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THE VENEZUELAN WOKE-UP: How Maduro’s Collapse Is Exposing a Globalist Reset Right on America’s Doorstep

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THE VENEZUELAN WOKE-UP: How Maduro’s Collapse Is Exposing a Globalist Reset Right on America’s Doorstep

THE VENEZUELAN WOKE-UP: How Maduro’s Collapse Is Exposing a Globalist Reset Right on America’s Doorstep

The mainstream media wants you to believe that the story of Venezuela is just a tragic tale of socialism gone wrong, a sad little saga of a distant country with oil and bad leadership. They show you images of people fleeing, but they never show you the full picture. They want you to feel pity, not to see the pattern. But we’re not here to feel pity. We’re here to connect the dots that the controlled press is so desperate to keep disconnected. Because what’s happening with the Venezuelan people right now is not just a humanitarian crisis—it is a *lever* being pulled to reshape the entire Western Hemisphere, and the American people are the ones being levered against.

Let’s start with the obvious. For years, we’ve been told that the only problem in Venezuela was Nicolás Maduro. A dictator, a bad guy, a socialist. Fine. But if that were the whole story, why did the United States, under both Trump and Biden, keep the sanctions on so tight that they choked the life out of the very people they claimed to want to help? Why did we embargo their oil, then turn around and buy oil from Russia and Saudi Arabia at higher prices? Why did we demonize their currency, then watch the IMF quietly print new loans for the region? The answer is not incompetence. It’s a plan.

Think about it. Venezuela has the largest proven oil reserves on the planet. Not Saudi Arabia. Not Russia. *Venezuela*. For decades, that oil was a geopolitical shield. Maduro was bad, but he kept the oil in the ground or sold it to China. That made him a problem for the globalist financial order. You can’t control the global economy if a rogue state holds that much energy wealth outside the petrodollar system. So what do you do? You starve the country. You collapse its economy. You create a refugee crisis so massive that it destabilizes every neighbor from Colombia to Brazil to the United States. And then, when the people are desperate, you offer them a choice: stay under Maduro’s boot, or flee into the arms of a new system.

Enter the "Venezuelan diaspora." And I use that word carefully, because it’s not just a mass of people. It is a *weaponized migration*. You see, the same globalist networks that orchestrated the color revolutions in Ukraine and the Arab Spring are now using the Venezuelan exodus to flood the Southern border of the United States. Why? Because an open border is not a mistake. It is a tool. Every person who crosses without documentation is a vote for the future, a consumer for the central bank digital currency, a worker who will accept wages below the minimum, and a political chip that can be traded for amnesty, citizenship, and eventually, a permanent shift in the electorate.

But here’s the part they won’t tell you on CNN: Many of these Venezuelans fleeing Maduro are not just poor farmers. They are middle-class professionals, engineers, doctors, and teachers who were systematically crushed by a regime that the U.S. helped keep in power through sanctions. They are being told by NGO’s funded by the same billionaire foundations that run the World Economic Forum that their only hope is to walk to the U.S. border. They are being funneled through cartel-controlled routes—routes that the same government that claims to fight the cartels has left wide open. Coincidence? Wake up.

And then you have the political theater. When a few hundred Venezuelans show up at the border in a caravan, it’s front-page news. But when the Biden administration quietly flies 10,000 Venezuelans into the country on "humanitarian parole" without any background checks, it’s buried on page 12. Why? Because that's the real story. The government is not just letting them in—it’s *importing* them. They are being given work permits, IDs, and in many states, driver’s licenses that allow them to vote. This is not a crisis of migration. This is a crisis of sovereignty, and we are sleepwalking through it.

Now, let’s talk about the globalist angle. The collapse of Venezuela was not natural. It was engineered. The same people who pushed for the sanctions, the same people who funded the opposition that refused to negotiate, the same people who control the IMF and the World Bank—they are all part of the same network that wants to dissolve national borders and create a "Great Reset." You think the World Economic Forum’s "You’ll Own Nothing and Be Happy" slogan is just a meme? Look at what’s happening in Venezuela. The people who fled own nothing. They have no homes, no bank accounts, no credit scores. They are the perfect population for a digital ID system tied to a Central Bank Digital Currency. They have no choice but to accept whatever system the host country gives them. That’s not a refugee. That’s a *test subject* for a cashless society.

And where is the American media? They are busy calling anyone who questions this a "racist" or a "conspiracy theorist." They are gaslighting you into thinking that the only problem is the border wall. But the wall was never the issue. The issue is that the people coming across are being used as pawns in a larger game. The issue is that the very same billionaires who fund the "open borders" think tanks also fund the "climate change" scare that is being used to justify depopulation and central planning. The Venezuelan crisis is the perfect storm: a socialist regime we helped create, a refugee wave we helped facilitate, and a digital surveillance system we are helping to build.

But here’s the kicker: The Venezuelan people themselves are not the enemy. They are victims of the same globalist machine that is chewing up the American middle class. They are being lied to by the same NGOs, exploited by the same cartels, and processed by the same bureaucratic maze. The real enemy is the system that profits from their suffering. The real enemy

Final Thoughts


After decades of covering upheaval across Latin America, what strikes me most about the Venezuelan exodus is not just the staggering numbers, but the quiet endurance of human dignity amidst systemic collapse—people rebuilding lives from scratch in concrete jungles with nothing but a phone number and a dream. The real story here isn't the political rhetoric in Caracas or Washington; it's the millions of individual acts of survival that have permanently reshaped the social fabric of an entire continent, forcing host nations to grapple with both their own economic frailties and the raw, undeniable value of human mobility. Ultimately, this crisis offers a sobering lesson: no wall or visa restriction can contain the gravitational pull of hope, and the world would do well to remember that migration is less a problem to be solved than a testament to the unyielding human will to thrive.