Recklessly driving through the sloping
streets of Caracas, Diego blares “Bonita,” the bass-heavy reggaeton hit of the
summer. The stock speakers of his tiny sedan pulsate as we pass block after
block of buildings, each cloaked with layers of razor wire and electrified
fencing. Diego (whose name, as well as others’, have been changed to protect
their identity) laughs and looks at me, smiling cynically, when I ask why it
seems like no one bothers to stop at red lights. “Do you want to be kidnapped
or something?” It’s the night of Thursday, July 27. In less than three days,
Venezuelans will live through one of the most defining days in their country’s
modern history — and one of the bloodiest. A vote nicknamed the Constituyente
is scheduled for July 30. If successful, it would be a major step in president
Nicolás Maduro’s march toward dictatorship. More…Monday, October 2, 2017
How Venezuela’s resistance movement — and the country’s democracy — reached a breaking point during one week in July.
Recklessly driving through the sloping
streets of Caracas, Diego blares “Bonita,” the bass-heavy reggaeton hit of the
summer. The stock speakers of his tiny sedan pulsate as we pass block after
block of buildings, each cloaked with layers of razor wire and electrified
fencing. Diego (whose name, as well as others’, have been changed to protect
their identity) laughs and looks at me, smiling cynically, when I ask why it
seems like no one bothers to stop at red lights. “Do you want to be kidnapped
or something?” It’s the night of Thursday, July 27. In less than three days,
Venezuelans will live through one of the most defining days in their country’s
modern history — and one of the bloodiest. A vote nicknamed the Constituyente
is scheduled for July 30. If successful, it would be a major step in president
Nicolás Maduro’s march toward dictatorship. More…
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