Mar 17, 2026
Trump Threatens to Take Over Country Amid Major Blackout
Trump Threatens to Take Over Country Amid Major Blackout
- 15 minutes
Openly talks about taking over Cuba.
Here it is.
You know, all my life I've been hearing
about the United States and Cuba.
When will the United States do it?
[00:00:16]
I do believe I'll be the honor
of having the honor of taking Cuba.
That'd be good.
That's a big honor. Taking Cuba.
Taking Cuba in some form. Yeah.
Taking Cuba. I mean, whether I free it.
Take it.
[00:00:31]
I think I could do
anything I want with it.
You want to know the truth?
A very weakened nation.
No, that's not the truth.
It would be illegal to do so.
As a matter of fact, threatening to do so
should be impeachable under the governing
[00:00:51]
doctrine of the US Constitution
and also prevailing statutory law.
The person,
if you remember running for president
seemingly many moons ago now, right?
Marco Rubio well, Marco Rubio
made his presidential bid.
[00:01:11]
Cuba was on his top do not pass go list.
Let's do a little background
on Marco Marco Rubio.
Here it is.
In the mid 1950s, Rubio's family and mine
emigrated from Cuba to the US
after Fidel Castro's revolution
and Cuba's transition to communism.
[00:01:27]
A few years later,
many well-off white Cubans came to Miami.
Now, Rubio's family and most of mine
weren't part of that wave.
Both his father and my grandfather
were service jobs in Miami Beach
during their early years in the US.
But in the years following the revolution,
both our families would come to see
themselves as part of the Cuban exile
community that reshaped Miami politics.
[00:01:44]
Around the same time, the US government
gave lots of Cuban immigrants,
including Rubio's grandfather,
a pretty clear pathway
to citizenship and state assistance.
Meanwhile, Cubans in Miami organized
around overthrowing Castro anti-communism
plus white privilege laid the groundwork
for Cuban American conservatism.
If you have a party that is building
sort of messages around anti-Blackness
[00:02:03]
that is also promoting sort of this idea
of being pro-business or pro-capital.
Humans could see
where they fit in all that.
That was still true during Rubio's
childhood in 1970s Miami, and although his
family moved to Las Vegas in 1979,
Rubio was still heavily influenced
by Cuban exile politics
[00:02:19]
through his grandfather,
including his support for Ronald Reagan
and the right wing guerrillas
his administration illegally funded.
It's around this time that Rubio, quote,
boasted, I would someday lead an
army of exiles to overthrow Fidel Castro
and become president of a free Cuba.
By the time Rubio moved back
to Miami in the mid 80s,
[00:02:34]
Reagan's anti-communism had galvanized
Cuban American voters there, and that
same community was influencing U.S.
Foreign policy.
More and more voters then elected him
to the state legislature
and later the US Senate,
where he sponsored 41 bills, mentioning
Venezuela and 53 mentioning Cuba.
It's also where he started
pressuring Trump
to oust Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro.
[00:02:51]
That effort culminated in Maduro's capture
and Trump's cooperation with essentially
the same government in exchange for oil.
The imperialism we're seeing
from Rubio and Trump today
is a product of all this history.
That's right.
U.S. Imperialism.
[00:03:06]
Now, keep in mind that part
of the psychological warfare is to make
you believe that a system of government
is in itself corrupt and evil.
For example, they will utilize
the term communism.
[00:03:25]
They said the same thing
about Doctor King.
They will utilize the term communist
in order to proxy the term radical.
You see, a form of government
is not inherently evil.
[00:03:43]
Capitalism has committed more atrocities
than communism ever had.
Wars. Corruption.
Deceit. We're in it now.
[00:04:01]
It is not a communist nation
who has decided to kidnap heads of state.
It is not a communist nation
who has decided to ignore the needs
of the citizens in their country.
[00:04:18]
And they're paying more
for basic food services, gas.
It is a capitalist nation
that has done that.
A little history on US imperialism.
The US has set its sights
on the Caribbean island.
