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Submitted by ISIDOROS KARDERINIS

The unprecedented kidnapping in the world annals, in the manner in which it took place of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro constitutes not only a military intervention in a sovereign and independent country in violation of the principles of international law, but also constitutes a clear warning to the entire planet. A warning to every insubordinate leader of any country.

Already on January 3, 2026, during a press conference he gave regarding the military operation and arrest of Maduro, US President Donald Trump issued threats against Colombian President Gustavo Petro stating the following: “He would do well to be careful.”

At the same time, the US president hinted that Cuba could be a topic of discussion within the context of broader US policy in the region, highlighting Washington’s ability to expand its focus beyond Venezuela. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio even said that the Cuban government should be worried after Maduro’s arrest. Specifically, he said: “If I lived in Havana and was member of the government, at least I would be worried,” adding that “Cuba is a disaster” and that the country is “run by incompetent and depraved men.”

The history of the United States, moreover, is characterized by extensive imperialist interventions, both territorial and interventionist in other countries. Specifically, there have been approximately 400 interventions since 1776, when the Second Continental Congress adopted the Declaration of Independence on July 4, declaring the independence of the 13 American Colonies from the British Empire, an event that marked the official founding of the United States of America.

Who can forget that from April 15 to 19, 1961, 1,400 anti-Fidel Castro fighters, trained and financed by the CIA, attempted to land at the Bay of Pigs, 250 kilometres from Havana, but failed to overthrow the Cuban communist regime. These battles resulted in the deaths of about a hundred
people on each side.

“With Salvador Allende winning the elections of September 4, 1970 in Chile and already Fidel Castro in Cuba, we will have a Red sandwich in Latin America that will inevitably become all Red,” Richard Nixon feared, and his fear was soon confirmed by the election results. So, in the face of this unpleasant reality for the United States, a solution had to be found. And the solution was found on that morning of September 11, 1973, when a military coup took place under the head of the army, General Augusto Pinochet, with the support of the United States, but also of Brazil, whose military regime was completely friendly and cooperative with the United States. The coup plotters, after first surrounding and bombing the Presidential Palace, then stormed it. Salvador Allende and his close associates were killed, after fierce resistance.

The United States also invaded Panama in mid-December 1989 during the presidency of George W. Bush. The purpose of the military invasion was to oust Panama’s de facto leader, General Manuel Noriega, who was accused by American authorities of extortion and drug trafficking. So, if one is looking for a historical parallel where the US arrested a de facto leader of a country and transferred him to the US for trial, the Noriega case is the most characteristic. And this happened after a regular military invasion, that is, in the context of a coordinated armed intervention, and certainly not a “normal” peace.

Noriega managed to escape and took refuge in the Vatican embassy in Panama City, the country’s capital, where he remained for 11 days. There, he was subjected to relentless psychological warfare in order to surrender. The US military set up a horrible, deafening wall of sound outside the embassy. A fleet of Humvees with loudspeakers constantly played hard rock and occasionally heavy metal music. For example, “Panama” by the heavy metal singers Van Halen was played.

The Holy See rightly complained to President Bush, and the musical war ended after three days. By January 3, 1990, the general had agreed to surrender. But what are the deeper reasons for the US military invasion of Venezuela and the pursuit of overthrowing the insubordinate existing regime?

Venezuela, therefore, has the largest proven oil reserves in the world, amounting to approximately 303.8 billion barrels as of 2021. For comparison, leading oil producing countries have smaller reserves. Specifically, Saudi Arabia has approximately 267 billion barrels and Kuwait has 101.5 billion barrels. At the same time, the country’s proven natural gas reserves exceeded 5.6 trillion cubic meters in 2021. It should be noted, at the same time, that in the Western Hemisphere, only the United States had more reserves.

Also, Venezuela’s total iron ore reserves are estimated at 4.5 billion tons. And here it should be emphasized regarding iron reserves that the country is second in the region after Brazil. Venezuela finally has some of the largest reserves of bauxite in the world, a mineral used to produce aluminum. The country’s total bauxite reserves amount to 950 million tons.

