergency toilets now that the bathrooms have no running water. Students play dice on the cracked asphalt of the yard, trading insults and piles of bills. The patio was used for gym class until the teacher was killed in crossfire this spring while working a second job as a barber, one of several teachers slain in the city this year.

Maria's parents worry most about boys; Venezuela now has the highest teen pregnancy rate in South America. The favorite make-out spot for students is behind a pile of 30,000 unopened textbooks that block the auditorium stage. The government delivered the books at the start of the year, but teachers decided they were too full of pro-socialist propaganda to use.

The supplies they really want are not available. In chemistry class, students can't perform experiments because they have no materials. The new cafeteria never opened because there was no food or cooking gas, so Maria and her friends drink water from home instead of eating lunch.

"When I was in school, they gave us lab coats and we experimented on rats," freshman coordinator Rosa Ramirez said. "And they fed us two meals a day."

As food grows scarce, schools have reported dozens of cafeteria robberies. This month, thieves beat a security guard to death at one school so they could make off with the cafeteria's food.

That leaves children with nothing to eat at home or in school. A quarter of Venezuelan children missed class this year because of hunger, according to the national research group Foundation Bengoa.

"I have one student who missed the whole year," earth sciences teacher Berli Jaspe said. "We're going to pass her anyway. It's not these kids' fault the country is falling apart."

Maria's teachers rarely see her on Thursdays, her government-assigned grocery shopping day. One recent morning, her mother asked her to leave art class because a store across town was selling flour.

By the time Maria arrived, the stock already had run out. She raced back to school to make her afternoon math exam. But when she got there, the math teacher hadn't shown up. It was his shopping day, too.

That night, Maria remarked bitterly that the metro is the cheapest thing you can buy in Caracas; if you pay for one ticket and throw yourself in front of a train, all your problems are over.

Parents say they struggle to guide teenagers through situations they find hard to accept themselves.

Maria's classmate Roberly Bernal wanted to drop out after a group of seniors threatened to stab her. Her father began walking her to class every morning to protect her. Then, in April, he was murdered by a mob that accused him of stealing $5.

Now, Roberly is at a loss. Her mother would like her to talk to a therapist, but the school's two counselors retired last year.

Maria's mother Aracelis knows her children's grades have fallen this year, though she isn't sure how much. The school has not had supplies to print up report cards.

"I dropped out my freshman year and it set me back," she said. "Maria goes almost every day, but I don't know if she's doing much better. Venezuela must have done something very terrible to be punished like this."

When the school day ended, Maria put off returning home and lingered in the hall with friends. A classmate showed them a baby sparrow he'd grabbed out of a tree in the yard. "We should eat it," he said.

The girls crowded in, examining the fluffy bird. Maria squealed with delight when it opened its wings. It was the first time she had laughed all day.

---

Hannah Dreier is on Twitter at https://twitter.com/hannahdreier. Her work can be found at http://bigstory.ap.org/content/hannah-dreier

© 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Learn more about our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
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bw

Fringe Ranger
We have snowflakes who have hysterical fits over micro-aggressions. Be interesting to see how they'd deal with the real thing.
 

Cardinal

Chickministrator
_______________
Interesting to see that the econpocalypse is a slow death spiral..even though the country has broken down, "life goes on". It isn't all mad max. It's 'normalcy' with a rumbling belly.
 

robinray649

Contributing Member
You know I read this and the first thing that comes to mind is the idiot ps dog liberal/commycrats want to bring socialism here to us. What does it take to get the point across that socialism DOES NOT WORK. Capitalism may not be the best political system around but it is a hell of a lot better than what I see in other countries.
 

China Connection

TB Fanatic
Venezuela Inflation Rate Forecast 2016-2020
Inflation Rate in Venezuela is expected to be 270.00 percent by the end of this quarter, according to Trading Economics global macro models and analysts expectations. Looking forward, we estimate Inflation Rate in Venezuela to stand at 300.00 in 12 months time. In the long-term, the Venezuela Inflation Rate is projected to trend around 29.00 percent in 2020, according to our econometric models.


venezuela-inflation-cpi-forecast.png


http://www.tradingeconomics.com/venezuela/inflation-cpi/forecast
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
I really-really think one of the main "lessons" of Venezuela in terms of prepping is that a crises can go on and on and on; eventually almost anyone's food is going to run out; and if it doesn't you had better be ready to self ration and look as hungry as everyone else.

