Every day, by all the supposed means of communication, we have an incessant bombardment of news about Venezuela that presents us with an apocalyptic panorama of the South American country: «In Venezuela there is no food, there is no bread, there is no electricity, the hospitals do not work, they are dying of hunger, the country is a disaster ... »,« in Venezuela there is no democracy but dictatorship, the opposition is persecuted, the media is closed, they torture and repressed, journalists go into exile ... the work of the media joins the version of thousands of Venezuelans who live outside their country and who contribute to an opinion matrix that seems, to say the least, exaggerated. In these paradoxical times in which greater accumulation of news does not mean being more informed, Venezuela exemplifies the death of journalism like no other case; a country that holds the main oil r...read more