This week on the pod, we’re breaking down the global freak-show that’s unfolding right now:🔥 Venezuela exploded onto the world stage when U.S. forces executed Operation Absolute Resolve — a massive military strike in Caracas that captured Nicolás Maduro and his wife, flew them to the U.S., and put them in federal custody on narcotics and cartel-linked charges. This wasn’t some minor law-enforcement grab — it was a military-scale assault involving hundreds of aircraft and elite forces that took out air defenses and tore into a sovereign nation without UN backing. The world is calling it illegal under international law, a blatant violation of Venezuela’s sovereignty and the UN Charter.⚔️ America’s military might isn’t just flexing — it’s reshaping geopolitics. Trump’s team is now dictating Venezuela’s oil output, recognizing puppet leadership, and hinting that this kind of operation might be the blueprint for future U.S. interventions.❄️ Still think that was extreme? Trump’s next target on the geopolitical bingo card is Greenland. Not asking Denmark nicely — but openly stating the U.S. “needs” the island for national security, bragging about owning it, and refusing to rule out military intervention. Denmark and Greenland themselves are furious and say, bluntly, Greenland is not for sale.🏔️ Let’s be clear: Greenland is part of the Kingdom of Denmark and a NATO ally. It isn’t U.S. territory, nor does Denmark want to sell it. The push to seize it — using the same muscle that snatched Maduro — would shred alliance trust and could undo the entire NATO security framework.👩🎤 And while we’re on hot topics, we’re not ignoring the domestic cultural front. We’ll be unpacking why some commentators are accusing liberal women and virtue signalers of weaponizing tragedies and protests — especially around controversial events like ICE raids and polarizing media coverage of individual victims — as political theater rather than genuine social movements. (This part gets sharp — we’ll dissect what it means for our political discourse, and whether outrage is being used as a currency.)