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Saturday, 3 January 2026

Demand Canada Denounce Trump Attack on Venezuela (letter to Prime Minister link): World Beyond War

 

 

Dear Christopher,

 

Early this morning, the U.S. carried out a violent military assault

 on Venezuela, bombing the capital, causing numerous fatalities,

 and abducting President Nicolas Maduro. These illegal, unilateral,

 and criminal acts of aggression against Venezuela threaten peace

 and stability across the entire region and fit into a long history of

 violent U.S. interventions in Latin America and around the world.

Shamefully, Canada's response to Trump having bombed Venezuela,

 kidnapped its president, and claimed that he would run the country has

 thus far been to condemn President Maduro and call on all parties to

 "respect international law". Canada has refused to even name Trump's

 attacks and utter destruction of any rule of law, much less condemn them. 

Send PM Carney and Foreign Affairs Minister Anand an urgent

 email right now to demand Canada immediately:
— Condemn this clear act of war, demand Maduro’s immediate release,

 and denounce all U.S. aggression on Venezuela
— Cut off any military support to the U.S. war on Venezuela, including

 the use of Canadian naval vessels, military personnel, Canadian-made

 arms, or military intelligence to support U.S. strikes.
— Rescind Canadian sanctions on Venezuela and resume diplomatic

 relations with Caracas.

Spread the word by forwarding this email, sharing on Instagram,

 Facebook, and X, and linking to the urgent email action

 

Emergency rallies are being called across the country right now

 - join one near you. 

World BEYOND War, with its chapters and allied organizations around

the world, including a chapter in Venezuela, has also announced a

 Global Day of Action in Solidarity with Venezuela on Saturday,

 January 17 to continue to build unity around the world to demand

 No War, No Overthrow, No Coup, No Sanctions.

All out in solidarity with Venezuela! 

Rachel
World BEYOND War Canada

 

World BEYOND War is a global network of volunteers, chapters, and affiliated organizations advocating for the abolition of the institution of war.
Privacy policy.

              

World BEYOND War
PO Box 871 | Campbellford PO, ON, K0L 1L0 | Canada
worldbeyondwar.org/canada

Support our work.

Venezuela - and The Gangsters on Our Border: Charlie Angus/The Resistance

 

Venezuela - The Lesson for Canada

Make no mistake, the attack on Venezuela by the Trump regime is not about removing a rogue leader; it is a deliberate attack on international law.

Since coming to power, the Trump regime has deliberately undermined the international rules-based order.

He has targeted the work of the International Criminal Court over its investigations into war crimes in Gaza. He has betrayed Ukraine time and time again while justifying the illegal Russian invasion.

And he has threatened NATO allies, Canada, and Greenland.

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By invading Venezuela, Trump is declaring war on the United Nations.

One of the founding principles of the UN is that it is illegal to use force against another nation without UN Security Council Authorization. Over the decades, the United States skirted these obligations while carefully avoiding directly challenging the legitimacy of international law and institutions.

In the case of the invasion of Panama and the kidnapping of President Noriega, the United States set up a long paper trail in the courts regarding allegations of racketeering and drug trafficking.

When George W. Bush set out to invade Iraq, he brought the case for war to the United Nations. The claims of weapons of mass destruction were clearly false, but the United States presented its case in order to be seen as acting within the larger obligations of international law.

Bush also pushed for support from Western allies to create the impression of an international consensus. Trump doesn’t believe in the Western allies. He prefers the United States to act like a rogue state.


In the case of Venezuela, Trump and his minions have made a mockery of the laws of the sea and warfare. The blockade was deemed by UN human rights experts to have no legitimacy. It was considered equal to “an armed attack” because no credible justification was given and no Security Council vote took place.

Trump claimed the Venezuelans had stolen American oil – a ridiculous claim.

Similar ridiculous claims were made for the boats being hunted on the high seas.

These strikes represented murder on the high seas. At least 83 people were killed, including those who were deliberately targeted after their boats were destroyed. This represented clear violations of the law.

Then they shifted from killing supposed drug dealers to seizing oil tankers. Some US lawmakers even suggested legalizing high-seas piracy to advance their goals. This represents a move into banditry by a nuclear-backed nation.

