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How the U.S. Public and Politicians Feel About Potential War With Venezuela

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The U.S. is set to launch new operations against Venezuela and its President Nicolás Maduro, Reuters reported over the weekend, as U.S. President Donald Trump’s Administration escalates what increasingly looks like a war against the Latin American nation over its alleged role in the international narcotics trade.

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Since Sept. 2, U.S. military strikes on alleged drug boats have reportedly killed at least 83 people in the Caribbean, raising questions about the legality of such operations and whether Trump is seeking a fight elsewhere to ease political pressures at home.

Some observers even think Trump’s ultimate goal may be regime change in Venezuela, seeking to force out the authoritarian Maduro, whose most recent election successive U.S. Administrations have not recognized as legitimate, and whom the State Department alleges to be the head of a cartel recently designated a terrorist organization—a move Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said Friday brings “new options” to how the U.S. combats “narco-terrorism” in the region. Nothing, including a potential land-based operation, Hegseth said, was “off the table.”

But the thought of waging a new war with Venezuela is unpopular in the U.S.

A CBS News/YouGov poll conducted from Nov. 19-21 showed that 70% of respondents opposed U.S. military action in the South American country, and 56% believe any military action would have no effect on the amount of drugs entering the U.S.

And a November poll from Reuters and Ipsos also found that a majority of Americans believe the risks of U.S. military action in Venezuela outweigh the benefits, though attitudes largely split along party lines, with Republicans more supportive.

Some prominent Republicans, however, have voiced their own opposition.

Sen. Rand Paul (R, Ky.) on Sunday warned of potential fractures within the GOP, where some members have already questioned the Administration’s boat-bombing campaign, echoing congressional Democrats’ misgivings about Trump’s actions in Venezuela.

“I think once there’s an invasion of Venezuela,” said Paul on CBS News, “I think you’ll see a splintering and a fracturing of the movement that has supported the President.” 

“I think a lot of people, including myself,” he explained, “were attracted to the President because of his reticence to get us involved in foreign war.”

Paul, who was one of two Republicans (along with Alaska’s Sen. Lisa Murkowski) who voted with Senate Democrats in a failed bid to require congressional approval before Trump takes any military action against Venezuela, criticized the Administration’s latest terrorist designation on Cartel de los Soles, saying: “I think by doing this, they’re pretending as if we are at war. They’re pretending as if they’ve gotten some imprimatur to do what they want.”

Speaking to the AFP, Mexico-based academic Juan Manuel Trak said the terrorist designation, which went into effect Monday, “creates the perception that some kind of attack is almost imminent” in Venezuela. Trump said last week that the designation gives the U.S. military more options to target Maduro’s assets, although he also indicated a willingness to speak to Maduro to try to find a diplomatic resolution to the standoff.

Other Republicans, while not as explicitly rebuking the Administration as Paul, have also expressed concern about continuing U.S. military activity around Venezuela. Sen. Todd Young (R, Ind.) voted against the legislation that Paul and Murkowski supported, but he clarified in a statement that his vote was not an “endorsement of the Administration’s current course in the Caribbean and Eastern Pacific” and that he is “troubled by many aspects and assumptions of this operation and believe it is at odds with the majority of Americans who want the U.S. military less entangled in international conflicts.”

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Slender Man Attacker Is Found After Manhunt

Morgan Geyser went missing after removing her GPS monitoring tag from her ankle.
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Pauline Hanson faces widespread condemnation after repeating ‘disgraceful’ burqa stunt in Senate

Nationals senator Matt Canavan says One Nation leader ‘debased’ parliament while independent Fatima Payman says she is ‘disrespecting Muslim Australians’

Pauline Hanson has again worn a burqa into the Senate, repeating a previous widely-condemned stunt as she sought to ban the Muslim face covering on national security grounds – despite being unable to name a single safety incident linked to the burqa.

Hanson, the One Nation leader, was ejected from the Senate on Monday, forcing the the suspension of the chamber as she refused to take off the burqa, in violation of a parliamentary ruling. She was condemned by all parties in the Senate for repeating the offensive display, with Nationals senator Matt Canavan saying Hanson’s stunt “debased” the parliament and was “ridiculing” Muslim Australians.

