First Quote Added
April 10, 2026
Latest Quote Added
"I remind you that it is not a personal award, it is to let everyone see the need to work for the understanding among all Venezuelans, overcoming all kinds of violence is the only way that will allow us a future of peace and harmony."
"I have been amazed to see the constant flow of pilgrims who come to show their devotion to Mary from all over the continent and this is a sort of mark of our people. This is for me an example and an encouragement for my own personal life of faith."
"The answer is to live to its fullest our faith in Jesus and to openly proclaim the supreme gift of God to humanity: grace and salvation through Jesus made man. The answer is to live our ecclesial life in Jesus more intensely, and openly proclaim the message of salvation, clearly and boldly, without disputes between churches and in the joy of our Catholic identity."
"There are several elements that must be taken into account if you really want peace in Venezuela. One should start from the fact that we all have different ways of thinking, and both parties must accept this reality. To have peace there must be justice, because there can be no peace if there is no justice."
"We all have a responsibility in forging a more dignified Venezuela, but not in violent forms. The right to protest is a civil right granted by the Constitution that the State must recognize. No one can deny or hide that there is rampant violence and insecurity. the State must assume its role of governing for all citizens and not just for one faction."
"Let us ask God that all human beings, especially believers, will learn to be thankful for the gift of life that God has given us and that those who govern the destinies of the nations will establish laws that respect and defend that gift."
"El presidente Hugo ChĂĄvez fue un pilar fundamental para el deporte en mi paĂs. ImpulsĂł muchos mĂŠtodos para que el deporte llegara a los mĂĄs bajos niveles y para que los niĂąos vieran que el deporte era importante para la salud, para los valores humanos."
"Listen, my books are about dragons and vampires and puppies and bad-tempered unicorns, because I like all those things and I want to write funny, happy books. But one of the biggest reasons I write at all is to get inside someone else's head. I think everyone is at the center of their own story, and I always wonder about how other people see the world... how two people might experience the same event in completely different ways. [...] [I]t shouldn't be surprising that I put a lot of faith in the power of storytelling to shape our own real-life character."
"I feel so lucky that these amazing readers have connected with my books - and they are amazing; the kids I've talked to are the sweetest, smartest, most thoughtful people, and it gives me so much hope for the future. Especially since so many of them are storytellers and artists, too! Maybe that's the unexpected response I'm proudest of, that there are so many incredibly creative young people who want to come play in my dragon world. I hope it inspires them to create their own hopeful, compassionate stories and a more hopeful, compassionate real world."
"Iâve always loved kidsâ books, because I feel like children are the most interesting audience and the one you can affect the most. I remember the books I read when I was 10, 11, and 12, and I feel like they shaped me and my view of the world, and the kind of person I wanted to be. Itâs such a wonderful field to work in. Iâm interested in joyful and hopeful stories. Thereâs a lot of dark, crazy things that happen in the dragon books, but the kind of thing Iâm always trying to head toward is that idea of hope and agency, that no matter who you are you can control your own destiny. I want kids to feel that coming out of these books."
"I am convinced that it is possible for us to be united by our ideals, instead of divided by our differences."
"Weâre not just dealing in willingness, humanity has to qualify to survive and it wonât depend on political or economic systems, but âthe forcesâ pushing them to act. The universe is synergetic, life is synergetic. Don't fight forces, unite them."
"As a Senior Technical Marketing Engineer for over 18 years, I am deeply impressed by the value of the work that Sheyene is doing through her non-profit. She understands how to inspire people to not just love the subject matter, but to see the possibility of contributing to it in themselves through a few simple steps. This is a rare skill; you often get two of these at the same time, not all three."
"People, in general, are unaware of the danger they are in, that with no way to personally go into space, no need for their labor in the face of robotic artificial intelligence, and no way to gain an ownership share in the industry, they will be left behind both economically and politically, unless steps are taken during the startup period."
"Workers who donât share ownership of the robots will be reduced to political powerlessness far worse than their conditions today. We have the opportunity to solve this problem during the bootstrapping period while human labor is still needed for space industry."
"Creating industry on the Moon and Mars and in space with asteroids is not rocket science; it is industrial engineering where we need to adapt existing technologies to a new environment."
"There is so much to learn, but also so much to unlearn... And perhaps not surprisingly, even our approach to learning has changed."
"I have been following with great interest Sheyeneâs activities in organizing world-wide robotics competitions. Her vision for expanding the scope and the impact of space science and engineering outreach dovetails strongly with the objectives of the Center for Lunar and Asteroid Surface Science. We are looking forward to working with Sheyene and are excited about the possibilities of the robotic competitions."
