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Speaker 0 centers on a political figure described as the woman taking over Venezuela. He asserts she is pro Israeli and pro Likud, noting she signed a cooperation deal in 2020 with Netanyahu's Likud party and fully supports Netanyahu's war on Gaza. He questions whether this alignment explains ongoing bombing activity “right now.” Speaker 1 broadens the critique to international responses to violence. He claims the UN has allowed bombing and destruction in Beirut and Lebanon, Syria, and Yemen, implying ongoing Western complicity. He then probes what major capitals—Berlin, Paris, London, Washington—will say or do, suggesting they may “keep encouraging the Hitler of the twenty first century now against the noble peaceful people of Iran.” He declares, on behalf of the Bolivarian humanist peaceful people of Venezuela, a stance of resistance to war: “This madness must be stopped.” He calls on the people of Israel and Jews, addressing them as a Christian and Sephardic heir, to stop Netanyahu’s madness, asserting that only the people of Israel can stop this madness and questioning where warmongering will lead. Speaker 1 condemns racism, intolerance, hatred, and violence, asking where such actions will lead and whether missiles and bombs will subdue the will of the world’s peoples. He warns about the consequences of destruction and urges an end to aggression, appealing to the concept of a world court of Israel’s Jewish people and labeling the war as immoral and criminal. He concludes with a call to stop the aggression and ends with a conditional expectation: “We shall see.”

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The speaker appeals to the United States government, saying: “listen Trump, listen, comment help us and please, comment get the shit out of México. Comment get Obrador, comment get Claudia fucking Sheinbaum.” They add, “Gracias, muchas gracias, gracias.” The fragment ends with, “Bueno, son muy.”

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Global leaders are plainly shocked that the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela is both a victim and a target of an attack of this nature, which is described as truly shameful. The speaker invokes Simón Bolívar’s Jamaica Letter, saying, “the veil has been torn, we have seen the light, and we are being pulled back into darkness.” They state that the chains have been broken, we have been free, and our enemies seek to enslave us again. There is a clear assertion that the Venezuelan people and the country understand that they will never be enslaved again. In response, all of Venezuela is mobilized, and a decree has already been signed by President Maduro, described as the only president of Venezuela. A single president is named for the country: Nicolás Maduro Moros. The statement emphasizes that there is only one president in Venezuela, and that person is Nicolás Maduro Moros, underscoring the legitimacy and singular leadership of Maduro.

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Speaker 0 notes that land strikes to stop drug trafficking specifically will start soon, and questions whether Speaker 1 has been promised anything. Speaker 1 responds that he does not know and, even if he did, he wouldn’t say it, adding, “we are not involved, and we will not get involved into another nation's policy, for their own national security.” Speaker 0 then asks whether Speaker 1 would welcome U.S. military action. Speaker 1 says, “I will welcome more and more pressure so that Maduro understands that he has to go, that his time is over.” He emphasizes that this is “not conventional regime change” and that it “cannot be compared to other cases like countries in The Middle East.” He states, “We had an election,” and asserts that “Regime change was already mandated by over 70% of the population,” arguing that the goal is “support to enforce that decision.” Speaker 0 asks how to square military action with receiving a peace prize and whether the moment has become necessary. Speaker 1 answers that what they are fighting for is “precisely freedom in order to have democracy and democracy in order to have peace.” He argues that “to maintain freedom and to achieve freedom, you do need strength,” contrasting this with the idea of a peace that would come from oppression or mere concession. He contends that it is “absolutely absurd” that Maduro’s regime gets support from Russia or from Iran, while democratic countries and democratic leaders are not being asked for support. He rejects the notion of appealing solely to peaceful means without addressing the regime’s international backers. Speaker 1 concludes by saying they do not have arms, but they have “our will. We have the power of organization and the power of love,” and adds, “peace is ultimately an act of love.”