[00:04:34]
Cuba is really a nation
that's very close to failing.
You know, they got their money
from Venezuela.
They got their oil from Venezuela.
They're not getting that anymore.
The US has also been pressuring Mexico
to stop sending oil to Cuba.
But why is the US so determined
to bring down Cuba anyway?
Especially since unlike Venezuela, the
country imports rather than exports oil.
[00:04:50]
First, to understand the relationship
between the US and Cuba,
we need to go back to Cuba's fight
for independence from Spain.
Cuban nationalists fought to break free
from Spain's colonial empire for decades,
causing the country to develop
a strong base of support for independence.
Near the end of Cuba's final war of
independence, the United States intervened
on the side of Cuba.
[00:05:06]
This is known in the US
as the Spanish American War.
But this intervention
had self-serving interests.
The US actually intended on kicking Spain
out of the Western Hemisphere
in the name of the Monroe Doctrine.
The Monroe Doctrine called
for keeping Europe out of the Americas,
but not to support self-determination
in the Western Hemisphere.
The US actually wanted imperial control
of the Americas for themselves.
[00:05:23]
So when the US entered
the Spanish-American war,
many in Washington called for the
annexation of Cuba by the United States.
So the US occupied Cuba after the war,
promising to pull its forces out
once the new government was in place.
And so when Cuba was drafting
its constitution in 1901, the US forced it
to include an amendment that would allow
Cuba's powerful neighbor to intervene
[00:05:38]
on the island when it saw fit.
The Constitution also grants the US
a perpetual lease for US military bases.
That's how the US kept
hold of Guantanamo Bay.
While several US friendly regimes
ruled Cuba for the next half century,
resentment bubbled underneath for decades
because many Cubans felt they didn't
break free from Spain just to be dominated
by the US. That would all change in 1959,
[00:05:55]
when the Cuban revolution overthrew US
backed dictator Fulgencio Batista.
The revolution ended indirect
control by the US
over the island's politics and economy.
And that's an outcome the US has
been determined to reverse ever since.
Put up the picture for mass.
[00:06:12]
Yesterday, Trump mused over whether he
would have the, as he called it, honor of
taking over over Cuba, a sovereign nation
and doing whatever he wants with it.
[00:06:32]
Kind of like he's doing in America.
He previously threatened a, quote,
friendly takeover and wants to pursue it
after his illegal war in Iran,
[00:06:50]
which came after he kidnaped.
A head of state.
This comes in the midst of Cuba, plunging
into darkness yesterday with a major
blackout affecting 11 million people.
[00:07:09]
Trump imposed an oil quarantine
against the island at the end of January.
Understand this plan or these plans
have been in motion for a while.
Trump imposed this oil quarantine,
[00:07:28]
cutting off its main supply of oil
from Venezuela after kidnaping Maduro.
No oil shipments have arrived in Cuba in
the last three months, which has affected
communications, education, health care
[00:07:47]
and transportation of that nation.
Our tax dollars, unfortunately,
once again, are being utilized
to fund the world's oppression.
By force, We are complicit.
There's more blasting.
[00:08:06]
The blackout is, quote, a direct
consequence of Trump's economic warfare.
Manolo de Los Santos of the People's Forum
in New York City, said on social media
Monday that the US has deliberately
[00:08:22]
cut off fuel, spare parts and equipment,
crippling an already fragile grid.
It's a genocidal saying designed to starve
[00:08:38]
and break the Cuban people
into submission, end quote.
Shortly after Trump spoke, the New York
Times reported that US officials told Cuba
to remove its president from power.
[00:08:54]
What?
Yeah. Shortly after Trump spoke, Officials
from our government told Cuba to remove
its president, citing four unnamed sources
familiar with the discussions.
[00:09:11]
Trump and his cronies won't open Cuba.
Cuba for business.
Once again, we're back to oh, capitalism.
What makes a government corrupt?
What makes a system of economy
and social governance corrupt?
[00:09:29]
Well, the administrators do.
