Trump stuns reporters by making the insane claim that Venezuela "took all of our oil" as he gears up for his illegal war of aggression. President Donald Trump just said the quiet part very loudly. In a rambling interview today, Trump dismissed U.S. actions toward Venezuela as "just a blockade" before launching into a grievance-filled rant that sounded less like foreign policy and more like a hostile corporate takeover pitch. According to Trump, Venezuela "took all of our oil," "threw our companies out," and now - in his words - "we want it back." Yes. He actually said that. Trump claimed Venezuela "illegally took" American oil rights because a prior president "wasn't watching," framing a sovereign nation's decision to nationalize its own resources as if it were a burglary at Mar-a-Lago. Apparently, when another country controls its own land, Trump considers that theft. This wasn't subtle. It wasn't diplomatic. And it definitely wasn't accidental. Trump openly suggested that U.S. sanctions and blockades are about reclaiming oil and land - not democracy, not human rights, not freedom - but raw economic power. For decades, U.S. officials have insisted that interventions abroad are motivated by noble ideals. Trump just bulldozed the script and blurted out the colonial logic underneath. "We want it back," he repeated, as though Venezuela is a delinquent tenant and the United States is the landlord. That framing is stunning - and revealing. Venezuela didn't "take" U.S. oil. It reclaimed control over its own natural resources, something international law allows sovereign nations to do. But Trump, ever the real-estate mogul, seems to believe countries are just properties that should stay profitable for American corporations indefinitely. Even more alarming is Trump's casual reference to a "blockade," a term that usually signals acts of war under international law. Trump waved it off like a minor inconvenience, while making clear that economic punishment is simply leverage to force Venezuela into submission. This is the same worldview that treats foreign policy as a protection racket: comply, or we squeeze you until you do. Trump didn't expose a plan. He exposed a mindset - one where U.S. power exists to extract, reclaim, and dominate, and where the sovereignty of other nations is negotiable if there's oil involved. For years, critics warned that Trump's foreign policy was transactional, crude, and dangerous. Today, he confirmed it himself. No euphemisms. No dog whistles. Just a president saying, out loud, that America wants another country's oil - and thinks it's entitled to take it back.