Learn How Donald Trump Wins Support Fast
The First Rule of Power: Choose the Right Target
THIS VIDEO IS NOT
FOR THE MASSES
IT IS FOR THOSE
WHO WANT TO LEARN
HOW TO GAIN SUPPORT
AS FAST AS POSSIBLE
DONALD TRUMP IS A MASTER
AT TURNING IMAGES INTO PUBLIC APPROVAL
AND NO ONE UNDERSTANDS THAT
BETTER THAN HE DOES
THE RAID IN VENEZUELA
IS A TEXTBOOK EXAMPLE OF THAT LESSON
If Venezuela was the opening move, what kind of country will be targeted next?
For decades, Venezuela has been one of the most aggressively anti-U.S. countries in South America. From Hugo Chávez to Nicolás Maduro, Caracas has consistently positioned itself in direct opposition to Washington, moved closer to Russia, China, and Iran, and held a uniquely powerful strategic weapon: oil.
But to understand why the United States is acting this way, we need to look at the person making the decision: Donald Trump.
Trump is not a long-term strategist. He is a populist politician who prioritizes simple, easily understood actions that deliver immediate results in the eyes of voters, regardless of long-term consequences. Instead of complex plans with uncertain outcomes, Trump chooses shock moves strong enough to leave a personal mark.
That mindset explains most of his major decisions. The lightning operation to capture Venezuela’s president is a clear example.
Trump is now in his second and final term under the U.S. Constitution. Looking back, he realizes that he still lacks a truly symbolic geopolitical legacy. Trump is one of the few American presidents who has not launched a war. But a long, costly conflict with distant and uncertain benefits does not fit his style.
So what about a short, fast, symbolic campaign?
Trump looked at the world map and saw Venezuela as a nearly perfect target.
An unstable country, a collapsing economy, and a deeply divided society. A president facing domestic opposition and leading a government with weak legitimacy. Venezuela is isolated in South America, lacking strong military allies and located outside high-risk strategic theaters like the Middle East or Eastern Europe.
Striking Venezuela does not carry the risk of direct confrontation with other major powers.
So why not Cuba?
Because Cuba is poor and has almost no strategic resources to exploit.
Venezuela is different. It holds the largest proven oil reserves in the world. Controlling Caracas could immediately affect oil supply to the U.S. market, push energy prices down, reduce inflationary pressure, and deliver direct benefits to voters.
That is a result that can be seen right away, perfectly aligned with Trump’s style.
But capturing Maduro is only the first step.
The bigger question is how the United States will pressure and control Venezuela’s oil resources to maximize its benefits, when a successor government in Caracas may not be fully aligned with Washington.
And after Venezuela, what comes next?
Which country or territory will become the next piece on the board, serving Donald Trump’s short-term but dramatic strategies?
IN POLITICS,
THE LOSER IS NOT THE WEAKEST
THE LOSER IS THE ONE
WHO CHOOSES THE WRONG TARGET
DONALD TRUMP
UNDERSTANDS THIS BETTER THAN MOST
HE DOES NOT NEED
A HISTORIC VICTORY
HE NEEDS A VICTORY
THAT CAN BE TOLD TO VOTERS
THIS IS NOT JUST A LESSON
FOR POLITICIANS
IT IS A LESSON
ABOUT THE GAME OF POWER


