Send us Fan MailA president announces the U.S. has seized the leader of a sovereign nation, plans to “run” that country, and then drifts into side chatter like it’s a ribbon cutting. We unpack the January 4 Trump press conference on Venezuela as a case study in how authoritarian politics can hide behind performance, swagger, and deliberate confusion, even while describing actions that amount to war.We walk through the core constitutional crisis: Congress is cut out of the decision, war powers are treated as an inconvenience, and “they leak” becomes the excuse for ignoring checks and balances. Then we tackle the legal theory being floated, where a U.S. criminal indictment is used as a pretext for invasion and abduction, a precedent that invites copycat aggression worldwide and hollows out international law.From there, we follow the money and the messaging. Trump speaks openly about U.S. oil companies moving in, getting “reimbursed,” and treating Venezuelan resources like a recoverable debt. He also invents a new brand name for hemispheric dominance, the “Donro Doctrine,” turning a doctrine into a slogan and a slogan into permission. The result is a foreign policy that confuses impunity with legitimacy and makes ordinary people, especially Venezuelans, pay the price.Subscribe for more clear-eyed analysis, share this with someone who still believes process matters, and leave a review to help others find the show. What should Congress and the public do when a president treats war like a TV segment? Support the show