Hugo Chavez is dead, but his oil lives. A man who evoked a prism of emotions, from those looking down on Latin America with scorn for his anti-American rhetoric to those who yearned that his democratic message may infect our complacent masses, Chavez was a divisive symbol of our changing relationship with our continental neighbors.
The article continues: An oil tycoon American leftists could love, a member of the one percent now at rest with over a billion dollars to his name, and countless admirers from the ninety-nine percent in this game called politics, Chavez was both villain and hero of the Americas. It’s difficult to find a more polarizing international figure in American politics than Hugo Chavez.
His reckless personality and charismatic charm forced Americans to confront our foreign policy in a way no other Latin country has. His single-minded drive to resist American pressure and his embrace of our enemies, like Cuba’s Fidel Castro and Iran’s Ahmadinejad, while in our backyard was a rebuke that our government took personally
More: The larger picture is unlikely to change with Chavez’ death, and until we see Latin America beyond the sense of entitlement we have grown to assume in our relationship with that region, we will continue to serve as a convenient focal point of indignation for Latin politicians to rally their people behind.
Read more: http://nbclatino.com/2013/03/06/opinion-petrodollars-will-continue-to-dominate-our-relationship-with-venezuela/