
Alex Krainer

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A moving, inspirational speech by the nobel peace prize winner Machado about how much money American companies will make in Venezuela after she takes over. Trump Jr. can't conceal his excitement! https://t.co/wxqPx4uE7v
— Alex (Sasha) Krainer (@NakedHedgie) October 15, 2025
Ms. Machado has been dying to get into power in Venezuela for over 20 years now. In 2002, she participated in the failed coup against then President Hugo Chavez for which she accepted funding from the CIA front, the National Endowment for Democracy. Well, great ends might justify great means and Machado has continued to seek such means ever since.
Sanctioning Venezuela to death
The sanctions didn’t do the trick and by 2018, Machado was calling for stronger medicine, arguing that the Maduro regime could only be removed by force. The following year she wrote a letter to Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu: citing the R2P (responsibility to protect) doctrine, she asked Netanyahu to intervene in Venezuela and overthrow Maduro already so she could become the country’s new democratic President. She sent a similar letter to Argentina’s President Macri and also to Santa Claus, according to three people familiar with the matter.
All these years, Machado has persevered and now it appears that a renewed push to free Venezuela’s resources people from the odious, undemocratic Maduro regime is gathering momentum once more. Trump has moved American naval assets to the region and yesterday blew up yet another Venezuelan boat, killing six people on board. No worries, all six were very, very bad people. That was the 5th such strike, which killed a total of 27 very bad people. However, the reasons given by the administration for killing these bad people make little sense.
Supposedly, these are suspected drug traffickers. But even if they were, deploying the U.S. military to kill them wouldn’t be the best way to stop the drugs flow into the U.S. The real purpose of these strikes is to exert pressure on Maduro regime and embolden its opposition. With any luck, this will provoke them into retaliating, giving the U.S. a justification to bomb Venezuela - like nobody’s ever seen before. Eventually, we do in Venezuela as we did in Libya, Syria, Iraq and a few other places around the world.
Why are regime changes necessary?
Venezuelan officials, hoping to end their country’s clash with the United States, offered the Trump administration a dominant stake in Venezuela’s oil and other mineral wealth in discussions that lasted for months, according to multiple people close to the talks.
The far-reaching offer remained on the table as the Trump administration called the government of President Nicolas Maduro of Venezuela a “narco-terror cartel,” amassed warships in the Caribbean and began blowing up boats that American officials say were carrying drugs from Venezuela.
Under a deal discussed between a senior U.S. official and Mr. Maduro’s top aides, the Venezuelan strongman offered to open up all existing and future oil and gold projects to American companies, give preferential contracts to American businesses, reverse the flow of Venezuelan oil exports from China to the United States, and slash his country’s energy and mining contracts with Chinese, Iranian and Russian firms.
The answer from the Trump White House was, NO, confirmed with yesterday’s killing of another six very bad people on a Venezuelan boat.
If Maduro was offering what the Trump administration wanted, and they could have had it without a fight, then why was that offer declined? In general, resources can always be obtained through trade. For the regional behemoth like the United States, they would always be able to negotiate guaranteed long-term contracts on very favorable terms, so Venezuela’s riches could flow to the U.S. markets even without Maria Corina Machado and still, the “American companies would profit greatly.”
It’s all about bank collateral
This relationship highlights the driving incentive behind imperialism and colonial wars over centuries, whether we are talking about Venezuela, Libya, Syria, Ukraine, Russia, India, Congo, or any other resource rich nation. It may be hard to imagine that the fine, affluent gentlemen in expensive suits sitting in corner offices in New York or London could be the ultimate butchers of humanity, but they are the only group in society that have the motive, the means and the opportunity under their control.
The business model to kill for
After the bailout, the banks walked away with at least $16 trillion in profits, which works out to more than $42,000 per man woman and child living in the United States. That business model far eclipses oil trade, military industrial complex and all other industries. It truly is the business to kill for.
Gods of finance & dogs of war
Thanks to the magic of our fraudulent monetary system, the global banking oligarchy can repeat such pirate raids almost infinitely, so long as we go along with the children’s tales about democracy and human rights, evil dictators and brave freedom fighters. In an interview with the New York Times in 1938, Henry Ford stated as follows:
“Somebody once said that sixty families have directed the destinies of the nation. It might well be said that if somebody would focus the spotlight on twenty-five persons who handle the nation’s finances, the world’s real war makers would be brought into bold relief. … if these financiers had their way we’d be in a war now. They want war because they make money out of such conflict - out of the human misery that wars bring.”
Hardly anything changed since then and the same incentives drive the same behaviors.
Venezuelans deserve more & better democracy!
Besides: Maduro bad, freedom, democracy, human rights, bla, bla, bla. Wash - rinse - repeat… With any luck and enough cannon fodder, we could take control of the resource wealth of the Donbass next, then Iran and eventually even Russia. They too deserve freedom and democracy at any price!
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