And the Next President of Venezuela Will Be… – PJ Media

Insightful analysis of Venezuela’s political future and key figures shaping its path to democracy.

 

On Monday, after hosting the historic first Shield of the Americas Summit in Doral, Fla., Donald Trump stopped by a Venezuelan restaurant, El Arepazo, on his way to the airport to fly back to Washington, D.C. He was greeted with cheers and applause and chants of “Trump!” and “USA!” The crowd loved him, as they often do during these types of appearances, but this one was, potentially, a bit more meaningful.

Sometimes referred to as “Dorazuela,” the city of Doral has one of the largest Venezuelan diaspora communities in the United States. The president owns a hotel here — it’s where the summit, which was focused largely on rallying like-minded Latin American leaders to come together in the name of regional security and combating the cartels that plague every country in the Western Hemisphere, took place just days before.

At the restaurant, Trump shook hands, chatted with staff and patrons, and even took some Venezuelan food back on the plane for his staff. Those who were there said it was one of the warmest political appearances they’ve ever seen, which doesn’t surprise me. Whether they live in Doral or Caracas or somewhere else in the world, the Venezuelan people love Donald Trump. On January 3, he did more for that country than almost anyone else probably ever has.

But the language he uses leaves many wary and understandably so. The constant praise of Delcy Rodríguez and saying she’s doing a good job is tough to hear when you know that she’s just as bad and every bit as much as corrupt as Nicolás Maduro was. She’s a communist by birth and was radicalized even further when her Marxist father died in police custody after being arrested for kidnapping a business executive from the United States. After his death, she vowed to go into politics as her own form of personal vengeance.

“Delcy Rodríguez knows how to present herself as a ‘moderate,'” Venezuelan opposition-aligned lawyer Estrella Infante told me earlier this year. “That is why she has always handled international negotiations. She has extensive global connections, and many actors prefer her continuity because it protects their interests. That is her power.” (For what it’s worth, those global connections are largely our adversaries — Iran, China, Russia, Cuba, etc.)

The thing is, Delcy has a little help with maintaining her “moderate” reputation, and it comes from the United States. If it’s not the New York Times literally calling her a “moderate” and writing a glowing review of what a great leader she’d be, it’s what Venezuelan lawyer and writer Emmanuel Rincón calls the “hidden lobby war against Venezuela’s democratic transition.”

In a recent op-ed in the Washington Times, Rincón asserts, “Alongside the brave men and women who genuinely fight to end the socialist dictatorship, there has emerged a growing ecosystem of false opposition figures, fake activists, opportunistic lobbyists and self-proclaimed ‘conservatives’ who have found a way to profit from Venezuela’s tragedy.”

Here’s more:

From Day 1, certain groups have tried to persuade President Trump and key conservative policymakers that the leadership chosen by Venezuelans themselves is ‘inconvenient,’ ‘too radical’ or ‘not viable,’ and that accommodation with elements of the dictatorship would somehow be more ‘pragmatic.’

That is not pragmatism; it’s surrender disguised as strategy.

The money behind these efforts is murky. Not every initiative aimed at weakening Venezuela’s democratic transition is openly coordinated, but the outcome is the same: Divide the opposition, fracture its leadership, and weaken the possibility of a real break from socialism.

The motives vary. For some, it is money. For others, political ambition. For others, ego. For a smaller but destructive group, resentment and envy.

Thankfully, despite the language he uses publicly, Trump hasn’t been persuaded. Thankfully, he has the man in U.S. politics who knows more about Venezuela than anyone else whispering in his ear: Secretary of State Marco Rubio.

Rubio’s fingerprints have been all over this entire operation, and they were long before everyone else was paying attention, long before Maduro was sitting in the Metropolitan Detention Center. For every time Trump praises Delcy, Rubio or another cabinet member comes behind him and reminds us all that she’s temporary. Trump himself even said at the Shield of the Americas Summit that he’s only praising her because she’s doing what he’s telling her to do, and that if she wasn’t, that wouldn’t be the case.

You see it in the media notes released by the State Department. You see it in the legal paperwork at the Department of Justice.

