• Susan Seligson

    Susan Seligson has written for many publications and websites, including the New York Times Magazine, The Atlantic, the Boston Globe, Yankee, Outside, Redbook, the Times of London, Salon.com, Radar.com, and Nerve.com. Profile

Comments & Discussion

Boston University moderates comments to facilitate an informed, substantive, civil conversation. Abusive, profane, self-promotional, misleading, incoherent or off-topic comments will be rejected. Moderators are staffed during regular business hours (EST) and can only accept comments written in English. Statistics or facts must include a citation or a link to the citation.

There are 17 comments on With Hugo Chávez Dead, What Now?

  1. Thank you, BU Today and Renata Keller. These are definitely interesting times for Venezuela and for international relations in the Americas. While on some level Chavez performed his presidency with demagoguery and theatrics, he also helped his country immensely by redefining its destiny and history, and by taking back its natural resource wealth. He also presided over one of the first instances where a country told the US to get out of its backyard and wasn’t subsequently invaded.

      1. Sure, he put the country on the map, but for negative reasons. Everyone knows Chavez as the president who challenged and mocked Bush and America, but no one truly knows the damage he did to his own nation. Since his reign, people in Venezuela have been suffering with extreme, unnecessary violence and unstable conditions when in comes to safety for the individuals and their families. The only reason one would say that Chavez redefined Venezuela’s history is because they are unaware of all the conditions that declined while he was in power. He might have redefined his nation’s history, but surely in a negative, detrimental aspect.

  2. Thank you Dr. Keller for giving a balanced and interesting perspective on Chavez. Many times students who don’t know a lot about Latin America will only hear the opinions of students who have left their country to study at BU, and sometimes their perspectives reflect their experiences and beliefs but don’t give light to the thoughts of poor people who could never afford to get that sort of education. Good read.

  3. Good article Renata. I’m Venezuelan born and moved here in my teens. I left many relatives in Ven, and watched their successful middle class lives go south under Chavez. My aunt was the owner of an electronics store one week and driving a taxi the next. They claim Chavez’s focus on social programs and directing oil production wealth to the poor was huge in the media and relatively small in actuality. They tell me he was “all talk, no substance”.

    With an enormous lower class that tends to vote with their hearts vice their brains, most Venezuelans are feeling a state of mixed feelings. They are hopeful that a new administration can re-establish foreign relations with countries not necessarily associated with “the axis of evil”, but they also fear the return of the Carlos Andres Perez-type presidents that cleaned out their coffers with ridiculously extravagant lifestyles.

    We are watching with anticipation and hope the Venezuelan people get it right.

  4. I think this is a very misleading article about Chavez and his impact on Venezuelan society. During his tenure Mr. Chavez destroyed the Venezuelan economy and created an unsustainable welfare society. The tension between those with and without money in Venezuela is such that it is actually dangerous to travel in the country. There are regular shortages of all imported good. Oil production has dropped by 35% since he came to power. Inflation is out of control….etc I think its great that so many North Americans want to believe in a champion for the poor but unfortunately he destroyed the country. His successor inherits this mess and as a result the Chavista movement will only outlive its founder by a couple years.

  5. His death was actually in december and the government has been hiding it the past few months. People, open your eyes. The media has been blinding the truth over there and you can’t trust there will be a fair election especially since Maduro has been in power for months. It’s sickening to see people crying because they voted for him just so they can have a plate of food. Meanwhile crime has gone up substantially and Caracas has become more dangerous than when I spent my childhood there. My family didn’t want to leave tjhecountry. Now they can’t even get a visa to visit without having a substantial amount of money much less reside somewhere else. What a mess. What a shame. Tragic sstoryin Venezuela

  6. At the funeral a river, sea, an ocean of red shirted people mourned for El Comandante Hugo Chavez. Their banners red “We are all Chavez”.

    Chavez lives on in the hearts of the Venezuelan people. What Chavez called 21st Century Socialism is alive and well, not only in Caracas not only in Venezuela, but across Latin America, Southern Europe and the Middle East.

  7. My brother has lived in Caracas for the past 33 years – as a musician, not a rich businessman – and seen the terrible decline in Venezuela’s society, economy, and democracy. He has repeatedly said that Americans just don’t get how bad and thuggish Chavez is/was. Chavez ripped up the constitution,packed the courts and assembly and businesses (i.e., oil) with his cronies. The country is bankrupt and on the verge of civil unrest. Thanks, Chavez.

  8. To millions of Venezuelans, Chavez was an iconic statesman; yet, I revile him for branding our beloved President (George W. Bush) a snake. But, whatever our political orientations, pro-socialist or democracy-focused, the best judge of his legacy as a leader and a human being is history.

  9. Chavez shared the same goals as Simon Bolivar. A just free fair, democratic and equitable United States of Latin America. Chavez’s Bolivarian revolution thus predates Chavez, and shall live on long after all of us currently living, have passed away.

  10. I don’t understand how anyone can think that a country taking care of its poor is bad. America says in God we trust, but they do the exact opposite. You think God wants the poor to die, just because of where they are born?
    Capitalism is killing democracy all over the world. The Top 1 percent control our markets for their own benefit,
    Anyone who doesn’t see this is very poorly informed. Do your research people of America, the majority of you are not getting the whole story. Don’t believe a lot of what you see in the news, it’s meant to mislead you!
    If we don’t do something to change the state of the world, there won’t be one for our future generations!
    We owe it them to educate ourselves on what is really happening in the world around us. We need to make the necessary changes to improve life for all people and not just the ones on top. You think the billionaires of the world care about the future of your children? If so their plan is working, good luck with that!

Post a comment.

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *