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Tuesday, 30 December 2025

The Communes of Venezuela: Andreina Chavez

 I didn't know about the commune movement in Venezuela until I read this article. One more reason for the Americans to hate and try to destroy it. Please click on this live link to learn about their communard movement.  CF

“War of the entire people”: Venezuela's Grassroots Rise to Resist Trump's Naval Blockade

After withstanding a decade of sanctions, Venezuela’s communes are prepared to face Trump’s illegal naval blockade and U.S. plans for economic asphyxiation. 

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Workers place a giant Venezuelan flag in the venue of a meeting in which government officials explain the commune laws bill in Petare neighborhood, Caracas on October 30, 2024 (Photo by JUAN BARRETO/AFP via Getty Images).

CARACAS, Venezuela—Venezuela’s grassroots organizers and communards are responding with defiance and steadfast willingness to defend their country’s sovereignty in the face of U.S. President Donald Trump’s mid-December imposition of a “total and complete blockade” on Venezuela.

In an interview last Friday, President Trump said that the U.S. destroyed “a big facility” in Venezuela that Trump questionably claimed was engaged in drug trafficking. Last week’s operation would be the first known attack on Venezuelan land, and President Trump appeared to confirm the strike on Monday, saying “There was a major explosion in the dock area where they load the boats up with drugs,” he told reporters at Mar-a-Lago, his club and residence in Florida. “They load the boats up with drugs. So we hit all the boats, and now we hit the area. It’s the implementation area—that’s where they implement—and that is no longer around.” 

This latest escalation comes as thousands of U.S. troops, warships, and combat aircraft have been deployed in the Caribbean since mid-August, just a few miles off Venezuela’s coasts. The U.S. blockade, based on claims made without credible sources or evidence, was deployed under a purported counter-narcotics mission against Nicolás Maduro’s government.

Trump also claimed in mid-December that the U.S. was entitled to “oil rights” in Venezuela, citing that U.S. companies ExxonMobil and ConocoPhillips had been “thrown out” of the South American nation almost two decades ago. In recent weeks, U.S. forces have seized three oil tankers in the Caribbean.

These actions were denounced by Caracas as illegal acts of maritime piracy carried out under unilateral sanctions lacking any basis in international law. The Maduro government called the seizures a “serious act of international piracy” as well as “blatant theft.” Each vessel was carrying approximately 1.8 million barrels of Venezuelan Merey-16 crude oil, and Trump has announced the U.S. would retain the cargoes.

“The U.S. has revealed to the world that its true intention has always been to plunder Venezuelan oil, land, and resources. However, we will not easily yield, and there is a unanimous determination to defend our homeland,” Lana Vielma, spokesperson for El Maizal Commune, a rural commune located between the Portuguesa and Lara states, told Drop Site News.

Venezuela’s communes are assembly-driven, constitutionally mandated, and grassroots political entities at the heart of the country’s socialist project. The communes contribute largely to sovereign production and have become the backbone of the country’s political life.

In recent years, communes have set up economic circuits for the exchange of products and services they produce to support each other’s communities. These communal circuits offer a range of goods, including grains, vegetables, coffee, corn flour and textiles. In 2022, some communes came together under the “Hecho en Comuna” brand to distribute beyond their communities based on the principle of “life over capital.”

Vielma told Drop Site that the country is better prepared to withstand any form of economic sabotage than it was between 2017 and 2020, when it depended entirely on essential imports. Key imports such as foodstuffs were cut off by U.S. unilateral sanctions.

“We are not the same people we were five or ten years ago. Now we produce almost one hundred per cent of the food we consume,” said Vielma, who is also spokesperson for the Communard Union, which serves as an umbrella organization for Venezuela’s communal movement.

According to UN Special Rapporteurs’ data, the most significant impact of U.S. sanctions was malnutrition, with 2.5 million people suffering from food insecurity and 22 per cent of children under five experiencing stunted growth in 2019. The Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR) has documented the “negative effects on outcomes ranging from per capita income to poverty, inequality, mortality, and human rights” caused by sanctions.

Over the past decade, government and popular power initiatives like the communes have diversified the country’s economy, creating more sovereign production and distribution systems and eliminating the need for intermediaries. The country has become almost entirely self-sufficient as a result.

Hernán Vargas, spokesperson for Alba Movimientos and housing rights activist, condemned Trump’s “imperialist action” and expressed confidence that popular power has “armored” itself against U.S. economic sabotage, drawing from a decade of experience resisting sanctions.

The “Pueblo a Pueblo” Plan, created in 2015, is among the resistance mechanisms that became a lifeline during times of acute shortage and continues to operate today, feeding over 100 thousand children. The program connects rural producers directly with organized groups in urban areas, distributing fresh, affordable fruit, and vegetables to schools nationwide.