“Our engagement is focused on helping the Venezuelan people move forward through a phased process that creates the conditions for a peaceful transition to a democratically elected government.”

Delcy is not running the show. The United States is. As I like to say, the Marxist woman didn’t suddenly see the light on January 3 and decide to become a proud partner of Trump and U.S. ally. She saw the writing on the wall. She saw Delta Force. She saw a United States president with the ability and cajones to do whatever the heck he pleases to make the world a better place. She just agreed to be the puppet, the pawn who would handle everything to save her life.

Despite the fact that most of us understand this now, much of the U.S. media and some of the other people within that “hidden lobby war” seem determined to make Delcy the focus, when the real story is María Corina Machado. The U.S. mainstream media has spent two months now pretending that she’s irrelevant, that Trump and Rubio have “jilted” her or cast her aside. But again, if you get past the rhetoric and look at the physical evidence, you see a different story.

Since escaping Venezuela and accepting her Nobel Peace Prize in December, Machado has been in Europe and the United States, meeting with political leaders, business leaders, investors, and think tanks. She’s the one who is advocating for Venezuela. She’s the one securing the country’s future. She’s the one who has impressed Trump and countless others.

As I reported over the weekend, it was rumored that she’d had a secret meeting with Trump, Rubio, and Susie Wiles last Friday. Machado herself has since confirmed it. They meeting lasted nearly two hours, and she’s expected to return to the White House in the weeks to come for more talks. That doesn’t sound like someone who has been jilted to me.

Over the weekend, after the Shield of the Americas Summit, Trump was having dinner with some of his team and actually pulled out his phone and called Machado. “Everyone loves you here,” he said as he put her on speaker. And on Wednesday, she was a guest of honor as the new Chilean president, José Antonio Kast, was sworn in. Delcy didn’t receive an invitation. Video from the event shows Machado meeting with everyone from everyday Venezuelans who gathered outside to the numerous leaders and heads of state who were in attendance, and she was treated like a freaking rock star. She may have even overshadowed Javier Milei, and that’s hard to do.

Machado was the favorite to become Venezuela’s president in 2024 before Maduro banned her from running. Polls out of there today show that nothing has changed. If anything, people are losing their fear and speaking up even louder in support of her. She’s the most popular politician in a county where the opposition is more united than anything I’ve ever seen. She’s ready to return home and have elections as soon as possible, so that her country can be free and its people safe and prosperous.

That’s exactly why the bad actors that Rincón mentioned are ramping up their game. “…if one’s true objective is to end the socialist dictatorship, then attempting to sabotage the opposition’s bridge to the White House or to American conservative allies is politically irrational,” he said. “A country that cannot consolidate around strong leadership during a liberation struggle becomes easy prey not only for its internal oppressors but also for foreign actors seeking leverage. Dividing leadership strengthens the regime.”

“Those who cannot understand this, who prioritize headlines, applause or proximity to power over liberation, are either profoundly naive or knowingly serving the interests of the regime. Experience suggests the latter is far more common than the former,” he continues. “Today, Venezuela stands closer to freedom than at any other point in recent years. That is not accidental. It is the result of alignment between Venezuelan democratic forces and American leadership that understands the stakes: Socialism in our hemisphere is not merely a Venezuelan issue; it is also a strategic threat.”

He’s exactly right. None of this would have happened if Machado hadn’t rallied her country. None of this would have happened if she hadn’t connected with Rubio, and he hadn’t taken a vested interest. And none of this would have happened if Donald Trump was not president and hadn’t hired Rubio as his secretary of State. And the only way it will continue toward liberty is if these connections continue. And they will.

“First, we must have a country. Only then can we argue about how to govern it,” Rincón says, and he’s right about that, too. You don’t undo decades of dictatorship overnight. But when that time comes to decide how to govern it, there is no doubt in my mind that Machado will be the one to lead, while Delcy, if she’s lucky, lives out her years somewhere across the Atlantic.

 

Sarah Anderson

Source: And the Next President of Venezuela Will Be… – PJ Media

Turning Point; David Jeremiah – Rich and Happy?

