Author: Eduardo Bittar

La visita del jueves de la activista venezolana María Corina Machado a la Casa Blanca para reunirse con el presidente Donald Trump no pasó desapercibida. Más allá del protocolo y la puesta en escena política, el encuentro desató un debate más profundo sobre coherencia, alineamientos ideológicos y la verdadera naturaleza de la llamada “oposición” venezolana. Machado ingresó a la Casa Blanca acompañada por Magalli Meda, jefa de su campaña y su confidente más cercana, una figura plenamente alineada con su línea política e ideológica. Meda dista mucho de ser neutral: públicamente se burló del presidente Trump llamándolo “idiota” por “llorar”…

Read More

Venezuelan activist María Corina Machado’s Thursday visit to the White House for a meeting with President Donald Trump has not gone unnoticed. Beyond the formalities and political optics, it has triggered a deeper debate about coherence, ideological alignment, and the true nature of Venezuela’s “opposition.” Machado entered the White House accompanied by Magalli Meda, her campaign chief and closest confidante – a figure fully aligned with Machado’s political and ideological line. Media is far from neutral: she has publicly mocked President Trump as an “idiot” for “crying” about then-President Barack Obama spying on his 2016 campaign, questioned his leadership as…

Read More

Q1: Why did you align yourself with the American Left and the globalists in publicly praising the fraudulent 2020 presidential election, despite widespread objections from Americans and patriots worldwide who argued that the 2020 election, which I won by historically record numbers, was rigged and stolen? “I am convinced that American democracy was not mistaken.” Q2: María Corina Machado, why did you support Venezuela’s Law for Disarmament and Control of Arms and Ammunition? Why did you vote in favor of it alongside Chavismo? What was your political and ideological role in advancing gun-control policies that weakened Venezuelans’ ability to defend…

Read More

Venezuela hoy no es simplemente una nación en crisis. Es un Estado fallido: corroído por el crimen organizado, capturado por un narco-régimen y aún más desestabilizado por una “oposición” que demasiadas veces ha funcionado como mera disidencia controlada. Durante más de dos décadas, el proyecto chavista – engendrado por Hugo Chávez, el difunto caudillo comunista, y posteriormente continuado por Nicolás Maduro, su sucesor designado y líder autoritario hasta su captura por fuerzas estadounidenses en enero de 2026— ha desmantelado sistemáticamente la soberanía, las instituciones y la economía del país. Durante décadas previas al ascenso de Chávez, los venezolanos habían soportado…

Read More

Venezuela today is not simply a nation in crisis. It is a failed state—corroded by organized crime, captured by a narco-regime, and further destabilized by an “opposition” that has too often functioned as little more than controlled dissent. For more than two decades, the Chavista project — spawned by Hugo Chávez, the late socialist strongman who founded Chavismo, and continued by Nicolás Maduro, his handpicked successor and long-time authoritarian leader until his capture by U.S. forces in January 2026 — systematically dismantled Venezuela’s sovereignty, institutions, and economy. For decades leading up to Chávez’s rise, Venezuelans had endured governments dominated by…

Read More