It is, therefore, clear to any objective observer that the US covets Venezuela’s wealth-producing resources. Resources that they cannot get their hands on with the existing regime, which is a political and military partner and ally of Moscow, Beijing and Tehran, but also the main supplier of oil to China, whose control is drying up the flow.

The solution therefore for them, for the US, in order to secure primacy in the relentless international competition is the overthrow of the existing Venezuelan regime and the emergence of a president and a government that is absolutely friendly and serviceable. The rest, that is whether such a thing is legal and democratic does not concern them at all.

In closing, I would like to emphasize that the leaders of any country are overthrown only by their people, that is, by popular uprisings and revolutions, as has happened in various countries in the past. They are not overthrown by the military intervention of another country, a foreign power. Therefore, the US military invasion of Venezuela and the kidnapping of its president, Nicolas Maduro, are absolutely condemnable for any democratic and free-thinking citizen of the world.


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60 responses to “The unprecedented kidnapping of Maduro”




  1. What if Venezuela was a well-laid strategic trap for empire? Like Afghanistan was for the USSR.

    This line of thinking is consistent with our initial suggestion that the invasion and kidnapping seemed, the way they unfolded, as less than sufficient to make complete sense.

    And there are many points, given a 20/20 view, supportive of a grand strategy by Russia and China to make America react to events, extend empire within its backyard, spread the global battlefield and open the chessboard to weaken empire in areas deemed consequential to its adversaries.

    That the oil industry in Venezuela has reached a state of dilapidated such that it would take ten years or more to bring daily production to three million barrels suggests an own goal for the home team. Other leading players are producing up to ten million barrels a day.

    That there is now talk about bringing oreshnik missiles systems to Caracas aimed at Miami follows this logic and will constitutes a win for the away team.

    It is the kind of long term thinking characteristic of the so-called “autocratic” regimes. Regimes where grand strategy is not subject to four year election cycles and therefore more able to outlive present incumbents, as argued by some in the Western camp.

    Many more points seem supportive.

    As an international relationship matter or judged by the reactions regionally, hemispherically, America has at least gotten a red card and nothing to show, except a few kidnapped victims and 100 dead Venezuelans, for its trouble. While Russia and China appear far less committed to their level of belligerence.


  2. People have to pledge loyalty to the Devil Trump USA Israel


  3. @ David,
    The list is growing. Barbados should abandon Caricom and navigate towards the continent of Africa.

    https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=m0CkpBIPnNA


  4. @TLSN – Isn’t that what MAM has been doing and still attracting criticism from you and others?


  5. With the USA adopting a brazen foreign policy read the abduction of Maduro, the question is who will be next?

    We can expect to witness extreme volatility in the financial markets, US withdrawal from global bodies this week is an indication of USA’s doubling down on its right wing, nationalist, protectionist policies. Note the blogmaster stated USA and not Trump.


  6. Fascism is the proper description!

    Even when disguised under the velvet glove of the democrats.

    How can any phenomenon be correctly understood if improperly named even when its specific ddefinition is clear?


  7. Do not agree that the USA is a fascist state although it seems to be gripped in the throes of fascist tendencies at the moment. We have to be able to separate the personal position of a leader and their team to an ideology that is ensconced in the governance system of a country.


  8. I watched the sit down between Trump and the oil giants and on the whole the majority seem committed to going in, or in some cases back into Venezuela.

    Some lost billions when their equipment was seized without a cent of payment from Venezuela, but it seems as long as they are protected and their payments guaranteed they will go ahead. This may see a long term presence there by the USA as they will now have American interest there to ensure their safety.

    For us old enough to remember the hay day of Venezuela in Barbados, let me help you. They came here and holidayed spending serious money on the west coast. Many owned villas there and would come over and spend several weeks at a time. They ate at the best restaurants and bought jewellery and clothes, along with anything else they saw and liked. I don’t know if we will ever see a resurgence to that level of spending from them, but if their progress means we benefit that’s fine with me.

    As for Maduro he was an unelected dictator who refused to accept the power of the vote. He put his people through serios hardship over the last decade, while the chosen ones got fat off the calf. If he and El Chapo are cell mates going forward I will be the last to shed a tear!

