U.S. Stated Legal Basis for Invading Venezuela Was Known to Be False

Buried in Axios’s explanation of “why the U.S. went after Maduro” is a sentence that merits closer attention:

U.S. intelligence determined last year in a classified memo that Maduro did not actually control Tren de Aragua, infuriating some in the Trump administration.

The legal architecture supporting the invasion of Venezuela, the indictments, the foreign terrorist organization designation, the narco-terrorism charges, all rests on the lone assertion that Maduro controls criminal organizations trafficking drugs to the United States.

U.S. intelligence had concluded this was not the case.

The operation proceeded illegally.

Students of recent American history will recognize the pattern of crime. In 2003, the United States invaded Iraq on the assertion that Saddam Hussein possessed weapons of mass destruction. Intelligence assessments expressing doubt were overridden or ignored. The weapons did not exist. The invasion proceeded illegally.

What distinguishes the Venezuela case is the compression of the crime timeline. The intelligence contradicting the stated justification was not buried in classified estimates that surfaced years later. According to Axios, it was known beforehand and intentionally ignored. The Trump administration was “infuriated” by the assessment because the truth complicated the narrative of lies.

The narco-terrorism framework, it appears, was never the reason for the invasion.

It was the pretext.

President Trump, echoing Hitler in 1938, stated his objectives on live television with some clarity:

  • The United States would “run the country” until a transition could occur
  • Venezuelan oil sales would benefit Venezuelans, “but so will the U.S.”
  • The American military presence would remain until “United States demands have been fully met”

The legal apparatus of indictments, designations, and charges provided the form of legal justification for actions whose actual motivations lay elsewhere.

This is a familiar mechanism.

Aggressive military action requires domestic legitimation. A framework that sounds legal serves that purpose even when the underlying claims are known to be false.

The Nuremberg judgment against Nazism was specific on this point:

To initiate a war of aggression… is the supreme international crime differing only from other war crimes in that it contains within itself the accumulated evil of the whole.

The United States prosecuted German leaders under this standard. The United States constructed the international legal architecture to codify this standard.

The question of whether the United States has now violated this standard, with clear knowledge that its stated justification was false, is one that legal scholars and historians will presumably now examine in great detail.

What can be observed at present is the structure of the reporting.

The Axios sentence appears in paragraph seven of a piece framed as explanatory journalism. It is surrounded by discussion of oil reserves and immigration flows. The false intelligence, the overt admission of supreme crime in violation of law, is noted as one might note an interesting complication in a policy dispute.

The framing is not suppression. The fact of a crime is reported. But neither is it emphasis. A head of state was illegally captured by military force. A nation’s administration was illegally assumed by its invader. The legal justification was known beforehand to use a false premise. These facts appear, but they do not drive or even organize the narrative.

How such events are recorded in their first hours often shapes how they are remembered.

The intelligence assessment is now part of the public record. Whether it becomes central to the historical understanding of what crimes occurred on January 3, 2026, remains to be seen.

Tesla Diner is the Starlink Canary: You Want Loyalty Fries With That Erratic Autocratic Infrastructure?

Less than six months after opening, Elon Musk’s Tesla Diner in Hollywood has the feel of a Rhodesian ghost town.

The celebrity chef is gone. Eric Greenspan, a Le Cordon Bleu graduate who helped build Mr Beast Burger, quietly departed and scrubbed his Instagram of any association with the venture. The hundred-person lines evaporated. The global expansion plan went the same way as Musk’s other promises, nowhere. On a recent Friday afternoon, more staff lifted fingerprints off chrome walls than there were customers.

The Guardian reports that the novelty of eating at a restaurant owned by the world’s most hated man “seems to have worn off.” A more precise diagnosis: the reputational cost of association with investments in Musk now exceeds any benefit, and the competent professionals have done the math.

Greenspan’s Instagram scrubbing is the digital equivalent of removing a company from your résumé before it gets raided. He hasn’t publicly explained his departure. He doesn’t need to. The AfD promotion in Germany and Nazi salutes at Trump’s inauguration—”repeatedly portrayed in the picket signs held by Tesla Diner protesters,” per the Guardian—made the calculation straightforward.

This is what the Musk ecosystem is all about: not dramatic collapse, but a leaky hype balloon with gradual evacuation by anyone with options, leaving behind only the true believers. The diner can absorb not being a diner. A shiny chrome dumpster fire in Hollywood is embarrassing but survivable.

Starlink is the other side of this coin.

The same week the Guardian documented the diner’s decline, Forbes published what reads like Starlink investor relations copy. Joel Shulman, who discloses financial affiliations with investment vehicles that benefit from exactly this narrative, celebrates Musk as playing “a different entrepreneurial game.”

