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The Big ‘What If’ : what is the commenting community being seeded with now?

Let’s take a look.  Barbaria is in trouble, and they know it.  What do they do?  What have they done forever in the past?

What if they are planting false messaging right now to confuse the commenting community?  They plant false messaging as a regular method.  This is not hard to understand.  We saw that in Syria, we see that in West Asia.  We see that in the major ‘China Bad’ program.  We saw this in the Russian Hoax series, the Skripals, and how many examples are necessary?

They seed the environment with a falsehood to get themselves out of international pariah status desperately and it is always that it is the other guy’s fault.  They use Psyops!

What are they seeding the environment with now?  Figure it out.  They want to prove that this was a coup, and not an attack.  Venezuela only invited them to support an internal coup to get rid of the criminal badman, Nicholás Madero.

It is not so bad.  We just don’t understand.  They are the everlasting good guys, pouring holy light on the nation and helping poor Venezuelans.

Right now heavy gunfire has erupted near presidential palace in Caracas.  Soldiers and armored vehicles were seen in Venezuelan capital amid reports of a coup attempt.   Drone shot down.   We don’t know yet what is happening.  The CIA spread a lot of money around.  I’m convinced that the US strike on Venezuela was only partially successful.  They wanted boots on the ground and were stopped.  Delcy Rodriques did not coup Maduro a few days ago, and now, there is another force trying to coup Delcy Rodriques.  This is the chaos that the barbarians has seeded.  Will we see Libya redux with human slave auctions in the Caribbean again?

American and Venezuela opposition-linked media claim the fighting was over a civilian drone that Venezuelan army identified as hostile military drone, However a local source from Venezuela reported that it was indeed a hostile action by opposition next to Venezuelan Presidential Palace that triggered fighting. No official story out there yet, but right now the situation has stabilized.

This is the kind of AI slop the MAGA crowd swallows hook, line, and sinker.  When the narrative collapses, this is what it gets replaced with.

 

BriefAnalysis by Franco Vielma
The biggest intrigue surrounding Delcy Rodríguez’s alleged betrayal of Maduro was orchestrated by Maduro’s very own captor: Trump.
So, for some, Trump suddenly became a credible, honest man who tells the truth, doesn’t lie, and doesn’t manipulate facts to achieve his goals. The objective truth is that Trump is a convicted felon, prosecuted for crimes and accused of being a pedophile, who lied about foreign policy regarding Gaza, Ukraine, Venezuela (fentanyl, cocaine, immigrants released from prisons and psychiatric hospitals, etc.), tariffs, and many other issues.
Trump, the credible one.
But then why does Trump insist that Delcy should cooperate and “is cooperating”?
1. Trump says this not to convince Venezuelans, but rather to convince Americans. He wants to project the image that he controls the situation and that there won’t be “the chaos of the day after,” after kidnapping the Venezuelan Head of State.
2. Trump wants the Chavista leadership in Caracas to break up. If that means sowing intrigue, it’s a cheap and blatant tactic.
3. He exerts pressure and intimidates, claiming he will take control of the country. His weapon is force, and he’s using it.
4. At the same time he indicated that Delcy was “cooperating,” he also threatened her with “a fate worse than Maduro’s” if she didn’t submit to his control. The threat is unnecessary if Delcy was supposedly co-opted.
5. Trump cannot maintain internal order in Venezuela unless he sends troops like in Iraq. He doesn’t want to do that. Only Chavismo guarantees internal order. And both sides agree on the need for that order. So Trump makes it seem as if something Chavismo would do out of its own convictions, he’s doing for his benefit. He wants to appease the Americans who criticize him.
6. Trump insists on a transition that must be carried out by the same ruling Chavista movement, but under US supervision. This is the most vague aspect of his proposal, but to make it clearer, he ousted María Corina Machado. However, he doesn’t set any deadlines, talks about oil, oil infrastructure, etc., and then, perhaps, elections. For this to work, he has to claim to control Delcy Rodríguez, even if it isn’t true.
Saying “I control” is the best way to mask the underlying issue: “He needs Chavismo in charge, Delcy,” to present his strategy as a winning one “the day after” Maduro.
Another question: Why does Delcy Rodríguez indicate that it is necessary to have relations of respect, mutual recognition, and cooperation after what has happened?
1. Maduro, and Venezuela, have been the country that has most strongly defended the implementation of energy agreements with the US. Venezuela defended Chevron’s position in the face of Trump’s new sanctions. Why? Because placing US interests in Venezuela is a way to protect the oil industry itself from the very sanctions imposed by one US administration on another. For this, it is necessary to establish relationships.
2. It is true that Maduro himself, even under the worst threats (like those now facing Delcy), insisted on the importance of dialogue. This was public knowledge.
3. Delcy insists that Maduro is being held hostage, and her first decision as interim president is to create a Commission for his release. As in any kidnapping situation, you cannot sever ties with the kidnapper. You must negotiate. You must mediate.
4. Trump is a megalomaniacal narcissist. Delcy understands his psychology, especially now that she has a position of strength and a proven ability to wield it. She is also an excellent facilitator and negotiator, capable of adapting to the context. Let’s try to understand not the form, but the substance.
5. In his own way, Trump needs to build bridges. He kidnapped Maduro, but he hasn’t achieved regime change. To a large extent, he depends on Chavismo in Caracas.

