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It‘s high time for regime change in Venezuela

I think it’s time to call it. The President of the United States is apparently finally prepared to topple the Bolivarian regime of Venezuela, if need be with military force.

All diplomatic contact between Caracas and Washington via Special Envoy Richard Grenell has been broken off. Overwhelming naval, air and Marine Corps assets have been moved to the Caribbean theater to execute targeted raids in order to kill or capture the political and military elite of Venezuela, thereby destabilizing the regime to make way for a democratic renewal in a country that was once one of the most robust democracies in South America.

The administration rightly considers Nicolas Maduro an illegitimate President who illegally usurped power by flatly ignoring the results of his decisive electoral defeat last year. They are also correct in their assessment of his notorious criminal activities. He is indeed a fugitive from justice and his imprisonment will not just be a political and economic liberation for about 30 million Venezuelans at home or living abroad, but an overdue relief for the many victims of Venezuelan narco-crime all over the world. Accordingly, the designation of Maduro‘s Cartel de Soles as a FTO along with the administration‘s de facto declaration of war on narco-terrorists in Venezuela create the legal framework for a drastic and rapid military intervention.

The Venezuelan state, if one can call it that, is nothing but a house of cards. It comes closer to a syndicate than to an actual state. Impunity is all that keeps it from collapsing. Unfortunately, the Venezuelan civilians who are desperately waiting for a dramatic change haven’t been able to mount an armed resistance to counter the repression of a ruthless military, a cruel police force and violent armed gangs allied with the regime.
Opposition forces weren’t armed or trained by any outside power, hence they never stood much of a chance to free themselves from the anachronistic and autocratic joch that keeps them from realizing their human potential and flagrantly violates their most basic human rights and civil liberties.
The $50 million USD bounty on Maduro‘s head is now twice the amount that was promised for the capture of UBL. It‘s time for Maduro to be brought to justice in the United States for the narco-terrorism that he has tolerated, authorized, facilitated and in some cases engineered.

There‘s no place in this world for despots who turn once vibrant liberal western democracies into tyrannies, who impoverish once wealthy economies, who strike bargains with the global enemies of the free world to safeguard their hold on power at the expense of their own people or who compensate for their political and economic mismanagement by building a state-sponsored narcotics empire through which a quarter of the world‘s annual cocaine supply is now funneled.
There’s no place for a man who has unleashed an unprecedented refugee crisis on the entire Western Hemisphere, which led to the emigration of 7 million Venezuelans who had to leave their home since this needless, man-made crisis began to engulf their country.

The people of Venezuela rose up. They rallied behind the opposition, behind Juan Guaidó, behind María Corina Machado and behind President-elect Edmundo González. They voted for them despite fraud, manipulation and voter intimidation. They went on to protest the actions of the regime, peacefully, without arms repeatedly and for months despite the well-known terror and torture practices of the regime.
Yet, neither their civil courage as free citizens of the Republic nor the diplomatic isolation, the international criticism, the targeted and sectoral sanctions, nor President Biden‘s offer to exchange sanctions relief for free elections followed by a democratic transition were enough to rid the world of this man and his loyal coterie of conspirators.

The time for decisive military action has come. If the US and Venezuela‘s neighbors are not willing or able to train, arm, organize and fund an insurgency to bring this regime to its knees, the responsibility for removing it falls on the shoulders of highly trained, highly capable and highly equipped Marines, airmen, sailors and special forces of the US military who will be able to neutralize any hostile regime target inside Venezuela within mere days.

Once this surgical operation is concluded, the responsibility for a new era of hope in Venezuela will pass on to the millions of Venezuelans who can’t wait to close this perverse Marxist chapter of their nation‘s proud history.
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Convivial · 26-30, F
You sure you're not talking about merica when you say all those things?
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CedricH · 22-25, M
@Convivial I can’t deny that there are certain, troubling, parallels between Maduro, Chavez and Trump.
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samueltyler2 · 80-89, M
@CedricH please describe?
CedricH · 22-25, M
@samueltyler2 The parallels?
samueltyler2 · 80-89, M
@CedricH yes, particularly your inclusion of Chavez and Trump in the same line!
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CedricH · 22-25, M
@samueltyler2 The parallels are demagoguery, populism, nationalism, a disregard for rules and norms, authoritarianism, illiberalism, economic mismanagement and undeniable autocratic aspirations.
Convivial · 26-30, F
@CedricH all that too lol
samueltyler2 · 80-89, M
@CedricH stop with such broad words, give me examples of how Chavez and Trump are similar!
CedricH · 22-25, M
@samueltyler2 Those are straightforward political terms with a definition and all of them can be attributed to both Trump and Chavez. Maybe you ought to delve deeper into political terminology before you accuse me of giving you a vague response.
samueltyler2 · 80-89, M
@CedricH you stated it, show it! Prove your statement.
CedricH · 22-25, M
@samueltyler2 I did explain my statement, you simply weren’t satisfied with the answer.
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CedricH · 22-25, M
@samueltyler2 No my friend, you asked me in what ways they were alike, I gave you a short, concise answer. If you don’t understand the answer or don’t like it that’s not my problem. If you disagree with the similarities I‘ve listed then you can write a post explaining in great detail how and why I‘m wrong in highlighting these parallels.
samueltyler2 · 80-89, M
@CedricH ingivebup with you, you cannot answer the question. You are the one saying they are on the same category. When i asked you to show that, you listed a bunch of political descriptors but not how both trump and Chavez share the same positions.
CedricH · 22-25, M
@samueltyler2 For God‘s sake. The descriptors are the parallels.
samueltyler2 · 80-89, M
@CedricH no, if you think the descriptors got them, you need to show they fit the descriptors.

This isn't the first time you have shown your lack of sensitivity to the issues. I wish you luck on your future.