Different is an interesting word choice. The piece inadvertently catalogs every Musk vulnerability while fraudulently framing them as strengths:

His companies iterate faster than regulators, incumbents, and even capital markets are structured to absorb.

The simple stupidity of raw speed is presented as true genius. It’s actually the explicit strategy of toddler-like skills, operating outside democratic accountability. The speed isn’t about innovation—it’s about fait accompli. Get the absolute worst possible version of infrastructure embedded before anyone can object.

A vertically integrated, globally scalable communications network that bypasses nearly every legacy constraint of the telecom industry.

Those “constraints” include safety and reliability, regulatory oversight, spectrum licensing, and the political processes that prevent private actors from controlling critical infrastructure without accountability. Bypassing them isn’t really a feature, especially after governments decide it isn’t.

Infrastructure that governments, industries, and populations increasingly depend on.

The Ukraine episode already demonstrated what happens when Musk controls infrastructure that anyone depends on. He toggled access based on a personal whim. The piece treats dependency as a moat. It’s actually an invitation to regulatory intervention, if not forfeiture.

Switching costs are high where Starlink is the only viable option.

The monopoly framing. This is the argument for why regulators will eventually act, not why they won’t. Shulman bizarrely invokes railroads and electricity as precedents for infrastructure monopolies that compound private wealth indefinitely. He appears not to have read the second half of that history.

Railroads: The Interstate Commerce Act of 1887. Federal rate regulation. Antitrust action. Eventually nationalization of passenger rail. The robber baron era ended precisely because railroad dependency triggered democratic backlash.

Electricity: Heavily regulated as a public utility. Rate-setting by state commissions. Must-serve obligations. Prohibition on discriminatory pricing.

The monopoly dream Shulman celebrates was tamed by regulation in every historical instance he cites. Rockefeller’s Standard Oil was broken up. AT&T was broken up. The Gilded Age produced the Progressive Era.

“Infrastructure makes it permanent,” Shulman writes, as if history ends at the moment of monopoly formation.

It doesn’t.

The political economy of essential infrastructure has a second act: public assertion of control over private power to prevent catastrophe. He’s describing the conditions under which democratic societies historically decide that private control of critical infrastructure is obviously unacceptable.

Apparently he wants to rewrite history, or just doesn’t realize he’s making the argument against himself.

The Tesla diner shows the trajectory. The Forbes piece shows the radical investor class hasn’t noticed.

When the competent people flee and only the loyalists remain—people selected for devotion rather than capability—you get soggy industrial fries served in a soulless, empty and shiny corporate diner.

That’s the optimistic scenario.

The pessimistic scenario is the same dynamic applied to global communications infrastructure that governments and militaries depend on. An erratic autocrat who has already demonstrated he’ll use infrastructure access as political leverage. A workforce increasingly selected for loyalty over competence. No democratic accountability structure. Explicitly designed to outrun regulation.

Starlink is exposed as an erratic, autocratic, global communications infrastructure, maintained by a loyalty cult.

The diner is the proof of concept—showing exactly what happens when the reputational toxicity reaches escape velocity and the professionals calculate their exit.

The only question is timeline.

Wegmans is Watching: NYC Grocer Goes Full Surveillance on Bananas

A New York family-owned grocery chain investing in eyes/voice/face biometric collection infrastructure just for shoplifting prevention doesn’t quite add up economically.

It reminds me how IBM pushed license plate reader technology onto NYC bridges in 1966.

Wegmans launched facial recognition in October 2024 at its Brooklyn Navy Yard location, initially claiming it would delete data from non-consenting shoppers. It’s a notable claim given a $400,000 settlement with New York’s Attorney General over a data breach exposing 3 million consumers.

It’s also notable given the FTC’s 2023 Rite Aid enforcement action, revealing the chain used facial recognition in “hundreds of stores” from 2012-2020, generating “thousands of false-positive matches” that disproportionately flagged women and people of color. Rite Aid received a five-year facial recognition ban and was required to delete both images and algorithms developed from collected data.

By 2025, the Wegmans program expanded to all NYC stores with a critical policy change: signage now indicates collection of face, eye, and voice data from all shoppers, and the promise to delete non-participant data was removed.

Wegmans’ privacy policy claims biometric collection is “limited to facial recognition information” yet their in-store signage says face, eye, and voice data are collected, a large discrepancy the company has not explained.

The opacity of Wegmans’ specific arrangements—refusing to disclose its vendor, data retention policies, or law enforcement sharing practices—suggests awareness that basic levels of transparency might reveal uncomfortable interdependencies of a growing surveillance economy that shifts costs to taxpayers (through grants and policing partnerships), shares risks across industry consortiums, and potentially opens future monetization pathways.