When starving school children are still seen as worth robbing because maybe they have a cell phone or teachers give grades based on a child or teens ability to bribe them with milk or flour; anyone who looks even remotely well fed is going to be a target.

And again, while a particular brand of "Chavezmo" "Socialism" was in place when this happened; the real collapse occurred because the nation was so depended on just one export (oil) and when the price for that went to rock bottom, the country fell apart.

This would have happened under the previous "Democratic" governments (I put that in quotes because most of them made the current election cycle in the States look like a children's tea party in terms of open bribery, corruption and "palanca" akaI help you then you are honor bound to help me); if the oil had been allowed to crash and the government of the day refused help from the IMF, the US or the Soviets.

This is not a simple situation, but the results are becoming more simple every day as life devolves into a weird sort of "new normal" where the main goal of everyone is food, getting it, keeping it and consuming it.
 

Countrymouse

Country exile in the city
You know I read this and the first thing that comes to mind is the idiot ps dog liberal/commycrats want to bring socialism here to us. What does it take to get the point across that socialism DOES NOT WORK. Capitalism may not be the best political system around but it is a hell of a lot better than what I see in other countries.

I tried to use Venezuela as an example to show a liberal friend the evils of Socialism, but all she could talk about was how well one of the Scandinavian counties is doing with it--forget whether she said Sweden or Norway (think it was Norway, since Sweden is where the women are getting raped...)
 

Countrymouse

Country exile in the city
Venezuela Inflation Rate Forecast 2016-2020
Inflation Rate in Venezuela is expected to be 270.00 percent by the end of this quarter, according to Trading Economics global macro models and analysts expectations. Looking forward, we estimate Inflation Rate in Venezuela to stand at 300.00 in 12 months time. In the long-term, the Venezuela Inflation Rate is projected to trend around 29.00 percent in 2020, according to our econometric models.


venezuela-inflation-cpi-forecast.png


http://www.tradingeconomics.com/venezuela/inflation-cpi/forecast


I just must be misunderstanding the chart; are the figures (like the "180.0" just before January 2016) NOT the inflation rate?

29% instead--???


Another question---I am NOT a 'math' person---if an inflation rate is 300%, i know that means prices will triple. But does that mean they will triple....annually? monthly? daily? Please clear me up on that.
 

Sub-Zero

Veteran Member
Most people are focusing on this as though Venezuela is completely broke; as though there is no money coming in from oil sales. There is money coming in from oil sales. This is one of the biggest cons out there. The money, although reduced, is going somewhere. Keeping the citizenry in turmoil and fighting each other is the perfect way to divert their attention and allow TPTB to pillage the country.

By the way, coming to this country as some point, too.
 

bw

Fringe Ranger
What does it take to get the point across that socialism DOES NOT WORK. Capitalism may not be the best political system around but it is a hell of a lot better than what I see in other countries.

With all due respect, what does it take to get the point across to reasonable people like you that IT DOES NOT MATTER IF SOCIALISM WORKS? What matters is SOCIALISM GETS VOTES! Socialism will not hesitate for a second to eat its seed corn in order to stay in power. It's more important to rule in a collapsing paradigm than to be a mere participant in a thriving economy.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
Most people are focusing on this as though Venezuela is completely broke; as though there is no money coming in from oil sales. There is money coming in from oil sales. This is one of the biggest cons out there. The money, although reduced, is going somewhere. Keeping the citizenry in turmoil and fighting each other is the perfect way to divert their attention and allow TPTB to pillage the country.