    For those this may offend that is perfectly fine, as unlike being In Venezuela I will neither be jailed or shot for my comments.


  9. David,

    Holness is playing smart. He is saying that Jamaica’s position is the same as it has always been on such matters, and goes without repeating in this particular instance. It is similar to what I recommended that MAM do. Our position goes without saying at present. Everybody knows what is is. No sense in drawing undue attention to our totally vulnerable, impotent selves. We should focus on navigating around the big guns and warships with our little dinghies in the turbulent waters. Meanwhile, we quietly look to cross other waters unnoticed, under the radar. Trump and his regime are going to lose the midterms once elections are free and fair. Only the American voters can stop this rampage. And most of them intend to do just that.

    Maduro’s recent threats to invade Guyana give us the perfect excuse to keep our big mouth shut when one bad meets two bad. Imagine reigniting old colonial border disputes whilst arguing against re-colonisation and colonialism!


  10. John A,

    I may not be offended, but I am indeed baffled by your positive outlook. Then again, I should not be, considering how your ears heard sweet music in the words of the white supremacist, Charlie Kirk.

    Whether Maduro was a dictator or duly–elected, corrupt, ran the economy into the ground or not, isn’t the issue at hand. The issue at hand is one of sovereignty. PERIOD!

    You speak of the oil companies losing billions of dollars. That depends on how one looks at it. The truth is that they would have long recovered the cost of their investment and made handsome profits to boot. They lost nothing but the chance to persist in neo-colonialism, the opportunity to exploit the natural resources of another nation, mostly to their benefit, by way of grossly unfair agreements extracted under the duress of poverty! You also forget that they were not kicked out of Venezuela, but offered terms which were more fair and favourable to the actual owners of the oil. Chevron stayed. Clearly it was still profitable to do so!

    Is it forgetfulness or flawed perspective that allows you to ignore the illegally imposed United States sanctions that crippled the Venezuelan economy in the first place? You attribute the collapse to mismanagement alone. This is the equivalent of cutting off somebody’s leg and blaming them for not being able to keep up the pace!

    And finally, so there were some Venezuelans who had money to blow on our West Coast in “the hey days” of Venezuela when the apparently benevolent oil companies ruled thd roost. Have you any statistics on how many remained in poverty? Have you even considered that?

    P.S. I shudder to think of what your opinion is of Ibrahim Traoré and the Sahel alliance!


  11. @ John A
    Perhaps you watch too much CNN.

    Where is it written that the only legit leader is one that is ‘democratically’ elected?
    Surely you know that some of the VERY BEST leaders of all time were not selected by popularity vote.
    Elections are so EASILY manipulated by PR / bribery /threats /lies and blatant false promises that only a clown sees this as a perfect selection method.

    When a country is viciously and maliciously SANCTIONED by the USA using the power of their oil based fiat paper to STARVE and IMPOVERISH innocent citizens for their own albino-centric ends, one CANNOT expect that country to play by the shiite rules that were created by the AGGRESSOR.

    Saddam was a MOST EFFECTIVE and successful leader
    Gadafi oversaw an extremely successful Libya
    Traoré seems to be an outlier at the moment

    Based on your CNN type analysis, these were all demons.
    Meanwhile Trump and others of his democratic ilk are CLEARLY agent of demonic forces.

    How do you explain the fact that Venezuela has not moved to chaos as the Americans had expected?
    How come the PEOPLE REVERSED the previous US led coup against Chavez?

    You know of course that Bussa was not democratically elected???

    When your donkey is under foreign attack you don’t need democracy,
    …You need COMPETENCE and PATRIOTISM.

    Chavez seems top have chosen his truck-driver successor wisely…


  12. Bushie

    Apposite!

    Some people can only ever reason according to the most popular media.

    Others live in the perpetual fear of disagreeing with those same narratives.


  13. @ Bushie

    Would you want to live in a country where your vote is not respected? What you would do if next elections the BLP lost and Mia said “I ain’t giving up power” and calls out the defence force to make sure not a man questions her decision?

