Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Venezuela Gets Cat Calls From Globe

I don't know, readers.

Is this all that has been going on in Venezuela, Globe?


"Biologist tracks elusive jaguar; In Venezuela, her mission is to save endangered cat" by Ian James, Associated Press | August 22, 2010

GUATOPO NATIONAL PARK, Venezuela — Jaguars are the largest land predators in the Americas. They once roamed widely from the southwestern United States to Argentina, but have lost more than 40 percent of their natural territory and have disappeared from Uruguay, El Salvador, and many other areas.

Today, jaguars are listed as a “near threatened’’ species. They are vulnerable due to expanding farmland and roads that are carving away at their habitat, and conflicts with ranchers who view them as cattle killers and shoot them on sight or poison them. No one has any good estimates of how many jaguars are left in the wild, and that’s why work like Isasi-Catala’s is important....

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Related(?)
:

"Venezuela Drought -- The worst drought in 50 years came in late 2009 after Elites labeled Hugo Chavez an authoritarian (despite repeated popular elections). They indicated a desire to, "divert the country toward a democracy." That type of rhetoric often indicates a mission to destabilize a regime, and impose a true dictator subservient only to the whims of the Globalists. Big Oil hates iconoclastic leaders who are not members of The Club. The benefit of political instability can set the stage for a future coup, so we have to wonder if a weather weapon was tested to produce anger among the populace. Chavez invoked El Niño at the time, but did indicate his awareness of U.S. weather weapons after the Haiti Earthquake.

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