I thought it was like Greece. As I understand it, Venezuela borrowed money based on its oil income that by contract must be paid back in dollars. When the oil prices crashed, it hadn't the dollars to pay the debt. I think it has already lost its gold reserve to the debt. I think what usually happens is that the IMF of whatever, gives them a bridge loan to pay the interest payments on the debt and then demands austerity and the privatization of national assets. The country may try and print money to devalue the currency to pay the debt, but that never works. (Tell the FED with its QE.) It is how Greece, Puerto Rico, Venezuela and others get raped by the 1%/bankers/whomever. . Don't know why they just don't tell the lenders to FO and reset the currency with a regime change and debt jubilee. I think they are afraid of covert war by the US and other elite puppet governments.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Socialism used to work in Sweden because it was a small country with a similar population and a historical world-view that saw things as family first; with the community to step in if family failed - and socialism simply saw the Federal State as an extension of the community.

When we lived there, despite many tax-payer "bennies" most native Swedes would have thought it "rude" to ask for help from the government if they didn't go to their extended family first- there was a strong work ethic and grandparents or parents were simply expected to "sign on" for a young couple's first car, house or even telephone.

There was a tradition of people living in tiny villages in the "big, dark woods" with everyone "banding together against the dark;" so in that particular places (and Finland, Norway and Denmark) Democratic Socialism worked out fairly well until huge numbers of people with none of these traditions were brought in and suddenly were gifted with "the free stuff" without the culture that went with it.

Venezuela's situation is TOTALLY different; they only thing they had in common with the Nordic countries was the belief in extended family as a social safety net and oil fields (Norway); but they also have a traditional corruption, tax evasion on a huge scale, bribery as a way of life, a totally different view of work (when you are a peasant farmer time isn't the same as that for an office worker - and the climate makes working during the afternoon very difficult without modern air conditioning) and centuries where breaking the law was really the only way to get ahead.

Instead of people who culturally expect people to mostly be law abiding and hard working; you have a culture that encourages people to break the law in order to avoid failure and being easy-going as sign of someone who is smarter than most.

"Socialism" in Venezuela therefore was absolutely nothing like the Socialism of the Nordic countries and never could be; then add to that what Marsh pointed out about IMF loans and the usual their world debt issues; that require ever more lending and borrowing to stay going.

That combines with decades (long before Chavez) of tradition where WHOMEVER is in power creams off ANY money coming in for themselves and their friends (that's expected, it is part of Palanca) and you get today's crises.

Basically the US has cut off the gravy train that propped things up and is waiting for the current government to collapse so they can allow the multinationals to rush back in when things fall apart (that's how it has been done in the past, it just hasn't been this bad in a long time; like since the early 20th century).

This time there is no Soviet Union to jump into the breach, Cuba is broke and China is more interested in Africa - if China were interested in South America this story might have a very different outcome.

This isn't just about the evils of socialism; which like most political systems has good and bad points; and takes a certain cultural mindset (which I don't have by the way) to actually work in any sort of fair fashion; it is about what happens when a failed state really-really fails; and has angered the powers that be (especially banks and multinational corporations) beyond repair.
 

kittyknits

Veteran Member
I tried to use Venezuela as an example to show a liberal friend the evils of Socialism, but all she could talk about was how well one of the Scandinavian counties is doing with it--forget whether she said Sweden or Norway (think it was Norway, since Sweden is where the women are getting raped...)

It seems it can work, at least for a time, in a smaller, homogeneous country where people share the same values and goals. I think Sweden was like that. But, of course, things have changed there now.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
It seems it can work, at least for a time, in a smaller, homogeneous country where people share the same values and goals. I think Sweden was like that. But, of course, things have changed there now.
Exactly and I saw the writing on the wall when we lived there over 20 years ago - they started bringing in "refugees" from third and fourth world countries; dumped them in apartment complexes without cultural training and then expected their children would simply grow up to be identikit Swedes because the Swedish way of life was so "wonderful" (which it was if you were born into it, and had the proper connections and understanding of the system and social contract).

It was one reason I encouraged us to move, first out of the apartment complex and later to Ireland which is a bit more socialistic than the US but isn't (and still isn't) as highly controlled or taxes as Sweden is.
 
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