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Home»News»Media & Culture»We’re Not Talking About It
Media & Culture

We’re Not Talking About It

News RoomBy News Room9 months agoNo Comments5 Mins Read1,006 Views
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“We’re not talking about” regime change in Venezuela, President Donald Trump told reporters back in August. “I can only say that billions of dollars of drugs are pouring into our country from Venezuela,” and that “a very strange election” put Nicolas Maduro in office, “to put it mildly.”

“What I can tell you is Maduro is a narco-terrorist,” said Attorney General Pam Bondi, who has placed a $50 million bounty on Maduro’s head, wanting him to face charges in the U.S.

Earlier this week, another six suspected narco-traffickers were killed in a strike ordered by Trump on a boat in the Caribbean suspected of carrying drugs. This brings the total number killed up to 27.

The Reason Roundup Newsletter by Liz Wolfe Liz and Reason help you make sense of the day’s news every morning.

“Trump is truly aghast at how Maduro savaged the economy of a once-vibrant Venezuela,” reports Nahal Toosi in Politico, mentioning how Trump appears to “genuinely dislike” Venezuela’s president.

But Trump isn’t just satisfied with strikes on boats. Yesterday, news broke that he secretly authorized the CIA to take some sort of action in Venezuela, the details of which aren’t clear and haven’t been confirmed. There’s also been some repositioning of ships starting this past August. Never one to keep his mouth shut, Trump told reporters a bit about his plans: “We are certainly looking at land now, because we’ve got the sea very well under control,” he told reporters.

At this point, “the scale of the military buildup in the region is substantial: There are currently 10,000 U.S. troops there, most of them at bases in Puerto Rico, but also a contingent of Marines on amphibious assault ships,” reports The New York Times. “In all, the Navy has eight surface warships and a submarine in the Caribbean.”

“Why did you authorize the CIA to go into Venezuela?” a reporter asked Trump yesterday. “They have emptied their prisons into the United States of America,” responded the president, in what sure looks like him soft-launching the idea that an invasion would be warranted.

Maduro, for his part, announced that he would mobilize 4.5 million members of the Bolivarian Militia, which is a civilian force that’s undergone military training, to support the official military, which has been placed on high alert.

If Maduro wants to be treated like a legit head of state, not the leader of a cartel, he isn’t helping his own case:

Absolute HORROR- young Venezuelan activists @LuisPecheVE and @yendrive were shot at more than 10 times in what looks like a hit job in Bogota, where they are exiled. This would be the latest case of Maduro targeting dissidents abroad.

— Germania Rodriguez Poleo (@iamGermania) October 13, 2025

Nor is he interested in entertaining diplomatic pathways:

Appears a US deportation flight heading to Caracas turned back just before landing earlier this morning.

— Stephen Gibbs (@STHGibbs) October 15, 2025

One possible theory: This deportation flight was denied landing and turned around, possibly as retribution for Trump’s choosing to strike the boats in the Caribbean. Maduro is making clear he’s not interested in talking, and that he wants leverage.


Scenes from New York: This was amusingly a scene from Philly that some Brooklyn leftist imbecile seized on and assumed was…city hall in Manhattan (since the whole world revolves around NYC, donchaknow). Now, the discourse has swirled around fare evasion in both cities and the degree to which the leftist mindset is just totally tolerant of public disorder and blatant theft.

boy i sure do love exiting subway stations through the emergency exit door! unfortunately i am a very slow walker and easily distracted so sometimes i look up from my phone and find that i’ve been holding the door open for a minute or more without even realizing it https://t.co/fCQAyN5ANm

— antifa????girlfriend (@lllliatttt) October 14, 2025

It’s just totally taken as a given in these lefty circles that all the people and entities actually paying all the taxes are not paying any taxes https://t.co/qebrM563AO

— wanye (@xwanyex) October 16, 2025


QUICK HITS

  • “President Donald Trump said he might go to the Supreme Court to personally watch oral arguments on whether the bulk of his tariffs pass legal muster, in what would be a highly unusual spectacle,” reports Bloomberg. “‘I think I’m going to go to the Supreme Court to watch it,’ Trump told reporters Wednesday in the Oval Office. ‘I’ve not done that, and I had some pretty big cases. I think it’s one of the most important cases ever brought, because we will be defenseless against the world.’ The Supreme Court will hear arguments Nov. 5 over whether import taxes affecting trillions of dollars in international commerce imposed by Trump are legal. The president has said the tariffs are authorized under the 1977 International Emergency Economic Powers Act, a law that gives the president a panoply of tools to address national security, foreign policy and economic emergencies.”
  • “The Trump administration is considering a radical overhaul of the U.S. refugee system that would slash the program to its bare bones while giving preference to English speakers, white South Africans and Europeans who oppose migration,” per a New York Times report. “The proposed changes would put new emphasis on whether applicants would be able to assimilate into the United States, directing them to take classes on ‘American history and values’ and ‘respect for cultural norms.’ The proposals also advise Mr. Trump to prioritize Europeans who have been ‘targeted for peaceful expression of views online such as opposition to mass migration or support for “populist” political parties.'”
  • Bill Ackman—aka my new favorite person—just donated $1 million to a super PAC opposing Zohran Mamdani’s mayoral bid.
  • Truly:

OpenAI is an amazing company and these are impressive numbers … and also a company losing $20 billion a year with $13b in revenue, making business deals that project hundreds of billions in future spending, with a private valuation of $0.5 trillion, is mental.

