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The invasion of Venezuela is not a show of strength—it is an admission of weakness. When a currency requires bombs to maintain dominance, it is already dying.

The petrodollar once allowed America to fund deficits, welfare, and military expansion. But as BRICS consolidates economic power—already controlling 40% of global GDP—the dollar’s supremacy looks increasingly fragile.

History does not repeat, but it rhymes. Iraq, Libya, Panama, and now Venezuela—all victims of a system equating dollar dominance with national survival. Yet the world is changing.

The invasion may secure short-term control of oil flows. But in the long run, it exposes the petrodollar’s fatal flaw: reliance on coercion rather than competitiveness.

And when the world finally calls America’s bluff, the dollar may collapse not with a whisper, but with a bang.