“We now have diversification in the production of staples such as corn flour,” noted Vargas, referring to a Venezuelan staple that had been controlled by an oligopoly for decades and disappeared from the shelves during the worst years of the crisis. Now, numerous private, state-led, and communal producers ensure that a variety of products are available nationwide.

The Venezuelan communal movement has pledged to strengthen an economy centered on life and satisfying domestic needs, resolute in preserving sovereignty amid U.S. pressure. Vargas explained that the next challenge for the communal movement is to expand production to every corner of Venezuela through economic communal circuits, which encompass primary production, processing, supply, distribution, and consumption.

“While we condemn and express our outrage, we are also considering concrete action,” Vargas told Drop Site. “In recent years, we have secured production chains covering just over 80 percent of the nation’s main consumer goods. This capacity must be strengthened, and the primary challenge lies in integrating commune production into these distribution chains.”

A worker carries vegetables in support of “Plan Pueblo a Pueblo," a grassroots initiative for food sovereignty in Venezuela (Credit: MinComunas).

U.S. Designs in The Caribbean

Since September, U.S. forces in the region have bombed small civilian vessels, killing more than 90 people in both Caribbean and Pacific waters, with U.S. officials claiming without evidence that they were carrying drugs. The strikes have been classified as extrajudicial killings by UN experts. UN data and the information from the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) show Venezuela is not a producer or main transit of either cocaine or fentanyl.

The Caribbean country is home to the world’s largest oil reserves, with over 90 percent of its foreign revenue coming from oil exports. Since 2017, Washington has imposed financial sanctions on the state oil company PDVSA, followed by an oil embargo in 2019 and other secondary measures in 2020. Crude production reached historic lows in 2020, leading to an economic downturn that experts described as the worst peacetime decline in modern history. Other key economic sectors—including banking, mining and essential imports—were also targeted, resulting in widespread shortages of food, medicine, and fuel.

Washington’s implementation of an illegal naval blockade on the country aims at further dissuading the commercialization of oil, the country’s most vital commodity, on international markets. Economists warn that these measures are aimed at starving the besieged nation of hard currency, severely impacting government finances.

Advocates of Washington’s campaign such as Ryan Berg, director of the Americas Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, had alleged that the U.S. was merely enforcing its sanctions policy and would only pursue “sanctioned” vessels. However, the second seizure of the Panamanian-flagged “Centuries” vessel, which was sailing under the Panama flag and is not under sanctions, indicates that Trump intends to enforce his “total and complete blockade” of Venezuela’s oil industry.

Legal experts view the seizure of the tankers and the naval blockade as an unprecedented measure of warfare that is tantamount to a unilateral declaration of war, violating principles of sovereignty and self-determination.

“The United States does not have the jurisdiction to seize a vessel, whether on high seas or in another country’s territorial waters,” Rubén Bolívar told Drop Site. Bolívar, a Venezuelan international and maritime law expert, specified that a vessel sanctioned by the U.S. Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) does not mean it operates illegally or under a “shadow fleet,” as U.S. officials have claimed. The OFAC responds to U.S. foreign policy and does not adhere to the norm of applying sanctions through the UN Security Council or the wider UN system.

Bolívar warned that tankers not sanctioned by OFAC may avoid trading Venezuelan oil due to an “overcompliance” effect.” According to reports, several tankers bound for the Caribbean country to deliver diluents or intending to pick up oil have turned back mid-route. Meanwhile, loaded vessels remain in Venezuelan ports over fears of seizure.

“The U.S. is no longer peddling the narrative of fighting drug trafficking. Trump has openly stated that the intention is to ‘reclaim’ the oil that he claims was stolen after Venezuela’s nationalization,” said Bolívar. He foresees that the narrative may soon change to a “transactional one” as the U.S. seeks to gain leverage against Caracas.

In 2007, ExxonMobil and ConocoPhillips chose to abandon their oil projects in Venezuela after refusing to transition to mixed-ownership with state majority control. Having first sought compensation through international arbitration, ConocoPhillips and other claimants may soon benefit from the auction of CITGO, the U.S.-based Venezuelan oil subsidiary seized in 2019 and worth billions.

The Maduro government has long denounced Washington’s oil-driven, regime-change agenda and decried the “narcoterrorism” claims as part of a manipulation campaign. In a recent statement, Caracas called the naval blockade a “grotesque threat” that exposes how Washington’s intentions have always been to appropriate the country’s resources.

“The U.S. president is seeking to impose an irrational naval blockade on Venezuela to steal the wealth that belongs to our homeland. We will never again be a colony of any empire,” read the communiqué. It also denounced the oil siege and militarization of the Caribbean Sea as a violation of the UN Charter and the right to free navigation and trade.