"What a country does affect all the others. The solution to our global problems requires a perspective that embraces the fact that we are all in this together. The silver lining is that is forcing us to act as universal species. That´s a terrifically exciting thing."
"The president of the United States Donald Trump in the months of August and September of last year was analyzing a military intervention against Venezuela."
"Itâs a political war of the American empire, of the interests of the extreme right that today governs, of the Ku Klux Klan that rules over the White House, to take over Venezuela."
"You are wrong, Milei [...] you who were put in Argentina to destroy the rule of law, to destroy the State, to destroy all social and labour rights, to destroy the national economy and to colonise Argentina and deliver it to the knees of North American imperialism."
"Come and get me, I'll be waiting for you here in Miraflores [...] Come and get me, coward!"
"We are complex beings they say Homo Sapiens have been around for 300 thousand years. The scholars say it. Scientists with recent discoveries, I believe, in Argentina, by studying Milei's brain, discovered that he didn't belong to Homo Sapiens which is a weird thing. And as such, (he is a) âHomo Fascisâ, âHomo Nazisâ. Milei is a kind of âHomo Naziâ."
"Yesterday, the President of the United States announced, precisely on this same platform, new and alleged economic and financial sanctions against our country in the sanctuary of the law and international legality. Did the United Nations System know that the unilateral sanctions, using the dominion, the status of the currency and the financial persecution are considered illegal from the standpoint of international law?"
"Venezuela is subjected to a permanent media aggression... to justify an international intervention. We know that it is an intended international intervention, a military intervention to control our country. At global level, a file has been forged through the media against our country to pretend a humanitarian crisis that uses the United Nations concepts to justify a coalition of countries led by the Government of the United States, and their satellite governments in Latin America, to get its hands on our country. A migration crisis, that goes without saying, has been forged by several means, aimed at diverting the attention from the real migration crises in the world..."
"Yesterday, the President of the United States, in this very platform, threatened the governments of the world to submit to its designs, to its orders and to cooperate with its policies in the United Nations system, or he would act accordingly. Venezuela has been attacked with a fierce diplomatic offensive at all of the United Nations system bodies, supported by satellite kneeled governments blackening the honor of the peoples that they are called to represent."
"Venezuela has been subjected to permanent political aggression. On September 8th, the New York Times published an article evidencing the participation of officials of the White House and the government of the United States, in meetings to bring about a military coup and cause a change of government, a change of regime in Venezuela. The investigation published by the New York Times â replicated by the Times magazine, the Washington Post and the world press â simply confirmed the conspiracy, the permanent aggression by factors of the government of the United States against a constitutional and strengthened democracy; a democracy supported by the people, such as the Venezuelan democracy..."
"Should Latin America and the Caribbean accept these methods that so hurt our region in the entire 20th century? How many military interventions? How many coup dâĂŠtats? How many dictatorships were imposed during the long and dark 20th century in Latin America and the Caribbean, and who did it favor? Did it favor the Peoples? What interests did they represent? The interests of the transnational companies, the unpopular interests; long dictatorships, like Augusto Pinochetâs in Chile, were faced by our peoples due to the stubbornness of the American elites..."
"We bring our homelandâs truth to this honorable UN General Assembly; after the failure published and announced by the New York Times of these illegal, unconstitutional and criminal attempts of regime change, after the democratic presidential election, last May 20th, when I, Nicolas Maduro Moros, obtained 68% of the popular votes through free elections â the 24th election in 19 years, of which 22 have been won by the revolutionary forces of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, at different levels of approval, against the opposition forces of our country; after the failure of the attempted military coups, candidacies and electoral tactics supported by Washington..."
"Last August 4th, I was a victim of a terrorist attack with drones that tried to kill me in a military event on one of the main avenues in Caracas. If it had been executed as planned, it would have been a massacre, an assassination of the institutional, political and military high command of our nation....the terrorists... who attacked me... were captured by the security... agencies. The 28 perpetrators were captured...are convicted and sentenced. As I informed... different governments of the world, all the investigations about that terrorist attack indicate that it was prepared, financed and planned in the territory of United States of America... I would like to ask the United Nations system to appoint a special delegate of the Secretariat of the United Nations to conduct an independent investigation internationally about the implications and responsibilities of this terrorist attack."
"We bring good news from a country that has not given up and shall not do so. Good news from a nation that is consolidating its democracy... a country that is building its own social model, its own welfare state by means of new formulas to protect its elders, its pensioners, its children, its young people, its women, the neediest sectors, its working class."
"Venezuela is a country which advocates for and is committed to the construction of a pluripolar and multicentric world, where all the different regions (Africa, Latin America, the Caribbean, Asia, Europe, and North America) can live together in balance and peace, respecting our cultures, religions, idiosyncrasies, identities and economic and political models."