    What about if Mia took away your families business and homes, so as to give them to her generals, you would be good with that too then? How about if your favourite toothpaste went from $10 bds a tube to $250bds a tube and you without a raise, had to buy it you good there too?

    Wunna dont let your dislike for the American government blind you from what living in a dictatorship means. All you opposed to Trumps removal of Maduro need to seek out a Venezuelan family living here and ask them what is in their care packages they send there to family. I think you would be amazed at how bad things there have become. A country that was in the 70s the richest country in Latin America.

    Wait Bushie you was one of the 20 that march today?


  14. Shite I forget if Mia was to do all the above this blog would not exist either, as any dictator worth the salt would clap the brakes on free speech, the internet and foreign TV like in North Korea.

    We complain here as we should be able to in a free Democratic society about our concerns. Here ain’t perfect i agree, but let me tell you if you feel Bim bad go and spend 30 days in Venezuela. Carry you toiletries and medicine with you cause dem ain’t no guarantee the bodega in the area will have what you want. I have seen first hand the effect of this type of behaviour both in Guyana and Venezuela. It is alright for the armchair apologist to sit here and point fingers, but unless you witness it with you own eyes as I have, you can’t imagine what empty shelves look like in reality.


  15. @Donna “You speak of the oil companies losing billions of dollars. That depends on how one looks at it. The truth is that they would have long recovered the cost of their investment and made handsome profits to boot. They lost nothing…”

    This reminds me that the British slave owners in the Caribbean went crying to the British Parliament when they “lost” their free laborers, and the British Parliament reimbursed them for their lost slaves, borrowed the reimbursement money from banks, and that money was repaid by people working in the UK up to the 1960’s, including your kin and mine who are descendants of the enslaved.

    Why is money so valuable? People lose their liberty, people lose their lives their lives and all we can worry about is that a few capitalists have lost a few billion dollars.

    I say “so what”


  16. @John A “How about if your favourite toothpaste went from $10 bds a tube to $250bds a tube”

    Many of us, perhaps most of us do not have a favorite toothpaste. We buy what is the best value for money. All of them essentially do the same job.

    I suppose that you have a favorite soap, dish liquid, detergent and toilet paper too? I assure you that it is mostly advertising deliberately designed to siphon money out of your pockets.

    Drink Coco-Cola.

    Or drink tap water.


  17. I agree that Maduro needed removing from power but not with trump now becoming ruler of Venezuela.
    Grenada and Panama type operation I would have preferred


  18. Some of the oil companies being encouraged to invest in Venezuela were forced to leave in 2019 when the Trump administration imposed sanctions. You really can’t make this stuff up.


  19. @TLSN – Isn’t that what MAM has been doing and still attracting criticism from you and others?

    +++++++

    Spot on Davie!


  20. John A somehow believes that the malignant narcissist Donald Trump who has formed his own goon squad and is attempting to terrorise his own country’s citizens will be a benevolent dictator to the same people he is currently demonising and deporting.

    Also — THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA DELIBERATELY CAUSED THE ECONOMIC CONDITIONS AND SUFFERING OF THE VENEZUELAN PEOPLE.

    Chavez spent much of the oil profits on social programmes. With his successor, the profits dried up due to illegal US sanctions.

    Stands to reason that when the profits dried up, Maduro’s popularity would have plummetted and he had nothing left but authoritarian control.

    He did not have Chavez’ charisma, after all. A charismatic leader who inspires a strong belief in a cause can overcome one’s desire for one’s favourite toothpaste.

    For freedom from white supremacy, neo-colonialism and to see the back of capitalism RIGHT NOW I would be willing to brush with baking soda. 🤣🤣🤣🤣

    And substitute salt water for “Listerine”.

    Indeed I would.