In response to Trump’s bellicose actions, Fuerza Patriótica Alexis Vive, a socialist self-defense collective from El Panal Commune in Caracas, affirmed the revolutionary grassroots organization’s ability to “sustain production, supply, communication, and collective protection, even in the most adverse conditions.” The organization said that Washington faces a “war of the entire people” in Caracas.

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A guest post by
Andreína Chávez
Venezuelan journalist. I write about my people's fight against imperialism.
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Monday, 29 December 2025

Charlie Angus fighting in an age of monsters: Elizabeth Thompson/CBC News

 

Former MP Charlie Angus planned a quiet retirement. Now, he'd rather 'kick at the darkness'

Longtime NDP MP takes 'shit disturber' ethos across the country — and to YouTube


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Former MP Charlie Angus and his band the Grievous Angels perform at Ottawa's Rainbow Bistro
Former MP Charlie Angus and his band the Grievous Angels perform at Ottawa's Rainbow Bistro. (Elizabeth Thompson/CBC)

Sitting in Ottawa's Rainbow Bistro, preparing for his band to play a gig, former MP Charlie Angus was reflecting on the past year. His plan to quietly retire and write a book turned into creating viral videos viewed around the world and a cross-Canada tour to fight Donald Trump.

A few months ago, Angus was preparing to wrap up a run of nearly 21 years as NDP MP for the northern Ontario riding of Timmins-James Bay and had begun researching the 1930's era in towns like Timmins, Kirkland Lake and Rouyn-Noranda for a book. He had just gotten to the end of 1938 and the rise of fascism when U.S. President Donald Trump was re-elected.

"I think I was one of the first people to come out and start using terms like the fascist threat," Angus recalled. "I've been living this in my research and suddenly it was there before me."

Angus knew that his time in Parliament was coming to an end so he decided to use his final speeches to talk about the threat he saw to democracy.

"I decided very quickly that I wasn't going to spend any more time in Parliament. I didn't know how much time I had, but I wasn't going to spend another minute asking dumb questions about bills that nobody was paying attention to. I was going to start to try and put on the record what was happening because I felt the threat was very, very serious, given what was happening with Putin, given what was happening in Europe, and then Trump."

'People started stopping me on the street'

Little did Angus know, MeidasTouch News, a popular U.S.-based news site that has been critical of Trump, was watching. It started posting some of those speeches.

"People started stopping me on the street … the bus on [Ottawa's] Elgin stopped in the middle of the street and the bus driver gave me a shout out," said Angus. "I couldn't figure out what was going on."

Angus's speeches — meant for the historical record — touched a chord with Canadians.

"What really struck me was that people really saw the nature of the threat. Ordinary Canadians saw threat and, for some reason, I was one of the voices speaking up."

"So, it's full-time work. That's what I do all the time now."

In January, while still an MP, Angus began a Substack called The Resistance with columns that stand up for Canada, warn about the risk of Trump's administration and, as Angus says, "kick at the darkness."

A man speaks at a podium
Now retired from public office, Angus says he doesn't wear a suit as often these days. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

Angus began a Resistance tour, criss-crossing Canada from coast to coast, talking about the dangers Canada was facing and that it was going to get worse — but that the Canadian people had the power to resist.

On Labour Day, Angus launched MeidasCanada, featuring YouTube videos commenting on the news of the day – part rant, part op-ed and often featuring the kind of language Canadians are unlikely to hear on mainstream television airwaves.

Nearly four months later, MeidasCanada's YouTube channel has more than 206,000 subscribers. That's well shy of the 570,000 subscribers Conservative Party Leader Pierre Poilievre has built up over the past 14 years but far more than the 24,000 to Prime Minister Mark Carney's channel over the past 10 months.

While some videos have attracted only a few thousand views, Angus's takedown in August of Maine state Sen. Joseph Martin, who wrote a letter to Canada's western premiers suggesting they apply to become U.S. states, has garnered more than 585,000 views and more than 12,000 comments — numbers many Canadian politicians can only dream about.

Sitting in the Rainbow, Angus doesn't mince words about the threat he believes lies ahead.

"Is it the idea that this is going to go back to normal in the [U.S.] midterms? That world is gone. It's gone forever."

Angus says when Trump was elected, the first thing that came to mind were the words of Italian philosopher Antonio Gramsci: The old world is dying, and a new world is struggling to be born, but we are now in the age of monsters.

"I'm not a student of Gramsci, but this is what we're in," Angus said. "We're facing the threat to democracy. We're facing the threat to international institutions [that are] stressed in a way they've never been before. We're facing a threat to our border, which is very real. What we're dealing with are monster oligarchs, and nobody's coming to save us. Nobody's going to come up with a great trade deal, and nobody's going to figure this out up top.

"But I believe that ordinary Canadians understand the mission, and I've got a lot of hope for Canadians."

Angus said Canadians have moved from a sense of panic and urgency in January and February to "a determination to be something different."

