Opposition supporters will likely get some extra luck sent there way, as OPEC leaders last month voted to cut production to keep prices and their windfalls high were unable to secure production measures in many OPEC producing nations. With another attempt in December to curb production by 1 million barrels a day and forcing purchasing countries to re-gauge inflation for the increasing number of debt ridden citizens worldwide, it is likely that OPEC and oil producing nations need to realise that economics are linked with the livelihood of real people, and that a process of de-fossilization which began in the late 70's may finally get its opportunity to grow and reduce oil prices indefinitely. Politically, countries such as Iran and Chavez's Venezuela might envy the past with Bush's America spending as much on crude as on political currency, a dual benefit for many anti-American populists, a day which might come to an end with low oil prices and Obama.
In the end, like in the late 70's, Oil prices will always find a way to follow the market, and as any first year Economics student knows, prices will always fall and rise based on supply and demand, unless of course the government bails out too many faulted companies, or activities that should be illegal create chaos in markets which do not produce anything but ill gotten liquid investment and is tied into every industry in the world whether healthy or problematic. This last month of economic downturn was inevitable, but politics, crime and a lack of transparency may rob many generations of a future they well deserve, including Venezuelans.