There are 2 sides to the Monroe Doctrine. I mean it's an antiquated concept in a globally connected world, but even if you try to resurrect it conceptually, there's the other part of non involvement elsewhere outside the hemisphere. Trading Venezuela for Taiwan, Japan, and South Korea isn't a good swap.KaiBear said:ATL Bear said:That would be a very dangerous move. Most of them are managed by Sinopec or CNPC. So you'd be attacking China directly.KaiBear said:boognish_bear said:Venezuela’s Acting President Delcy Rodríguez:
— Visegrád 24 (@visegrad24) January 7, 2026
“The government of Venezuela governs in our country. No one else!
There is no external agent that governs Venezuela. It is Venezuela; it is its constitutional government” pic.twitter.com/9Q7nnifbMq
Then take out some pipelines.....if that doesn't finish the message.....take out some platforms.
The fact that China is so deeply embedded with the Venezuelan oil industry simply provides another reason for the US to act decisively.
This is our hemisphere….the Monroe Doctrine is not a dead letter.
If the United States is going to war let it be in our own sphere of influence and not Eastern Europe.
EDIT: And for what it's worth, China has been one of the top purchasers of U.S. crude oil for some time.