I think it's an indirect attack on China, who is a primary customer of Venezuelan oil exports, rank piracy and a threat to every sovereign country in the world, whom must all be alert to the prospect of rogue US military actions to assassinate political leaders, conduct illegal acts of war on their soil, or otherwise compromise their sovereignty with raw military force. This is exactly why the US dollar is losing it's reserve status with increasing rapidity as the Dollar hegemony is used to harm sovereign states for political reasons.
I'm agin' it.
Thanks!
Yea I think Maduro's relationship with China is what got him in the end.
We do have a lot of Venezualen immigrants in the US. I think it's interesting because they are really the only nationality I know of that regularly talks about going home.
At least Trump just said the quite part out loud about the oil and didn't gas light everyone like every other administration has in the past when they make these moves.
At first I was surprised at the lack of US casualties because they used helicopters. But then that just made me realize Maduro was probably sold out by people in his own administration.
Greetings friend, I am Venezuelan. I emigrated from my country at the age of 12 along with my family from Venezuela because of hunger and misery, and to look for a better future because education in Venezuela was not viable. There are many qualified teachers who resigned from their jobs because the salary was miserable. I came back because I missed my country, my parents and siblings who, for economic reasons, could not leave the country. We always want to return to our homeland because Venezuela is beautiful. After 7 years I returned. I had many dreams of staying to study at university and working. It wasn't possible. The only profitable job was being a security guard, and the only possible course of study was becoming a police officer or soldier because that's the career the government needs to repress the people. I returned to Colombia again, leaving my parents and siblings behind once more in December 2025. Despite not being my native country, Colombia has embraced me and I have the opportunity to pursue a university degree. It's not easy to leave Venezuela because of a dictatorship; it's not easy to leave such a beautiful country when forced to because criminals want to decide what you eat, your salary, your studies.
We didn't leave the country because we wanted to, but because we were forced to. A dictatorship that chooses your life is unacceptable.
That's why the vast majority of Venezuelans want to return, because we were forced to leave the land that is supposed to be our home.
I'm a 19-year-old guy telling you all this. But my story is nothing compared to the thousands of Venezuelans who couldn't leave the country and who are imprisoned or killed by this government.
Thank God I'm alive; many young people didn't live to tell the tale.
I speak to you sincerely from the anger and pain of someone who is happy not because Trump is the one who managed to end the tyranny. I'm happy that my country is free again. Perhaps it's interference, perhaps he wants our resources, but a part of me is grateful to Trump for giving us a little peace.
I've lived all my life in America, and I was raised on a wilderness island in Alaska. It's hard for me to even imagine that kind of government interference in my life. America was created when English colonists got outraged at a 3% tax on tea, so government interference here, while getting worse all the time, just isn't at the same level as you have suffered.
Thanks!
Alaska, wow, my friend, this is a magnificent island.
And regarding the situation of thousands of Venezuelans, it's all documented; it's not new, it's been our history for 27 years. I'm only 19, but it's been tough, but here we are, still standing. Sending you a brotherly hug.
Thank you!!