  21. Anybody involved in small business back in the day, knows that hundreds of Bajans shopped in Venezuela , often leaving Bim with empty suitcases and returning with shoes and other products to sell. The majority of these small business people were Black. To imply that the Venezuelans who came to Bim were all rich vagabonds spending ill-gotten money is not true. Ordinary Venezuelans came here in great numbers as tourists.
    It is not surprising that many of us believe that there is some long game here. The response of almost all the Caribbean leaders to this situation has been weak almost bordering on embarrassment. And this includes our PM.
    Stupid uneducated people have been positing that no amount of pseudo intellectual bull shit can help us . Anybody who have spent a few minutes reading Eric Williams, and others could have easily predicted that these current atrocities were imminent.
    We are now humbling ourselves because when all the pretty talk and sophisticated rubbish was being tossed about , it was nothing more than intellectual regurgitation.
    Without a unified Caribbean State our future will continue to produce sophisticated mendicancy . The plantation economies will be nothing more than playgrounds for the rich.
    This is not about fancy speeches and intellectual hogwash – we must speak with one voice of protecting our Caribbean sovereignty.


  22. @ well said William

    As it stands today this is where caricom stands. Trinidad and Guyana will work with the USA as they have already shown. It benefits their economies so to do and the USA will protect their oil bases. Jamaica will work with the USA for the sake of their tourism, also the USA were some of the first to offer them assistance after the hurricane recently. I can not recall a Russian or Chinese heavy lift aircraft being shown at the Jamican airport at that time either.

    As for Caricom they spoke of their zone of peace being honoured. So wait where that zone and its leaders were when Maduro was planning to send his gunboats into Guyana? Then they say Trump only wants the oil. So wait what wunna think Russia, China and the same caricom want but cheap fuel? All that happen here is that caricom back the wrong horse here and now they like church mice too frighten to say anything. Barbados and Venezuela enjoyed good trade in the old days. Bajans went there, especially Margarita to shop and many Venezuelas came here to holiday. The wealthy went to the west coast and the Middle class went to the south in the St Lawrence area. Caribbee Hotel in those days and others on that side of the island did well out of them.

    Caricom had a chance to stand united in this situation but all sought what was best for their country. Kamala all but said Caricom was a waste of time. Guyana does not need caricom anymore and their presence in caricom may well prove to be more of a hindrance than a help, in light of the future economy they will become. So who now is caricom in reality and how much recognition do they now have in real terms? Are the days of charging 200% in import fees on a tee shirt now over for them?

    Let us hope for all involved that those days return again.


  23. “Kamala all but said Caricom was a waste of time.”

    endorsing that thinking is a bit like saying all Caricom people are a waste of time
    looks like USA has the Caribbean peoples’ balls on a plate ready to squeeze them
    USA has a prior criminal record for it’s treatment of ‘Negros’ but it’s black history and civil rights fights for human rights heroes have been whitewashed by the regime that requires change

    comments saying it is time for changes (not regime changes) c*ckbl*cked


  24. THE POLARIZATION & HEGEMONIC BEAST RAISES ITS UGLY HEAD JUST AS WAS SEEN DURING THE COLD WAR & BEFORE #WW2 BEGAN

    Since the #GrandWizard’s move against Venezuela; spiralling “THREATS” against the “GREENLANDERS”; provocation against “COLOMBIA”, “MEXICO” & “CUBA” are creating massive bouts of consternation across the world – resulting, in #AshkeNAZIS* moving back to #IsraHELL* & #AmeriKKKans & C.I.A operatives being forced to get out of Venezuela, as they are being “HUNTED”!!!

    Just over a week into a “NEW YEAR” & the “WINDZ OF CHAOS” & “DRUMBEATS OF WAR” are everywhere – “GOD HELP US ALL COME SPRING/SUMMER”!!!


  25. Muduro had a meeting in st Vincent with CARICOM heads I think about the Guyana situation


  26. John A

    If Trump has so much sympathy for people suffering in dictatorships, why does he send some soldiers to North Korea to ‘kidnap, take out, remove,’ Kim Jong Un?

    By ignoring Court rulings, Congress and the US Constitution to fulfill his agenda, attempting to silence the media, weaponising the judicial system to prosecute his perceive political opponents, enriching his family and himself at the expense of US taxpayers……

    …… Trump is essentially exhibiting the characteristics of a dictator.


  27. @ Artax

    So if Venezuela was so wronged where were the hundreds of Venezuelans on Saturday in the March that only 20 or so well know agitators went to?

