**Headline: Earthquakes Hit Venezuela, But Good Luck Getting Help!**
So, two earthquakes in Venezuela managed to take out power in two out of three public hospitals in La Guaira. Great job, infrastructure! The director of a nonprofit, “United Doctors of Venezuela,” is the one spilling the beans here, while a reporter from a big-name outlet hops on CBS to discuss it, because, apparently, that’s the best we can do these days.
You have to wonder: why are we hearing from a nonprofit director instead of government officials? Oh right, because they’re too busy with whatever it is they do when disaster strikes—likely not dealing with the aftermath. The hospitals are essentially out of commission, and it seems nobody in charge can muster a plan to get things back on track.
It’s almost like the media loves to report on disaster without digging deeper into why these systems are so fragile. You know, the stuff that really matters, like what’s being done to fix it or why this keeps happening.
Is it too much to ask for a little accountability? Or are we just going to keep rolling with the narrative that everything’s fine until the next disaster proves otherwise?
By Admin | Published: June 30, 2026 at 1:17 am