David Crane, the founding Chief Prosecutor of the UN Special Court for Sierra Leone, writes:

“If the United States normalizes unilateral force, it signals to authoritarian leaders that aggression is once again an acceptable instrument of statecraft. This erodes the UN Charter’s foundational principle that disputes must be resolved peacefully and that force is a last resort. The United States helped build the post‑war legal order. It cannot selectively abandon it without consequence.”

Trump has contempt for traditional allies in Europe and the Americas. What has emerged in place of the traditional alliances is a dangerous new alignment – a triumvirate of gangster leaders determined to undermine international law – Putin, Netanyahu, Trump.


In the book Autocracy Inc., Anne Applebaum documented how the invasion of Ukraine was marked by Putin’s provocative challenge to principles of international law.

“From the first days of the war, Putin and the Russian security elite ostentatiously demonstrated their disdain for the language of human rights, their disregard for the laws, their scorn for international law, and for treaties they themselves had signed. They arrested public officials and civic leaders. . . They built torture chambers for civilians. . . They kidnapped thousands of children. . . they deliberately targeted emergency workers.”

Even more flagrant were the actions of Israel following October 7.

From the earliest days of the incursion into Gaza, Netanyahu’s agenda seemed less about freeing the hostages and more about eradicating the people of Gaza. A clear pattern of provocations against civilians and aid agencies emerged. The world watched increasingly bold and vicious assaults on hospitals and aid convoys, aid workers, and journalists. Food was used as a weapon of war, including deliberate starvation or gunning down hungry children at supposed aid stations.

Netanyahu was banking on the unwillingness of Western leaders like the UK and Germany to call out these brazen war crimes. And so, while Western leaders denounced crimes by Putin, they tiptoed around the increasingly belligerent attacks on international law by Israel, thereby weakening an already tottering international order.

And then came Trump.

He has issued sanctions against a Canadian jurist working to investigate the war crimes. He has aligned the United States with the crimes of both Putin and Netanyahu. And he has deliberately targeted the Western alliances with threats of invasion in Greenland or arbitrarily moving the Canadian border.

With the attack on Venezuela, he has upped the ante through invasion and kidnapping. Venezuela puts the world on notice, and Canada must be ready.

We played a key role in establishing the International Criminal Court. We helped establish the Statute of Rome, which laid out key protections against state violence.

Canada has a long history of defending the international rule of law. We are now dealing with a regime that will kill people in the water, seize ships on the high seas, invade other countries, and kidnap their leaders. All bets are off.

This is the age of gangsters. And Canada must be ready to rise to the threat.

We must work to build alliances with other democratic nations in Latin America, Europe, and Asia.

We must be ready for whatever comes next from the gangsters on our border.


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Thursday, 1 January 2026

For The Principled, The Innocents, The Banished: Honey Novick poem

Honey Novick

(this poem will be the centrepiece of the next issue of The Banished Poets Society


For The Principled, The Innocents,  The Banished  


                   

To banish

To ban

To ban is the same thing as to be banished

Being banished is being banned, it is an act of control

One trying to control another

 

It comes in many flavors, banishment

Family shunning, banishing one another

Work places

Friends no longer friends

 

I have been banished by my family

I’m different, “smart”, unwed, childless, 

It is almost a relief, in my case

however

 

To be banned is to banish

To ban is the same thing as to be banished

Being banished is being banned

It is a control “thing”

 

History is wrought with the banned, the banished, the decision to distance

. 

Johnny Cash  famously banned from the Grand Ole Opry in 1965 

He was drunk, went on a rampage, drug induced

Smashing stage lights with a microphone stand during a performance,

he was a rebel but his addiction and frustration weren’t understood

he couldn’t articulate what he saw and felt, so he acted out

eventually he was welcomed back after cleaning up

later he turned his defiance into an art form, a statement

my favorite was his being banned by radio stations over his

recording of the thought-provoking songs like "The Ballad of Ira Hayes

 

Ethel Rosenberg, accused by the USA government of spying for Russia,

jailed and then executed 

even though there is proof she was innocent

her banishment was deadly

 

Stephen Colbert and Jimmy Kimmel were banished from late night TV

they make people laugh and think 

what is the true meaning of truth?