In his own way, Trump prefers to say, “I’m in control,” rather than, “I have to negotiate.” Delcy needs to get on board with that.

TOP 10 BS DEFENSES OF THE U.S. COUP AGAINST VENEZUELA

Peter Joseph (https://www.instagram.com/p/DTG7tdygaSI/) – author of Zeitgeist series

➡️#1 “Illegitimacy” of Nicolás Maduro’s Election

Debunked:

(a) Irrelevance under international law

Whether Maduro’s election meets U.S. approval standards is entirely irrelevant. The internal electoral affairs of a sovereign nation are not the business of another sovereign nation. This principle is foundational to international law and the UN Charter. There is no legal mechanism that allows one state to overthrow another based on disputed elections.

(b) Blatant historical hypocrisy

The idea that the United States has moral standing to object to electoral legitimacy is laughable when viewed historically. The U.S. has ignored, enabled, or directly supported election fraud, coups, and outright dictatorships across the globe—unless it suddenly became geopolitically useful to object. “Democracy” is invoked selectively, never consistently.

➡️#2 “Humanitarian Intervention”

Debunked:

(a) Sanctions as the primary driver of suffering

The humanitarian crisis cited as justification was dramatically worsened—if not primarily caused—by U.S. sanctions, especially financial and oil sanctions imposed after 2017. You don’t strangle a country’s ability to import food, medicine, and industrial inputs and then blame the government for the resulting suffering.

(b) Weaponized compassion

Human rights language is being used instrumentally, not sincerely. If humanitarian concern were genuine, sanctions would be lifted first. Instead, suffering is used as leverage, not a problem to be solved.

➡️#3 “Authoritarianism / Dictatorship”

Debunked:

(a) Selective outrage

The U.S. actively supports and arms regimes that are far more authoritarian—some with no elections at all. Authoritarianism becomes a problem only when a government is economically or geopolitically noncompliant.

(b) Context deliberately erased

Emergency powers, arrests, and restrictions in Venezuela occurred in the context of open coup attempts, economic warfare, and foreign recognition of a parallel government. Remove that context and anything can be framed as tyranny.

➡️#4 “Corruption”

Debunked:

(a) Universality without consequence

Corruption exists in virtually every state, including the United States. It is never grounds for invasion, sanctions, or regime change—unless it serves as a convenient narrative weapon.

(b) No jurisdiction, no due process

U.S. indictments of Venezuelan officials have no legitimate jurisdiction and rely heavily on testimony from incentivized defectors. Accusation is treated as conviction.

