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It's never complete without the war porn, faked or otherwise. It's all part of the fog of bullshit.



Cartel de los Soles” translates literally to:
“Cartel of the Suns.”
Why “Suns”?
In Venezuela, “los soles” (the suns) refer to the sun insignia worn by high-ranking military officers, especially generals.
The name implies a drug trafficking cartel involving senior Venezuelan military officials.
So while the literal translation is Cartel of the Suns, the meaning is closer to:
A cartel associated with (or run by) high-ranking military officers.







The Invoice of Power
For all the crying haters of U.S. power projection. You mistake American peace for a donation.
Peace is not mailed out like aid packages. It’s underwritten. By carriers you don’t build, by logistics you don’t maintain, by men and women you didn’t raise, and by a debt of blood you never agreed to pay.
You mortgaged your future and outsourced your security. Now you project morality instead of power and call it “sovereignty.”
You cry foul when America decides the bill is due. When we choose to remove a parasite like Nicolás Maduro from the bloodstream of a hemisphere we’ve kept stable for generations. You say it’s illegitimate, unfair, and that it violates norms.
Norms are written by those who can enforce them.
You ask if we think peace is benevolent. No. Peace is transactional. The price is alignment, stability, and order. If you don’t pay it, someone else will, eventually with interest.
This is the sickness of the postwar world: a civilization feminized by safety it did not earn, mistaking feelings for force and outrage for deterrence. You boo and hiss about sovereignty while cheering mass migration, institutional decay, and the slow motion rape of the West. Your moral vocabulary is loud; your martial vocabulary is empty.
So understand this clearly: If you disagree, do something about it. Because your boos mean nothing to a nation that has seen what you applaud.
This is a mask off moment. You don’t have to respect America. Fear will suffice.
We are not cruel, merely structural. Gravity does not apologize to the weak for pulling them down. Fire does not explain itself to straw.
America is strong. You are not. That’s not personal. That is simply the way of things.
Power is the rent you pay to exist unmolested in a violent world. If you refuse to pay it, don’t be shocked when the landlord shows up.
I sometimes blackpill too hard. But lately, I’m starting to see America might not be in total decline, just hitting puberty. So yea, it’s about to get weird. But we aren’t going anywhere.
For the soft among you out there, I guess you’re just gonna have to deal.






Patrick says
You know the saying “if it’s free, you are the product”.
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio has publicly responded to Moscow's outrage over the arrest of Venezuelan dictator Nicolas Maduro. He made it clear that the Kremlin's opinion on the matter was of no concern to the White House.
The response was published by the U.S. State Department. Rubio made it clear that Moscow, bogged down in its war against Ukraine, is now capable of nothing but words.
"We don't care about escalating conflict with Russia over Venezuela. We thought they would give rhetorical support to the Maduro regime. I think they have enough on their plate in Ukraine as it is. And if Lavrov is watching, Sergei, Merry Christmas. At the end of the day, I expected exactly what they said. The rhetoric that we heard (...) is not a factor in our understanding of everything that's going on," the US Secretary of State said.
FortWayneHatesRealtors says
Patrick says
You know the saying “if it’s free, you are the product”.
As if your current interwebz provider who charges you $50-80 per months doesn't treat you as such.
RWSGFY says
FortWayneHatesRealtors says
Patrick says
You know the saying “if it’s free, you are the product”.
As if your current interwebz provider who charges you $50-80 per months doesn't treat you as such.
I don’t get direct CIA/KGB propagandas beamed into my brains like Starlink does to its “clients”.
Russia has publicly declared its readiness to supply hypersonic missiles to Venezuela, a move that could significantly escalate geopolitical tensions in the Western Hemisphere.
As reported by seekingalpha.com (5 November), citing Russian state news agency TASS, the statement came from a senior figure in the Russian parliamentary defence committee.
Alexei Zhuravlev, First Deputy Chair of the Russian Defence Committee, confirmed to Gazeta.Ru that Moscow is “prepared” to consider supplying next-generation weaponry should Caracas (the Venezuelan government) express “relevant interest.”
Zhuravlev specified that the missiles in question include the Oreshnik, Russia’s medium-range hypersonic ballistic missile designed to carry nuclear warheads, and the Kalibr, a cruise missile capable of delivering either conventional or nuclear payloads.
“I see no obstacles to supplying a friendly nation with new developments such as the Oreshnik or Kalibr missiles,” he said, adding that Russia is not bound by any international obligations that would prohibit such transfers.
He also emphasised that all military-technical cooperation between the two countries is “progressing steadily.” He noted that the volume and type of weaponry imported from Russia remain confidential, “so the United States may be in for a few surprises.”
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Venezuela has greater oil stores than any other country. But after years of corruption, mismanagement and more recently U.S. sanctions, its oil output has dropped to a tenth of what it was two decades ago.
From Lake Maracaibo in the west to the Orinoco oil belt in the east, abandoned wells rust in the sun as looters scavenge the metal. The last drilling rig still working in Venezuela shut down in August. The country is on course, by the end of this year, to be pumping little more oil than the state of Wyoming.
“Twenty percent of the world’s oil is in Venezuela, but what good is it if we can’t monetize it?” said Carlos Mendoza, an ambassador under the late socialist president Hugo Chávez, who enjoyed an oil bonanza when prices were high but starved the industry of investment and maintenance funds.
“We’re entering a post-oil era,” Mr. Mendoza said.
While petroleum is under stress world-wide from climate-change concerns and the rise of wind and solar power, what is happening to oil in Venezuela goes far beyond the global industry’s troubles. It is an existential crisis for a country long dependent on oil for nearly all of its hard-currency earnings.
This year, Venezuela’s oil income will probably fall below the limited funds coming in from other sources such as gold mining and overseas workers’ remittances, said Luis Vicente León, an economist and pollster. Venezuela’s economy is likely to shrink more than 30% this year from the oil collapse plus the pandemic, says Ecoanalitica, a Caracas business consulting firm.