Venezuela should be rich. Instead it’s becoming a failed state
Venezuela troops occupy food distribution warehouses
The move follows months of accusations by President Nicolas Maduro that Polar, the country's largest private employer, is working to sabotage the economy. The company denies this.
Maduro's predecessor Hugo Chavez expropriated several warehouses from Polar, in some cases arguing that the space should be used to build houses for the poor....
"If we don't work, we don't eat," said truck driver Carlos Munoz, a 43-year-old contractor for Polar. He transports food and drink from the site to shops and distributors. "There's no food in Venezuela and now they do this! How are people going to eat?"...
Around 50 people on Thursday rallied outside the complex in support of the measure, chanting, "We want homes." "Many of us here don't have homes. Chavez promised us homes," said Lindomar Nieves, a 37-year-old mechanic holding a Venezuelan flag.
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One cherry-picked example is no proof that a socialist, centrally planned economy is destined to fail. It would be premature to conclude that any socialist aspiring to public office is at best an insensitive joke, at worst a menace and grave threat to the already poor. See comments below for counterexamples of successful planned economies before jumping to conclusions.