[Abel-tasman] Ashley Madison guarantees you will sleep with a
married woman
Ashley Madison Affiliate
AshleyMadisonAffiliate at scolopes.com
Fri Mar 7 03:09:05 CET 2014
Ashley Madison guarantees you will sleep with a married woman
http://www.scolopes.com/l/lt7DSPYOE4482TK167D/538Y1374UJ3571AHN10PVW62883642NIAWLY1541076179
Unsub- http://www.scolopes.com/l/lc8PFXEYQ4482TF167M/538M1374ED3571QBP10TAL62883642FCUSRR1541076179
ch everywhere but Caracas, the capital. Worsening power
outages, crumbling infrastructure and other unfulfilled promises witnessed
this week in a trip through the country's industrial heartland could be
an important factor in Sunday's election to replace socialist President
Hugo Chavez, who died last month after a long battle with cancer.His
political heir, Nicolas Maduro, is favored to win, largely on the strength
of Chavez's generous anti-poverty programs, which Chavez emphasized over
public works with one big exception: housing.But polls show that support
may be eroding and the outages are a testament to the neglect
many Venezuelans consider inexcusable in this major oil-producing state.
Violent crime, double-digit inflation, official corruption and persistent
food shortages are other factors.Some of the rolling, intermittent blackouts
are still scheduled. But most are no longer announced. They generally last
three to four hours a day on average, said Miguel Lara, who
ran the power grid until Chavez forced him out in 2004 for
being "a political risk."Jose Aguilar, a U.S.-based consultant with extensive
and more recent experience in Venezuela's electrical industry, says it is
suffering "a downward spiral of deterioration." Insufficient transmission
lines are running so hot that 20,000 distribution transformers burned out
last year, he said. "They run them cherry red."Electrical substations are
in a precarious state, Aguilar and Lara s
l on Sunday.Land invasions are nothing new
in Venezuela. What's different now is that people are invading valuable
properties in city centers.All the squatting riles Rosa Contrera, a 57-year-old
housewife who walked past the invaders, shaking her head. The day before,
people from the apartment block adjacent to hers attacked the invaders with
Molotov cocktails."This is what Chavismo has created: people who expect
handouts," said Contrera, a Capriles supporter. "A country doesn't advance
with that mentality."The government says Venezuela's poverty rate dropped
from more than 50 percent to 21 percent under Chavez's leadership, though
there is still plenty of misery.Lake Valencia has been rising few feet
a year and swallowed up Antonio Rojas' home last year."We filled out
all the forms but in the end we didn't get a house,"
said the wiry 67-year-old, who works at a nursery earning the equivalent
of $17 a day at the official exchange rate and $5 on
the black market.At a squatter's settlement outside Tacarigua, a town on
Valencia's southern outskirts built around a sugar cane mill, Rojas and
his wife share a dirt-floor, aluminum shack with their 7-year-old son, Gregorio.
The boy doesn't go to school because there are none nearby.They have
neither water nor sewage service. Dirty dishes are piled on a kitchen
table. Burned garbage litters the yard.When a reporter visited, the family
hadn't had power for a week. They siphon it off a nearby
tr
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://post.in-mind.de/pipermail/abel-tasman/attachments/20140306/78d97ff4/attachment.htm
More information about the Abel-tasman
mailing list