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In early January 2026, four seemingly unconnected stories — spanning a century, multiple countries, and entirely different arenas of power — collided in a way that may have changed the course of history.
In this episode of The Political Fixer Podcast, Shawna Presley Vercher traces how the foundations of modern international law, the global war on drugs, and decades-old political decisions converged with a shocking U.S. military operation in Venezuela. The result raises a question the world has not seriously confronted in generations: what happens when the most powerful nation on Earth openly defies the rules designed to prevent global war?
The episode begins with the aftermath of World War II and the creation of the United Nations which made aggressive war illegal for the first time in human history. That legal framework held, imperfectly, for nearly 80 years. Then, in the early morning hours of January 3, 2026, U.S. forces entered Venezuela, killed more than 100 people, and seized President Nicolás Maduro and his wife — without congressional authorization and without approval from the UN Security Council.
To understand how we arrived at that moment, Shawna unpacks the long history of cocaine trafficking into the United States, including Honduras’s role as a major transit hub, the conviction of former Honduran president Juan Orlando Hernández, and his subsequent pardon by the current U.S. administration. She contrasts that pardon with the justification offered for the Venezuela operation: a claimed commitment to holding international drug traffickers accountable.
The episode also revisits Miami’s cocaine-era past, including the case of a convicted drug kingpin who later received political assistance from the very officials now framing themselves as uncompromising on drugs. These inconsistencies matter because they undermine the legal and moral rationale offered for an unprecedented act of international aggression.
Finally, Shawna examines the broader implications. If violations of international law can be excused whenever a nation feels justified, what remains of the global order designed to prevent catastrophe? And if authoritarian tactics are condemned abroad but mirrored at home, what standard are we actually defending?
This episode isn’t just about Venezuela. It’s about power, accountability, and whether the rules that have kept the world from another global war still apply — or only apply to some.
Key themes in this episode:
If this episode raised questions for you, share it with someone who cares about democracy, global stability, and the rule of law — and stay engaged by following the Political Fixer on TikTok and BlueSky @PoliticalFixer.
Support the show
Follow The Political Fixer podcast on your platform!
Connect with Shawna Presley Vercher:
YouTube - @PoliticalFixer
TikTok - @PoliticalFixer
Instagram - @PoliticalFixer
Blue Sky - @PoliticalFixer
Substack - @PoliticalFixer
Website - PoliticalFixer.com
By Shawna Presley VercherIn early January 2026, four seemingly unconnected stories — spanning a century, multiple countries, and entirely different arenas of power — collided in a way that may have changed the course of history.
In this episode of The Political Fixer Podcast, Shawna Presley Vercher traces how the foundations of modern international law, the global war on drugs, and decades-old political decisions converged with a shocking U.S. military operation in Venezuela. The result raises a question the world has not seriously confronted in generations: what happens when the most powerful nation on Earth openly defies the rules designed to prevent global war?
The episode begins with the aftermath of World War II and the creation of the United Nations which made aggressive war illegal for the first time in human history. That legal framework held, imperfectly, for nearly 80 years. Then, in the early morning hours of January 3, 2026, U.S. forces entered Venezuela, killed more than 100 people, and seized President Nicolás Maduro and his wife — without congressional authorization and without approval from the UN Security Council.
To understand how we arrived at that moment, Shawna unpacks the long history of cocaine trafficking into the United States, including Honduras’s role as a major transit hub, the conviction of former Honduran president Juan Orlando Hernández, and his subsequent pardon by the current U.S. administration. She contrasts that pardon with the justification offered for the Venezuela operation: a claimed commitment to holding international drug traffickers accountable.
The episode also revisits Miami’s cocaine-era past, including the case of a convicted drug kingpin who later received political assistance from the very officials now framing themselves as uncompromising on drugs. These inconsistencies matter because they undermine the legal and moral rationale offered for an unprecedented act of international aggression.
Finally, Shawna examines the broader implications. If violations of international law can be excused whenever a nation feels justified, what remains of the global order designed to prevent catastrophe? And if authoritarian tactics are condemned abroad but mirrored at home, what standard are we actually defending?
This episode isn’t just about Venezuela. It’s about power, accountability, and whether the rules that have kept the world from another global war still apply — or only apply to some.
Key themes in this episode:
If this episode raised questions for you, share it with someone who cares about democracy, global stability, and the rule of law — and stay engaged by following the Political Fixer on TikTok and BlueSky @PoliticalFixer.
Support the show
Follow The Political Fixer podcast on your platform!
Connect with Shawna Presley Vercher:
YouTube - @PoliticalFixer
TikTok - @PoliticalFixer
Instagram - @PoliticalFixer
Blue Sky - @PoliticalFixer
Substack - @PoliticalFixer
Website - PoliticalFixer.com