The Academy was already mentioned I think as early as September, and the project itself has been ongoing for a long time. Taaki is definitely one of those I hope stays around with Bitcoin for a long time. He may forever be associated with dark markets by the mainstream media but he has quite a bit of respect I'd say within the cypherpunk communities.
I don't think the survival of a few Venezuelans or Syrians, and the death of the rest, is the point here. Amir's project is political, obviously, with nationalism that one hopes is not toxic.
Correct, but I think guys like Taaki have been for very long keen to keep "the spirit of crypto" alive. I watched an interview a few months back and he seems very much like the same guy he has a reputation for. He's always been a strong cryptography and privacy activist, definitely socially and politically active. He believes that Bitcoin's origin in development was as a political technology, and feels it should return to those roots.