    Singapore for all intention was brought from being a village in the 1960s to a financial power house by a Dictator. Ibrahim Traore could be seen as a military dictator, but no one can question the good that man has done for his people! From protecting his mineral rights to building roads to connect his country, he has done all he can to improve their lives. Maduro on the other hand enriched himself and his cronies while his people suffered. He took a population from comfort to poverty in a decade. So yes he needed removal.

    Glad you brought up North Korea. Look at 2 countries North and South Korea and their difference in development is night and day. The North with the Kim family are still living in the 1950s, while the south has grown into a massive economy.

    So maybe they are examples of good and bad dictators who knows, but there is no one that knows Venezuela that would tell you Maduro did not want getting rid of.

  28. Full name. the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela Avatar
    Full name. the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela

    Was there a comment from John A banging on about the VE people rejoicing?
    I was going to respond but it’s gone on walkabouts when I clicked it
    I would have said he is a one big sucker baby lapping up yankee propaganda
    guess he does not even know what the first casualty of war is
    the lights are on but no one is home


  29. Sovereignty and empire have never been known to coexist!

    Maybe the weakness of Caribbean “leaders” is the manifestation of the imperial system in which we exist under notions of flag independence and the pretense of interdependence.

    There will never be any level of state unification, within the Caribbean, which could combat the presence of a great power within an anarchic system.

    Maybe, if this was understood you too would be less harsh with the misleadership class.

    Maybe it well qualifies as “hogwash” to transport the magisterial work of Williams, without adjustments, beyond the foundational, into a twenty-first century context.


  30. Nowadays wars are performed by remote control by fat lumps in control rooms
    Yanks and Israel spend nuff money on their wars
    they think it’s funny spending 100s of billions on blood money


  31. What I find most amusing with many here is that while they have much to say about my comments, none have come here and been able to say that the average Venezuelan’s life improved under Maduro. Not a single person can argue that the average Venezelans did not smell HELL under him. He was NOT their elected leader nor was he favoured as a leader by the majority, yet he stayed in power by the gun. So basically you all hate Trump and the USA but love Maduro and what he stood for correct? How many of you would leave here where you have your freedoms and go there tomorrow to live then? Be Christ the amount of you that would go could not even fill a LIAT. How many of you ever went there even? How many of you have ever talked to a Venezuelan family here with family there about their existance?

    Wunna need to make a stand then by cancelling your visas and never visiting the USA again! Rather than running wunna mouth make a stand and travel to Russia and North Korea for a holiday next time instead LOL. Anyhow all at you all. Next time a hurricane hit call Putin or Rocket Man instead of bothering the USA with your problems.


  32. AMERIKKKAN KLANSMEN DO NOT YET REALIZE THAT THE MOUNTAINOUS HILL OF SHYTE THAT THEY ARE PLANTING THEIR FLAG UPON IS THE SAME DAMNED HILL THAT THEY MUST BE WILLING 2 DIE ON

    Black #PhillySheriff who is a “FORMIDABLE BLACK WOMAN” reminds me of #QueenNandi of the “ZULU KINGDOM” (1760 – 1827): “MOTHER OF SHAKA ZULU”, whom she protected from threats & trained him in “LETHAL” warfare. After “SHAKA” became king, he established an “ALL-FEMALE” military regiment, a legacy attributed to her influence – “SOMETHING GADDAFFI TOOK ON WITH HIS ALL-FEMALE PERSONAL PROTECTION SQUAD”!!!

    #SheriffRochelleBilal “ISSUED” Trump’s “ICE GESTAPO” a “THREAT” that if they come into “PHILLY” with their “SHYTE” they will be “ARRESTED” & thrown in jail!!!

    NOW THAT’S BALLZ 4 YA’>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

    #LetThePowerfulBlackWomen – “PLEASE STAND UP” – for it seems the men are all “PUSSIES”!!!

    #GoodMorning2YALL


  33. John A

    According to Margaret Satterthwaite, United Nations special rapporteur on the independence of judges and lawyers, “There’s a very clear limit on enforcement jurisdiction internationally, and that is that one state cannot enforce its law on the territory of another state unless that state gives its consent.”

