• @dragontamer@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      What fruit company existed in Venezuela that’s related to today’s (largely) Venezuelan migrant population?

      Hint: you’re talking about the wrong portion of the world if we’re focusing on today’s migrant crisis. Venezuela was oil and has a completely different set of circumstances than you might believe.

      2018 was Northern Triangle that at least is somewhat related to fruit company (albeit a hundred years later, but whatever. If you want to ignore modern history so much so bet it, at least you’re somewhat correct for the Northern Triangle migrants). But 2024 is Venezuelan migrants under a completely separate issue.

      • @TropicalDingdong@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        My joke was primarily about previous vintages where US policy was a direct factor resulting in later waves of immigration. I wasn’t talking specifically about Venezuela or anywhere really. The later immigration appears ‘random’ only because of a superficial analysis of US policy and its consequences.

        I mean you can point to like… maybe all of US policy towards Venezuela post 1998 in this same light. Sanctions, election interference, etc… This isn’t to say that the US controls the worlds destiny, but I would say peak US hegemony was maybe 2005-2010? Like we’re definitely on the other side of that, but it had its consequences.

        • @dragontamer@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          I mean you can point to like… maybe all of US policy towards Venezuela post 1998 in this same light.

          And completely ignore Hugo Chavez? Why? Hugo Chavez actually was in charge of Venezuela for the bulk of the period you’re talking about.

          I know that Lemmy is filled with Marxists who want to have as favorable of a viewpoint of Communism as possible. But… uhhhh… Hugo Chavez and his successor haven’t exactly made Venezuela into a utopia.


          What I do know, is decades of Hugo Chavez (and now Maduro) rule has led into Venezuela’s current predicaments. And that’s directly led, as in these are the people who actually controlled the country and built it up for what it is over the last nearly 30 years.

          USA has foreign policy influence for sure, but the bulk of Venezuela’s problems are Venezuala’s alone to deal with. We aren’t responsible for the vast majority of decisions over there.


          But whatever. If those migrant waves are coming to USA looking for hopes, dreams and opportunity, I’m on their side. There’s benefits to accepting the dreamers who make such a long trip. We have housing issues to deal with (and other population issues), but we can probably afford letting some of them in.