 

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Let your conduct be without covetousness; be content with such things as you have. For He Himself has said, “I will never leave you or forsake you.”
Hebrews 13:5

Recommended Reading: Hebrews 13:1-6

Television celebrity Simon Cowell doesn’t like most rich people. In The U.S. Sun, he said, “I think a lot of those people thought they were better than other people because they had money, which is ridiculous when you think about it.” He recalls asking his fiancée, “Do we actually know anyone who’s rich … and happy?” She said, “No,” and he replied, “Nor me.”1

Yes, we need enough to meet our needs along with enough to give back to the Lord. But our real comfort and cheerfulness are based on the sheer presence of God with us through thick and thin, through rain and sunshine. Because He will never leave or forsake us, we can be content with what we have.

As the worship of wealth and materialism accelerates, the Bible can keep us from yielding to these pressures. Nothing is sadder than someone whose pockets are full but whose heart is empty. Ask the Lord to make you content with His loving provision and spend time thanking Him for all His daily provisions.

Even if materialism brought happiness in this life (which is certainly does not), it would leave us woefully unprepared for the next.
Randy Alcorn

  1. Rod McPhee, “Simon Lets Rip ‘Obnoxious & Snobby,’” The U.S. Sun, May 8, 2025.

 

 

https://www.davidjeremiah.org

Our Daily Bread – The Cost of Commitment

 

The Spirit God gave us does not make us timid, but gives us power, love and self-discipline. 2 Timothy 1:7

Today’s Scripture

2 Timothy 1:6-14

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Today’s Devotion

A group of twenty-two Christian leaders traveled half a day to secretly meet and learn from a pastor who came from another country. If caught, the pastor would be deported, and the others would spend three years in prison. Eighteen of the twenty-two had already been imprisoned for their faith in Jesus.

After the pastor handed out fifteen Bibles he’d brought with him, one woman gave hers to someone else. Like many others, she’d memorized chapters of Scripture so she would have its wisdom secured in her heart if she were to go to prison. She later asked the pastor to pray that their church would be free to gather just like his. Instead, marveling at how they sacrificed, suffered persecution, and risked imprisonment, he prayed that his church would be just like theirs.

Believers around the world are persecuted for their faith in Christ, some more severely than others. And all believers can be tempted to cower when the stakes of living for Christ are raised. But the Holy Spirit enables us to use our God-given gifts with “power, love and self-discipline” (2 Timothy 1:7). God will help us share the gospel with boldness and compassion, wherever He leads. Because of all He did for us (vv. 9-10), we can embrace the sacrificial cost of commitment to Christ and preserve “sound teaching, with faith and love in Christ Jesus” (v. 13).

Reflect & Pray

How have you sacrificed to seek and share Jesus? Who will you share the gospel with today?

Mighty God, please deepen my commitment to know You and boldly share You with others.

For further study, read The Power of Prayer in Sharing the Gospel.

Today’s Insights

Imprisonment in the first century was filled with shame. Paul spent a great deal of time in Roman incarceration (see Acts 16; 21; 25-28). As a result, some churches struggled to see him as someone they could claim as their founding apostle (see 2 Corinthians 6:3-12). From that full knowledge of the shame associated with his chains, the apostle writes to Timothy, challenging him to endure all things out of love for God and in the grace that’s been offered through Jesus. No suffering is too shameful in light of everything that God has accomplished on our behalf through Christ.

 

http://www.odb.org

Denison Forum – “There are crocs absolutely everywhere”

 

A reflection on cultural engagement and personal transformation

NOTE: Iran has apparently conducted a significant cyberattack against a US company, a first since the war began. As more is known, I will provide an update on the war and a biblical response in an article on our website later this morning.

If you live where I live, you waited for the rain to end yesterday for hours on end. But it could be worse: people in the Northern Territory of Australia are being warned to stay out of rain-fueled rivers in their area because, as one official put it, “There are crocs absolutely everywhere.”

Social media in the region is filled with images and videos of crocodiles floating down streets and galloping across roads. Residents are being told to “assume any waterway may contain a crocodile.”

There’s your devotional thought for the day.

