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March 07, 2013

Hugo Boss

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Christopher Hitchens in Slate:

Recent accounts of Hugo Chávez's politicized necrophilia may seem almost too lurid to believe, but I can testify from personal experience that they may well be an understatement. In the early hours of July 16—just at the midnight hour, to be precise—Venezuela's capo officiated at a grisly ceremony. This involved the exhumation of the mortal remains of Simón Bolívar, leader of Latin America's rebellion against Spain, who died in 1830. According to a vividly written articleby Thor Halvorssen in the July 25 Washington Post, the skeleton was picked apart—even as Chávez tweeted the proceedings for his audience—and some teeth and bone fragments were taken away for testing. The residual pieces were placed in a coffin stamped with the Chávez government's seal. In one of the rather free-associating speeches for which he has become celebrated, Chávez appealed to Jesus Christ to restage the raising of Lazarus and reanimate Bolívar's constituent parts. He went on:

"I had some doubts, but after seeing his remains, my heart said, 'Yes, it is me.' Father, is that you, or who are you? The answer: 'It is me, but I awaken every hundred years when the people awaken.' "

As if "channeling" this none-too-subtle identification of Chávez with the national hero, Venezuelan television was compelled to run images of Bolívar, followed by footage of the remains, and then pictures of the boss. The national anthem provided the soundtrack. Not since North Korean media declared Kim Jong-il to be the reincarnation of Kim Il Sung has there been such a blatant attempt to create a necrocracy, or perhaps mausolocracy, in which a living claimant assumes the fleshly mantle of the departed.

Posted by Robin Varghese at 04:41 PM | Permalink

Comments

Holder:

Mr Holder stressed in his letter that the prospect of a president considering the assassination of an American citizen on US soil was "entirely hypothetical" and "unlikely to occur".

Yet "it is possible, I suppose, to imagine an extraordinary circumstance in which it would be necessary and appropriate under the constitution and applicable laws of the United States for the president to authorise the military to use lethal force within the territory of the United States," he wrote.

And in other news,

"Attorney General Eric Holder on Wednesday said the suicide death of internet activist Aaron Swartz was a “tragedy,” but the hacking case against the 26-year-old was “a good use of prosecutorial discretion.”

But I agree, it is much more important to stress Chavez's megalomania and paranoia.

Posted by: Foppe | Mar 7, 2013 5:24:09 PM

Thank you, Foppe.

Posted by: Ruchira | Mar 7, 2013 10:23:58 PM

By fostering the inequalities in their countries, the Right only have themselves to blame for the rise of people like Chavez. And the Left will only have themselves to blame when their countries inevitably lurch back to the Right.

Posted by: Johnson Tang | Mar 7, 2013 11:38:57 PM

Thank you, Johnson Tang. I've often wondered, from this rainy side of the Pond, whether the US plan for exporting democracy to Cuba includes exporting the Mafia to run new casinos; and other US businesses to run the agriculture sector
. . . much as it was under Batista.
Aside from that, the Divine Hitch gets it right as usual.

Posted by: Nigel Foster | Mar 8, 2013 7:17:22 AM

Yeah, Chavez was such a thug. I can't believe the way he invaded that country on false pretenses and murdered a million people there.

I hope you're comfy in Hell, Hitch, you evil old whore.

Posted by: Picador | Mar 8, 2013 10:53:14 AM

As a side note: the veneration of political mummies is an old tradition in Latin America (cf. the Perons). There are a number of scholarly treatises on the subject. So Chavez was following a traditional path, not a radical commie one as Hitchens insinuates.

Posted by: CCBC | Mar 8, 2013 4:08:04 PM

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