Yeah, "voting shouldn't cost $200 for a quarter of the eligible voterbase" is sure a mega arcane criticism, who could possibly engage with it??
the 'voter base' that isn't present in the country. yeah, that's pretty arcane. telling that you can't even describe it completely when trying to justify your objection, because if you actually include 'outside the country' then it definitely sounds like a quibble.
and i did engage with it. you haven't engaged with my criticism of it as far from some kind of obvious bedrock principle at all. oh, i don't want to compare them, but it's super interesting how these comparable things that I'm definitely not comparing are treated differently by some people.
Because it doesn't change whether the specific actions are acceptable or not, which is a question that rests on the merits of those actions.
what on earth do you mean by 'acceptable'? because it is not at all your prerogative to decide what Venezuelans should or should not accept.
Complete bollocks. The upshot is that the legally eligible voterbase are actually able to vote. Now call me idealistic, but I think that's a worthy aim in and of itself.
If you think that those millions with refugee status would all vote against the government, and thus must be stopped from voting, don't drag me into your assumptions and justifications.
lmao
You're the one who made the case that somehow requiring passports for overseas voting would result in gains for the opposition. Which is fascist. Do you need me to go and link it for you?
Well, here it is:
Put in more than a minute's thought. If they've left the country, as ~a quarter of the population has since 2024 (most with refugee status), then they're more likely to be dissatisfied with the situation at home. At that point, any measure that drastically suppresses that vote is likely to assist the gov.
Interestingly, the country with the most Venezuelan refugees is Colombia, another South American country with a socialist gov, but one with transparent and fairer elections. What's interesting is that Colombia's observers were also barred from Venezuela's 2024 election.
also, about Colombia: yeah, it's SUPER WEIRD to not allow observers from a country that has, among other things, hosted training camps for soldiers to cross the border into Venezuela and attempt to overthrow the government. Venezuela really has no respect for democratic marauding.
Were you ignorant of Colombia's history of collaboration in US antagonism toward Venezuela? Or is this just another case of omitting inconvenient facts?
This last paragraph is brainworm stuff, pretty unhinged. I criticised a government policy, bud. You can weave that into a strange elseworlds narrative about my state of mind if you want, but it's not that deep-- and you've already spent more page space breathlessly defending it than I wanted to devote to the criticism.
yeah, you haven't bothered defending how it's important that people elsewhere absolutely have to have a say in the governance of Venezuela. But neither have you conceded the point. You're stuck with a pretty silly idea that seems to have come from deciding to criticize Venezuela before actually finding a reason, as I said.