"Canadians aren't just wanting to hold the line now. It's like we can be a better country. We can have a vision. If we can pull billions of dollars out of the American economy by just deciding to do that, then we can decide where to put those billions. And we could build resilient communities," he said.

"I think that's what Canadians want."

Carney's 'runway' to make mistakes is limited

Angus said Canadians voted for Carney because they wanted a wartime prime minister to handle the threats to Canada but Carney has to remember that they voted for a prime minister — not a CEO.

"I think Mark Carney is doing some very interesting and powerful things, but he also has to be super careful," said Angus. "He doesn't really understand Canadian politics."

One example, he says, is the Indigenous file and the need for consultation.

"That could come back to haunt him. We are in a minority government. What I think is that people are going to give the prime minister a lot of leeway but he doesn't have a lot of runway to make a mistake."

WATCH | From 2018: Angus questions social media executives at House committee:

Charlie Angus questions Facebook executives

April 19, 2018|
Duration2:38
Ontario NDP MP Charlie Angus asks Facebook executives to implement the EU's General Data Protection Regulation for Canadian users

While his new life has kept him on the road much of the year – speaking to town hall meetings across Canada, writing columns, filming videos and playing gigs with his band The Grievous Angels, Angus is enjoying his life after Parliament.

"I'm having a blast. I love this country. I love travelling. I love going into these communities," he said.

Despite his newfound popularity, Angus insists he has no plan to once again seek the NDP leadership — or to return to the House of Commons.

"You know, I did 21 years and it was a great honour and I learned a lot of things and now I feel I can help in a different way," said Angus. "I'm a shit disturber. That's what I always was. I don't need to wear a suit as much anymore."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Elizabeth Thompson

Senior reporter

Award-winning reporter Elizabeth Thompson covers Parliament Hill. A veteran of the Montreal Gazette, Sun Media and iPolitics, she currently works with the CBC's Ottawa bureau, specializing in investigative reporting and data journalism. In October 2024 she was named a member of the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists. She can be reached at: elizabeth.thompson@cbc.ca.


Thursday, 25 December 2025

Reclaiming the Story of Christmas: Charlie Angus

 The John Lennon Collection CD is playing softly this Crimbo morning - it'll be playing loudly later on this Christmas Day!  cf 

Reclaiming the Story of Christmas

Do we stand with the powerful and the haters, or with those seeking refuge from threats and war?

It’s been one year since Donald Trump’s hate-filled Christmas rant. On the day of good cheer, he threatened Panama, Greenland, and Canada — then signed off by telling us all to go to hell.

The debased behaviour of the President should have had the American political and media establishment rise up in indignation for such an abuse of the tradition of a president’s Christmas message. Instead, there were crickets.

The silence said more about the United States coming into 2025 than it did about Donald Trump. It set the tone for a dark and dangerous year.

And perhaps because we have come through such a hard year, this Christmas is feeling different. For the first time in a long time, people are thinking of Christmas as something more than a massive push to buy and consume.


In 2025 we witnessed the horrific wars in Gaza and Ukraine. There was a seemingly endless march of hate across Europe and the United States against refugees and the vulnerable.

But it was also a year of incredible resistance and solidarity. And now, as we gather with loved ones, is it possible that the story of that first Christmas is coming into view with more clarity?

I was thinking about this as I saw the anger of MAGA officials over churches in the United States showing the baby Jesus with zip-tied hands and the holy family threatened not by Herod’s men but by ICE.

A similar anger was displayed by the Israeli government when it sent its army into Bethlehem last Christmas Day in response to the church that featured a Palestinian baby in a bombed-out creche.

Jesus in the Rubble: Christmas Canceled in Bethlehem | Democracy Now!

The real story of Christmas is of a poor refugee family on the run from state violence.

In that story, the most powerful man in the land was frightened by the prospect of a helpless child in a stable. It is incredible that two thousand years later, the child in the creche still has the power to challenge the most powerful.

This is not a question of whether one comes from the tradition or is a believer. It is about reclaiming a story that has universal significance.

This is something Billy Bragg totally gets. He is not the kind of guy I would expect to be singing a song called Put the Christ Back in Christmas but it is a powerful challenge to the extremist groups who are invoking Christianity as a reason to hate newcomers.

What John Lennon did for the Christmas canon during the Vietnam War, Billy Bragg does in this age of monsters. 

In haste to vilify you forget
Christ was a refugee
King Herod’s murderous orders caused
His family to flee
Into the land of Egypt
Where their safety did lie
Would you refuse to let him in
And send him back to die?

This year especially, the Christmas story challenges us to consider whether we stand with the powerful and the haters, or with those seeking refuge from threats and war.

I know which side I’m on.

Merry Christmas, fellow resisters. Look out for each other. We are kicking at the darkness. It will bleed daylight.


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