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The United States government decides to send the CIA to Venezuela. They say the CIA will conduct operations against Venezuela, against the peace of Venezuela. This is claimed to be unprecedented; the speaker notes that never before has any government since the CIA’s existence publicly said it would order the CIA to kill, to derange, and to topple countries. A historian named Alejandro is invoked to support this claim. The speaker lists past Latin American coups, asserting that all involved the CIA and resulted in governments being overthrown and presidents assassinated, with documents allegedly published by the U.S. government that have since been declassified. Specific examples named are: 1974, Guatemala, Jacobo Arbenz; 1965, Dominican Republic, Juan Bosch; 1964, Brazil, Joao Goulart; 1973, Chile, Salvador Allende. The speaker says these are “a few” among many coups in Latin America, all documented through declassified U.S. government documents. Additionally, the case of Mosaddegh in Iran (1952) is cited as another example of a national leader toppled. The speaker asserts that, over time, the CIA apologized for overthrowing these presidents, stating the pretenses were that they were communists or terrorists, but later acknowledging the deception. The speaker uses the term “immorality” to describe those past actions and contrasts them with the present claim, stating that for the first time in history, a U.S. government says it has given authorization and issued orders to attack a country. The speaker concludes with a call to the Venezuelan people, saying their people are clear, united, highly conscious, with “1000000 of eyes and 1000000 of ears,” and that they possess the means to defeat this “open conspiracy” against the peace and stability of Venezuela. The ultimate aim asserted is to restore the peace and stability to which the people of Venezuela have a right, and to ensure they regain and sustain that peace and stability.

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A group of organizers describes rapid mobilization following the bombing and kidnapping of the president of Venezuela. By 03:30–04:00 this morning, they issued a call for demonstrations for Saturday, January 3, and within less than twelve hours, tens of thousands gathered. They characterize the moment as a watershed or epic moment and emphasize that people should be in the streets, framing it as a class war, a global war, and an anti-imperialist war. They report that demonstrations occurred in more than 100 cities on short notice. In Washington, they describe a scene where fifty fifty-one participants were scheduled for a simultaneous demonstration. As some attendees passed their protest site, many stopped for Gaza-related demonstrations, deciding to join the other event instead. Early on January 3, after the Answer Coalition and others called for demonstrations, fifty fifty-one expressed interest in collaborating and co-hosting that day. The presence of additional organizations that have opposed Trump but focus on domestic issues helped grow the demonstrations from about 60 at 10:00 to around 100 by 11:30, which they identify as a promising development. Speaker 1 introduces Manolo De Los Santos as the executive director of the People's Forum and a researcher with the Tri-Continental Institute for Social Research, noting his perspective that the United States is a rogue state with no regard for the UN Charter or international law. He also mentions Vijay Prashad, the executive director of the Tri-Continental Institute. Speaker 2 comments that Prashad is an extremely humble man and a reluctant politician, and expresses sympathy for him, noting there is nothing in his character that suggests otherwise. There is also a mention that people on the left will turn their back on Nicolas Maduro Moros and Celia Flores, and the speaker asserts they refuse to do so.

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¿Quién bombardea a sus países vecinos? Irán y el estado sionista de Netan Yau. Desde hace 76 años, se ha disparado el genocidio de Gaza, matando diariamente a palestinos, incluyendo niños, mujeres y ancianos, y destruyendo edificios, escuelas, mezquitas, iglesias y hospitales. El mundo occidental apoya esta destrucción. Luego atacaron al Líbano y Siria. Ahora pretenden aplastar a Irán, desatando una guerra donde Irán ha demostrado un poder militar inmenso. Existe el riesgo de una guerra nuclear que se extienda por Asia Central, Asia Oriental, Medio Oriente y Europa. Los que tienen el poder político podrían detener esta guerra con una palabra, pero en cambio, alimentan el fuego. Venezuela aboga por la paz justa y apoya a los pueblos de Palestina, Líbano, Yemen, Siria e Irán. **English Translation:** Who bombs their neighboring countries every day? Iran and the Zionist state led by Netan Yau. For 76 years, the genocide in Gaza has been ongoing, killing Palestinians daily, including children, women, and the elderly, and destroying buildings, schools, mosques, churches, and hospitals. The Western world supports this destruction. Then they attacked Lebanon and Syria. Now they intend to crush Iran, unleashing a war where Iran has demonstrated immense military power. There is a risk of a nuclear war spreading through Central Asia, East Asia, the Middle East, and Europe. Those in political power could stop this war with a word, but instead, they fuel the fire. Venezuela advocates for just peace and supports the people of Palestine, Lebanon, Yemen, Syria, and Iran.