➡️#5 “Economic Mismanagement / Socialism Failed”

Debunked:

(a) Causation is deliberately misrepresented

Economic decline is blamed on “socialism” while systematically excluding the impact of sanctions, capital flight, asset seizures, trade embargoes, and financial isolation.

(b) Policy disagreement isn’t regime change license

Even if Venezuela’s economic model were flawed, policy failure is not a justification for overthrow. If it were, half the world—including the U.S. itself—would qualify.

➡️#6 “Drug Trafficking / Narco-State”

Debunked:

(a) Pure assertion, zero adjudication

These claims originate almost entirely from U.S. law enforcement and intelligence agencies with a long track record of fabrication in regime-change contexts.

(b) Jurisdictional absurdity

The U.S. claims the right to prosecute foreign leaders for alleged crimes committed outside U.S. territory, while refusing international jurisdiction over its own leaders.

➡️#7 “Regional Stability”

Debunked:

(a) Destabilization is the policy, yes

Migration spikes and regional strain closely track sanctions escalation, not internal Venezuelan policy alone. The instability is then blamed on the target.

(b) Double standard applied

Far worse instability in U.S.-aligned states is framed as “complex challenges,” not justification for overthrow.

#8 “International Consensus”

Debunked:

(a) Manufactured alignment

“Consensus” means U.S. allies and client states. Large portions of the Global South reject the coup narrative outright.

(b) No UN mandate

There is no UN Security Council authorization for intervention. That alone ends the legal argument.

➡️#9 “Rules-Based International Order”

Debunked:

(a) The rules are applied only downward

Sanctions without UN approval, asset seizures, recognition of parallel governments, and economic warfare all violate international law—yet are justified retroactively.

➡️#10 “Well… the Venezuelan Population Needed It Anyway”

Debunked:

(a) Colonial paternalism in modern form

This argument reduces an entire population to passive subjects incapable of determining their own political future. It resurrects the same logic used to justify colonial occupation, coups, and “civilizing missions” for centuries: they can’t govern themselves, so we must intervene.

(b) Collective punishment disguised as concern

If the goal were genuinely to help Venezuelans, the first action would be to remove sanctions, restore trade access, and stop economic strangulation. Instead, suffering is imposed and then cited as evidence that intervention was necessary.

(c) No consent, no mandate

There is no democratic, legal, or ethical mechanism by which one nation can decide that another population “needed” its government overthrown—especially without consent, referendum, or UN authorization.

(d) The final mask-off admission—
When all other justifications fail—election claims, human rights rhetoric, corruption narratives

This is what remains: force is acceptable because the target population is deemed inferior in judgment. It is not a defense. It is an admission.

——

⚖️WHAT IS THE TRUTH?

The truth is the overthrow of Maduro has been an extension of the interest to overthrow Chavez spanning well over 20 years in an effort to gain hydrocarbon resources fundamentally while squashing any country that doesn’t completely abide by the selfish interests of the United States imperial order. It is also a Geo strategic move simultaneously against Russia & China for global hegemony.

 

 

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Chris24
3 days ago

All correct, but listen to Trump, he said “earliest (!) in one year, maybe earlier we will have excess to the oil”. Why? Because, first they need chaos, spread fear and violence under the population. Their target, Chavenista support will ‘melt’, ‘thanks to’ US Technofeudalime, Bots, Trolls, and ‘fake news’… Read more »

AHH
Admin
AHH
3 days ago
Reply to  Chris24

Not at all. 
There’s a reason the Yanqui’s continue to sit on the pot, afraid to invade, relying on PsyWar, Lies, and more BS. 
Chavistas melt slower than steel in Siberian snow. They’ve held out for 1/4 century!
BS’s all they got, and terror-bombing. 

As for Marmalade Mafioso 👇🏽

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Snow Leopard
Snow Leopard
3 days ago

All true, and let’s not overlook how passionately The President of Venezuela (Maduro) criticized the Zionist terrorist state of Israel and stood up for solidarity with the Palestinians. Why would Israel allow such openly provocative polarizing criticism from a Head of State to remain “unpunished.” They needed to smack him… Read more »