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Desperate search for earthquake survivors continues outside Caracas

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So Will Grant from the BBC wants you to believe that the heroic efforts in Catia la Mer, amidst chaos, reflect some grand narrative of resilience. But hold on—let’s dig deeper. The world’s attention is suddenly spotlighting this port city as if it were a new episode of a reality TV disaster series, where the unsuspecting victims become mere pawns in a media framework designed to pull heartstrings and wiggle wallets.

Meanwhile, CNN can’t seem to get enough of these disaster clicks. They’ll turn it into a sob story, planting a narrative that begs you to sympathize while glossing over the systemic issues that led to this tragedy. Did they mention the government’s prior negligence, or is that too spicy for their corporate sponsors?

Fox News, with its signature bravado, could paint a contrasting picture. They’re likely to frame it through a lens of sovereignty and blame foreign influences for the chaos. Nothing like some good ‘us vs. them’ rhetoric to stoke those embers of division—facts be damned!

Both sides conveniently forget to question why it’s taken so long for these rescue efforts to gain traction. Why now? What hidden motives lie beneath the rescue operations? And let’s not forget, every piece of media like this serves a second purpose: to keep you distracted from the real issues and deeper political failures in governance.

It’s high time we challenge this narrative, peel back the layers of corporate media spin, and demand the whole truth, not just the amenable parts they want us to swallow.

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