The return of Paul Duggan to the screen C5N It did not go unnoticed. In his first program, the host was isolated even among his own people: he was the only one who explicitly condemned Nicolas Madurowhile the rest of his panelists observed in silence, between discomfort and perplexity.

The television scene immediately moved to X. There, the Venezuelan journalist Carlos Monteroaligned with Chavismo, came out to cross it harshly: he denied that Maduro was “a bloody dictator” and accused Duggan of falling into a “trap,” justifying the regime’s drift as a reaction to an “unscrupulous” opposition.

Duggan responded with an uncomfortable synthesis for his own ecosystem: two simultaneous truths. First, that Maduro was a bloody dictator. Second, that capture driven by donald trump It violated norms of international law and sets a dangerous precedent in the region.

He joined the crossing Dario Gallowho provided an internal reading of the climate on the channel: “Duggan is back and takes several bodies out of the sharpest of his panel. All fighting Trump, except Duggan, who seems to have seen and know something that the rest have not.”

The episode exposed an increasingly visible crack within media progressivism: questioning Trump is an automatic reflex; condemning Maduro, still, a border that few dare to cross. Duggan did so, and he was alone.

by RN

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