    “So, if a state, for example, harboured someone that the US considered a fugitive, the US could approach that state and seek its consent to arrest them and bring them back to the US to stand trial. But it cannot go into another country without that state’s consent and grab up an individual, even if they are indicted properly by the US court system.”

    Another international law issue that arises with Maduro’s abduction is the immunity of heads of state and other high-ranking officials from prosecution and civil penalties abroad…… a principle that has been affirmed by the International Court of Justice and previously acknowledged by Washington.

    Whether or not Maduro was a dictator ‘the bottom line’ is, what the Trump administration did in Venezuela is ILLEGAL.

    ‘Don’t care how much fancy talk you putting down ‘bout how Bajans used to go to Venezuela and shop, or how much Venezuelans round the world rejoicing,’ DOES NOT CHANGE that FACT.

    I’ve realised you’ve refused to recognise they’re Venezuelans PROTESTING AGAINST the USA’s military action in their country as well.

    Ironically, you mentioned, “Maduro on the other hand enriched himself and his cronies while his people suffered.”

    Donald Trump ‘is doing the same thing’…… in a so-called democracy.

    However, whether or not we agree, we must accept and respect the fact that everyone is entitled to his/her opinion.


  34. A

    I agree with most of what u said ( for once )
    No, the average Venezuelan life did not improved under Madura

    Can you also break down the effect the sanctions would have had on the average Venezuelan?


  35. John A
    January 11, 2026 at 8:06 pm

    Actually, I believe that the official stats show that overall poverty fell significantly under Chavez / Maduro.

    Remember that before Chavez, Venezuela was very much rich and poor, with all of the oil wealth, there were mountainside shanty towns.

    Indeed, it is a bit like Animal Farm, with the leaders still reaping extensive rewards, however, this does not negate the fact that some poor have had relief under this ‘regime’.


  36. “Wunna need to make a stand then by cancelling your visas and never visiting the USA again!”

    @ John A

    I’ve NEVER visited the United States, nor any of its Caribbean territories, and I don’t intend to do so.

    The Jim Crow Era (approximately 1870s-1960s), a period in the American South and beyond, defined by state and local laws enforcing racial segregation and disenfranchisement of African Americans.

    The May 15, 1916, lynching of Jesse Washington, who was repeatedly lowered and raised into a fire for approximately two (2) hours.

    Ocoee, Florida (1920): On Election Day, a white mob burned the Black community to the ground and killed or expelled nearly all of its 500 residents to prevent Black citizens from voting.

    The Tulsa Race Massacre of May 31 to June 1, 1921, during which a white mob attacked and destroyed the thriving African American Greenwood district, in Tulsa, Oklahoma, known as “Black Wall Street.”

    The brutal beating and lynching of 14-year-old Emmett Louis Till, and thousands of other African Americans who were publicly tortured, mutilated, and murdered by white mobs with near impunity.
    A fate Trump demanded for the ‘Central Park Five,’ even without remorse after they were acquitted.

    The September 15, 1963, Ku Klux Klan bombing of the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama, in which four (4) young African American girls, Addie Mae Collins (14), Carole Robertson (14), Cynthia Wesley (14), and Carol Denise McNair (11) were killed, and injured many others.

    Trump has now emboldened the racists.

    The above events are AMONG SEVERAL REASONS why I don’t want to visit the USA.

    But that does not mean I want to “travel to Russia and North Korea for a holiday next time instead.”


  37. Sanctions:

    John2 mentions sanctions.

    Indeed, to compare a country without sanctions to a country with sanctions impeding the flow of business and funds is flawed.

    One must take into account what impact the sanctions have had in coming to any reasonable conclusion.

    One of the reasons for this current stranglehold is to break the Russia / China/ Iran / Venezuela flow.

    However, who determines sanctions? Who has the right to determine sanctions?

    In effect, no one, aside from a general world consensus. Even then, such is decided with alliances in mind.

    In principle, no one country or even small group can just decide that another should be sanctioned.


