Delta Force just yanked Maduro out of Venezuela. Maduro! You're fired

  • Thread starter Thread starter 70 Mach 1
  • Start date Start date
1767729123543.jpeg
 
Fucking spot on is what that is, not wrong at all. The only one that is wrong here is you Ass Baby.
SA + AB = SAAB
You really have no problem taking the hits because you don't possess much upstairs...obvious, I know.

Be careful as being punch drunk can be fatal at times.
 
You realize China and Russia just wanted the oil for themselves..... And the Venezuelans don't have the means or capacity to drill it as good as they could without American assistance.



You welcome for cheaper oil and access to more oil.…... And taking it away from Socialist/Communist dictators in Russia, China and Venezuela *_*

Everyone wants oil, man. Everybody. But in the last two decades, most countries have not gone to war for it, barring a few.

Here's something else that will fry everyone's noodles:

The Foreclosure of a Country

There is a glitch in the Venezuela story that most people are missing. The official line is that we captured a dictator to "restore democracy" and "stop drugs." But those reasons don't explain the timing. There is a $13 billion transaction happening right now that does. It’s called the Citgo Auction.

Most people don’t realize that Venezuela’s "crown jewel"—the massive Citgo refinery network—is being sold off in a Delaware court this month. It’s a forced liquidation to pay creditors, but the auction had been frozen for years by political chaos. The capture of Maduro didn’t just change the regime. It cleared the title so the sale could close.

The winning bidder isn’t an oil major or a democracy activist. It’s Amber Energy, an affiliate of Elliott Management. That is Paul Singer’s fund, the most feared "vulture capitalist" in the world, famous for seizing sovereign ships to collect old debts. He isn’t betting on freedom. He’s closing a distressed asset deal.

The timeline tells you everything you need to know. The sale to Elliott was approved by the court late last year, but it needed a "change in political circumstances" to finally clear regulatory hurdles. Maduro was the obstacle blocking the transfer. His capture on January 3rd wasn’t a police action. It was the final signature on the closing documents.

This reframes the entire operation. We aren't watching an episode of Law & Order; we are watching a foreclosure. The legal doctrine allowing the capture turns a President into a defendant, but the economic doctrine is simpler. It's a distressed asset restructuring with a military escort.

The playbook is the same one private equity uses for a failing mall, just scaled up to a sovereign nation. You depress the asset value with sanctions, buy the debt for pennies on the dollar, and use the courts to force a liquidation. Then you send in the troops to evict the tenant so you can collect at face value. It’s a leveraged buyout with an air force.

If you look at who is getting paid, the "democracy" frame falls apart completely. It isn't voters waiting in line; it's a queue of corporate creditors like Crystallex, ConocoPhillips, and Siemens, with Elliott Management at the front. Marco Rubio isn't representing a constituency here. He's processing a payout.

There is a simple way to prove the drug war angle is just wallpaper. Two weeks ago, the administration pardoned Rubio’s own brother-in-law for cocaine trafficking. You don't pardon traffickers while invading a country to stop trafficking. The drug story is decoration. The $13 billion asset transfer is the load-bearing wall.

That’s why the bonds rallied before the raid. The market wasn't guessing about justice; it had inside information about the closing date. Power is just physics with a spreadsheet, and the spreadsheet says the auction is finally closed.

https://www.reuters.com/business/en...t-affiliate-2025-11-29/?utm_source=perplexity
 
Also, just FYI: a lot of people seem to have forgotten Epstein amid all the talk of Venezuela and seizing Greenland.

We saw something familiar prior to Vladimir Putin's first election victory. A series of mysterious bombings of flats thay made people rally around him before it was too late.

Some people think that a similar attack took place in the US at the turn of the century to prop up an unpopular president.

A similar incident took place before Indian PM Narendra Modi's first-ever major election as chief minister of the state of Gujarat in 2002.

Have you read 1984? It's a great book, and will give you insights into how our world leaders apparently make grand moves and keep us in perpetual war and poor so they can do whatever they like.

Do note, right after the Maduro extradition, China said it was a playbook for the invasion of Taiwan.
 
Everyone wants oil, man. Everybody. But in the last two decades, most countries have not gone to war for it, barring a few.