(Everybody in… https://t.co/jLTVPcMd3g

— Derek Thompson (@DKThomp) October 15, 2025



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Entrepreneur Dr David Potter was a long-term supporter of Index through the charitable foundation he set up with his wife Dr David Potter CBE, who died on 28 June aged 82, was a scientist, technologist, entrepreneur and philanthropist. He founded the pioneering technology company Psion in 1980, riding on the wave of the home computer boom and launched the world’s first mass-market handheld computer, the Psion Organiser. The company later went on to become one of the prime movers in the mobile phone revolution, designing the operating system Symbian. David Potter was born and spent his early years in East London, South Africa before moving to England to attend Trinity College, Cambridge to read natural sciences. He later received his doctorate in mathematical physics at Imperial College, pursuing an academic career in the 1970s with spells at UCLA in California. Potter met fellow South African Elaine Goldberg while she was working towards a doctorate at Nuffield College Oxford on the political role of the press in South Africa, published as her first book. The couple met at a party in Tunbridge Wells and arranged to meet up the following weekend in Oxford. “He pretty much proposed to me within a week,” Elaine told me later. Elaine later went on to work as a journalist at the Sunday Times under legendary editor Harry Evans. While there she co-authored several Sunday Times books, including Suffer the Children: the Story of Thalidomide and Destination Disaster: From the Tri-Motor to the DC10. She later served as a trustee of Index on Censorship for many years. In 1980 David Potter founded Psion, using money he had made from a scheme investing in the manufacture of duvets, tapping into the British appetite for a more continental lifestyle during the package holiday boom. David located a duvet factory in the north of England and interviewed workers in the local pubs to find out everything about the company before investing in the firm. Psion was one of the early leaders in developing software for the fast-growing home computer industry, particularly Sir Clive Sinclair’s ZX Spectrum, writing the popular software package Flight Simulation and marketing and distributing the Hungry Horace series of arcade game clones. From 1984 Psion pioneered the management of personal information by inventing the Organiser, the world’s first mass-produced handheld computers for personal use. His handheld computers, particularly the Psion Series 3, were synonymous with the early 1990s and went on to sell in their millions. In 1998, David led the creation of the Symbian operating system partnership with mobile phone manufacturers Nokia, Ericsson, Motorola and Matsushita. One of Elaine’s sisters, the New York art historian and critic RoseLee Goldberg, said on many occasions that “David always described the future”.  Elaine said, “He wasn’t a crystal ball gazer, he just had a very good sense of what might be coming down the road.” He was someone who could make things happen too. His half-brother from his mother’s second marriage, Colly Myers, once said, “The most useful thing about David is he always believed something was possible. If David said it could be done, it would be.” David was awarded the CBE, in 1997, for services to the manufacturing industry and in 2001 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineers. Between 2003 and 2009, David served as a non-Executive Director to the Bank of England. In my many discussions with him over a period of years, he regularly lambasted the ability of successive British governments to support innovation. But entrepreneurship was not his only passion. In 1999, when Psion’s stock was riding high before the dotcom bubble burst, he sold a chunk and established with Elaine an eponymous foundation to encourage a stronger and fairer society. In the 27 years since, the foundation has granted more than £23 million to registered charities in the UK and abroad. The focus of the foundation is on education and civil society and it provided grants contributing to “economic development and well-being in a plural, rational and tolerant society”. Index on Censorship was one of the many charities the foundation has supported over the years, alongside Amnesty International, the Bureau of Investigative Journalism, Liberty and Human Rights Watch. He was passionate about education, serving on the 1997 National Committee of Inquiry into Higher Education (the Dearing Committee) and was a board member of the Higher Education Funding Council for England. He served as a visiting, honorary fellow and governor for a wide range of higher educational establishments. From 1999 to 2003 also served as a member of the Council for Science and Technology reporting to Tony Blair’s Cabinet. David maintained strong connections with his native South Africa, spending long periods in the country every year and also hosting Nelson Mandela at his home in London after the South African president’s release from prison. The Potter family home in South Africa was Nieuwe Sion, a working fruit farm in Simondium near Paarl that huddled below the Western Cape’s mountains. The name’s similarity to his company name Psion was immensely amusing to David. In 2015, David and Elaine took the philanthropic decision to hand over ownership of the farm to its 30-strong workforce to develop as a luxury retreat and working fruit farm. Speaking to the press at the time, Fielies du Toit, the farm’s manager, said, “The Potter’s vision of empowering their workers moves beyond the payment of living wages and the creation of a safe and worker friendly production environment. Their ultimate goal is to help workers and their families, especially their children, become less dependent on the farm for their financial wellbeing, by giving them access to the mainstream economy.” David’s other passion was his family. David and Elaine had three sons. In the days before founding Psion, he did much of the childcare due to the flexibility of his academic life compared to the intense shift-based work Elaine was doing at the Sunday Times. “Family was always very important to him,” Elaine told me a few years ago. “If you look at his Who’s Who entry, his interests include his family, and that’s a true reflection of him.” David Potter had a brilliant mind and was equally at ease talking to business leaders as young children, scientists and world leaders. His success in business was matched by the philanthropy he demonstrated in later years. Index on Censorship is grateful for his and Elaine’s support. He will be much missed. READ MORE

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