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The conversation centers on accusations about Venezuela’s leadership and the international response to Middle East conflict. Speaker 0 asserts that “the woman” who is supposedly taking over Venezuela is pro Israeli and pro Likud, noting she signed a cooperation deal in 2020 with Netanyahu’s Likud party and fully supports Netanyahu’s war on Gaza, asking, “This is why we're seeing the bombing of them right now?” Speaker 1 counters by outlining a pattern of what they view as permissive international inaction. They assert that “The UN has allowed the bombing and destruction of Beirut and Lebanon. They've allowed the bombing and destruction of Syria. Every day, they permit the bombing of Yemen's Arab people.” They then ask what major Western capitals—Berlin, Paris, London, Washington—will say as they “keep encouraging the Hitler of the twenty first century now against the noble peaceful people of Iran.” They declare, “The Bolivarian humanist peaceful people of Venezuela say no to war,” urging that the madness must be stopped. Speaker 1 then addresses Israelis and Jews directly, framing themselves as a Christian and Sephardic heir who tells them to “stop Netanyahu's madness.” They state that only “the people of Israel can stop this madness.” They question where warmongering will lead and warn about the consequences of racism, intolerance, hatred, and violence. They ask whether missiles and bombs will subdue the will of the world’s peoples and call for an end to aggression against Palestinians, Lebanese, Syrians, Yemenis, and the noble people of Iran. The speaker emphasizes that “The ball is in the court of Israel's Jewish people” and urges an end to this “immoral war, this criminal war.” The exchange conveys a sense of urgency and moral appeal, framed as a call for stopping perceived aggression and imperial complicity, while highlighting the interconnections between Venezuelan solidarity with peaceful movements and opposition to ongoing bombardments in the region. We shall see.

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The speaker expresses pride in actions taken by the president, highlighting the involvement and support of Marco Rubio, Pete Headseff, and a broad group described as “our military,” as well as Maria Carina Machado. The speaker asserts that what they did in Venezuela is going to change Latin America and frames it as the beginning of a broader transformation in the region. The speaker states that this is the start of changing Venezuela, and outlines a sequence of upcoming reforms and outcomes: first, Venezuela will be changed; then Cuba will be fixed; Nicaragua will be fixed as well; and, looking ahead to the next year, there will be a new president in Colombia. Throughout, the speaker emphasizes a broader objective of restoring democracy in the hemisphere, asserting that democracy is returning to the region. The overall message centers on pride in leadership and a believed, ongoing process of political change across several Latin American countries, culminating in renewed democratic governance in the hemisphere.

