Venezuela's illegitimate "acting president" Delcy Rodríguez pulled a classic communist playbook move Thursday, staging a cringe-worthy youth rally that had all the authenticity of a "How do you do, fellow kids?" meme come to life.
Rodríguez, who seized power after the Maduro regime's latest election fraud, appeared at the "Gran Encuentro con la Juventud Venezolana" wearing jeans and a t-shirt, flashing peace signs like some kind of middle-aged socialist trying to connect with Gen Z. The desperate optics weren't lost on anyone paying attention.
But here's where it gets interesting for America First patriots: Secretary of State Marco Rubio isn't playing games with these communist wannabes. Sources close to the State Department confirm Rubio is preparing to officially declare Venezuela's recent elections a complete fraud – something the Biden regime refused to do with any real teeth.
"We're not going to pretend this socialist puppet show represents the will of the Venezuelan people," a senior State Department official told Next News Network. "The Trump administration calls it like we see it."
Meanwhile, President Trump has been dropping hints about what he calls a "friendly takeover" strategy for Cuba. While the fake news media obsesses over semantics, patriotic Americans understand what Trump means: economic and diplomatic pressure so overwhelming that the Castro-era communists finally collapse.
Think about it, folks – Venezuela's regime is staging desperate youth rallies while Cuba's economy crumbles under decades of failed socialism. The dominoes are falling across the Caribbean, and Trump's America First foreign policy is positioned to help freedom-loving people reclaim their nations.
This isn't about military intervention or nation-building nonsense. This is about strategic pressure, economic leverage, and supporting the millions of Venezuelan and Cuban patriots who want to live in freedom instead of under communist boot heels.
The contrast couldn't be clearer: fake socialist "youth meetings" versus real American leadership. Which future do you think the people of the Caribbean actually want?
