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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">aid. If one goes offline,
others fail. Employees don't even have fuses, said Lara. "They have to
cobble together their own to keep things running.""There's no money to buy
parts for something that breaks," said Giovanni Rinaldi, a 15-year employee
at a hydroelectric plant in the eastern city of Ciudad Guayana, which
he said is plagued by four or five power outages a week
despite being in the region that generates more than 70 percent of
Venezuela's electricity.He was fired this week after posting photos on Twitter
of a state utility company vehicle plastered with Maduro campaign material."We
had put our own money into keeping those vehicles running because the
company didn't," Rinaldi, a 40-year-old father of two, said by phone. "It's
not right."The government hasn't adequately spent to expand and strengthen
the power grid, critics say.They also blame problems on Cuban, Iranian and
Uruguayan technicians brought in to run by Chavez to run the system.
Accidents are up tenfold, and there are places in remote states that
suffer outages for as long as three to five days, says Lara.Maduro,
who was sworn in as interim president the day of Chavez's funeral,
promises better performance but blames the recent surge in outages on sabotage
by sympathizers of his challenger Sunday, opposition leader Henrique Capriles.The
government has "militarized" the electric grid and said Tuesday that at
least 17 alleged saboteurs have been detained but offered n
In President Obama's push to crack down on the abundance of firearms
in America, proposed gun-control legislation may be having the opposite
effect.Updated FBI statistics show that background checks in the first three
months of the year far outpace the number of checks in early
2012. The stats show that from January through March, gun owners went
through 7 million background checks -- compared with just 4.8 million in
the first three months of last year.The spike in checks, coupled with
mounting anecdotal claims that ammunition is hard to come by, comes amid
concern by gun owners that new proposals at the state and federal
level could limit access to firearms.Though supporters of the legislation
say that is not the case, the assurances haven't stopped what statistics
suggest is a run on weapons. The purchases have picked up ever
since Obama's election in 2008. Since 2009, there have been 71 million
background checks logged in the federal system. The annual number has risen
every year.The recorded checks only apply to sales from licensed dealers.The
most recent spike further adds to the underlying challenge facing lawmakers
-- how do you regulate weapons when there are already 300 million
of them, and rising, in circulation?While some lawmakers have proposed clawing
back currently owned assault-style weapons, most proposed assault-weapons
bans only apply to future purchases. And at the federal level, the
chance of such a ban passing has
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