CARACAS — In a STUNNING betrayal of its founding ideology, Venezuela’s US-installed puppet regime has OFFICIALLY SURRENDERED the nation’s oil wealth to foreign corporations. Acting President Delcy Rodríguez, leading a government installed after the BRAZEN U.S. MILITARY CAPTURE of Nicolás Maduro, has signed a law dismantling two decades of socialist policy, throwing open the doors to the privatization of the world’s LARGEST oil reserves.
This is not reform—it is a CORPORATE COUP. The law, rubber-stamped in hours, grants private companies FULL CONTROL over production, sales, and pricing, dismantling the state monopoly that was once the heart of the Bolivarian Revolution. The move comes in LOCKSTEP with the Trump administration, which simultaneously began rolling back sanctions, paving a golden road for U.S. oil giants to recolonize Venezuela’s crippled industry. This is the PRICE of “regime change”: the systematic liquidation of national sovereignty for profit.
Rodríguez, speaking to a staged crowd of oil workers, shamelessly declared this fire sale is “for the future of our children.” The reality is FAR DARKER. The law allows disputes to be settled by international arbitrators, BYPASSING Venezuelan courts entirely—a direct capitulation to foreign capital. This legal shield is designed to protect corporations from EVER being expelled again, turning the nation into a PERMANENT resource colony.
The ghosts of Hugo Chávez’s nationalization are being EXORCISED by the very forces he expelled. ExxonMobil and ConocoPhillips, which lost billions in the 2000s, are now poised to return and claim their pound of flesh. Opposition warnings about corruption and a lack of transparency have been IGNORED. The “socialist” red jumpsuits worn by celebrating workers are now just a CRUEL COSTUME for a theatre of absolute submission.
This is the final, shocking chapter of a revolution DEVOURED by the empire it sought to defy. The oil that was meant to fund a people’s utopia will now fund foreign shareholders, as a nation’s soul is auctioned to the highest bidder. The lesson is clear: in the modern world, independence is just a commodity waiting to be purchased.



