Trump’s Iran Threats Are About Venezuela

A new DW article makes the connection explicit: Iran covers 4% of global oil demand versus Venezuela’s 1%. Iran exports 2 million barrels per day; Venezuela manages 350,000. The article notes that if Iranian production stalls, eventually other producers would fill the gaps.

That means Venezuela.

The Calendar

  • Dec 10: U.S. forces seize Venezuelan oil tanker Skipper, escalating tensions.
  • Dec 19-27: U.S. military buildup in Caribbean reaches 15,000 troops. Energy stocks quietly move to sector-leading positions despite weak crude prices.
  • Dec 27: An anonymous Polymarket account is created. It will bet on exactly two things.
  • Jan 3: Maduro captured in U.S. military operation. Trump immediately declares U.S. oil companies will “spend billions of dollars, fix the badly broken infrastructure.”
  • Jan 3-5: Oil majors “largely silent” as Chevron, Exxon, and ConocoPhillips stock rises—but companies refuse to commit to new investment because “the situation on the ground remains uncertain.”
  • Jan 5: Analysts note Venezuela would require $53 billion just to maintain current output. Oil executives say they need “certainty about who is in charge” and “long-term stability” before committing—30-year projects need confidence about the operating environment “decades into the future.”
  • Jan 5-14: Iran protests explode. Trump escalates threats of military strikes, creating maximum uncertainty in Iranian supply.

Gaming the Market

Someone wagered $32,000 on Maduro’s ouster hours before the operation, when prediction markets gave it 6% probability. The account was created December 27 to bet on exactly two things: U.S. invasion and Maduro’s removal. It netted over $400,000.

The CFTC, which nominally regulates these markets, has one-eighth the SEC’s staff. The Justice Department has dropped investigations into prediction markets. TruthSocial has announced plans to launch its own, while Trump Jr. advises both major prediction market platforms. In other words, no regulation.

A potential Iranian blockade of the Strait of Hormuz—through which 25% of global oil passes—could push prices to $120 per barrel. That price spike transforms Venezuela’s $50-180 billion investment requirement from economically marginal to lucrative.

Oil companies won’t commit capital to Venezuela until the deal is sweetened. This means Trump needs external pressure. Making Iranian supply genuinely unstable creates the strategic calculus where Western Hemisphere reserves become insurance rather than speculation.

It’s the same coercive arbitrage logic I’ve documented elsewhere: create the crisis that makes one preferred outcome the rational choice. The reluctant oil companies get pushed toward Venezuelan investment not by promises but by making the alternative unacceptably risky.

The Contradiction

Here’s what oil companies actually need. Harvard economist Ricardo Hausmann explained:

If you want to recover oil, you need to go back to rule of law. Let’s be very mechanical: You need to change the hydrocarbons law. And to change the hydrocarbons law, you need a congress that people think is legitimate.

ExxonMobil CEO Darren Woods, at Trump’s oil executive meeting, also explained:

If we look at the commercial constructs and frameworks in place today in Venezuela, today it’s un-investable. And so significant changes have to be made to those commercial frameworks, the legal system, there has to be durable investment protections and there has to be change to the hydrocarbon laws in the country.

Oil companies need democratic legitimacy—rule of law, enforceable contracts, a legislature that can change hydrocarbon laws. Military regime change provides none of that. It provides the appearance of stability while destroying the institutional foundations that make long-term investment rational.

Destabilizing Iran creates price pressure. while also it creates urgency that might override oil executives’ assessment that Venezuela remains “un-investable.” The coercion operates on two levels: make the alternative dangerous, and make the timeline for waiting seem unaffordable.

The bet is that $120 oil makes “un-investable” irrelevant. That when the Strait of Hormuz is on fire, Exxon’s lawyers will find a way to make Venezuelan hydrocarbon law work. That crisis overrides judgment.

And once they’ve committed billions to an unstable regime, they become dependent on continued U.S. military presence to protect those assets. The Trump trap is set.

Trump Urges Protesters to Rise Up, Promises “Killers and Abusers” Will Pay

Authoritarian movements have always championed “freedom” abroad while crushing dissent at home. This pattern is well-documented.

Trump is doing both publicly, lazily and simultaneously, assuming his audience either won’t notice or won’t care about the plain contradiction.

