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Communism came to my country when I was 3 years old, most of my life I was in a bubble of privilege without even knowing it, thanks to my parents, obviously every year the economic situation limited them and strangled them more, I never lacked food, a roof, even vacations once a year in the interior of the country.
In my adolescence, I began to have the notion that things were no longer the same, I heard the word "inflation", I saw that some products were no longer in the country because the companies had left, I saw how they expropriated companies, houses, even small businesses. Not to mention devaluation because it is one of the worst in the world.
Now as an adult I remember these things and it makes me admire my parents more for how they have fought and continue to do so, and how they kept my brothers and me safe for so long.
I remember being at the university, lunch time, I was sitting in the dining room with 4 classmates, I took out my food which was chicken, black beans, ripe plantains and rice, I remember very vividly how they all looked at me with surprised faces. and one of them said to me "Do you know that this is a rich person's food?" I stayed silent, I didn't know what to say, I did know that the country was going through a critical situation, but I didn't think that many of my colleagues classes could not have a full meal or could not eat 3 meals a day. I was not "rich" my father was a taxi driver and my mother sold clothes.
By the time of 2014, it was becoming increasingly difficult to obtain basic products. There had been a shortage of some products for years, but it was not as strong as it started that year.
I took care of my siblings (I'm the oldest) while my mom left at 9pm to queue outside the supermarket to buy food the next day at 9am when the place opened, just to buy 2 kilos of rice, 1 kilo of flour, a package of toilet paper. And so on, she had to do it 3 or 4 times a month to be able to buy only 4 items, one day it could be deodorant, another day sanitary pads, noodles, toothpaste, diapers, shampoo or 1 kilo of chicken. The pharmacies were the same story, lines lasting 10 hours or more to buy some medicine, and if you were lucky enough to be able to get what the doctor prescribed, luck was mostly not on your side.
Let me not forget to mention that when you went to the supermarket or pharmacy you could NOT buy the amount you wanted of any product, for example: x day rice arrived, you were only allowed to buy a maximum of 2 kilos, sometimes only 1 kilo.
You may ask me why only go to the market or pharmacy once a week instead of trying several times? Well, there was an "order", you could only go to the establishment by the terminal number of your identity document, in my country it is called an ID. I explain: Monday: for people whose ID ends in 0 and 1 Tuesday: 2-3 Wednesday: 4-5 Thursday: 6-7 Friday: 8-9 Saturday and Sunday without attention to the public.
In 2015 the government implemented something called "fair pricing" but I want to leave this for another post because it is too long.
In 2016 I emigrated, I have never set foot on my land again. My dad emigrated the following year, to a different country from where I am. So I have my dearest family divided into 3 countries.
Sometimes when I talk to my mother she tells me that she has been waiting in line for 2 days to fill the car's gas tank.
If you do not want to wait in lines for food, medicine, gasoline or another product, you have the option of paying the corrupt military to give you a place further forward in the line. My country hurts me.
I saw how several acquaintances went from being large or medium-sized people to having severe malnutrition, emaciated, marked bones, it was very cruel to see them like that. Many people have died from malnutrition or starvation.
In my country there are many mango trees, sometimes it was the only thing a family ate, mango. Many parents did not eat to give even one piece of bread (literally, just one piece of bread) to their children... and so on, I can continue writing about different cases, such as sleeping until noon to avoid feeling hungry in the morning or going to bed to sleep. early so I don't have to have dinner.
For many years there have been protests and many young people have died, who only had stones to fight, while the military bought by the government massacres the country with their weapons.
The health sector doesn't even have to be mentioned, they don't even have cotton. So describing what happens inside hospitals would be sadistic.
When I emigrated, it was a blessing for me to be able to buy an Oreo cookie or go out to eat ice cream. In my country I could no longer afford those "luxuries" as the years went by.
Many families started cooking with firewood because getting gas is an ordeal.
Electricity? Water? Sometimes you don't have it for several days. The government began to call the lack of electricity "electrical reasoning", while there there was a time when they cut off electricity for 4 hours per sector. There was "sector A" where they turned off the electricity from 6 am to 10 am, "sector B" their hours were from 10 am to 2 pm... and so it continued "sector C", sector D"... In 2019 I did not I was able to communicate with my family for days because the entire country went without electricity for more than 3 consecutive days.
