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<a href="http://www.speedingup.eu/2279/402/710/4932/8845.12tt33823536AAF1.php"><span style="font-size: large;">Get Noticed Today</span></a><br />
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JT Richards<br />
Managing Director<br />
Who's Who Among Executives and Professionals<br />
<br />
<font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><br />
<br />
To opt out visit this link: http://global.globalregistryonline.com/remove.php or write to: 3635 S. Fort Apache Rd
Suite 200 - 637
Las Vegas, NV 89147</font><br type="_moz" /><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><font color="#FFFFFF">CARACAS, Venezuela One of Venezuela's most-prominent opposition bloggers,
whose English-language musings are a must-read for foreign journalists,
academics and political junkies, is leaving his beat as a chronicler of
the country's socialist revolution.Francisco Toro said that his decision
to cut ties with the Caracas Chronicles blog he co-founded reflects the
stagnation that has overtaken his homeland since former President Hugo Chavez's
death last year and which makes the country less interesting to write
about.When the blog began, in 2002, Chavez was a fast-rising, political
maestro who craftily leveraged the world's largest oil reserves to rally
anti-American sentiment in Latin America and other parts of the developing
world. A decade later, in the hands of his less charismatic successor
Nicolas Maduro, Toro says much of the revolution's influence has waned as
the economy reels from widespread shortages, 50 percent inflation and a
currency crisis."The truth is that like a lot of people I miss
Chavez," Toro, who was also a frequent contributor to the New York
Times, said in a telephone interview from his home in Montreal. "There's
no real hemispheric dimension anymore. Venezuela is so clearly not a model
that any sane person would want to emulate. It's just a local
story of a country gone crazy."The blog's other founder, Chile-based Juan
Cristobal Nagel, says the blog will soon be relaunched with new voices
including more women and
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