If you pay much attention to secular culture, you might feel the same way about the moral issues of our time. It seems you cannot watch a television show without meeting LGBTQ characters normalizing LGBTQ ideology. Advocates for “reproductive healthcare” (abortion) are active on every platform. Non-evangelicals view evangelicals in decidedly negative ways.

Continue reading Denison Forum – “There are crocs absolutely everywhere”

Harvest Ministries; Greg Laurie – The Importance of Getting Up

 

 Abraham was, humanly speaking, the founder of our Jewish nation. What did he discover about being made right with God? If his good deeds had made him acceptable to God, he would have had something to boast about. But that was not God’s way. For the Scriptures tell us, ‘Abraham believed God, and God counted him as righteous because of his faith.’ 

—Romans 4:1–3

Scripture:

Romans 4:1–3 

The Bible doesn’t teach that if you’re a Christian, you’ll never stumble or periodically fall short. But it does teach that if you’re a true believer, when you’ve had a lapse or a stumble, you will always get up and move forward. That’s the way to determine whether a person is really a believer or not.

When God came to Abraham in Ur and told him to break away from his family, Abraham basically refused and didn’t go for years. Even after he left, he only partially obeyed God by dragging his nephew Lot along. This only resulted in more friction down the road, when he and Lot eventually parted company.

Abraham told his beautiful wife, Sarah, to say that she was his sister because he was afraid someone would kill him if they realized he was indeed her husband. He did that on two occasions.

After God promised him a son—an heir to continue his lineage—Abraham tried to force the Lord’s hand by fathering a child with Sarah’s handmaiden, Hagar. That decision resulted in immeasurable heartache and strife.

These were just a few of the lapses of faith and acts of disobedience that marked Abraham’s life. It’s important to note, however, that although Abraham deviated from God’s path on occasion, he always came back. He never drifted too far from the One who made a covenant with him. That’s why the apostle Paul wrote, “Abraham believed God, and God counted him as righteous because of his faith” (Romans 4:3 NLT).

No stumble is too great, no fall is too steep, to recover from. First John 1:9 says, “But if we confess our sins to him, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all wickedness” (NLT). Acts 3:19 says, “Now repent of your sins and turn to God, so that your sins may be wiped away” (NLT). When you turn to God and away from the sin that caused you to stumble, you regain your forward momentum on the right path, just as Abraham did time and time again.

If a person says he or she is a believer and falls away and never comes back, then that person is not a believer. The apostle John put it this way: “When they left, it proved that they did not belong with us” (1 John 2:19 NLT). But if a person is a true believer, then he or she will be miserable in sin and eventually will beat a quick path back to the cross of Calvary.

Reflection Question: What does moving forward after a spiritual fall look like in your life? Discuss this with believers like you on Harvest Discipleship!

 

 

Harvest.org | Greg Laurie

Days of Praise – The Limited Knowledge of Jesus

 

by Henry M. Morris, Ph.D.

“But of that day and that hour knoweth no man, no, not the angels which are in heaven, neither the Son, but the Father.” (Mark 13:32)

This verse has always been difficult to understand. If Jesus was God, how could He be ignorant of the time of His second coming? Indeed He was, and is, God, but He also was, and is, man. This is a part of the mystery of the divine/human nature of Christ. In the gospel record, we see frequent evidences of His humanity (He grew weary, for example, and suffered pain) but also many evidences of deity (His virgin birth, His resurrection and ascension, as well as His perfect words and deeds).

He had been in glory with the Father from eternity (John 17:24), but when He became man, “in all things it behoved him to be made like unto his brethren” (Hebrews 2:17), except for sin. As a child, He “increased in wisdom and stature” like any other human (Luke 2:52). Through diligent study (as a man), He acquired great wisdom in the Scriptures and the plan of God. After His baptism and the acknowledgment from heaven of His divine sonship (e.g., Matthew 3:16–17), He increasingly manifested various aspects of His deity, but He still remained fully human.

With respect to the time of the end, He said that “the gospel must first be published among all nations” (Mark 13:10), and only God the Father could foresee just when men would accomplish this. Although the glorified Son presumably now shares this knowledge, in His self-imposed human limitations He did not.