 

Book banning has become the sport of the uneducated, arrogant and spiteful

books make children and other people, think, question, express and curious

 

The displaced ordinary citizens of Sudan, that is an inexorable banishment

 

Those accused and imprisoned for being wrongfully accused of murder

 

To ban is the same thing as to be banished

Being banished is being banned, it is an act of control

Like the colonial adventurers and usurpers

 

Add your own names and causes to this list

 

1.    Sign says:  “Do Not Buy Goods From Israel”

I look down at my comfortable, stylish, warm Naot boots made in Israel

I understand the sentiment… what the current Israeli government is doing to the Palestinian

people is a genocide.  I won’t add my name to that but I will not punish a whole lot

of people because their government is cruel.  I won’t do that to the Americans either.

How can I banish whole groups of people by painting them all with the same brush

 

2. When little, I was given several lovely dolls, to celebrate my birthday 

I couldn’t find them to play with.  My mother, in her own well-meaning way

gave them away because we didn’t have money to buy presents for other

kids celebrating birthdays.  I was angry.  It wasn’t fair.  It isn’t fair.  They were not

hers to give away.  I didn’t know how to say anything but I learned about fairness

I hope my sense of fairness will guide my morality to the future and forever

And I have been tested including one time the CBC wouldn’t play my song “Bank Of Love” saying it was too suggestive.  Yes, it was…yes, it is

 

3.   Angela Davis says, “A woman who knows her voice is dangerous only to systems built on her silence.”  She, a professor, not only was banished, but jailed as she supported a man fighting for the rights of others of color, civil rights, human rights

 

To ban is the same thing as to be banished

Being banished is being banned.  It is an arrogant act of control

 

4       Maria Ressa, 2021 Nobel Peace Prize Awardee was and is a prominent critic of 

the then Philippine president Rodrigo Duterte

She was arrested

her conviction was seen by many as politically motivated

It is her mission to safeguard freedom of expression   

 

5       Buffy Ste. Marie   Phew, Buffy, brilliant, courageous, controversial banished from public appearances, accused of being “Pretendian”, distrusted, aggrieved

I believe and support her.  She said her “growing up mother” told her she “was adopted and that she was native but there was no documentation as was common for indigenous children born in the 1940s”.

I was Buffy’s gofer, 1965, at the Mariposa Folk Festival.  Her pain is immeasurable.  Her contributions, IMHO, are invaluable.  I loved her immediately.  The love has never waivered 

 

 

6.    Pete Seeger a brilliant songwriter, social justice activist wasn’t physically "banished" from the United States, but he was blacklisted from American radio and television for years

He was open about social justice issues, humanism, and

his political affiliations during the McCarthy years.  

When the Smothers Brothers invited him onto their television show in the 1970s, 

he sang “Waist Deep in the Big Muddy” a song about war.  

This was during the Viet Nam War era.  This eventually cost the Smothers Brothers their show.

In 1999, I was asked to organize a UNESCO endeavor called “New Songs for Peace”.  It was an honour and daunting.  I contacted Pete who encouraged me by saying, “start off small.  Contact those you know and then widen the circle”..I never forgot those words of wisdom

 

To ban is the same thing as to be banished

Being banished is being banned.  It IS the arrogant act of one debasing another

 

 

7.    "Trail of Tearswas the forced removal of approximately 60,000 Native Americans 

from the "Five Civilized Tribes" (Cherokee, Muscogee/Creek, Seminole, Chickasaw, and Choctaw

by the U.S. government between 1830 and 1850. This action is described as a forced exile from their homelands in the Southeast to an "Indian Territory" in what is now Oklahoma

 

8.  Some generations of First Nations children have never known clean running tap water 

 

Mankind’s inhumanity is a choice based on an experience 

fueled by education resulting in a world that understands 

all life is sacred and must be respected.  When the water is no longer

easily available and the air no longer easily breathable, will that be the time to look at 

what we have and what we want 

we will get that respect, camaraderie, community, good living conditions by working and living respectfully, together with our Earth Mother

 

OH WHEN WILL WE EVER LEARN?  OH WHEN WILL WE LEARN?