Bolivia gay clubs
If the president of Bolivia, Evo Morales, a couple of very large country nationalized mines, he threw the foreign operators who had put the entire infrastructure, and invested the money in digging up these resources. These foreign investment companies and the companies on which the operations were all lost, and they had to pay license fees and taxes to the Bolivian government under contract. Evo Morales said in a speech that the resources belonged to the Bolivian people, that the Bolivian people, and Indians of this country. He also said that the money was from the minerals taken from the mines generated belongs to the Bolivian people and the money generated is used to give them a better life, are not among the beneficiaries of the foreign companies. This sent shock waves throughout the international investment community and Bolivia was fast from the short list of foreign countries to invest in. It turns out that if Bolivia took over these mines and trampled upon, for the foreigners, they did not know enough to put on mining, the mines efficiently enough to make a profit. In the meantime, Evo Morales had promised the Bolivian people, that by taking over the mines, they could afford to pay for services to the people by the government. Now the president of Bolivia is running for re-election and put many of the farmers over other small mines and claims that they have them. The result is a new series of shock waves, and yet nothing is done. It looks like the president of Bolivia has something that he can not quit now, and so close to the election, he does not say a word started. According to Reuters News Wire, "ANALYSIS-Bolivia's Evo Morales makes his eyes in front of me fits," Thu 15 October 2009, by Diego Ore, "Dozens of my bouts of peasants to the suffering of the dilapidated mining industry in Bolivia encore, but the left-wing government is unlikely to crack down on squatters before a presidential election. "It looks as if the socialist tactics have increased in Bolivia, where the mobs, and this seems to presentiment of things to come. Bolivia is definitely at a crossroads, and although the country was once a rising star in South America, things are not very good in those days. Even as a rogue communist and socialist states in motion in order to make the current government. Please note all of this.
Farellones













