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JULIAN’S DISPATCHES ||| Trump: the Ugly American

And getting uglier

by Julian Macfarlane
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Part 2

Trump’s drug

So to speak….

Damn you, Donald! I really wanted to write about the Russian economy. But you just had to derail my plans…

For the Donald, the delusion of power is a drug.

Delcy Rodriguez

One of his delusions is that he is able to push Delcy Rodriguez around. At least that’s what the Media say…
Delcy- Maduro backdrop

Aside from the threat of launching a second military operation against Venezuela, the US reportedly sees sanctions relief and access to Rodriguez’s financial assets as leverage. However, several Politico sources said they were unaware of any plans to lift sanctions or provide significant humanitarian aid at this stage. Politico

Really? With Politico it is always best to read between the lines.

Delcy and her brother Jorge, head of the national assembly, are both dedicated Chavistas, with a very good reason not to comply with the Gringos– revenge.

On the other hand, they know how to play the game for time, which is all-important given American domestic politics.

Why the Rodriguezes hate the Gringos

Both the Rodriguezes, like most Chavista leader,s are dedicated Neo-Marxist nationalists. Unlike Trump and most politicians, their priority is not money or power but ideals.


Jorge Antonio Rodríguez


Delcy Rodríguez’s father, Jorge Antonio Rodríguez, was a prominent Marxist leader in Venezuela who died in police custody on July 25, 1976, after being tortured.

He was a student leader at the Central University of Venezuela (UCV) and the founder of the Socialist League, a radical left-wing party.

He was detained by the Directorate of Intelligence and Prevention Services (DISIP) on July 23, 1976, for his alleged involvement in the kidnapping of American executive William Niehous, the head of Owens-Illinois in Venezuela, said to be a CIA operative.

While officially attributed to a heart attack, an autopsy revealed he had suffered severe physical trauma during interrogation, including seven broken ribs and a detached liver.

He was 34 years old at the time of his death.

His death became a foundational political narrative for his children, Delcy and Jorge Rodríguez (current President of the National Assembly).

Delcy has historically described the “Bolivarian Revolution” as “revenge” for her father’s killing.

Delcy will not betray Maduro any more than she would betray Chavez or her father.

But many people are going with this “betrayal” narrative, which is spread by the Western Media. Y’know— Latinos are lazy, venal, and unreliable.

The betrayal story

International law specialist and UN expert Alfred de Zayas told Sputnik.

Unlike past US-backed coups across the region, plotters in Venezuela have not found a base of support in the military to draw from to successfully overthrow the government and install a US puppet regime, renowned international law specialist and UN expert Alfred de Zayas told Sputnik.


“When the US tried to overthrow Hugo Chavez in 2002 and the coup d’etat failed after 48 hours (Chavez had been taken prisoner – but his popularity with the Army was such that the Army succeeded in liberating him), the Venezuelan people remained loyal to Chavez,” Zayas recalled.


“I am convinced that the Venezuelan authorities would have remained loyal to Maduro if they had had the opportunity. That is why Maduro was immediately flown out of the country,” he added.


Speaking to Venezuelan government officials repeatedly, including in his capacity as a UN independent expert, and in the years since, Zayas said what stuck out to him about these conversations was their ideological commitment and loyalty “to the tenets of the Bolivarian Revolution,” and the US’s clear inability to easily “buy” them.


“I personally know of several high officials who were approached by CIA operatives with very attractive offers, and they refused to sell out,” Zayas said.

What’s more, in his conversations with ordinary Venezuelans, the expert came away with the impression that “the masses hate the United States – the Yankees – and will not accept a US puppet,” seeing US sanctions pressure, not the Venezuelan government, as the source of their troubles.

Ironically, the US seems to agree.

Tactical narrative


This aligns with my own explanations in previous posts—and I have been following the evolution of American military tactics— since I was a stringer during the “Secret War” in Laos.

Of course, there are many theories. Here’s an interesting one, which is at least as credible as the CIA buying off the Chavista military.

A Trojan Horse?

The most provocative possibility is that the kidnapping “was a Trojan Horse operation,” which would remove questions about betrayal and incompetence and explain “many inconsistencies,” Lidovskoy says.

“The gist of this theory is that a US delegation accompanied by armed guards arrived at Maduro’s residence to discuss the parameters of a peace deal at a dinner, to conduct peace talks, to find common ground.