  38. @ John 2

    So they were many breaches by VeneZuela but it goes way back to when Chavez confiscated the equipment of the American drilling and well equipment companies and nationalised it without any payment to the owners. He then as we say here ” chased away” all of the American persons involved in the industry and replaced them with his cronies who knew little or nothing about the industry. They basically then ran the equipment without proper maintenance etc still it shut down one station at a time. From there it all went down hill and then Maduro took over and the rest is history.

    Trump stated that all presidents before him did not act on trying to recover payment for the equipment confiscated which ran into the tens of millions. The arrangement now with Venezula is supposed to take all that and other issues into consideration. To go into all the agreement and breaches that occured over the years now would be too time consuming.

  39. Terence Blackett Avatar
    Terence Blackett

    WHILE THE GRAND DRAGON WIZARD & COMMANDER & CHIEF OF AMERIKKKA’S KLU KLUX KLAN WAS BUSY TRYING TO INVADE VENEZUELA & ALL THE OTHER TERRITORIES IN HIS CROSSHAIRS* – CHINA, RUSSIA, IRAN & SOUTH AFRICA WERE BUSY DOING QUIET MILITARY DRILLS IN THE MOST IMPORTANT STRATEGIC, COMMERCIAL WATERWAY ON EARTH

    This is why #EasternBlocNations will “WIN OUT” in the upcoming war!!!

    I dare anyone 2 challenge what “IS WRITTEN”!!!


  40. A

    Just give a simple break down on how the sanctions affected the average Venezuelan


  41. @ Artax

    I.am also not sure what legal justification president Obama used either when he entered a foreign country and killed Bin Laden on foreign soil. I cant really recall much being said then about it. I remeber beimg an enemy to the state and causing mass deaths to American citizens was mentioned. Bush I know went in after weapons of mass destruction which were never found. Again not sure of the legal precedent he used then either.


  42. The Great Iranian nation has once again defeated the plots of the CIA and Mossad to instigate ‘regime change’.

    Such are the weaknesses of the Collective West, America and the Zionist state that after 47 years of stifling sanctions, after hundreds of billions invested to reverse the popular revolution of 1979, after the deployment of Western-backed terrorists, after all the demonization of the Iranian government, after all the military support for its aircraft carrier – Israel – in the region, they have been made to face failure one more time.

    The Iranian Revolution, in law, materially supported the Anti-Apartheid Movement in the same ways it supports all struggling peoples of the earth against imperialism, colonialism, fascism and racism.

    Because it supports Palestinians. Even today, if Iran like the Persian Gulf Arabs, were to accept the primacy of America and its sidekick Israel it would be helped to be one of the leading economies in the world.

    This spate of violence started with a CIA tactic of attacking the Iranian rial. The rial went down by about 40 percent. Merchants from the many markets or bazaars rightly held protests. These protests were hijacked by foreign agents as the means to undermine the establishment.

    Those thugs damaged a lot of property, killed security officials, burnt mosques, burnt ambulances, destroyed hospitals and much more.

    The internet was disabled by the government and with Elon Musk’s Starlink supply of tens of thousands of illegally sent satellite set ups as the alternative means for the Western agents to communicate were also neutralized.

    Also neutralized we’re up to 100s of terrorists, Western agents. Of course, many more will face the courts and certainly the maximum penalty. We should except that the cranes of Tehran will decorate the skyline with strange fruit these nights.

    There is little double that these events were designed at a time when the criminals – Trump and Netanyahu – were in the White House South agreeing to make war on the Islamic Republic once more. And they will again fail. Only this time there shall be no ceasefire as begged for in the recent 12-day war by Netanyahu.


  43. Traoré also confiscated the equipment and chased the parasitic companies out of Burkina Faso, did he not?

    Besides which, AS I HAVE ALREADY STATED, Chavez did not chase the oil companies out. Chevron stayed. The others did not like that their shareholdings and profits would be reduced. And so THEY LEFT!

    Some of you cannot shake the neocolonialist mindset! You see only through the eyes of the colonisers! Tens of millions of dollars of equipment?????

    Man, they had already made BILLIONS off the investment!

    SMH.

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