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�Erre Tres�

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Jul 2, 2009, 9:19:15 AM7/2/09
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Micheletti se aferra al poder mientras Zelaya suma apoyos en el exterior

http://www.abc.es/20090702/internacional-internacional/parlamento-hondureno-restringe-libertades-200907020356.html

(...) "Mientras tanto el nuevo Gobierno conf�a en que, con "la fe en Dios",
lograr� el reconocimiento internacional para "subsistir", a pesar de que el
depuesto presidente sigue sumando apoyos en el exterior". (...)
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||

Yo creo que Micheletti piensa que le parla el deus opusdiano y que le
susurra en sue�os jac�bicos: 'David, mi peque�o saltamontes, mant�nte firme
contra el Goliath de Teutonia, Euronia y Kenyonia. Yo te elevar� a las
alturas celestiales magnas y ya ver�s c�mo te sentar�, orondo, a mi banquete
op�paro, junto a mis ap�stoles rechonchos'.

Aunque yo no apruebo del todo ciertas acciones de 'bigotito' Zelaya, me
place much�simo menos el �talo 'cochino' [s�, cerdo, marrano, tunco, etc]
Bobby Micheletti. El primero, al menos en principio, apela por los m�s
necesitados, y algo ha hecho ya para aliviar algunas situaciones de los que
no tienen voz con $$$; el segundo, en cambio, utiliza toda su hipocres�a y
cinismo -en cuenta el catolisismo y otros ismos variados en los que cabe el
franquismo- para nombrarse 'valiente' caballero andante, defensor de la
democracia pur�sima y protector cancerb�rico de la Santa Constituci�n [s�,
�sa, la que conviene y calza al dedillo a la �lite criolla local, toda una
Cenicienta c�mica].

Curiosa comedia la que se est� dando en un peque�o pa�s de cuyo nombre no
quieren recordarse los Se�ores de la Burbuja.

r3


tschmidtundert

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Jul 2, 2009, 10:15:34 AM7/2/09
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On Jul 2, 7:19 am, "³Erre Tres³" <cangurofe...@terrafelix.net> wrote:
> Micheletti se aferra al poder mientras Zelaya suma apoyos en el exterior
>
> http://www.abc.es/20090702/internacional-internacional/parlamento-hon...
>
> (...) "Mientras tanto el nuevo Gobierno confía en que, con "la fe en Dios",
> logrará el reconocimiento internacional para "subsistir", a pesar de que el

> depuesto presidente sigue sumando apoyos en el exterior". (...)
> |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||­|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||­||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
>
> Yo creo que Micheletti piensa que le parla el deus opusdiano y que le
> susurra en sueños jacóbicos: 'David, mi pequeño saltamontes, manténte firme
> contra el Goliath de Teutonia, Euronia y Kenyonia. Yo te elevaré a las
> alturas celestiales magnas y ya verás cómo te sentaré, orondo, a mi banquete
> opíparo, junto a mis apóstoles rechonchos'.

>
> Aunque yo no apruebo del todo ciertas acciones de 'bigotito' Zelaya, me
> place muchísimo menos el ítalo 'cochino' [sí, cerdo, marrano, tunco, etc]
> Bobby Micheletti. El primero, al menos en principio, apela por los más

> necesitados, y algo ha hecho ya para aliviar algunas situaciones de los que
> no tienen voz con $$$; el segundo, en cambio, utiliza toda su hipocresía y

> cinismo -en cuenta el catolisismo y otros ismos variados en los que cabe el
> franquismo- para nombrarse 'valiente' caballero andante, defensor de la
> democracia purísima y protector cancerbérico de la Santa Constitución [sí,
> ésa, la que conviene y calza al dedillo a la élite criolla local, toda una
> Cenicienta cómica].
>
> Curiosa comedia la que se está dando en un pequeño país de cuyo nombre no
> quieren recordarse los Señores de la Burbuja.
>
> r3

El Opus Dei es amigo del Cardenal hondureño que tuvo problemas con
Chavez y creo que el se lleva bien con ellos también. Pero creo que el
Cardenal no se ha rebajado a hacerse miembro del Opus, algo que sí han
hecho cardenales de Venezuela. (ser del Opus te obliga a obedecer sus
mandatos, son como los masones).
Por cierto que Hugo le pidió perdón al cardenal hondureño y parece que
se llevan mas o menos bien. Al que veo sospechoso en asuntos de
religión es a Zelaya; por regla general los evangélicos
centroamericanos son de extrema derecha. Han habido curas
guerrilleros, pero los evangélicos no han sacado ni un solo ministro
guerrillero. Posiblemente porque el gobierno gringo utiliza los
misioneros como espías.