"There is not a unique economic model; we must not allow the imposition of a single cultural model, a single political model; they intend to impose a single thought for humanity. I say no. We vindicate the cultural, religious and political diversity of humanity...we advocate for the emergence of such a world of justice. We assume and declare our solidarity with the Arab people of Palestine; justice shall arrive to Palestine so that their historic territories, established in 1967 by this United Nations Organization, are respected."
"200 years ago, our region was plagued by colonies, slavery and injustice. 100 years ago, as peoples, we struggled for freedom. Today, in the 21st century... the opportunity has come. Undoubtedly, in the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, with Simon Bolivarâs revolutionary ideas, with the example and legacy of Commander Hugo Chavez â whose voice still resonates here in this room demanding justice and justice for the world, demanding the cessation of the imperial practices of threats, coercion and extortion against peoples â we can say that in 20 years of revolution, the last 3 have been the hardest years: years of harassment, aggressions and attacks."
"Venezuela is a friendly country. Venezuelans do not hate the United States; on the contrary, we appreciate the United States, their culture, their arts, their society. We differ from the imperial concepts that took over the political power in Washington since the foundation of that nation. In 1826, our Liberator Simon Bolivar said prophetically: âThe United States appear to be destined by Providence to plague America with hunger and misery in the name of libertyâ. It was a prophetic vision.... We believe in the political dialogue as a way to find solutions and solve conflicts."
"I welcome all those... who wish to help respecting the countryâs sovereignty, without interfering in Venezuelaâs internal affairs so that they can support us, join us in a process of sovereign dialogue for Venezuelaâs peace, democracy, justice, future and prosperity; a noble nation which deserves peace, a future and the best."
"Two years ago, on April 30, 2019, the Venezuelan people took to the streets to reclaim their democracy from the illegitimate rule of NicolĂĄs Maduro. Yet for now, Maduro still clings to power. In so doing, he has driven what was once the wealthiest country in Latin America â with the worldâs largest proven oil reserves, its second-largest gold deposits, and one of the highest literacy rates in the region â into abject, grinding poverty."
"The size and variety of corruption schemes employed by the regime is dizzying. Over the past two decades, the late Hugo ChĂĄvez and NicolĂĄs Maduro and their cronies plundered at least $300 billion from state assets (according to several of ChĂĄvezâs own former ministers). At the same time, they racked up a massive amount of debt; experts place the amount owed to creditors at more than $150 billion. The situation is so bad that the International Monetary Fund recently made clear that the Maduro regime is cut off from receiving its $5 billion in special drawing rights, because the IMF knows that Maduro will simply steal the money."
"Of all the rapacious schemes employed by Maduro and his cronies, the most heinous was the one run for the benefit of Maduro himself: profiting from the starvation of his own people. By blocking humanitarian aid from outside the country, he made Venezuelans increasingly dependent on the so-called CLAP program â a food-box distribution. By overbilling on sole-source contracts and purchasing substandard products, Maduro and his front men stole as much as 70 percent of the money that was meant to feed the most desperate Venezuelans."
"ChĂĄvez had died a year earlier, in 2013, after fourteen years as president. A former soldier, he called himself a socialist and a revolutionary and he delighted in thumbing his nose at the United States, the imperial power to the north, to which he sold most of his countryâs oil. His successor was NicolĂĄs Maduro, a less talented politician who styled himself as the ideological heir of the man he called the eternal comandante. In Maduroâs short time as president, there had been waves of protest, the economy had begun to contract, inflation was soaring, and shortages of food and other goods were becoming acute."
"I asked what she thought about the government. She told me that the government gave people what they needed. This was a Venezuelan truism, whether or not it was true in practice: Venezuela was a petrostate, and in the eyes of its citizens, it existed to parcel out the riches pumped from the ground. What did she think about ChĂĄvez? She said that he was her comandante. And Maduro? The son of the comandante. That was all."
