, Columnist
Catastrophe Is the New Normal for Venezuelans
Why bother to complain when political and economic turmoil have become a way of life?
Queuing at the supermarket.
Photographer: Federico Parra/AFP/Getty ImagesThis article is for subscribers only.
Making sense of the rolling political and economic disaster in Venezuela isn't easy. But the bigger mystery may be why the whole country isn't flooding into the streets to demand the end of the social revolution that's left one of Latin America's most resource-rich nations in a shambles.
Start with the riddle of why the country with the world's largest crude oil reserves has suffered constant power outages. (Spoiler: instead of using oil to generate electricity, the government has relied on hydropower while failing to plan for this year's punishing drought; it neglected to build new power plants or invest in its crumbling infrastructure.)