T.Schmidt

Petry Petry

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Jul 2, 2009, 10:40:31 AM7/2/09
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TODAY'S NEWSPAPER

washingtonpost.com  > Opinions
Honduras's Coup Is President ZCOMMEN
 Discussion Policy
.
WHO'S BLOGGING
» Links to this article
By Alvaro Vargas Llosa

Wednesday, July 1, 2009; 5:49 PM
Any time a bunch of soldiers break into a presidential palace, pick up
the president and put him on a flight to exile, as happened in Honduras
last Sunday, you have a "coup." But, unlike most coup targets in Latin
America's tortuous republican history, Honduras's deposed president,
Manuel Zelaya, bears the biggest responsibility for his overthrow.
A member of the rancid oligarchy he now decries, Zelaya took office in
2006 as the leader of one of the two center-right parties that have
dominated Honduran politics for decades. His general platform, his
support for the Central American Free Trade Agreement with the United
States and his alliances with business organizations gave no inkling of
the fact that halfway into his term he would become a political
cross-dresser.
Suddenly, in 2007, he declared himself a socialist and began to
establish close ties with Venezuela. In December of that year, he
incorporated Honduras into Petrocaribe, a mechanism set up by Hugo
Chávez for lavishing oil subsidies on Latin American and Caribbean
countries in exchange for political subservience. Then his government
joined the Bolivarian Alternative for Latin America and the Caribbean
(ALBA), Venezuela's answer to the proposed Free Trade Area of the
Americas, ostensibly a commercial alliance but in practice a political
conspiracy that seeks to expand populist dictatorship to the rest of
Latin America.
Last year, following the script originally laid out by Chávez in
Venezuela and adopted by Evo Morales in Bolivia and Rafael Correa in
Ecuador, Zelaya announced that he would hold a referendum to set up a
constituent assembly that would change the constitution that barred him
from reelection. In the next few months, every legal body in Honduras --
the electoral tribunal, the Supreme Court, the attorney general, the
human rights ombudsman -- declared the referendum unconstitutional.
According to the Honduran constitution (articles 5, 373 and 374),
presidential term limits cannot be changed under any circumstance; only
Congress can modify the constitution; and political institutions are not
subject to referendums. Honduras's Congress, Zelaya's own Liberal Party
and a majority of Hondurans (in various polls) expressed their horror at
the prospect of having Zelaya perpetuate himself and bring Honduras into
the Chávez fold. In defiance of court orders, Zelaya persisted.
Surrounded by a friendly mob, he broke into the military installations
where the ballots were kept and ordered them distributed. The courts
declared that Zelaya had placed himself outside the law, and Congress
began an impeachment procedure.
This is the context in which the military, in an ill-advised move that
turned a perfectly legal mechanism for stopping Zelaya into a coup,
expelled the president. The fact that the constitutional procedure was
subsequently followed by having Congress appoint the head of the
legislative body, Roberto Micheletti, as interim president, and that the
elections scheduled for November have not been canceled, is not enough
to dissipate the cloud of illegitimacy that hangs over the new
government. This factor has disarmed Zelaya's critics in the
international community in the face of a well-coordinated campaign led
by Chávez to reinstate him and denounce the coup as an oligarchic
assault on democracy.
That said, the international response, seeking to reinstate Zelaya
without any mention of his illegal acts, has been highly inadequate. The
Organization of American States, led by its secretary general, José
Miguel Insulza, has acted like Venezuela's poodle. At Chávez's
request, Insulza went to Nicaragua, where a summit of the
anti-democratic ALBA group became the hemisphere's political center of
gravity after the coup. Insulza and other populist presidents said
nothing about Zelaya's dictatorial conduct leading up to last Sunday's
events and simply echoed Venezuela's self-serving stance. Efforts by
other countries, including the United States and many South American
governments, to put some nuance into the public statements were
neutralized by the spectacle unfolding in Nicaragua, which was widely
reported across the Spanish-speaking world. It was sad to see Insulza
suddenly remember his organization's Inter-American Democratic Charter
in relation to Honduras -- the same rules of democratic conduct that
Chávez, Morales, Correa and Nicaragua's Daniel Ortega have violated
on numerous occasions while the OAS looked the other way.
The crisis in Honduras should bring to people's attention this truth
about Latin America today: The gravest threat to liberty comes from
elected populists who are seeking to subject the institutions of the law
to their megalomaniac whims. Given that scenario, the hemisphere's
response to Honduras's crisis has undermined those who are trying to
prevent populism from taking the region back to the times when it was
forced to choose between left-wing revolution and military
dictatorships.
Alvaro Vargas Llosa is the editor of "Lessons From the Poor" and
director of the Center on Global Prosperity at the Independent
Institute. He is syndicated by the Washington Post Writers Group. His
e-mail address is

_____________________________________________

AVL...@independent.org.
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Jul 2, 2009, 10:41:21 AM7/2/09
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