Post AzbanLeHA8INSs916m by zedheds@www.minds.com
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 (DIR) Post #AzbanLeHA8INSs916m by zedheds@www.minds.com
       2025-10-25T22:14:27+00:00
       
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       "We’re just gonna kill people, ok, we're going to kill them, they’re gonna be like, dead, ok" ~ TrumpRegime Change Disguised as Drug War: The Political Agenda Behind Trump’s Maritime MurdersThe Blood-Stained Ocean: Trump Slaughtered Fishermen, Not TraffickersLawlessness, Deception, and Political MotivesTrump’s supposed justification—that these killings protect Americans from overdose deaths—has no basis in fact. Experts on narcotics policy revealed that Venezuela plays no role in the fentanyl drug flow to the U.S., and that fentanyl enters the USA from Mexico over land, not by sea. The true purpose of these operations is not narcotics interdiction at all but political pressure to destabilize Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, whom Trump falsely brands as a “narco‑terrorist”. This is a political campaign disguised as counter‑narcotics enforcement, waged to overthrow a government that does not even produce the drugs Trump claims to be targeting.​Trump’s bloody “war at sea” has become a full-blown moral and legal scandal, exposing the administration’s reckless disregard for human life. Since September 2025, U.S. forces have carried out ten air and naval strikes on small boats in Caribbean and Pacific waters, supposedly aimed at “narco-terrorists.” In reality, those killed were South American fishermen, not cartel soldiers.​Civilians Deliberately Misidentified as TraffickersGovernment data and independent reporting confirm that at least forty‑three people have died in these strikes, including Venezuelan, Ecuadorian, and Colombian fishermen working in traditional fishing zones. One Colombian fisherman, Alejandro Carranza, was blown up at sea; his widow told CBS News: “He went out fishing—why did they just take his life like that?”. Another survivor, Andrés Tufiño Chila of Ecuador, told CNN that his vessel was unarmed and carried no drugs. No evidence has been presented by the U.S. to justify these killings.​Latin American FuryGovernments across Latin America have condemned the attacks as extrajudicial killings and “acts of state terrorism.” Colombia, Ecuador, and Venezuela have all demanded investigations and accountability, calling for prosecutions under international law. For the fishing communities of Sucre State in Venezuela—where Trump’s first strike killed eleven men—these events have left families shattered and towns in mourning.​Crimes Against HumanityThese killings constitute clear violations of international law, breaching both the U.N. Charter and customary norms on sovereignty and human rights. Trump's bloody “war at sea”  amount to crimes against humanity under the Rome Statute, part of a broader political effort to topple a foreign leader.​In sum, Trump’s maritime “anti‑drug” crusade is not about narcotics—it is a psychopathic act of state violence designed to advance political ends. The victims were not traffickers but poor fishermen, sacrificed in a reckless bid for power and domination, their blood now staining the ocean and America’s conscience.​