I tell all this from my experience living in communism. I have many more things to write, but my daughter is calling me to play.
Thanks for reading me this far. I would like to know, do you know or have you lived in a communist country?
Yet despite all that you have undergone, I sense your love for your country. Which is why your words are powerful because your hurt is profound n seeps through your words.
I’m curious about why your mum didn’t follow your dad out of the country, if it isn’t a sensitive question to ask.
Looking forward to reading more of your work
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It hurts to see how your home is consumed in decay. The places that saw you grow up and made you happy no longer exist. Then sometimes we immerse ourselves in the "what if only all this didn't happen..." Anyway, never vote for the left. Answering your question: Divorce. Postscript: My family NEVER supports communism in any vote.
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Never vote left!
Great advice
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15 sats \ 7 replies \ @TomK 6 Jan
And now listen to a lot of privileged young people what good an idea communism is. I could puke! Feliz reyes!
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I seriously don't understand what the hell people have in mind when they think communism is a "good idea." They are idiots. sorry for writing hate hahaha Feliz reyes!!
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In USA my favorite acronym is AWFL
Affluent white female leftist
People live in a wealthy bubble, completely out of touch with the world and working people who struggle
College and universities are communist breeding grounds.
Some people take abundance for granted. They have no perspective only entitlement.
Young Americans acquiesce to peer pressure. Communism, climate change and BDS Israel are the most trendy issues on TikTok
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @TomK 6 Jan
Igualmente. No, I think it's more like a mental illness born out of a weak resentment.
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10 sats \ 3 replies \ @Caleb 6 Jan
“No bro that’s not real communism. If we did it here and I was in charge, it would be different.”
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It's pure and good sarcasm.
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I have heard that phrase many times. Every time someone says it my liver twists. Idiots who have enjoyed the fortune of living under capitalism should be taken to an island and let them rot with their communism.
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @xz 6 Jan
Genuinely curious, is that your opinion in quotes? I often miss the humor in posts.
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What country is this?
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Venezuela. I always see very little information about the political, social, economic situation. I wanted to write from a personal perspective, since we are the ones who have really experienced the ordeal and destruction of a country. I have a lot to write, there are so many things left that I could do 10 long posts and I think I would still be missing. I must give myself time to correctly organize everything I could write regarding the topic, from a macro to a personal perspective. There is so much that the media is silent about.
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Ah -- a very interesting place, I look forward to reading more of your stories! I was there twenty years ago and it was eye-opening even then. Can't imagine how it has evolved.
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110 sats \ 1 reply \ @bief57 OP 6 Jan
How great that you got to know him! Did you go tourism? In 20 years it has changed a lot, unfortunately not for the better. Currently very incongruous things are happening in my opinion, but I will write that in a few days. Thank you for taking the time to read and comment.
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Hugo Chavez
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10 sats \ 4 replies \ @xz 6 Jan
Your writing is very readable. Thanks again for sharing.
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Yep, real quality writing!
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Thank you very much for reading me! I feel flattered.
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I'm sure you could find ways of monetizing your writing also outside of here :-)
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10 sats \ 0 replies \ @xz 6 Jan
I'm serious. I've been an educator in various capacities, yet I find it's not always as easy to express meaning through the written word, let alone a second language.
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10 sats \ 1 reply \ @siggy47 16 Jan
I don't know how I missed this post. Thank you for sharing your experiences, and please post frequently if you can. I think we will all learn a lot.
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There are very good posts every day, it's hard to see everything. Thank you very much for reading my post. I would love to continue publishing my experiences, I am organizing myself with my chores to have some time to write. Again, thank you very much.
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I was born in a communist country, and witnessed the collapse of communism in 1989 as a kid.
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I was on the other side, in the army before the wall fell, watched that event from afar but also with some glimpses into it from people who were there before it happened and so on...
There is so much to say about these things, especially how communism and its gateway drug socialism, I have seen quite a bit of the "internals" of this, its complicated as hell to even start explaining, but here on Stacker News it seems there is an audience that is up to it!
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Venezuela?
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