Here's something else that will fry everyone's noodles:

The Foreclosure of a Country

There is a glitch in the Venezuela story that most people are missing. The official line is that we captured a dictator to "restore democracy" and "stop drugs." But those reasons don't explain the timing. There is a $13 billion transaction happening right now that does. It’s called the Citgo Auction.

Most people don’t realize that Venezuela’s "crown jewel"—the massive Citgo refinery network—is being sold off in a Delaware court this month. It’s a forced liquidation to pay creditors, but the auction had been frozen for years by political chaos. The capture of Maduro didn’t just change the regime. It cleared the title so the sale could close.

The winning bidder isn’t an oil major or a democracy activist. It’s Amber Energy, an affiliate of Elliott Management. That is Paul Singer’s fund, the most feared "vulture capitalist" in the world, famous for seizing sovereign ships to collect old debts. He isn’t betting on freedom. He’s closing a distressed asset deal.

The timeline tells you everything you need to know. The sale to Elliott was approved by the court late last year, but it needed a "change in political circumstances" to finally clear regulatory hurdles. Maduro was the obstacle blocking the transfer. His capture on January 3rd wasn’t a police action. It was the final signature on the closing documents.

This reframes the entire operation. We aren't watching an episode of Law & Order; we are watching a foreclosure. The legal doctrine allowing the capture turns a President into a defendant, but the economic doctrine is simpler. It's a distressed asset restructuring with a military escort.

The playbook is the same one private equity uses for a failing mall, just scaled up to a sovereign nation. You depress the asset value with sanctions, buy the debt for pennies on the dollar, and use the courts to force a liquidation. Then you send in the troops to evict the tenant so you can collect at face value. It’s a leveraged buyout with an air force.

If you look at who is getting paid, the "democracy" frame falls apart completely. It isn't voters waiting in line; it's a queue of corporate creditors like Crystallex, ConocoPhillips, and Siemens, with Elliott Management at the front. Marco Rubio isn't representing a constituency here. He's processing a payout.

There is a simple way to prove the drug war angle is just wallpaper. Two weeks ago, the administration pardoned Rubio’s own brother-in-law for cocaine trafficking. You don't pardon traffickers while invading a country to stop trafficking. The drug story is decoration. The $13 billion asset transfer is the load-bearing wall.

That’s why the bonds rallied before the raid. The market wasn't guessing about justice; it had inside information about the closing date. Power is just physics with a spreadsheet, and the spreadsheet says the auction is finally closed.

https://www.reuters.com/business/en...t-affiliate-2025-11-29/?utm_source=perplexity
Dude.....


Maduro is a dictator who starves his own people, killed his own, had fraudulent elections to stay in power, sent drugs into America that kills thousands and thousands of youth and children......


What exactly are you defending here?



Chinese/Russia/Iran were being funded with Venezuelas oil and they are anti-American and anti-Human rights :dunno:



Plus we get access to oil, natural resources, raw earth metals etc etc and better means to efficiently tap into them. Win, win win for America, for Venezuela and the rest of the Free World.
 
Dude.....


Maduro is a dictator who starves his own people, killed his own, had fraudulent elections to stay in power, sent drugs into America that kills thousands and thousands of youth and children......


What exactly are you defending here?



Chinese/Russia/Iran were being funded with Venezuelas oil and they are anti-American and anti-Human rights :dunno:



Plus we get access to oil, natural resources, raw earth metals etc etc and better means to efficiently tap into them. Win, win win for America, for Venezuela and the rest of the Free World.
You do know...
1767730941570.png
 
Right. I guess you weren’t paying attention during all the ICE protests ?
Of course I was but as you should know, not everyone does the right thing and when emotions flare anything goes.

Look at @Findthetone1 and @Robostyle these 2 women are currently having their menstrual period and look at the total shit dribbling out of their mouths.

Imagine these 2 bitches flying a plane or working the front desk at a sexual disease clinic...would YOU trust them given how much their tits are lactating.
They can't see straight and the only thing on their minds is each other's asshole for comfort from the big bad NoHassle.

Give em' a day at the spa to gossip and talk about their men...that should calm the bitches down.

 
Last edited:
I feel as though an interesting plot twist, is the jury finds him innocent. And we just release him in NYC and see what goes down. This after of course of chipping him.
 
I feel as though an interesting plot twist, is the jury finds him innocent. And we just release him in NYC and see what goes down. This after of course of chipping him.
I can smell a hidden agreed narrative for this too.
 
Back
Top