The First 3 Weeks After a Fraudulent Election

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OK, it’s been more than three weeks after one of the most important events in Venezuela’s contemporary history.

You know already what happened the first three days after the elections past July 28th: turmoil, emotions getting out of control, Hugo statues being knocked down everywhere, and so on.

There has been a consequent wave of brutal repression violating our sacred Constitution. Something that the world should know about, by the way.

The first three weeks after an event

The first three weeks after a major event, like the incredible election fraud we are going through right now, haven’t been peaceful. Turmoil and a tense situation after the brutal repression are present everywhere, in sudden bursts. Whenever there are uniformed people (we don’t know if they are LEOs for real or just convicts who were given uniforms and impunity to spread fear amongst defenseless people), civilians discreetly disappear from sight. As usual, in the major cities, the centers of power, it is much worse than in the non-critical cities.

The highly suspicious, seemingly thriving economy (only for a small portion of chosen ones) makes one remember a series like Ozark, where a huge amount of cash flow came from (ahem) “underground” sources…because the main economic activity was once the crude oil production, but now, this is practically inexistent.

An interesting aspect: whenever they decide to stop someone, there are never fewer than four LEOs. Two on each motorcycle. Then they make a circle around the people they want to check. They surround those they want to harass.

This is because of two main reasons:

  • The psychological impact to deter any possible attempt to run or fight and make the victim feel threatened and helpless.
  • The other one, and the worst aspect, is blocking someone filming from the distance. Filming and uploading these videos to social media has allowed people to detect a bunch of fake LEOs.

An interesting aspect of this experience is that snitches will ALWAYS sell others to the wolf pack, no matter what country they are in —Cuba, Russia, Slovakia, the UK, or Poland. I will dedicate a little more to this in the next article. It deserves special attention because it is a trend that has been showing its ugly head throughout history.

Whenever this sort of regime makes it to the stage where they need to inspire fear in the people, they resort to violent shock troops to keep doing their stuff for a price. The Mussolini advisors did it, the German “fellows” did it (ahem), Cubans have been in that prison of an island for over 60 years with neighbors selling them over for a few food bags, and now it’s our turn. With a little difference: 200 years ago, we kicked those oppressing us back to the sea.

Not too many differences now.

What people are eating

On a lighter note, to ease the mood and not make the article so grim, I wanted to mention that I remember three events that caught my attention while we were experiencing the worst of the scarcity. 

People used sugar substitutes like the Coke sweetener (in bulk, incredibly high concentration!) instead of sugar, and some odd beans as a coffee “substitute” (yuck). This was mostly in the cities. We have tons of sugar cane blocks (it’s called “piloncillo” in most of Central America and MX. In Peru, this block is known as “chancaca“. I use it as a staple, too, because it is highly energetic, and tasty, and goes incredibly well with white cheese and some bread in a hurry or as a snack. A small bite, together with a piece of white cheese,  will calm your hunger for a couple of hours. It’s an old trick I’ve learned since young age.

This “papelon“, with our local variety of jerky is something that never missed the saddlebags of the “Llaneros“. (Local variety of cowboys, usually riding barefoot or with alpargatas) I’ve tried it, and it works. It’s versatile because you can prepare a refreshing beverage by adding lime juice to a jar of dissolved sugar cane in ice-cold water. It’s useful for baking spiced sweet rolls too. Delicious. It improves your mood when you’re down.

It is very shelf-stable out of the fridge but needs to be stashed away, safe from mice and bugs like everything else. It needs to be stored in a dry place, and it needs to be cut later with a knife or ground. Otherwise, in humid climates, it will absorb moisture and become sticky if not wrapped in plastic. I am used to eating it like candy, or with a small piece of hard white cheese. The combination of salty and sweet flavors is something we grow up with in the flat lands of Venezuela.

Butcheries now sell cattle and poultry parts that were once considered waste: chicken claws, beef lungs, intestines, kidneys, stomach, and whatever other innards you may think of. Good for dogs and cats, though. 

Eating this was not exactly common before the economic meltdown. People with meager resources would cook these in creative ways to increase their protein intake.

The obnoxious control points on every road, where guards seize and confiscate anything edible without a purchase receipt. It happened back in the worst of the scarcity period, but it seems the guards are now allowed more freedom with the civilians. And this can blow in their faces at any moment. People are so annoyed that the situation is highly volatile; allowing the uniformed people to abuse the civilians guarantees they won’t turn the guns (mostly without ammo, by the way) to them anytime soon.

Eggs, meat, and charcuterie products like cheese and sausages were (still are!) a very sought-after product. Mind you this is not something that will change, no matter where you are reading this.

