@BraddrofliT Maybe I'm too much of an American, but I don't understand how anyone would want to be a police officer if their job is to Jerry Springer every moron who wants to fight.
Sentiments of Venezuelans
I’m going to say this once, and I don’t care if it makes people uncomfortable.
If you have never lived in Venezuela
If you did not grow up there
If you did not watch your country collapse in real time
If you did not stand in food lines
If you did not watch your parents lose everything they built
If you did not have to leave your home with nothing
Then shut the fuck up.
You do not have an opinion.
Your opinion does not matter.
And you don’t get to lecture anyone about what’s happening there.
I’m Venezuelan.
I lived there most of my life until my early twenties.
I watched my country go from a functioning democracy to full blown socialism right in front of my eyes.
This is not politics to me.
This is trauma.
Before socialism, Venezuela was not perfect, but it worked.
There was trade.
There was money coming in.
There was investment from the US.
There were jobs.
There was food.
There was medicine.
My family had five businesses.
We had our home
We had investments.
We had a future.
Then the government started nationalizing everything.
Private companies were taken.
Foreign investors were pushed out.
Imports were blocked.
Price controls destroyed production.
Corruption exploded.
And everything died.
Not slowly.
Violently.
People didn’t suddenly become poor because of “capitalism” or “the US” or whatever bullshit slogan people like to repeat online.
They became poor because socialism destroyed incentives, destroyed production, destroyed trust, and destroyed hope.
People today in Venezuela are not debating ideology.
They are trying to survive.
They are trying to find food.
Trying to find medication.
Trying to keep their families alive.
So when I see people in the West posting from comfortable homes, full fridges, stable currencies, and safe streets talking about “imperialism” or “US bad” or “Trump this or that”
No.
It’s not complicated.
You’re just ignorant.
China is not rebuilding Venezuela.
Russia is not rebuilding Venezuela.
Cartels are not rebuilding Venezuela.
They are stealing.
They are extracting.
They are draining what’s left.
If the US comes in and reinvests
If refineries get rebuilt
If infrastructure gets restored
If imports open back up
If food, water, and medicine become accessible again
If people can work and earn with dignity
Then yes.
Let them take all the oil they want.
Because at least something gets built instead of destroyed.
This is something to celebrate.
Not because it’s perfect.
But because for the first time in a long time, there is hope.
Hope that families can eat.
Hope that people don’t have to flee their country.
Hope that Venezuela can function again.
If you’ve never lived through a country collapsing
If you’ve never watched socialism destroy everything around you
If you’ve never had to leave your home because staying meant starvation
Then again
Shut the fuck up.
This isn’t theory.
This isn’t politics.
This is lived experience.
By Stephen Subero
@catturd2 Excellent example of how their narrative won't withstand factual correction. I understand that people pile on with un-useful insults, but politicians who block commentary exhibit no backbone. A trick of weak hustlers.
@KamalaHarris Here's a few things I know for certain: 1) you did not personally write your post 2) your party literally stole the US 2020 election which is a coup on US soil.
@glenn_tunes I think you can safely un-wad your panties, unless Denmark and Norway starts seizing US assets and turning their countries into 3rd worlds against the survivability of their citizenry. Next?
@GovTimWalz It's funny how those of us who met you for the first time, running with Harris, immediately recognized the fraudster in you. You can't simply rewrite your history.
Calling this reckless imperialism overstates the case. And you ignore the critical signal of how Venezuelans themselves are responding. Nicolás Maduro was not a legitimate leader but the head of a criminal regime sustained by fraud, repression, and corruption. His removal is not equivalent to toppling a functioning government. The spontaneous celebrations, honking horns, and public relief across Venezuela suggest many citizens experienced this not as foreign aggression, but as liberation.
Invoking the Iraq War is emotionally powerful but analytically weak. Iraq involved a massive invasion and occupation amid deep internal division. It was a multi trillion dollar nation building exercise. Venezuela enters this moment with a unified democratic opposition, a constitutional successor, broad international recognition, and visible popular support at the outset. It also has a past tradition of open institutions and a culture that values them. That difference matters.
Acknowledging U.S. economic interests does not invalidate the action. Energy stability is a legitimate national interest, and restoring Venezuelan oil production reduces global volatility that harms American households. That is not “taking the oil”; it is aligning strategic interests with regional stability.
Oversight matters. So do risks. But inaction has costs too. When the people most affected respond with relief rather than resistance, it seems we should be focusing on how best to move next.