Wegmans’ own privacy policy states:

We may provide Security Information to law enforcement for investigations, to prevent fraud, or for safety and security purposes.

Think twice about the real price. At Wegmans, the bananas capture and sell you.

United States Adopts 1930s Nazi Doctrine in 2026 Venezuela Coup

Nazi Foreign Policy Doctrine is Officially American Now

On January 3, 2026, the United States conducted airstrikes on Caracas, captured Venezuela’s head of state, and announced it would administer the country. President Trump declared:

We are going to run the country until such time as we can do a safe, proper and judicious transition.

For students of twentieth-century history, this language is not unfamiliar. That’s the exact kind of statement Hitler made (Prague Castle on March 16, 1939).

Filled with the earnest desire to serve the true interests of the peoples… to benefit peace and the social welfare of all.

The post-1945 international order was constructed specifically after the defeat of Hitler to prevent great powers from doing what the United States did this morning. The UN Charter’s prohibition on the use of force against the territorial integrity of states, the Nuremberg principles, the architecture of sovereignty norms—all of it emerged from a specific historical experience.

Hitler seized Austria. March 1938.

Hitler occupied Czechoslovakia. March 1939.

Hitler invaded Poland. September 1939.

In each case, the Reich provided legal justifications: criminal governance by target states, security necessities, historic claims, protection of “ethnic” Germans.

The Allied powers who defeated Germany did not merely punish these acts. They constructed an international legal architecture designed to make them impossible to repeat. The category of “crimes against peace”—the waging of aggressive war—was established at Nuremberg as the supreme international crime, from which all other war crimes flow.

Trump has just committed the crimes.

Geoffrey Robertson KC, former president of the UN war crimes court in Sierra Leone, says it plainly:

[Trump] has committed the crime of aggression, which the court at Nuremberg described as the supreme crime.

What requires explanation is how the United States, the principal architect of that order, came to abandon it entirely—and to do so using the precise rhetorical framework it was designed to prohibit.

Hitler’s doctrine of Lebensraum, as recently evangelized by Peter Thiel, held that great powers possess natural spheres, that smaller nations within those spheres exist at sufferance, and that absorption or control represents correction rather than conquest. The Reich did not describe itself as an aggressor. Germany was administering territories for their benefit. Germany was restoring proper order. Germany was defending itself against threats emanating from criminally governed neighbors.

The Trump administration’s approach to Venezuela follows this structure exactly. Venezuela is claimed not to be a legitimate state but a “narco-state”, meaning a criminal enterprise masquerading as a government. The 2020 indictments and the “foreign terrorist organization” designation create legal architecture for action. The United States is the supposed aggrieved party, “defending” itself against drug trafficking. And now, administration: America will “run the country” for Venezuela’s benefit. Trump said Venezuelans would benefit from their oil being sold “but so will the U.S.”

Venezuela is not an isolated case.

In recent months, his administration has claimed Greenland is “essential for national security” and declined to rule out military action against Denmark. It has declared that the Panama Canal should return to American control. It has described Canada as a future “51st state.” It has renamed the Gulf of Mexico the “Gulf of America.”

This is not a metaphor.

This is the explicit application of Nazi spheres-of-influence doctrine to the Western Hemisphere—the Monroe Doctrine transformed from diplomatic posture into territorial acquisition, using the identical rhetorical structure that characterized Hitler’s aggressive expansion in the 1930s.

Roderich Kiesewetter, a German CDU parliamentarian who clearly knows Nazi history, recognized the pattern immediately:

With President Trump, the U.S. are abandoning the rules-based order that has shaped us since 1945. The coup in Venezuela marks a return to the old U.S. doctrine from before 1940: a mindset of thinking in terms of spheres of influence, where the law of force rules, not international law.

Before 1940.

He is being precise.

Before Austria, Czechoslovakia, Poland.

The “rules-based order” was constructed because of what Hitler did before 1940. A German conservative parliamentarian is now watching the United States leader replicate the Nazi conduct that international laws and order were built to prevent.

The question historians will ask is not whether this represents a crime, breaking with post-war norms. It obviously is and does. The question is how a constitutional republic, the principal author of the post-1945 architecture, came to operate under Hitler’s foreign policy doctrine that architecture was designed to constrain.

The answer is not yet clear. But the fact is no longer in dispute. On January 3, 2026, the President of the United States announced on live television that American forces had seized a foreign head of state and that America would govern his country.

The Hitler Lebensraum doctrine—great powers absorbing smaller nations within their natural sphere—is now operative and overt American foreign policy.

The post-war anti-fascism order did not die quietly. It was killed obnoxiously, on camera, by fascists now running its principal architect.