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Speaker 0 and Professor Jeffrey Sachs discuss the US attack on Venezuela and the detention of President Maduro, with Sachs calling it an illegal act and part of a long pattern of American regime-change operations. Key points: - Sachs calls the attack on Venezuela blatantly illegal and part of a sequence of what he describes as illegally aggressive US actions. He cites recent US threats to invade other countries, including Nigeria and Iran, and the declaration that Greenland “will be ours,” arguing the US is operating outside constitutional order, ruled by executive decree, with Congress moribund. - He notes that the arrest of Maduro is not the end of the Venezuela story, emphasizing a history of regime-change operations since World War II that have created instability, coups, civil wars, and bloodshed. He points out he has not seen mainstream US media question the action, criticizing press and congressional reaction as insufficient. - Sachs argues Europe’s response has been weak, describing European leaders as cowering to the US and labeling the Nobel Peace Prize recipient Machado (Norwegian prize) as having been rewarded for supporting the invasion narrative. He criticizes the EU for lacking diplomacy, multilateralism, and attachment to the UN Charter, while noting Russia and China condemn the action but will not intervene militarily in the Western Hemisphere. - He asserts Trump’s rhetoric includes “the oil is ours” and “our companies will go back in and do business in Venezuela,” calling this approach crass imperialism. He warns this sets a precedent for other actions in Latin America and beyond, linking it to broader goals of sidelining international law and UN institutions. - The discussion turns to broader implications: the US “rules the Western Hemisphere,” and European leaders’ support signals a wider collapse of international norms. Sachs predicts a dangerous trajectory with potential ripple effects if violence escalates in Venezuela or elsewhere (Iran, Gaza). - Regarding the future of Venezuela, Sachs explains that the US has pursued regime change for decades, with Marco Rubio as a leading advocate of invasion. He describes the operation as a decapitation of Maduro and his wife rather than a full regime collapse, suggesting long-term unrest and instability are likely outcomes, referencing Lindsay O’Rourke’s work on covert regime-change operations. - On broader geopolitics, Sachs argues that the US is attempting to counter China in Latin America and that the incident will not deter China or Russia from condemning the action at the UN but not engaging militarily. He warns of potential escalation if Israel attacks Iran following perceived US-led aggression, highlighting a dangerous contagion effect and the potential for a wider conflict. - He disputes the notion that democracy equates to peace, citing historical examples (Athens, Britain, the US) and describing US intervention in Iran since 1953, including the overthrow of Mosaddeq and subsequent conflicts, sanctions, and pressure to destabilize Iran’s economy. - Sachs stresses the need to revive the UN and multilateral institutions, arguing that the world should respond to a “rogue” US and prevent a total breakdown of international law. Speaker 0 closes by noting media framing and European reactions, and Sachs restates that Ukraine should be understood in the context of ongoing US projects, not as a direct parallel to Venezuela, calling for a broader understanding of US foreign policy and the military-industrial state. Speaker 0 and Speaker 1 thank each other for the discussion.

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The speaker states they fight for the people whose ancestors developed the lands, building cities and factories for centuries. They assert their concern is for the people, not natural resources that someone in the United States wants to keep. The speaker claims this unnamed party wants Ukrainians to be servants sitting on these natural resources.

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The speaker demands to be shown the embodiment of the people, power, and democracy. They also demand to be shown the representation of the fight for climate justice and human rights.

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Speaker: The speaker argues that a “plan of pedophiles” aims to end democracy in Colombia, stating that despite the harsh reality, they would not allow themselves to be silenced or betrayed by invading neighbors. They claim people would not applaud invading a brother country or a neighbor, emphasizing that the Colombian people are not the enemy, and that invading Venezuela would be traitorous. Speaker: They reject the idea of Venezuela as a villain and say they do not mock the Venezuelan people or trap them in an invasion driven only by oil greed and violence. They warn that such actions would turn this corner of South America into a place like Syria, Iraq, or Libya, filled with slavery and slave trading, and would degrade the region. Speaker: They criticize those “friends of STEIN” who do not want the list to appear in the United States and assert that these friends want to use violence to force the United States to ignore its own government, fueling xenophobia, racism, and ideas of racial superiority to distract from domestic issues. Speaker: They state that the Colombian president has long denunciated narcotraffickers, but note that the narcotraffickers who have been denounced have always been in power in Colombia, in the State. Speaker: The speaker reiterates a stance against betraying bloodlines or supporting invasions of brother countries, condemning any move by the Colombian president to seize lands for invasion from Colombia into a neighboring country. They denounce the president as “maldito” (damned) for generations to come for such a betrayal. Speaker: They emphasize that they do not belong to those who wanted to kill Bolívar, defending Bolívar’s legacy and the dignity of the region, while criticizing external powers’ influence and urging a stance against internal complicity with narcotrafficking and imperialist motives. Overall: The speaker frames a narrative of political betrayal, invasion threats, and manipulation by external actors framed as defending democracy and regional unity, while opposing violence against neighboring peoples, denouncing narcotrafficking within Colombia, and calling out alleged foreign influence and manipulation aimed at destabilizing the region.