"At the same time, on the other side of the Atlantic, in Venezuela, the authoritarian populist Hugo ChĂĄvez and his disciple NicolĂĄs Maduro initiated a similar policy of massive spending, corruption and nationalization. The difference was that ChĂĄvez had control over the worldâs largest oil reserves at a time when oil prices were soaring, so he received almost $1,000 billion that could keep that policy afloat for a little longer. That was enough for ChĂĄvez to be the leftâs favourite demagogue for a while. Bernie Sanders said that the American dream was more alive in Venezuela than in the US. Labourâs Jeremy Corbyn praised ChĂĄvez for showing that âthe poor matter and wealth can be sharedâ. Oxfam called Venezuela âLatin Americaâs inequality success storyâ. In an open letter to âDear President ChĂĄvezâ, luminaries of the Left such as Jesse Jackson, Naomi Klein, Howard Zinn and others state that they âsee Venezuela not only as a model democracy but also as a model of how a countryâs oil wealth can be used to benefit all of its people.â On paper, that $1,000 billion was enough to make every extremely poor individual in Venezuela a millionaire. But still, it is not much money if you do not invest it productively and if you destroy the ability to create new wealth with nationalization and price controls. When the price of oil began to fall only slightly, it became obvious that the business sector was in a shambles and the oil industry had been demolished by corrupt mismanagement and underinvestment. The result was one of the worst economic disasters to have occurred anywhere in the world in peacetime. Between 2010 and 2020, Venezuelaâs average income plummeted by an incomprehensible 75 per cent. South Americaâs richest country suddenly turned into South Americaâs poorest country with breadlines and a mass exodus from an increasingly tyrannical state. Around seven million Venezuelans have fled the crumbling country, an unbelievable 25 per cent of the countryâs population. Since then, Venezuela has been less frequently mentioned as the hope of the international working class."
"I am a son of ChĂĄvez, but I am not ChĂĄvez."
"In 2018, Maduro was re-elected President. A section of the opposition boycotted the election, a tactic tried against Chavez. The boycott failed: 9,389,056 people voted; sixteen parties participated and six candidates stood for the presidency. Maduro won 6,248,864 votes, or 67.84 per cent."
"On election day, I spoke to one of the 150 foreign election observers. âIt was entirely fair,â he said. âThere was no fraud; none of the lurid media claims stood up. Zero. Amazing really.â"
"People elected... NicolĂĄs Maduro...Thereâs a conspiracy to undermine the will of the people... that has happened, the will of the majority of the people. They delegitimized the elections when the Carter Institute said... âthese are the best elections in the world.â ...We seem to redefine or define dictator in ways that are useful [to dishonest politicians]. So you drive it into peopleâs consciousness... This pathology, if you drive that into peopleâs consciousness, that a person is a dictator, then in some sense, they accept that in ways, subconsciously, unconsciously, because itâs been drummed into their memory. No matter all the information that refutes that... free elections... transparent elections, whatever...The question is always going to be what they hear..."
"All across the so-called liberal media, the reporting and analysis on Venezuela the past weeks has been atrocious. And actually, it has been this way for a long time. We should remember that The New York Times actually openly supported the 2002 coup against Hugo ChĂĄvez. But in the wake of the recent Venezuelan elections, there has been a total uniformity to the characterization of Venezuelaâs suffering and chaos as the sole fault of NicolĂĄs Maduro. The elections are being denounced by anchors as though itâs just accepted fact that Maduro is only president because of corruption. Almost never mentioned prominently is the fact that Venezuela has been systematically targeted by the United States and its allies and its puppets in Latin America or the impact the economic sanctions have had on the country or the fact that there was an attempt to kill NicolĂĄs Maduro with a drone packed with explosives. The story is just âMaduro is a corrupt Socialist dictator. He needs to be taken out so that Venezuela can be free.â The central role that the U.S. has played under Bush, under Obama, and now, under Trump in destabilizing Venezuela"
"ChĂĄvezâs successor, NicolĂĄs Maduro, has been even worse. Heâs ChĂĄvez without the mo. He accelerated Venezuelaâs transition to authoritarianism while devastating its economy and people."
"For many media commentators, Maduro sought to strengthen his position internally by putting on display the support he counts on from powerful international allies. Fear of a U.S. military response may be a more plausible explanation for his motives.... The presence of Russian bombers in Venezuela last week and the possibility of future deployments are clear examples of the undesirable consequences of Washingtonâs unyielding hostility toward that nation."
Young though he was, his radiant energy produced such an impression of absolute reliability that Hedgewar made him the first sarkaryavah, or general secretary, of the RSS.
- Gopal Mukund Huddar
Largely because of the influence of communists in London, Huddar's conversion into an enthusiastic supporter of the fight against fascism was quick and smooth. The ease with which he crossed from one worldview to another betrays the fact that he had not properly understood the world he had grown in.
Huddar would have been 101 now had he been alive. But then centenaries are not celebrated only to register how old so and so would have been and when. They are usually celebrated to explore how much poorer our lives are without them. Maharashtrian public life is poorer without him. It is poorer for not having made the effort to recall an extraordinary life.
I regret I was not there to listen to Balaji Huddar's speech [...] No matter how many times you listen to him, his speeches are so delightful that you feel like listening to them again and again.
By the time he came out of Franco's prison, Huddar had relinquished many of his old ideas. He displayed a worldview completely different from that of the RSS, even though he continued to remain deferential to Hedgewar and maintained a personal relationship with him.