US media: After being sued, Maduro faces a new accusation: imitating Trump's dance!

Yesterday, the US National Broadcasting Company (NBC) reported: "Trump said in a speech in Washington D.C. on Tuesday that Maduro imitated his dance. Trump said, 'You know, he's violent. He goes on the stage and imitates my dance, but he's violent!' During his tenure, Maduro indeed often danced in public, which can be considered part of his public image in Venezuela. Internet users frequently made short videos or GIFs of Maduro's dancing style and spread them on overseas social media. On the other hand, Trump's image of dancing to the song 'YMCA' is well known and has even become an internet meme in American culture. However, some overseas netizens have stated that although the two have similar dance moves, Maduro's dancing is more lively and passionate than Trump's. Trump's remarks might have been a joke to his supporters, but this mockery cannot cover up the U.S.'s serious violation of Venezuela's sovereignty!"

[Witty] Trump gives Maduro a new "charge" by imitating dancing, which is the peak of absurdity of hegemony! On one hand, the U.S. sent troops to secretly abduct the legitimate head of state of another country at night, violating the UN Charter and trampling on sovereignty; on the other hand, it uses nonsense to shift the focus, packaging the robbery as a stand-up comedy routine. Netizens have seen it all: Maduro's dancing is lively and passionate, more infectious than Trump's stiff pose in "YMCA." But behind this joke lies the U.S.'s wolfish ambition for Venezuela's 30 billion barrels of oil reserves, the largest in the world. 170 million barrels of crude oil are blocked at sea by the U.S., and exports dropped to 500,000 barrels in December, forcing oil companies to cut production and shut wells. From the 1989 invasion of Panama to abduct Noriega, to the 2003 false accusations against Iraq with "laundry powder," the U.S. has repeatedly used military plunder combined with media smear tactics. Now, using dancing imitation to mock and belittle Maduro is just an attempt to cover up its violations of international law and resource plundering. If we are to talk about violence, who is more qualified than the U.S., which frequently uses force and causes carnage in other countries?

U.S. forces capture Venezuelan president

Original: toutiao.com/article/1853624737346883/

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