His hypocrisy is coherent once you understand the operating principle: protest is legitimate when it destabilizes enemies, unless he is the enemy. The language of liberation is only a weapon of control, and targets are decided by him alone. Same tool, his direction.

The “senseless killing of protesters” demands cancelled meetings and promised consequences. But not Renee Nicole Good. Her senseless killing is justification for threatening the protesters, not the killers.

The rhetoric is structurally identical. Protests, institutional takeover, naming names, retribution coming. The only variable is whose power gets threatened.

Facebook Installs Trump State Censor as President

Mark Zuckerberg complained bitterly that Biden officials made phone calls. He said he couldn’t handle the interference as they “pressured” Meta to address pandemic misinformation. He even called their calls censorship and wrote a letter to Jim Jordan’s House Judiciary Committee detailing performative outrage.

His new response to alleged government overreach? He just installed a government official to run the company as if in a tin-pot dictatorship.

Dina Powell McCormick, Trump’s former Deputy National Security Advisor, is now President and Vice Chairman of Meta. Trump immediately celebrated the collapse of separation on his social media account:

A great choice by Mark Z!!! She is a fantastic, and very talented, person, who served the Trump Administration with strength and distinction!

The complaint about Biden was never about independence from the state. It was about partisanship, splitting the country, to control which state gets the controller’s seat.

Zuckerberg’s letter to Jordan wasn’t a complaint—it was an offering. Evidence submitted to the investigative apparatus building cases against the previous administration. Jordan’s committee used that letter to subpoena Biden officials Andrew Slavitt and Robert Flaherty by name. The corporation provided the evidence to divide the country and target enemies within; the party apparatus converts it into prosecutions.

Meta is now cited as the persecution model other companies must follow. Jordan’s committee recently subpoenaed Alphabet because, unlike Meta, it hasn’t “similarly disavowed the Biden-Harris Administration’s attempts to censor speech” meaning it’s too free from Trump censorship.

The Nazi Germans had a word for Zuckerberg: Selbstgleichschaltung—self-coordination. Corporations rushing to install party-aligned leadership to demonstrate loyalty and secure position. The Holocaust Encyclopedia notes that the state enforced coordination from the top-down, but many Germans responded with bottom-up coordination of their own. Even Hitler was surprised at the speed from the Zuckerbergs of his day: “everything is going much faster than we ever dared to hope.”

Powell McCormick could even be a controller imposed from outside, like a domestic Venezuela “grab”. She appears right now as voluntary installation of a party loyalist to signal that Meta has completed its own coordination of targeted censorship by the state. The sequence is now established: file evidence with the committee, receive subpoena protection, install the party official to divide the country and censor enemies, get dictator endorsement.

Zuckerberg positioned himself as defending Meta from government influence, and shows now he’s the exact opposite guy. The operational reality is he invited government influence when it meant the end of the democracy. The letter to Jordan was the application. Powell McCormick is the acceptance letter.

Texas culture war robot just killed Plato

Dumber and dumber.

Texas A&M brought a robot to a culture war to scan syllabi for “gender ideology.” Their censorship AI flagged Plato’s Symposium, a 2,400-year-old dialogue where the phrase “platonic love” comes from.

The administrators wouldn’t overrule their own robot even while it was kicking them in the nuts. They told the professor to censor the classics, to delete Plato or be reassigned to teaching MAGA hat tricks.

This is the whole story.

Texas spent years building a political brand around defending the classics of “Western civilization” against the woke academics. The enemy of the people was defined as someone who won’t teach the classics anymore.

Then they built an enforcement robot to kill liberalism and it killed Plato, because their robot can’t tell the difference between woke training and the foundational text of Western philosophy.

Neither can they.

That’s the deepest cut here. The “classical education” thing was all hat and never any cattle. Cultural signaling for people who never read books. Hillsdale markets their Great Books programs. The Texas Public Policy Foundation runs “Western Civilization Summits.” The political network meant to save the classics built the robot that red-flagged the Symposium, just because Aristophanes’ speech from thousands of years ago mentioned a third gender.

They are not hypocrites, because that requires knowing what you claim to value. These are cargo cultists. Their cowboy affectations, the “defend Western civ” rhetoric, the Great Books branding… all of it just big empty hats.

Tribal markers, without commitments.

The rattlesnake just ate itself.