These three events seem to be a common pattern in lands going through our travails, where the law is distorted and warped to the convenience of those wielding the whip.

In the worst of the hyperinflation and scarcity period

When the “special period” in Cuba was at its worst, I was at university struggling with calculus. I still remember the stories in the newspapers. Not too much in the TV news, but it wasn’t good. I remember feeling bad because I could afford a couple of good steaks per week, minimum, and Cubans had that…”meat substitute” mixture that included all types of odd parts of pigs, goats, cows, and God knows what else, once every two weeks.

For most people my age, establishing a link between those years and what we would experience later in the 2013-2017 lapse was almost automatic. The similarities were too great.

I had already finished the first half of writing this article, and suddenly, we just had a power blackout. Nation-wide. Over 20 million people were without access to some kind of electrical power back on Friday August 30th.

What a way to end the month. 18 hours without grid power.

Staying comfortable

Sadly, my generator is still not working. However, I’m getting the spare part to fix it this week, and I need to put in a few other stuff, such as my PC, sound system, and a fan to keep working inside my bedroom. A little bit cramped but for the time being I don’t have the means to put to work the AC in the home office space I have destined.

I could put the AC to work for a while with the 220v outlet of the generator and then switch to 110v to put the rest of the equipment to work once the room has been cooled enough to be comfortable, a couple of hours in the hottest part of the day. I’m remodeling a few things here and there to increase cooling efficiency. The walk-in closet, for instance. This doesn’t need to be cooled off and doesn’t have any doors. I have all the tools to build whatever I need and make the bedroom a separate part of this area: drills, sanders, and so on.

Maybe this sounds a little bit silly, but remodeling and redesigning your habitat to make it more energy-efficient is something we have to do.

With such a large home, three bedrooms, a huge entertainment area (not too entertaining now) consisting of a 5×4 square meters saloon, and three full-size bathrooms, it’s a little bit too much space and expensive maintenance right now.

That’s why I find the Edison batteries, robust and easy to maintain, and the passive cooling provided by Peltier cells, so appealing. They consume a lot of amperes but will supply both hot and cold water at the same time. If the design system includes photovoltaic panels, the outcome is interesting and durable. The more sun there is, the more cold air you can extract from the system.

I’m even pondering the possibility of building a green roof on a portion of a roof that was poorly built without a proper slope, which is a huge problem that generated all the leaks I’ve been experiencing.

Analyzing your dwelling surroundings with patience and time will let you see what you need for comfort, what you need for mental health, and even what you want to leave behind for those coming after you.

It’s all about keeping them safe at the end of the day, isn’t it?

Take care, and stay tuned!

What do you think?

Do you think we could see something similar here in the United States? What are your thoughts on these events?

Let us know in the comments section.

About Jose

Jose is an upper middle class professional. He is a former worker of the oil state company with a Bachelor’s degree from one of the best national Universities. He has an old but in good shape SUV, a good 150 square meters house in a nice neighborhood, in a small but (formerly) prosperous city with two middle size malls. Jose is a prepper and shares his eyewitness accounts and survival stories from the collapse of his beloved Venezuela. Jose and his younger kid are currently back in Venezuela, after the intention of setting up a new life in another country didn’t  go well. The SARSCOV2 re-shaped the labor market and South American economy so he decided to give it a try to homestead in the mountains, and make a living as best as possible. But this time in his own land, and surrounded by family, friends and acquaintances, with all the gear and equipment collected, as the initial plan was.

 Follow Jose on YouTube and gain access to his exclusive content on PatreonDonations: paypal.me/JoseM151

Picture of J.G. Martinez D

J.G. Martinez D

About Jose Jose is an upper middle class professional. He is a former worker of the oil state company with a Bachelor’s degree from one of the best national Universities. He has a small 4 members family, plus two cats and a dog. An old but in good shape SUV, a good 150 square meters house in a nice neighborhood, in a small but (formerly) prosperous city with two middle size malls. Jose is a prepper and shares his eyewitness accounts and survival stories from the collapse of his beloved Venezuela. Thanks to your help Jose has gotten his family out of Venezuela. They are currently setting up a new life in another country. Follow Jose on YouTube and gain access to his exclusive content on Patreon. Donations: paypal.me/JoseM151

Leave a Reply

  • Is the paragraph about the limeade separate from the papelón jerky? I can’t imagine jerky in the limeade.

    Is your home on an hacienda in the country or in a city?

    What is Coke sweetener?

