Run Venezuela? They Can’t Even Run The United States
The insanity of it all—illustrated.
Jan 03, 2026
Read it in the news:
“Economic Confidence Drops to 17-Month Low” —Gallup, December 4, 2025
“Satisfaction with U.S. healthcare costs is the lowest Gallup has recorded … since 2001.” —Gallup, December 15, 2025
“ACA credits expire, leading to sharp rise in health insurance premiums.” —WANF TV Atlanta, January 1, 2026
“We’re going to run (Venezuela) until such time as we can do a safe, proper, and judicious transition.” —Donald Trump, January 3, 2026
The commentary pretty much writes itself. As surely as night follow day, the Trump Administration was bound to do something to distract Americans from their well-founded economic fears—especially from a health cost crisis Trump’s party just made vastly worse. And all that Venezuelan oil looks mighty attractive from an oligarch’s perspective.
But “run Venezuela”? Shouldn’t they do a better job running this country first? Let’s start with healthcare. The Affordable Care Act is what programmers used to call a “kludge”; it’s a Rube Goldberg contraption whose goal is to mitigate the pain caused by America’s so-called healthcare “system.” America’s healthcare crisis can’t truly be fixed until the profit motive is removed.
Nevertheless, the ACA has provided at least somehealthcare coverage to millions of people. That’s better than nothing—much better. The premium tax credits are a wealth transfer from the public to the private sector. But without them—and with no other system in place—millions of people will soon face disastrous monthly premium hikes. If they don’t pay them—and many won’t be able to afford it—they’ll face financial ruin if they become sick or injured.
We can recognize the flawed nature of the ACA and still see that these Republican cuts are inhumane and indefensible.
“We can’t afford it,” the Republicans argue. But that raises the obvious question: If not, then how can we afford to “run Venezuela”? Besides, they’ve got work to do right here.
Sure, the economy is doing pretty well—for the investor class. But even that limited success is hanging by a thread. It’s driven by an AI bubble that will almost certainly burst, wreaking economic havoc when it does. Meanwhile, millions of households are struggling with the cost of living (click on images to expand):
The housing shortage is causing widespread pain as homes become increasingly unaffordable for most workers:
The labor outlook is “cooling,” as the economists say. But even that doesn’t count the most critical element of the job market, which is the ability to find jobs that actually pay a living wage:
Young people are especially hard-hit:
“Energy affordability” is a growing crisis, too. The average American household paid $124 per month more on its utility bill in the first nine months of 2025 and rates are still rising, with no end in sight:
Oh, and the New START treaty will expire in a few weeks, leaving the world with no meaningful limits on the possibility of a new nuclear arms race:
Nuclear catastrophe? It’s not impossible. Doesn’t that warrant some attention from this country’s leaders?
You get the idea. With all these problems to solve, our leaders have decided the right thing to do is—invade Venezuela. That won’t be an easy ride. It’s a country of 28 million people and its terrain that includes jungles, deserts, and mountains.
With all these disasters at home, it’s a safe bet we’re not wanted in Venezuela for our management expertise. In fact, most Venezuelans don’t want us there at all:
Most Venezuelans think the US is only doing it “because of the oil”:
The question, translated: “Do you believe that a potential military invasion against Venezuela would aim to overthrow the president in order to seize the oil, or do you think it would be to combat drug trafficking?” The headline: “90% believe that an invasion would aim to overthrow Maduro because of the oil.”
To be fair, we are only doing it because of the oil. Mostly, anyway.
Most Americans don’t want us in Venezuela, either:
In fact, most Americans are sick of our government’s seemingly endless addiction to foreign military adventurism:
And yet, here we are.
This is a desperate resource grab by Trump and the other overseers of this dying economic system. It’s also an obvious and deliberate distraction from the many problems here in the United States. And we all know they’re doing it for their benefit, not ours.
Like the saying goes: it’s all about the grift. But at what price for the rest of us?
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The juxtaposition of domestic economic indicators with the Venezuela statement really underscores the absurdity here. When healthcare premiums are spiking due to ACA credit expirations and 43 million people live in poverty, the optics of announcing plans to "run" another country are just wild. The energy affordability crisis alone should be a wake-up call - Americans paying $124 more monthly on utilities while talking about seizing foreign oil assets feels like satire writing itself. I remember when political leaders atleast tried to maintain some rhetorical consistency between domestic priorities and foreign policy. The disconnect betwween what the polling data shows Americans want (end to military adventurism) and what actually happens is getting harder to ignore.
The juxtaposition of domestic economic indicators with the Venezuela statement really underscores the absurdity here. When healthcare premiums are spiking due to ACA credit expirations and 43 million people live in poverty, the optics of announcing plans to "run" another country are just wild. The energy affordability crisis alone should be a wake-up call - Americans paying $124 more monthly on utilities while talking about seizing foreign oil assets feels like satire writing itself. I remember when political leaders atleast tried to maintain some rhetorical consistency between domestic priorities and foreign policy. The disconnect betwween what the polling data shows Americans want (end to military adventurism) and what actually happens is getting harder to ignore.
Run Venezuela means to harvest the country of all is resources and leave when they're done a la Romney.