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Ermia, an organizer in Washington, DC, addressed a crowd gathered in the streets as part of a coordinated effort by a coalition of activists, organizations, and community members from across the city. The central message of the gathering was to call for an end to aggression toward Venezuela and to demand the removal of U.S. troops from DC and from local communities. The speakers and participants joined forces to raise a collective voice aimed at changing a foreign policy approach that they view as threatening to Venezuelan sovereignty and to regional stability. The group asserts that the Trump administration has taken actions against Venezuela that amount to aggression and interference, and they specifically call for the troops to be withdrawn from the District of Columbia and from communities within the city. The demonstrators emphasize solidarity with the Venezuelan people, expressing concern about the political and military pressure exerted by the United States on Venezuela and the broader Caribbean region. The gathering is framed as a show of unity with people abroad who are affected by these policies, as well as a response to fear felt domestically among communities that perceive ongoing threats or destabilizing actions. A key emphasis of the event is opposition to threats against Venezuela and its sovereignty. The speakers highlight that the Trump administration has attacked President MacGregor and has continually threatened individuals throughout the Caribbean, framing these actions as part of a broader pattern of destabilizing pressure. The message conveyed is one of resistance to interventionist tactics and a demand for respect for national sovereignty. By bringing together diverse groups and residents from across DC, the organizers aim to demonstrate broad-based local opposition to what they describe as aggressive foreign policy measures and to advocate for a peaceful, non-interventionist approach. Throughout the remarks, there is a repeated call for ending aggression toward Venezuela, removing troops from DC and from communities within the city, and standing in solidarity with people abroad while acknowledging fear that exists within the country due to these policies. The participants signal a commitment to continued advocacy and public demonstrations to push for a shift in administration policy toward Venezuela and the Caribbean region. People need.

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Speaker 0 and Speaker 1 discuss Venezuela policy and leadership. Speaker 0 asks if "secretary Hagsef and Rubio are going to be running Venezuela" and whether US military troops will be sent in. Speaker 1 responds that they are "working with the people of Venezuela to make sure that we have Venezuela" and questions who would take over if the US left, noting there is "a vice president who's been appointed by Maduro" who "was sworn as president just a little while ago." She had a long conversation with Marco and said, "we'll do whatever you need," though she "really doesn't have a choice." Speaker 1 asserts they will "have this done right" and "not gonna just do this with Maduro then leave like everybody else" or let it "go to hell." If the US left, it would have "zero chance of ever coming back." They will "run it properly," with "the greatest oil companies in the world" investing "billions and billions of dollars" and using that money "in Venezuela." The biggest beneficiary, per Speaker 1, will be "the people of Venice."

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The speaker asks, why are we doing this and why are we so opposed to Nicolas Maduro. On the street, most people would say they don’t know who Nicolas Maduro is. But in places like South Florida, where people recognize Maduro and can identify Venezuela on a map, the typical answer shifts: because he’s a communist or a socialist. The speaker asserts that this is true: Nicolas Maduro and his government are very left wing on economics. The speaker notes an interesting distinction: this left-wing stance is economic, not social. In Venezuela, gay marriage is banned, abortion is banned, and sex changes for transgender individuals are banned. The speaker describes Venezuela as one of the very few countries in the entire hemisphere with those social policies, emphasizing that these policies are conservative socially. The speaker adds that Venezuela is one of the very few nations in the region with those social policies, specifying that it is on social policy, not defending the regime. The speaker mentions that only El Salvador comes close in conservatism, though El Salvador is much smaller. Additionally, the speaker brings up a political point: the US-backed opposition leader who would take Maduro’s place, if Maduro were removed, is described as eager to implement gay marriage in Venezuela. This is presented as a counterpoint to the idea that the opposition is globally liberal or that the regime is uniquely opposed to liberal social policies. The speaker references the notion of a “global homo” project and implies that the reality is different from that belief, labeling the project as not crazy after all. The overall argument ties Maduro’s economic leftism to social policy conservatism, and contrasts Venezuelan social policy with potential shifts under the opposition, while noting public recognition differences about Maduro.

