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In the coming year, our solidarity with Venezuela must be as steadfast as our solidarity with Palestine.
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Dear John,
As the year comes to a close, I’ve been reflecting deeply on why working with the peace movement matters to me. Not just as a CODEPINK organizer, but as a Venezuelan American with family, history, and love tied to a country that has been under siege for far too long.
We’re taught that war only begins when bombs fall and armies invade. Most people in the United States oppose a military war on Venezuela. But blockades, sanctions, and economic strangulation are also acts of war. They target entire populations; restrict access to food, medicine, fuel, and basic infrastructure; and deliberately weaponize hunger, health, and survival itself. It’s collective punishment.
The consequences of sanctions aren't abstract. We see horrific images: empty shelves, malnourished children, overwhelmed hospitals, people scavenging for food. These scenes echo those coming out of Gaza, where siege and starvation have been normalized as weapons of war. None of this is inevitable. It is the result of policy choices that can be easily avoided.
I want to be honest with you: this is personal.
<[link removed]>In Venezuela, my brother receives support through a public social program that helps people with disabilities live with dignity. In many countries, this support would be prohibitively expensive or simply out of reach without money or insurance.
Similarly, my aunt is almost 100 years old. Since the Bolivarian Revolution, she’s received healthcare without bills, debt, or the fear of having to choose between medicine and food. Just a few decades ago, that kind of care simply didn’t exist.
That support still exists today, but U.S sanctions have placed an enormous strain on systems that once functioned with far more stability. Families now rely on creativity, community, and resilience to fill the gaps where resources have been constrained.
At CODEPINK, we’ve been listening to these families, amplifying their voices, and challenging policies that deepen hardship rather than support peace and well-being. We organize delegations, educate the public, and push back against narratives that reduce real people to political abstractions. This work matters because behind every policy decision are families like mine, doing everything they can to care for one another under increasingly difficult conditions.
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I don’t share this to romanticize Venezuela. I won’t pretend everything is perfect — it isn’t. But it’s not hard to imagine why billionaires, corporations, and centers of power don’t want policies like these to succeed. A system that prioritizes care over profit is dangerous…to them.
In Venezuela, there are comunas: organized communities producing food collectively, deciding together how to distribute resources, building local power where the state and market have failed elsewhere. There are leaders like Anacaona from the El Panal Comuna — fierce, clear, unapologetic — showing us what popular power looks like when communities organize to defend their dignity.
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There are people like Alejandra LapreafromFeria Conuquera, who works the land and helps feed her community, and who said something I haven’t been able to shake:
“From hunger they can see us furious, but never on our knees.”
That sentence carries the weight of resistance. It tells the truth sanctions try to erase: collective dignity is more powerful than any weapon.
<[link removed]>There are families like Yara’s, where nothing is thrown away. Her mother repurposed a damaged dishwasher by installing light bulbs inside. “When we have a lot of mangoes,” she told me, “I slice them and put them in here for a few hours. It’s my own food dehydrator.” This is the kind of creativity people rely on to survive under sanctions because resilience has become necessary.
<[link removed]>Women with disabilities are among those hit hardest by sanctions, yet Heroínas sin Barrera remain on the front lines defending Venezuela’s right to self-determination. They organize, mobilize, and speak out — not despite their disabilities, but with clarity born from lived experience. They know exactly what is at stake when social programs are strangled and resources are cut off.
<[link removed]>Through Misión Robinson, adults are learning to read, write, and do basic math, many of them for the first time in their lives. Venezuela succeeded in eradicating illiteracy through this program, opening doors that had been closed for generations.
The day I went to meet them, walking through the countryside, I saw a snake and instinctively froze. One of the campesinos laughed gently and said something that stayed with me: “Don’t be afraid of snakes. They usually move away if you give them space. Be afraid of the systems that keep people ignorant and silent.”
And then there are the moments that haunt me.
<[link removed]>Two years ago, I met a fisherman on the coast, Diego Castillo, who told me how U.S. sanctions had destroyed his livelihood through fuel shortages and broken supply chains. I still think about him — whether he’s afraid to go out to sea now, as Venezuelan boats are turned into military targets, and whether that fear has already forced him to abandon the work that sustained his family for generations.
<[link removed]>I think of the mothers and women organizers who are expected to be fearless in public, even when they lie awake at night worrying about how to protect their families, their communities, and their future.
These are the human costs of U.S. policy. Not abstractions. Not talking points. Lives.
Next year, CODEPINK’s work on Venezuela will be even more critical. Military escalation, misinformation, and economic warfare aren’t slowing down, and neither can we. We need to keep organizing, educating, sending delegations, challenging war narratives, and standing in principled solidarity with the Venezuelan people.
That’s why I’m asking you today to donate if you can.
<[link removed]>Please give today — every action counts! <[link removed]>
Your support makes it possible for CODEPINK to do the work others won’t: to tell the truth when it’s inconvenient, to stand with people instead of power, and to refuse the logic that says some lives are expendable in the name of profit. We don’t do this work because Venezuela is perfect. We do it because people deserve sovereignty, dignity, and the right to imagine a different future.
Thank you for being part of this struggle — with your heart, your voice, and your support.
With deep gratitude and determination,
Michelle
<[link removed]>P.S. One small way to show your opposition to sanctions and war: grab our new Peace with Venezuela t-shirts. <[link removed]>
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