This would explain the lack of incoming fire by Venezuelan air defenses on US helicopters. “Once inside, the delegation’s armed guard (revealed to be special forces) shot all of Maduro’s guards – who were unprepared for this – and captured the president. And only when the signal came in that something had gone wrong and the president had been captured did the bombing of Venezuelan bases and key air defense points begin, providing a smokescreen for the US withdrawal” .Egor Lidovskoy, director of St. Petersburg’s Hugo Chavez Latin American Cultural Center.

Are ya’ reading this, Netflix?

There are so many angles to this incident. It really would make a great TV series.
Take Delta Force.

Billy Lavigne Delta Force implicated in drug trafficking.


Heroes? Or Villains? You choose.

Ft Bragg cartel


Maybe the US hates the Latin American cartels because it hates competition? The US is the world’s biggest Mafia gang.

In case you are wondering who the US’ “witnesses’ against Maduro will be, they are all convicted criminals. Guess what they were promised in return for their testimony?

Witnesses against Maduro


Trump makes a mockery of justice, of the US, and ultimately of himself.

As I wrote recently, this is the Age of Artificiality. It’s a Virtual World. Nothing is real anymore.



Trump breaks bad

And lessons from the 14th Century


Walter White took the name “Heisenberg”who came up with the Uncertainty Principle— the core of which is that the more precisely you know a particle’s position, the less you know about its momentum and vice versa. The more Trump articulates a position, the less you know where he’s going next. That’s true of the US, too.

Uncertainty. Unpredictability. Contradictions. Yet, a trajectory.

The government of the United States doesn’t want peace. It wants to exploit its system of exploitation, of pillage, of hegemony through war. It wants peace. But what’s happening in Iraq? What happened in Lebanon? In Palestine? What’s happening? What’s happened over the last 100 years in Latin America and in the world? And now threatening Venezuela — new threats against Venezuela, against Iran?

Who said this? Me? Brian Berletic?

No, this was spoken by Hugo Chávez, the first president of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, in an address to the UN General Assembly in 2006.

Donald Trump is doing nothing new —he is just doing it more openly, more obviously, and more stupidly. He thinks he can get away with it because previous presidents did.

But previous presidents always pretended their actions were about “freedom”, “democracy”, ”human rights’ and the like– even “rules-based order” and “international law”, Commuters on the way to work, read their words and thought, “Oh yeah, I like those things”. They had other things to think about, like what to have for lunch.

Trump now just says his actions are just about resources – not that the US doesn’t have a lot of resources, but exploiting them takes effort and costs money — it is much easier to just steal resources that belong to others and somehow get them to pay for it.

The US is very,  very hungry. It is like an old lion that can no longer hunt as it used to and resorts to raiding villages – pigs, goats, and the villagers, too. It is an apex predator no longer at the apex.

It needs to be put down.

But Trump failed recently in Venezuela. Chavismo has survived—because of what it hs given to Venezuela, a record of liberation, almost unequalled in history.

And the Gringo challenge has made the country stronger. Venezuela is now unified against the Gringos – even those who do not subscribe to Chavez’s concepts.

 

Chavismo will defeat the US because it has moral power. Trump’s America has lost that, not that it ever really had it.

Asabiyyah

Ibn Khaldun, the 14th-century Islamist sociologist made an important distinction —-that power is not just what you have —weapons/money—as Americans seem to think— but how you are connected morally and socially). When the moral bond that is asabiyyah breaks, even huge empires break too.

The Chavistas have that asabiyyah.

Do Americans?

They kill people outside the US capriciously and fund genocide. Inside the US, masked and armed agents kill defenseless protestors.


If Americans have asabiyyah, it is not as a country, it is as people but in their local communities. The country will die – but those communities will survive and thrive.

Small is big.


Something more reassuring…


Dec 16, 2016 #Documentary #RealWild
Wildlife biologist Liz Bonnin sets off on a worldwide journey of discovery to find out why animals of different species make friends with each other as well as why apex predators make friends with humans. Click here for more documentaries: http://bit.ly/2gSPaf6

Ichi quotes JG Ballard


Support Professors Chappy and Ichi in their fight for Truth, Justice and the Feline Way of Life. Support also the camp follower Julian.

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Professor Chappy says:

Chappy cheers Bolivarian revolution

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