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A Venezuelan American speaker describes the impact of the regime on their family and millions of others. Their family lost everything—work, savings, investments—wiped out by a narco dictatorship that has held Venezuela in a death grip for over twenty-five years. The Venezuelan exodus is described as the second largest displacement crisis on Earth after Syria, a humanitarian disaster and not just tragedy. The regime has jailed hundreds of political prisoners and thousands have been murdered for speaking out. More than a third of the population has fled, not for opportunity or the American dream, but to survive because staying often means death. The speaker contends Venezuela is not merely a collapsed state but an occupied one, with territory, natural resources, and institutions overrun by hostile foreign powers: Iranian militias, Chinese corporations, Russian intelligence, all exploiting the country with impunity. Venezuela, they argue, is no longer a local crisis but a geopolitical threat endangering the Western Hemisphere, a launchpad for authoritarian expansion in the Americas. Amid this, Maria Corina Machado is highlighted as a leader who dared to push for freedom. In 2024, she supposedly led a peaceful democratic uprising that won the election. Her team allegedly smuggled physical voting receipts out of the country—hard proof of victory the regime attempted to bury. The speaker says her courage has sparked belief among millions of Venezuelans that change is possible. Some people have questioned Machado’s decision to dedicate her Nobel Prize to Donald Trump. The speaker accepts the criticism but argues it was a brilliant strategic move on the global political stage. Machado is portrayed as understanding Trump’s character, his campaign for the prize, and the symbolic, personal value of the recognition to him. The claim is that this gesture might keep Trump’s attention focused on Venezuela at a time when U.S. presence and pressure in the Caribbean is rising. The dedication is described not as flattery or optics, but as a strategic act to protect and preserve a form of power that could shift history, grounded in the belief that the ultimate aim is freedom. The speaker emphasizes that Machado is not asking for a U.S. invasion or war; Venezuela is already invaded and held hostage by a narco state with foreign agents and enemies of democracy—Russians, Iranians, Chinese—operating freely to expand influence across Latin America. Machado is calling for the support of the only military capable of countering that threat, framed as liberation rather than imperialism. The argument is that the fight is for Venezuela’s life, not theory or politics, and that the world should recognize what’s at stake. The fight for Venezuela is a fight for freedom, democracy, and continental stability, and if liberty, human dignity, and peace in the Americas matter, Venezuela’s fight must matter to all.

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Speaker 1 discusses the human toll of Venezuelan and regional instability, noting widespread Venezuelan suffering and massive migration from the region, including Honduras and other countries, driven by the situation in Venezuela. He contends that elections in Venezuela were stolen by Maduro’s regime, insisting that the opposition’s poll results were stored on cloud and the government refused to view them because they knew they had lost, labeling this as not a democracy. He adds that the drug trade through Honduras caused significant bloodshed and deaths, attributing much of this violence to shipments that originated in Venezuela and stating that the U.S. had not acted on that flow, which has cost Hondurans many lives. Speaker 0 then asks about the stance on U.S. intervention, whether intervention is sometimes warranted, such as against Maduro, or whether there should be no U.S. intervention in Latin America at all, across different administrations. Speaker 1 responds by recounting a Venezuelan friend’s view that options to change Venezuela are limited and that intervention might be necessary if there is no other way to save Venezuela. From the Honduran perspective, he says Trump’s actions helped Honduras and other Central American countries by addressing drug trafficking routes that harmed regional security, corruption, and lives. He asserts that Maduro created a political machine used to stall elections in regional countries, a tactic previously overlooked by the Obama-era U.S. administration but confronted by the Trump administration. He believes Trump’s administration provided options to Maduro, who did not accept them, leaving Maduro to defend himself in his upcoming trial. Speaker 1 emphasizes the sovereignty of countries and argues that many people worldwide do not understand what has happened in Venezuela and how it affects both Venezuelans and neighboring nations. He states that Maduro is going to have a chance to defend himself in court, and reiterates that intervention has implications for sovereignty and regional stability, implying that the situation has prompted broader regional consequences and debates about the legitimacy of elections and governance in Venezuela.

