Venezuela failed "aid" concert fake numbers
U.S. is trying to overthrow the Venezuelan government sending seudohumanitarian aid which was not requested and it is not accepted. In fact, US interests aim at the huge petroleum and gas fields and other mineral resources of the country. They organized a concert which was not very succesful and inflated the attendance numbers.
D.A.
200,000 or 10,000?
WaPo deletes inflated Venezuela Aid Live attendance figure from its website
Modeled on
Live Aid, Richard Branson's charity concert was meant to unite the world behind
the cause of delivering aid to Venezuela (which its government doesn't want). But
the endeavor would look vainglorious if few turned up.
The hastily planned five-hour affair at a
Colombian-Venezuelan border crossing was scheduled to start at 11am local time
on Friday – a workday. This wasn't a masterstroke of event logistics, even if
many of the biggest Latin American stars, presidents, and opposition leader
Juan Guaido, were due on the expensively assembled rotating stage.
The entire mainstream Western media dutifully covered the
event as a success, even before it happened, unquestioningly repeating claims
of 250,000 people attending and $100 million being raised in 60 days, although
it was not clear how these figures were arrived at.
'Tiny fraction'
On the day, the narrative continued unchanged. Colombia,
whose President Ivan Duque joined Guaido on stage, reported that 317,000 people
attended the gig. This was a wonderfully precise figure considering there were
no tickets and people came and went at will.
The Washington Post was a little more cautious, giving a
figure of 200,000. But perhaps oddly, considering all the pre-concert hype,
most media outlets gave no estimates at all, concentrating on the revolutionary
calls and platitudes of peace coming from the stage.
This was a wise move. The Live Aid concert in London at
Wembley in 1985, recently recreated for the Queen biopic 'Bohemian Rhapsody,'
was attended by 72,000, and was made iconic by the swooping overhead shots of
the overfilled stadium.
With a crowd three, or perhaps four times bigger, one would
have expected truly impressive vistas of the endless masses to emerge, yet the
majority of the camera angles were close-ups or shots taken from behind the
backs of the audience, just a few rows back.
Dan Cohen, the RT reporter on the scene, said that at 11am
only a "tiny fraction" of the announced crowd was present –
likely no more than 10,000.
Using the
few available aerial shots taken throughout the day, and some standard crowd
calculations for the occasion, alternative news site Moon of Alabama estimated an
attendance of about 18,000.
Even if these are conservative numbers, and one imagines
that some in the audience popped in for just a few songs to be replaced by
others, there is no evidence whatsoever to suggest that hundreds of thousands
were present.
The
Washington Post, which had not attributed its original estimation to any
source, edited the number out of the later drafts of its article,
without making any acknowledgement of the correction. The original can still be
found in saved screenshots and cached copies, while the number still freatire in
other articles.
Regime change songs
While it is tempting to do online detective work to expose
published untruths, the failure of Venezuela Aid Live was not about the
numbers. That people did not come, or that newspapers exaggerated, were all
symptoms – not causes.
However naive or vain the participants or inefficient the
spending of its donations, the original Live Aid was at its heart driven by a
genuine desire to do good for those suffering in Ethiopia.
The altruism of Aid Live was less self-evident.
Here is an
event created by Guaido and Richard Branson, a man with no obvious ties to
Venezuela, but a friend to Davos elites of all stripes, who loves to play
holiday host to the Blairs and the Obamas. It was an extravaganza for
which an exact funding breakdown has still not been made public. It was staged
in tandem with the violence-inciting aid caravans the following day.
The most
respectable charities in the world, including the UN, Red Cross and Oxfam, have
distanced themselves from the entire Western-backed "aid" initiative
in Venezuela, bemoaning its "political tone," while adding
that "humanitarian action needs to be independent of political,
military or other objectives." None of the slogans for regime change
shouted off the stage on Friday are likely to have brought them on side.
Reproduced
from:
https://www.rt.com/news/452358-venezuela-aid-concert-branson-numbers/

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