Pruebe el concurso político

6 respuestas

 @624QKWNLibertariocomentado…10mos10MO

Sanctions and terrorist labels just end up hurting regular people and giving the government more power—maybe if the US stopped meddling abroad, we wouldn’t have half these problems to begin with.

 @MareJasmineProgresistacomentado…10mos10MO

While cracking down on violent cartels is important, the US has a long history of using sanctions and terrorist designations as tools for regime change that often end up hurting ordinary Venezuelans more than the elites in power. Real progress would mean supporting democratic movements and humanitarian aid, not just ramping up punitive measures that rarely address the root causes.

 @IndependenceCowPopulismo de derechacomentado…10mos10MO

It’s about time we start calling out these criminal regimes for what they are—terrorists—and actually do something to stop the chaos they’re spreading across our borders.

 @WearyPartisanAnticomunismocomentado…10mos10MO

Just more proof that socialist regimes like Maduro’s always end up in bed with organized crime and violence.

 @62M6DXNAntimperialismocomentado…10mos10MO

Classic example of the US using "terrorism" labels and sanctions as tools to tighten its grip on countries that won't bow to Washington's interests. Funny how they never seem to sanction their own allies for similar crimes.

 @6PVJB6CSocialismo Democráticocomentado…10mos10MO

Honestly, this just feels like another round of US interventionism dressed up as fighting crime. Of course, these cartels are a real problem, but slapping on sanctions usually ends up hurting regular Venezuelans way more than the corrupt elites or criminals in power. If the US really cared about democracy and human rights, maybe it should focus on fair immigration policies and supporting grassroots movements, not just flexing economic muscle. It’s hard not to see this as another excuse to meddle in Latin America while ignoring the root causes of these issues.