• 4 months ago
The tranquility that is breathed in Venezuela a few hours prior to the elections, is another one of the achievements of the Venezuelan people and no, they do not want to lose it. The most difficult years seem to be over in Venezuela. Peace and reactivation, not only economic, mark the path that is not altered even a few hours before the presidential elections.
Transcript
00:00The most difficult years seem to be over in Venezuela.
00:03Peace and reactivation, not only the economic, mark the path that is not altered even a few
00:08hours before the presidential elections.
00:10The tranquility that is breathed in Venezuela a few hours prior to the elections is another
00:15one of the achievements of the Venezuelan people.
00:18And no, they do not want to lose it.
00:21It is gone.
00:22I think we are already used to voting process.
00:24We do our duty.
00:25This is no longer the same as years ago.
00:28Many years ago, when people used to shop impulsively.
00:33Something is going to happen, they used to say.
00:35No, it is something we have already overcome.
00:41Although media pressure for any interference and financial sanctions continue, the reactivation
00:46is evident, and not only the economic one.
00:50Artist Felipe Garcia knows it.
00:51He continues to occupy the spaces with his murals, and the sun is present in his new
00:56works.
00:57It was very difficult at some point, even due to the depressive state that practically
01:06everyone was in.
01:08Today it is not like that.
01:10Today, the results have been coming little by little, little by little, and also with
01:16the hope that this is the way to go.
01:20Even the businessmen are aware.
01:22At the Undercover Sanctions Forum held in April, they revealed an open secret.
01:28The financial coercion measures forced them to look for trade alternatives that represented
01:34up to 30% more costs in raw materials or final products.
01:41That produces inflation and consequently affects all Venezuelans, all consumers.
01:46The sanctions do not really affect politicians.
01:48They have never affected politicians.
01:51Even if it serves for something, time will tell, to strengthen national production, entrepreneurship,
01:57and deepen the patriotic sense of independence that today gives certainty to the people not
02:03to surrender.
02:04There is a greater consumption.
02:09People are consuming.
02:10At this moment, people are happy, and we see that there is flawlessness.
02:14Capital is being moved, and that is what we want.
02:16We continue betting on Venezuela.
02:18And the bet is not only economic.
02:20Although the blockade also affects the cultural industry, and, for example, books cannot be
02:27neither imported or exported, the Venezuela Book Fair was a success, and people went massively.
02:37I have had to see that as if, well, this was my money to do the weekly market.
02:44But I want the book so much that I will solve the food issue.
02:48There is an intention to continue investigating in culture.
02:53And in public activities, the rumba, the gathering, Caracas is refurbished, clean.
02:59La Guaira, the coastal border, probably shows off the beauty of its colonial streets.
03:04The economy is reactivated, yes, but also is the enthusiasm.
03:10Venezuelans walk with their heads held high.
03:13We made it, they seem to say, at every step.
03:17I remember 2017 and 2014 very well.
03:20I remember times when I spent months without leaving the comforts that I had at home.
03:24I will leave my little block because from there might be fire out there.
03:28There might be danger.
03:29Do you know what I mean?
03:31And danger caused by people who do not have very good intentions.
03:35Look how beautifully we are living at this moment.
03:38People working, people reinventing themselves, people building, which is what we have to
03:43aim at keeping it that way and to keep it going forward.
03:46Y en eso hay total acuerdo, ganó la mayoría, Paola Draknik, Telesur, Venezuela.

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