https://www.commentarymagazine.com/f...ezuela-maduro/
We are told, often bitterly and with a palpable hint of exasperation,  that today’s “Democratic Socialists” are gentler than their name might  lead you to believe. They are, they insist, cast more in the mold of  Europe’s social democrats than the apparatchiks in tunic suits who haunt  conservative’s imaginations. Perhaps the leftmost reaches of the  Democratic Party wouldn’t have to keep drawing this distinction if it  was evident in anything other than rhetoric. When forced to choose  between “democratic” and “socialist,” they opt decisively for the  latter.
 After years of privation, hardship, and popular—often  violent—struggle against an illegitimate regime, the situation in  Venezuela is coming to a head. A successor has emerged, making the  powerful and corrupted military the ultimate arbiter of events, which  are still very much 
in the balance.  In a coordinated effort with most of the Western hemisphere, the United  States endorsed the legitimately elected National Assembly leader Juan  Guaidó’s interim claim to the presidency over the dubious one clung to  by socialist despot Nicolas Maduro. To hear the “Democratic Socialists”  tell it, the United States has orchestrated a “coup.”
 “The United States has a long history of  inappropriately intervening in Latin American countries,” said the  Democratic Socialist’s patriarch, Bernie Sanders, in a 
statement, “we must not go down that road again.”
 Contradicting Democratic Senator Dick Durbin, who  commended President Donald Trump’s decision to back Juan Guaidó, Rep. Ro  Khanna 
insisted  that “the US should not anoint the leader of the opposition in  Venezuela during an internal, polarized conflict.” Moreover, it should  “end sanctions” against the Venezuelan regime. While we cannot assume  that re-tweets constitute an endorsement, it’s unlikely that Rep.  Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez was simply 
bookmarking her colleague’s pronouncement.
 Though not an avowed Democratic Socialist herself, Rep. Ilhan Omar’s 
campaign staffers  sure seemed to think she is a member of the club. It’s easy to see why.  “A U.S.-backed coup in Venezuela is not a solution to the dire issues  they face,” 
reads  Omar’s tweet from Thursday night. “Trump’s efforts to install a  far-right opposition will only incite violence and further destabilize  the region.” Guaidó’s “far-right” affinities must be news to him and the  
social-democratic party he leads.
 A 
statement  from the elected leadership of the Democratic Socialists of America  reads like an effort to mimic the hysterical tone familiar to students  of Soviet diplomacy. If the nostalgia wasn’t already thick enough, the  DSA alleges that U.S. sanctions on Caracas are intended to “make the  economy scream”—a phrase attributed not to Trump but Richard Nixon in  his effort to squeeze the Allende government in Chile. This “U.S. driven  coup is totally unacceptable,” the statement continues, “and just the  latest in a long history of U.S.-backed coups in the region showing  blatant contempt not just for democracy but national sovereignty.”
 The only people showing “contempt” for democracy  are these self-described democrats. They hope to rest their case for  Maduro on the notion that he is Venezuela’s legal president and Guaidó  is not, but that is a flimsy claim.
 Maduro and his predecessor, Hugo Chavez, spent over  a decade throttling the country’s democratic institutions when they  threatened their power. In 2015, when the opposition won two-thirds of  the seats in the National Assembly, Maduro simply created a new  legislature and packed it with loyalists. When the Assembly balked,  Maduro had Venezuela’s rubber-stamp Supreme Court 
strip the Assembly of its powers—a move that led most of the region to break off relations with the rogue regime.
 In 2017, 8 million Venezuelans 
turned out in an unofficial referendum to overwhelmingly reject changes to the constitution to codify Maduro’s power grab, but they were 
approved anyway  in a fraudulent plebiscite disputed by opposition figures and observers  alike. When they weren’t barred from the polls, Venezuela’s opposition 
boycotted a May 2018 presidential election that was rushed and declared neither “fair” nor “equitable” by 
foreign observers. By contrast, Guaidó’s provisional claim to the presidency is supported by 
three articles of the Venezuelan constitution, and the legitimacy of his election is uncontested.
 The idea that U.S. sanctions on regime officials  exacerbate a humanitarian crisis is dubious. Poverty and starvation in  Venezuela are rampant. Basic goods are rationed, where they can be found  at all. Venezuelans suffer from preventable diseases. Access to regular  power and clean water is a luxury—one enjoyed only by the  well-connected. Crime is a way of life for those unfortunate enough not  to have fled this open-air prison. Narcotics trafficking is so rampant  that even Maduro’s vice president is a well-known drug kingpin. The idea  that international sanctions on these criminals are somehow responsible  for 
Venezuela’s dystopian condition is both intellectually dishonest and morally bankrupt.
 We are left to conclude that the Democratic  Socialists who have joined hand with rogue states like Russia, China,  Cuba, Iran, Nicaragua, and Bolivia have made a simple calculation: They  like Maduro. And why shouldn’t they? He is the successor to a regime  that exemplified socialism. The Chavistas 
nationalized  vast swaths of the Venezuelan economy, expropriated and redistributed  wealth and land, and seized foreign-owned property and assets.
 The spectacular poverty endured by this once  wealthy state must be the result of sanctions on regime officials, the  kleptocratic bureaucracy, or collapsing oil prices (though no other  petrostate has suffered so acutely). The violence routinely meted out by  this besieged regime must be 
fabricated.  It simply cannot be that a system that fails the same way every time  has failed again in precisely the same fashion yet once more. 
Too much pride is at stake.
 You’re going to hear a lot about how these  self-described socialists aren’t really defending self-described  socialism in Venezuela. To do so would discredit the enterprise. So,  they will scramble for more familiar terrain. America’s imperialist  policies are to blame for Venezuela’s plight. So, too, are the corrupt  mandarins who squeezed the lifeblood out of the Bolivarian experiment.  Anything to confuse and deflect. But it is the world’s socialists, not  its democrats, who are standing athwart the desire of Venezuelans to  live free. And they will be to blame if those hopes are crushed.
Clear that the DPST radicals - Sanders, AOC, Tlaib, Khanna, Omar, and the ilk are much more comfortable supporting the tyrannical dictatorship of Maduro - where 2/3 of the country live in poverty. 
Such is the benefits and wonders of "Socialism" the DPST plans for America.  Of course, propagandized as a "kinder and gentler" version.  With the DPST leadership as Nomenklatura. 
Not for me, thank You very much!!!!
Any of the ilk - TM/YR/WTF are welcome to move to Caracas and join Maduro. !!!!!
Trump has it correct - send humanitarian aid, politically and economically isolate the ruling dictator class, and stay the Hell Out militarily.  Letting them worry about military intervention is just part of the politics. LOL!!!!