Transcript detail
Loading...
Public transcript context with linked callsigns, related nets, and analysis metadata.
Transcript
Public transcript text
That is the million dollar question. What's going to happen? They started their decline when they, I think Maduro was the one that got in the office, maybe it was the one before them, and they ended up taking all the privatized businesses, mostly the oil, and the government took it over, and then basically ran it to the ground. And now they've got a humanitarian crisis. They have for food, and millions of people are leaving the country trying to find food, work, and everything else. Their oil infrastructure, you just can't go from being a major oil producer to cut the production down and then expect to go back. They've got a lot of work that they need to do on the infrastructure of the oil. I think Maduro is reaching out to countries that subscribe to his brand of leadership or his brand of whatever he's doing because he wants to stay in power. Josh was saying that's not something that you know the United States and or Canada and Mexico can have you know happen in this region of the country you know South America is a statistically important for the United States so you know they have to try to help and save it but in order to do that they they need someone that is more in line with the way we do government rather than the way the communists do government. So yeah, I really don't know what they're going to do at this point. It's beyond my pay grade. So basically I just have to sit back and wait and see what happens and, you know, hopefully people that know what they're doing will prevail and, you know, hopefully turn things around. So I had a boss back when I was a production manager at a plastic factory. Whoops, I'm the grand one. He was in Venezuela and that's I did a school report in Venezuela. So that's my extent for the most part but there we go. Back to that.
Explore