America Shouldn't Rescue Socialist Venezuela
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS -- Here we go again. Yet another country full of voters who foolishly 
bought into the socialist pipe dream of endless nanny-state freebies is noticing 
the check coming due. Facing hyperinflation and shortages of necessities like 
toilet paper, Venezuelans are spilling into the streets, pleading for Captain 
America to rescue them from their own chronically poor voting choices. Sorry, 
amigos, but it's not America's problem.
Venezuelan voters aren't victims; they're accomplices to their own predicament. 
With Venezuela now only America's fourth-largest supplier of oil behind Canada, 
Mexico and Saudi Arabia, economic intervention no longer represents any 
significant benefit to the United States -- particularly when North America is 
soon to be energy-independent. The U.S. needs to stay out of it and let 
Venezuelans solve problems of their own creation. It's the only way that 
socialists will ever learn -- even if they apparently have to keep repeating the 
same mistake over and over. Eventually, the child might stop putting his hand on 
the stove.
So how did Venezuela get to this point? How did this oasis of socialism manage 
to rank dead last out of 152 countries in a recent global economic freedom 
report by Canadian think tank the Fraser Institute, behind such beacons of 
excellence as Myanmar and the Republic of Congo? Let's start with the Venezuelan 
government mandating private-sector sales of reduced-priced goods in order to 
give people more of what they want for next to nothing. The producers of 
necessities like milk, cooking oil and toilet paper can't afford to function for 
free, so shortages have become a major problem. It's a classic case study of 
socialism in action -- the translation of ideology from whimsical abstraction to 
tangible reality.
Voting is serious business. It isn't like picking out a shirt at a store with a 
good return policy. This is especially true when the elected party can deploy 
the military within the country and bend the rule of law as it sees fit. Which 
is perhaps why Venezuelans should have collectively given the matter a bit more 
thought before electing President Nicolas Maduro last April.
Maduro is a former bus driver who spearheaded union agitation and became the 
willing recipient of a benedictory butt slap from his socialist predecessor, 
Hugo Chavez. That support from Chavez gave Maduro the edge over his centrist, 
free-market opponent, lawyer Henrique Capriles. The election was a golden 
opportunity that could have led to greater U.S. foreign direct investment and 
freer markets, and Venezuelan voters totally blew it.
Chavez, elected president in 1998 after leading an unsuccessful military coup in 
1992 and supporting another coup later the same year, won public support despite 
initial voter skepticism by offering -- you guessed it -- freebies. As noted by 
the Venezuelan newspaper El Universal shortly after Chavez was elected: "In a 
very hard year due to economic troubles, low oil prices, a prevailing 
anti-political trend and loss of prestige of political parties, (Chavez) managed 
to go up in the polls. He climbed little by little and his speech filled with 
promises won followers, particularly the downtrodden."
The winning formula for a presidential election in Venezuela consists of various 
permutations of the following elements: (1) emotional manipulation; (2) 
retroactively co-opting as a socialist Latin American independence leader Simon 
Bolivar, who died 184 years ago; and (3) free stuff. What could possibly defeat 
that? Logic and realism?
There's still hope, however. Maybe the Chinese can bail out Venezuela with some 
foreign investments and joint ventures, since they're swimming in cash. That 
tends to happen when your domestic workforce will produce for next to nothing. 
(Bonus: The friction that's sure to result when Venezuelan union activists 
encounter Chinese labor standards could prove highly entertaining to the rest of 
us.)
Even in the absence of direct intervention, the situation in Venezuela is still 
likely to become America's problem, one way or another. After chronically voting 
for presidential-freebie candidates, the next step for many Venezuelans will be 
to bail out of the country now that socialism has proven to be an abysmal 
failure, again. Venezuelan immigration to the United States had already risen 
dramatically during the Chavez presidency, and now that it's become a struggle 
to obtain basic necessities, we're likely to see an even larger wave of 
Venezuelan immigrants.
One can only hope that they and other new Americans have checked any socialist 
delusions at the point of entry into America -- although Hispanic support for 
America's own freebie candidate, President Barack Obama, in two consecutive 
elections strongly suggests otherwise.
COPYRIGHT 2014 RACHEL MARSDEN