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Today's protest is against capitalist empires like the US and Israel. The protesters demand freedom for Palestine, Congo, Sudan, Haiti, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico, advocating for liberation for all.

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Speaker 0: The people are finally free; the people cry for their freedom. Thanks to the United States for liberating us, and long live freedom. Speaker 1: Hey, the dictator has fallen, finally we are free. Long live a free Venezuela. Thank you, God, thank you. Hey, the dictator fell at last. Granadito, brother, this is real, we are free. Look, look at the people. Long live a free Venezuela. Thanks to God, this is for all who endured; it has been achieved.

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The speakers express that the world is stunned that the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela is a victim of an attack that they describe as having a evident ideological tint. The situation is labeled as truly shameful. They invoke Simón Bolívar’s legacy from the Carta de Jamaica, recalling lines such as “El velo se ha rasgado, ya hemos visto la luz, y se nos quiere volver a las tinieblas. Se han roto las cadenas, ya hemos sido libres, y nuestros enemigos pretenden de nuevo esclavizarnos,” and affirm that if there is one thing the Venezuelan people are clear on, it is that they will never be slaves again. The statement then notes that all of Venezuela is mobilized, and a decree has already been signed by the president, Nicolás Maduro. It is asserted that there is only one president in the country, who is Nicolás Maduro Moro. The speakers end with this assertion, though the transcript cuts off abruptly after “Y su.”

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The speaker expresses frustration over Biden's lack of speaking at three different locations. They suggest that the election was rigged and criticize the way the war was handled. The speaker questions whether those in power truly love the country. They express gratitude towards the audience and emphasize the importance of a good outcome.

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Speaker 0: The speaker talks about the democratic nature of socialism and wishes the opposition candidate luck. Speaker 1 criticizes the president for not addressing the struggles of Venezuelan women and mothers, mentioning the scarcity of milk and the lack of justice for those who have lost loved ones. Speaker 1 also accuses the president of expropriation and insults towards private property owners. They call for a transformation and a new Venezuela. Speaker 0 suggests that the opposition candidate should win the primaries before debating with him, as they are not on the same level.

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Speaker 1 asks about the period after the speaker stayed in the country and hid within it until receiving the Nobel Peace Prize, and whether fear for life prevented a return. They note it’s unusual that the Nobel Peace Prize was dedicated to the leader of a different country, with the speaker publicly saying he deserved it more than the speaker. Speaker 0 responds clearly: as soon as they learned they had been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, they dedicated it to President Trump because they believed at that point that he deserved it. They state, “I dedicated to president Trump because I believed at that point that he deserved it,” and add that “a lot of people, most people said it was impossible to achieve what he has just done on Saturday, January 3.” They insist that if they believed he deserved it on October, they now think he has proven to the world what he means. They declare that “January 3 will go down in history as the day Justice defeated a tyranny,” calling it a milestone and saying it is “not only huge for the Venezuelan people and our future,” but “a huge step for humanity, for freedom, and human dignity.”

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The speakers are protesting for various reasons. One speaker says the protest seems pro-Hillary and pro-Kamala, and that America has been evil since before Trump. Another speaker says they are protesting for Palestine and humanity, and that America is a "God of a country." One sign says "Trumpy Pool's Russian asset," but a speaker admits this is an assumption without proof. Another speaker wearing a Ukraine hat gets angry when asked if they support the United States, calling it a stupid question. One speaker claims people from Venezuela are being wrongly accused of being gang members and deported without due process. The speaker fears this will lead to the repression of protesters. Another speaker calls someone a fascist dictator and "America's Hitler," claiming freedoms are being destroyed.
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