In no way does this compromise His deity. In our own finite humanity, we cannot comprehend fully the mystery of the divine/human nature of Christ, but He has given us more than sufficient reason to believe His Word! HMM

 

 

https://www.icr.org/articles/type/6

Joyce Meyer – Be Thoughtful About Your Day

 

Therefore encourage and comfort one another and build up one another, just as you are doing.

1 Thessalonians 5:11 (AMP)

Our thoughts affect the way we relate to people and the world around us, so it’s helpful to take time to think through your day before you begin it.

I like to start my day writing, while my mind is fresh and creative. During that time, I need quiet so that I can focus and so I don’t get involved in other things.

My afternoons usually involve meetings or appointments. When I go out, I plan to be friendly with and compliment the people I come in contact with. It is wise to be thoughtful, because everyone we meet is probably fighting some kind of battle.

After my business is complete, I spend time with Dave, and I ask him about his day. We might go to dinner. If we go with other people, I want to be thoughtful and interested in what they are doing in their lives. When I am with people, I plan to make them feel important, and one of the ways I can do that is to show genuine interest in them.

Being thoughtful about the scheduled parts of my day helps me behave in a way that pleases God. Things will happen that I am not planning, but I intend to respond calmly to those things. Being thoughtful about people and events will help you enjoy your day.

Prayer of the Day: God, I don’t know everything this day will hold, but You do. Help me be thoughtful about how I behave and react. Open my eyes to other people and their needs so I can lift their spirits and be a blessing to those I encounter, amen.

 

http://www.joycemeyer.org

Max Lucado – God So Loved the World 

 

Play

Can a holy God overlook our mistakes? Should a kind God punish our mistakes? From our perspective there are only two equally unappealing solutions.  But from God’s perspective there’s a third.  It’s called “the Cross of Christ.”

The cross is where God forgave his children without lowering his standards.  How could he do this? In a sentence:  God put our sin on his Son and punished it there. “God put on him the wrong who never did anything wrong, so we could be put right with God” (2 Corinthians 5:21 MSG).

Why did he do it? Because “God so loved the world that he gave his only son” (John 3:16 NLT).  Aren’t you glad the verse doesn’t read “For God so loved the rich”?  Or “For God so loved the famous”? No. We simply (and happily) read: “For God so loved the world!” And you my friend, are included in that love!

 

 

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Today in the Word – Moody Bible Institute – A Little Scroll

 

Read Revelation 10

So many wrong predictions have been made about Christ’s Second Coming that there is a Wikipedia page devoted to the topic. Hippolytus of Rome, for example, predicted that Christ would return in AD 500. More recently, a cult leader predicted He would come back on Pentecost in 2019. They are only two examples of many who have been proven wrong!

Jesus said that only God the Father knows the day or the hour (Matt. 24:36). Just as there was an interlude before the seventh seal, so now there is an interlude before the seventh trumpet. A “mighty angel” appears, straddling land and sea and holding a “little scroll” (vv. 1–4). He’s met by “seven thunders,” but John is forbidden to write down what they said. What they said, and even why it was hidden, remains a mystery. No one should ever be able to think that they have God’s plans all figured out!

The angel raises his right hand—just as we do in a modern court when promising to tell the truth—and swears by the Creator that there will be no more delay (vv. 5–6). “The mystery of God will be accomplished” (v. 7). Our redemption will soon be completed. The end of history is nearly here. All prophecies are about to be fulfilled. This oath would have been a tremendous encouragement to John’s original readers.

John is told to go and take the “little scroll” from the angel’s hand (vv. 8–11). He eats it, and as he was told, it tastes sweet, though it sours in his stomach. Ezekiel had had a similar experience (Ezek. 3:1–4). This means that John’s vision is not yet over. He must continue to watch and write down the end times prophecies he sees.

Go Deeper

We’ve seen several references to Ezekiel already in the book of Revelation. What parallels have you observed between Ezekiel and John as prophets and in their writings?

Pray with Us

As we wait for Your coming, remind us to take heart that Your plans are higher than ours! We wait in eager expectation to see the redemption of the world.

The mystery of God will be accomplished.Revelation 10:7

 

 

https://www.moodybible.org/