00:03The Venezuelan opposition is the same, that extremist opposition, I beg your
00:10pardon for the opposition people present here, the extremist opposition, the
00:14extremist opposition is the same. They're behind all that of everything. Me
00:24personally, I believe that they don't want to rule ever. Forgive me if I say like
00:30this, they want to be, continue to be opposition because they want to, they
00:35turn this into a business. They practice that every day a fool comes out
00:44believing that the world belongs to him and they abuse him because they don't
00:51want to rule because to rule means that you have to get your hands dirty and go
00:54where the issues are. To rule means to attend the people. Goberning means to be
01:04responsible for the area that, for what happens in the area that you govern, not
01:08turn a plan A. They are not interested in that. Do you picture them worried about
01:15the people? There were man hunts here. They came from Caracas to hunt indigenous people. One
01:36says it like this, it sounds hard, but those are the same people that burned Orlando Figuera, that they don't
01:44care for the life of another human
01:46being just because they believe themselves to be superior. Venezuela today claims that
01:54everyone is the same. There are no difference. The day that there's elections, whoever wins, go there and govern and
02:03see the difference between asking for water and giving water.
02:09When elections came, I wrote down a phrase. There are people, colleagues.
02:23colleagues from Soluciones. These are not oppositions, they oppose the country. Because if I want to be a candidate for
02:37a poor state, I do my political campaign. And the political campaign cannot be, even if I want to be
02:47a candidate for a poor state, I do my political campaign.
02:47Even if something is fixed, you cannot say it's broken. But to oppose your own country, that's a miserable thing
03:03to do. Disgusting.
03:08We listen here. I ask the colleagues here from the different associations for the reforms of law. I don't carry
03:21that task, but I ask.
03:33I learn about things. I've learned about things of corruption that have happened, of theft, of heads of cows.
03:43And more than one have been sanctioned. But impunity cannot be a norm. That's why there is a constitution and
03:52the laws.
03:52You know that our acting president, Deza Rodriguez, or the first decision she took, was present before the National Assembly
04:04an amnesty law.
04:08Some people from the Chavez sector did not like it. I know it is like that. People close to us
04:14say, what is that? These people want to burn the country.
04:18But the acting president said, we have to take a first step. And let's open this space. That is not
04:26us, the ones that don't want to understand what is happening in Venezuela.
04:30I don't know how many people have benefited by the amnesty law. But that extremist opposition, they truly are not
04:41smart.
04:41They say that the amnesty law did not work. Remember that. And when the president said the amnesty law came
04:49to an end, now they say that why it came to an end. That's how they are.
05:02A large amount of people benefited. Some sectors of Chavism with their reason because we have lived very unfortunate things
05:15in different states of those that want to do policy in a different manner.
05:21And then came the lifting of sanctions on the central bank of Venezuela and the public bank.
05:31The whole financing system has their own methods and ways.
05:39We didn't have an account of the Venezuelan bank in the world anywhere. Those were blocked.
05:49And now they leave those sanctions and the Venezuelan bank is going forward with the relaunch of those banking relationships.
06:01When the accounts were blocked, they stole CITCO.
06:08And that issue of CITCO will have, there's going to be a lot of discussion what they did with the
06:14money of all Venezuelans.
06:17So what do we do? Do we apply the amnesty law with those people that stole the money of Venezuelans?
06:23Those are the questions one asks oneself.
06:27Because I was in Mérida and I was telling the colleagues there, there are people without any kind of
06:40of
06:41of
06:41of honor that come out
06:43and they
06:46they
06:46call
06:48political prisoners
06:50corrupts officials that stole the money of the people, the money from
06:53PDVSA. So are we to allow them to steal the money?
06:58It cannot be with impunity.
07:01What's good with the amnesty law is that the game once again begins
07:06from near to near. So whoever commits a crime will have to face the justice.
07:12And now they are saying just that is for anyone. I'm not for anyone. That's what's written on the Constitution
07:15and laws.
07:29Venezuela also relaunched relationships with the IMF.
07:34People in the
07:36people from people from the Chavez didn't like that. It cannot be the World Bank once again.
07:42They owe us five billion dollars that belong to all Venezuelans.
07:47Wilmer, if Wilmer sells me
07:51five cows
07:56and I'm over there in Monaga
08:01and I say Wilmer, well, send me the cows, I will pay you
08:06by silly.
08:08And Wilmer will say no, no I don't have that.
08:13I will pay you by phone, even less.
08:18I have the money.
08:19I have the money on me.
08:21But I have no means to pay him. I have to go to a public.
08:27Imagine that, to pay.
08:29And that's a very simple operation.
08:32The same, the only way that Venezuela has to recover that money
08:35is to have relations with the IMF.
08:37That doesn't mean we are going to get in-depth or we're going to apply a package here in Venezuela.
08:43That has nothing to do with that.
08:48But if you want to cut our veins, well, I can give you a razor knife if you want to
08:53do that.
08:55Whoever has a better idea than that, that puts it on the table.
09:01But criticize just for criticizing, it doesn't help the country.
09:05And we take on the criticism.
09:08And the Iraqi president puts her face everywhere, attacks from within, from the outside.
09:14They don't know Delcy.
09:23When this man calls her monkey in Spain,
09:29he's not only calling monkey Delcy, he's calling monkey all Venezuelan women.
09:36Out with the monkey.
09:37Is that a new thing? No.
09:39That's not new.
09:41No, no, no.
09:47Because I'm thinking about blockade during commerce during colonia, but Cipriano Castro was also blocked.
09:54But Cipriano Castro, imagine, imagine,
10:01beginning of the 1900s.
10:04And Cipriano Castro, in the world, over 3,000 cartoons were made to refer to him as a monkey.
10:17And where do you think that campaign came from against Cipriano Castro?
10:21Right here from Venezuela.
10:23It was the same campaign that in 1860 over there,
10:27offered the English, our Guayana Ezequiva,
10:31in exchange to take out the monkeys that governed Venezuela for that time.
10:36It's racism.
10:40If there is a stupid sickness of the soul, it's racism.
10:44Because you have to be sick in your soul to think that someone is superior to another person
10:50for their skin color religion or for any other reason.
10:53Really sick in your soul.
10:54Let's go.
10:55Let's go.
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