    Piloncillo is cones of brown sugar, as in Sugar Loaf Mountain in Brazil? They sold sugar like that here in colonial times, and I bought it like that for some recipes when I lived in Mexico City, scraping it off to use.

    I don’t think it will get that bad here. I think the terrible news about the federal government blowing off Hélène victims and blocking volunteers and donations will force a rebellion. Trump and de Santis are helping. And Trump just pledged to protect Jews here and help Israel. While Kamala has cast her lot with the abusive longshoremen. I think Trump will win and take back the night.

    • Dear Cia,
      my home is in the middle of a great neighborhood in a former oil-producing city. But I do have a hideout in the middle of nowhere, in the mountains 500 km away. Only need to stock it and improve the structures. Sadly there is no Internet and that slows me down a lot of moving there.

  • One example of maximizing the pain in the US is the very recent dock worker’s strike … possibly in anticipation of another rigged election here in this November. If Kamala Harris is deemed the winner (I’ve seen a highly technical article about how voter registration records can be rigged in multiple states in favor of the criminal party’s favor) … the union can be fairly confident that she will not invoke the 1947 Taft-Hartley Act and shut down the strike. It was passed by Congress despite the presidential veto by Democrat Harry Truman.

    If on the other hand an honest November vote count puts Trump back in the White House …. he might very well invoke Taft-Hartley and shut down that strike to minimize the extreme damage being done. Since the union can’t know for certain that a Trump win won’t happen ..,. they very likely have a strategy to maximize the damage being done now (which is awful) in time for a favorable settlement ) BEFORE the election happens.

    Evidence of the current Biden administration’s ability to rig elections emerged when socialist Lula “won” the head of state position in Brazil … and the Biden administration bragged to them about how Biden administration assistance had helped rig that election in favor of Lula. Only in the US does the Biden administration demonize anyone who questions the honesty of the 2020 election vote count.

    If Harris is deemed the winner … the US constitution and its centuries old protections will be dead. Spending will go through the roof, hyperinflation will make 1920s Weimar Germany look like a garden party. (Right now spending is creating another trillion dollars in unrepayable counterfeit money every hundred days.) The gross influx of illegal aliens across multiple US borders will change the American culture well beyond our lifetimes. Benjamin Franklin’s famous remark in Pennsylvania when the US constitution was first created was in response to a woman’s question asking Franklin “What have you brought us?”. His classic reply which has echoed through the ages to us … was “A republic, if you can keep it!”

    –Lewis

  • Jose, you need to find a jar vacuum sealer to keep those foodstuffs sealed in jars, safe from bugs and humidity.

    • Dear Lady Life Grows, yes, but in the mean term before getting the $ for some stuff I need, I used some herbs and essential oils to keep bugs away.

  • Thank you for writing this article, Jose. I think it is coming to the U.S.A. very soon, and most people are going to be shocked and stupified by all the turmoil and riots that will happen at first. When it gets to the point that it is in your description, things may settle down somewhat… That is IF it ever gets to that point. Things may break out a lot quicker and more violently due to the amount of people with guns who are almost already fed up with our government. Any people that are just allowed to roam and set up roadblocks and commit violence on the civilian public will find a lot of opposition very quickly, I’m afraid.
    It looks like it’s working up to that sort, already… and many don’t recognize it – yet.
    Blessings to you and yours,
    OD

    • here in the deep south we take care of our own. we don’t depend on the government to help when a disaster happens, we don’t want them or need them. they make matters worse like they did in N.O. in 2005. we go to work every day, and take care of our families and our communities.
      we do what is right but our patience is wearing very thin. when it happens, it will happen fast so look out. these country boys can and will defend themselves and take care of their own. then disappear into the woods and swamps if needed, daring outsiders to follow them in.
      this is the left’s last chance with us. if they don’t believe it, FAFO.

      • Dear old fart,
        Commies are used to combat and wear resistance constantly, and use techniques like imprisoning and torturing family members and friends of anyone they accuse of being remotely related to those groups. We are talking about State-sponsored terrorism here, and Criminal Court processes. Even Lula and Petro are parting away of these thugs, at least in their speech.

    • Dear Old Duffer,
      You are right. If the commies wouldn’t have banned the civilian rights to be armed, this would have ended a decade ago. What we are living now is the aftermath: the only ones armed are the delinquents, whether if they belong to the Socialist party or not.

    • Dear Cia,
      We know it down here as papelon and it works as a sweetener for lemonades and beverages. Also as a snack, very tasty. I don’t know if you can find it in a block, the most useful way to get it. Researching by its name in Central America could be a good way to learn if you can find it up there.

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