Red London. Blue Paris.
Saka vs Dembélé.
90 minutes away from football immortality. 🏆🔥
The UEFA Champions League Final 2026 is pure cinema.
Who’s bringing the trophy home? 👀⚽️
#UCLFinal #ChampionsLeague #Arsenal #PSG #Saka Dembele Football Soccer Final
Let me say this clearly: this is not about defending a bad president. This is about power, control, and a system that keeps repeating itself.
Every time a country in the Global South sits on valuable resources, especially oil, suddenly the United States finds a “problem” that needs fixing. Venezuela is no different. It has the largest proven oil reserves in the world, and for years it has refused to fully bow to U.S. political and economic control. That alone explains a lot.
For over a decade, the U.S. has used sanctions, economic pressure, political interference, and threats of force against Venezuela. These sanctions didn’t hurt politicians, they crushed the economy, weakened the oil industry, and made ordinary people suffer. Food shortages, medicine shortages, mass migration, all of this happened while the U.S. claimed it was acting “for the people.”
That’s where the hypocrisy starts.
America talks about democracy, yet it has a long history of deciding which foreign leaders are acceptable and which must go. Iran in 1953. Chile in 1973. Iraq in 2003. Libya in 2011. Different countries, same pattern: label the leader a problem, destabilize the economy, support opposition groups, then intervene, directly or indirectly, and walk away when chaos follows.
So when people say, “This is about oil,” they’re not crazy. They’re paying attention.
What worries me most is the message this sends to the rest of the world. It tells smaller nations that their sovereignty is conditional. That as long as you cooperate with powerful interests, you’re fine, but the moment you don’t, your leadership, your economy, and your future can be targeted. That is not international order. That is intimidation.
And let’s be honest: if any other country did this — if China or Russia applied the same pressure, interfered politically, or hinted at removing leaders, the U.S. would call it an act of aggression. But when America does it, it’s rebranded as “promoting freedom.”
This is how empires behave. Not how equal nations behave.
I’m not saying Venezuela’s leadership was perfect. Far from it. But no foreign power has the right to decide another countrys fate