The people who are in charge,
the individuals who run it,
regardless of the name,
you may call it the corruption comes
from the heart of the individuals
[00:09:48]
that administer Cuban nationals living
abroad in places such as Miami will be
allowed to invest in the private sector
and own businesses in the homeland.
The country's economic czar has told
NBC news in an exclusive interview.
[00:10:06]
Cuba.
Cuba is open to having a fluid commercial
relationship with US companies and, quote.
Also with Cubans residing in the United
States and their descendants that came
from Cuba's deputy prime minister.
I talked about this in the sit down
in Havana ahead of announcing the news
[00:10:25]
to this country Monday night.
We're trying to sell you
on the idea of economic enterprising.
Is it not ironic that the man
has openly stole oil?
But you're paying more for gas.
[00:10:42]
They're not doing this for your benefit.
They're not going to take over.
World economies monopolize access and
commerce in order to give you a discount.
[00:10:58]
That's not happening.
Competition naturally drives
a better consumer opportunity
in the exchange of that competition.
Trump is trying to eliminate
the very competition
for the American consumer and beyond.
[00:11:14]
So here we are.
The sales pitch has been made.
It's a lie. Like the other sales pitches.
Yeah, the car is a lemon,
and our president is acting
like a used car salesman.
[00:11:29]
As a matter of fact,
he actually did sell us a car.
It happened to be a new Tesla
on the white House lawn.
This is the man you're dealing with.
So now he's having the honor of doing
[00:11:45]
what he wants to do with another nation.
And you don't think this is about you?
You don't think this is about America?
You don't think this is about
the people inside of this country?
It is.
If you stand by and say nothing and do
nothing and act as if it doesn't bother
[00:12:02]
you because it's not in your backyard.
Understand this.
Is building up to something.
You don't have to let him
because this is still a democracy.
We still have rules of governance
that he has to navigate.
[00:12:23]
We still have the opportunity.
To not only save this nation,
but other nations
that America is adversely impacting.
There's a very different reality here
than what Maga said.
[00:12:40]
They voted for Democrats.
Those of us on the left, we never
supported Trump, but those on the right.
I never heard you say you wanted this.
I never heard Maga say
they wanted the Venezuelan president.
[00:12:57]
I never heard Maga say
they wanted to take over Cuba.
As a matter of fact, I heard Magda say
less government intrusion.
I heard Magda say,
stay out of the affairs of other nations.
Alright, dear brother, thoughts here?
I mean, first, that was an excellent,
I think, take on this whole situation.
[00:13:16]
Especially the historical aspect of it.
I grew up in Florida myself.
I was immersed in Republican circles
and heard nothing except for Cuba
equals bad my entire life.
And I think it takes a little bit
of digging to realize that that might
be a sentiment that's not exactly shared
by those within Cuba.
[00:13:34]
At least not the majority of them.
Like I live in Los Angeles now.
People all over the country have at one
time or another lived in Los Angeles,
and they usually say negative things
about it because they're no longer there.
And I think that there's
a little diasporic thing
that's incredibly interesting.
Secondly, Trump did like a Freudian slip
there at the beginning
[00:13:53]
where he didn't even, he basically said,
I will be the honor, for a moment
and then corrected himself
and said and said, I will have the honor.
I think that speaks to his narcissism,
and that this goal for him is ultimately
[00:14:08]
to enrich himself and his cronies.
And then finally, Cuba.
You know, it is an island,
but I also think it is an island
both geographically and symbolically.
It is something that we have
continually tried to isolate.
It's something that we project our own
as a nation faults onto.
[00:14:26]
They're the ones doing political violence.
They're the ones
doing political oppression.
They're the ones where people can't
survive and put food on the table.
All of those problems are things
we could be focusing on in this country,
but instead we're projecting it outward
and doing it so that a few more people
can get a lot more rich.
[00:14:43]
Very well said.
Amazing, he believes, and some people
who support him believe it as well
that he can fix other nations, right?
He can fix them, but he can't
even figure out how to get the cost
of gasoline and eggs down in America.
Okay.
All right.
We'll bring you updates as they come.
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