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Farage urged to explain conspiracy theories linked to antisemitism he voiced in US media

Exclusive: The Reform UK leader discussed far-right talking points in web TV and radio appearances between 2009 and 2018

Nigel Farage is facing calls to explain why he repeatedly aired tropes and conspiracy theories associated with antisemitism during interviews, after claims the Reform UK leader used racist language in his teens.

In appearances on US TV shows and podcasts earlier in his political career, Farage discussed supposed plots by bankers to create a global government, citing Goldman Sachs, the Bilderberg group and the financier George Soros as threats to democracy.

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Politicians urge Labour to restore Electoral Commission independence

All-party group say move is needed to stop UK lagging behind global standards on election integrity

Keir Starmer is being urged to restore independence to the Electoral Commission, with MPs and peers likely to launch a battle to amend the elections bill in the new year.

In a letter to the prime minister, MPs and peers will warn the elections watchdog should not be overseen by the political parties in charge of holding to account.

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Heroes, zeros from Jets’ loss to Ravens: Derrick Henry shakes off slow start

Heroes, zeros and the full blitz from the Jets’ 23-10 road loss to the Ravens on Sunday.
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VC Max Altman says tech got too focused on mission: ‘We really lost our way for a little bit’

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Max Altman said that tech became too focused on mission.

  • Max Altman urged tech workers to prioritize joining the fastest-growing companies.
  • He criticized tech’s past focus on mission over business growth.
  • Today’s tech companies emphasize efficiency, lean teams, and rapid growth.

Max Altman’s career advice: Focus on picking the fastest-growing company.

On an episode of the “20VC” podcast published on Sunday, Altman said that tech once became too focused on prioritizing mission over “winning.”

“I say, don’t care about the product. Don’t care about anything, just go work at the fastest growing company,” the venture capitalist said. “Because winning feels great. It feels amazing.”

Altman is the cofounder of Saga, a $125 million venture fund that launched last March. Its investments include defense tech startup Anduril, Reddit, and Rippling. He is the younger brother of OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and the older brother of Jack Altman, also a VC.

On Sunday’s podcast, Max Altman said that tech lost its way in the last few years before 2020. Before becoming an investor, he worked at Microsoft, Zenefits, and Rippling.

He said that everyone in tech was making their company about their mission and “saving the world.”

“We’re doing on-demand dry cleaning and on-demand dog walking, but it’s gonna help the world this way, and you should feel good about yourself,” Altman added.

“I’m like, just go build a great business,” he said. “Winning’s the most fun thing here. And I think we really lost our way for a little a bit.”

In the last two years, tech has largely moved in the direction Altman says he prefers. The industry has been prioritizing growing quickly and doing more with less.

Companies have cut middle-level management in favor of more streamlined teams and fewer tiers of hierarchy, which they say should lead to less bureaucracy.

Across the industry, execs are sharing memos filled with words such as “efficiency” and “scrappiness and frugality.”

In April, Intel’s CEO Lip-Bu Tan detailed his plan for the company’s culture: more time in the office, less admin, and leaner teams.

“The most important KPI for many managers at Intel has been the size of their teams,” Tan wrote, referring to key performance indicators. “Going forward, this will not be the case. The best leaders get the most done with the fewest people.”

“We want to operate like the world’s largest startup,” Amazon’s Andy Jassy wrote in a September 2024 letter. “That means having a passion for constantly inventing for customers, strong urgency (for most big opportunities, it’s a race!), high ownership, fast decision-making, scrappiness and frugality, deeply-connected collaboration.”

Late last month, Amazon laid off 14,000 corporate employees, citing AI’s rapid advancement.

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DOGE Quietly Shuts Down With 8 Months Left on Mandate: Report

Critics say DOGE’s cost-cutting was hasty and wasteful.
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Golden Globes tickets selling for $70K via Penske Media concierge gift guide, ‘shameless’: source

The awards became a for-profit entity when Penske took over the show from the non-profit Hollywood Foreign Press Association.
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Knicks left holding their breath as they await Landry Shamet injury news

Landry Shamet was officially listed as out for Monday’s game against the Nets with a sprained right shoulder.