The U.S. military operation in Venezuela reveals a paradox: We claim we can’t afford to compete with China through infrastructure investment and development partnerships. But we can afford military operations seizing foreign assets.
This isn’t really about foreign policy. It’s a symptom diagnosing fifty years of systematically misapplying hard money mythology to a soft money economy. The result: strategic weakness forcing us to use military force where we lack capacity for partnership, and accelerating wealth concentration destroying the middle class.
In this essay, I examine:
– How monetary mythology created strategic weakness against China’s patient investment
– Who benefited from selective austerity (for you) and abundance (for them)
– Why Venezuela shows us becoming an isolated empire abroad and neo-feudalism at home
– What capacity stewardship means as concrete political action
This analysis transcends traditional left-right politics. It speaks to fiscal responsibility advocates, limited government advocates, opportunity advocates, and American strength advocates alike—because it’s grounded in economic reality rather than ideology.
The choice being made right now determines whether we preserve democratic capitalism or accept neo-feudal decline.









