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Here’s What It’s Like in Venezuela After the Stolen Election

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By Daniela Gonzalez

OK, finally, all hell’s broken loose.

I won’t give more details about what exactly happened with the efforts of the guys trying to hold onto their cards castle.

They couldn’t keep the gates closed, and the Patriotic Army of Venezuelans was coming their way.

This being said, a lot of rumors have been in place.

The situation became increasingly tense, but the election process itself was flawless. We all know the result, and even the lefties on the street accepted it.

But it was the chief gang who would never accept it.

Now, with the consequences.

The logical turmoil resulted in all the videos you’ve seen everywhere and registered for posterity on many social media.

While writing this, we (the family group) are hunkered down at home and have enough gas, camping stoves with 10 liters of fuel, and even firewood (just in case) to keep cooking for more than a month. No need to risk our integrity heading outside.

We’ve been leaving a couple of times to fetch some groceries.

The supermarkets are facing a situation: they’re running out of fresh products. Mainly beef (we eat a lot of meat in this family).

I will add an important note here.

We already lived through something like this before. As medical care personnel, my family was mostly busy, with money most of the time, while the crisis lasted. We do have private practice, too, and with the migration, many vacancies opened. Public hospitals have now a chronic lack of supplies and doctors.

For us, this sequence of events couldn’t happen at a “better moment”. My family finances were in their worst shape ever. Our food storage was at a shameful minimum (will make a list of this), our vehicle was disabled, and no pantry.

On the other side, the benefits of having a group are huge. My surroundings mean there are no surprises, even if there is an imminent threat. My family is well-guarded and safe. We don’t have small kids at home, which is a relief. We take care of each other and can live in groups of three or more. I knew that staying put was the right approach.

We debated a little bit about this, but our resources are meager. We can’t hold it up because we know how fast a food pantry is depleted. In our “trips” that were a survival drill mixed with a little bit of camping and hiking, we learned a lot about this.

Why did we decide to stay put?

People are randomly detained on the streets in the cities with major turmoils, and they could start doing that in this middle/upper-class subdivision just to collect some bribe money. Which I don’t have, means that any attempt would put me in a very bad position.

In the social media groups of the subdivisions, the losing gang threatens their neighbors. Go figure.

When someone commanding a gang of guys with guns threatens with a bloodbath, the best you can do is hunker down. No matter where you are, this is good advice. Unless you’re way better armed, trained, and outnumbering the threat, you should hunker down.

Even Dr. Azpurua, one of the stronger (and academically prepared) authors acknowledges it:

Translation:

Now that the USA formally declared González Urrutia as the legitimate president of Venezuela, there is no excuse for his first act of government not to be an executive measure to authorize the DEA to carry out the arrest warrants issued by Interpol and begin to clean the national territory. . Until that happens, all Venezuelans must protect themselves from street fire.

Oh, and just for the record, the word in the street says this is Wagner’s “operatives.”

Translation:

This is how militarized the center of Caracas looks, in the vicinity of Miraflores. Maduro fears that they will celebrate Chávez’s birthday.

Already in Caracas. A couple of hours by plane away from the US. No bueno.

Other than the emotional aspect being overwhelmingly disappointed, I have managed to keep my balance under control. 

It’s out of control here.

I was monitoring the news last night. The repressive forces in other cities are completely out of control. For some reason (this has always been one of their preferred lands to keep under control), I haven’t heard or seen any violent activity personally. But as things are going, this could change fast. Too much turbulency and unpredictable moves can start in a blink.

This is our most major happening in 70 years and a lot of turmoil is being generated.

As far as I can see…the only ones being left alone are the gangsters. What is called “serious” crime in Venezuela?

Guys in their early 20s (very few of them make it past 35) armed to the teeth and sniffing substances since they were kids, grew up in the streets, and never had a chance to leave.

The reason?

One, they have serious firepower. The other one may be related to mutual symbiosis. There is nothing new to dig into.

All corporationss have deep ties within all sorts of crimes.

It is even hard to write. My eyes are in tears. Not because of the gas, but thinking of the mothers of those dragged to jail because of posting on X.com too openly, being with a sign that says “Edmundo is the winner”…or even being in the wrong place at the wrong time.

Right now our bugout plan is not viable: two cars with grown men, women, and supplies will be an easy target for any patrol.

This is a mess. In the apartment buildings nearby, snitches got wild, reporting the innocent neighbors only because of celebrating the actual president’s victory.

We plan to leave early in the morning if there is a chance.

We believe that very soon they will cut the power to go after Maria C. Machado without people knowing it. They can’t afford the risk of everybody filming out in the open how they kidnap and very probably kill her team.

You can see now what we are facing: a gang of soul-less murderers.

There is a general feeling of danger EVERYWHERE, even if the city and the area are calmed down. A truck making the exhaust explode loudly almost gives a heart attack to the people around.

Black pickup trucks without license plates, filled up with masked and armed guys in black uniforms, roam the streets of Caracas and all the major cities.

But the most maddening scenario is the regular barrio people still supporting the bus driver gang.

They would slit their families or children’s throats before acknowledging the victory of the so-called “right-wing candidate,” as these psychos want to put it. It’s a “scam” for them. They will stomp on any legality and crush anyone opposing their narrative. This is not your standard fanatic who will get mad over a “political” discussion. It is people who will sell you to the illegal armed cops without hesitating just because they hate being defeated within the terms of fair play.

Even after the fraud has been exposed over and over and every day it is more and more evident that our president is being acknowledged by more countries, they won’t stop calling the bus driver with the position in the government he already doesn’t have.

It is a dictatorship here. Even the major world media outlets are openly expressing this.

Now let’s describe the atmosphere.

There is what can only be described as a tense calm.

The stories around are awful. One of the volunteers signing the acts was an elder lady. Not far from where we live. The responsible team of supposed policemen dragged her out of her home in underwear to “arrest her,” and she suffered a fatal stroke in the cell they threw her into. Now, she leaves behind a grandkid like 12 or 13. It’s doubtful that regular police work this way by accusing people who only signed up an act in an election process.

This is a nightmare we never saw coming. Word in social media and the streets is that a foreign intervention is unlikely. However, with the psy-ops labs working 24/7, we can’t confirm nor deny this. The mechanisms are there, but sadly, our two neighboring countries are governed by a part of the same gang: Lula and Petro, and they will block any attempt to send the UN troops.

Because that will expose the ugly, nasty truth: they are supporting fraud and war crimes against the Venezuelan people.

The presence of Cuban troopers within the Venezuelan Armed Forces is not a secret. Many serious journalists already alerted about this years ago, and that is highly relevant right now.

The psychological operation of terrorism is marching on full speed ahead.

Lord have mercy.

We are not Ukrainians. We were never subject to so much violence and aggression. The corps in the streets kidnapping people are incredibly soulless.

We are medical personnel, but we’re not safe, either. In the worst of the demonstrations, we were also attacked for taking care of the wounded.

Please support those you may know in our country. Many of our countrymen’s income sources are seriously compromised because they can’t work normally. Even business owners, like restaurants, cafes, and bakeries, are struggling: people don’t eat outside because anything could happen.

Thanks for your reading, and as soon as the request for International help (it should come sooner or later) is made public, we rely on you to spread it and liberate the country of those unhinged psychos.

About Daniela

Daniela Gonzalez is a student of history at the Universidad Central de Venezuela in Caracas.



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