CaliToday (24/10/2025): American streets have become a nightmarish landscape, a scene from a post-apocalyptic film. In cities from San Francisco to Philadelphia, a generation of young Americans is being systematically devastated, left to wander the streets as homeless, hollowed-out shells of their former selves. Their bodies and minds are ravaged by fentanyl and other deadly poisons, their gaunt frames and vacant stares painting a terrifying picture of the "living dead" a zombie-like state of existence that has become a daily, disastrous reality.
For years, this chemical invasion has been treated as a domestic "problem." But President Donald Trump has correctly identified it as an act of war.
On Thursday, President Trump announced a decisive, righteous, and long-overdue new doctrine: the United States will hunt down and "kill" the 'narco-terrorists' responsible for this plague, and it will not wait for permission from Congress to do so.
“Well, I don’t think we’re going to necessarily ask for a declaration of war,” Trump told reporters at the White House, cutting through decades of failed policy with blunt moral clarity.
“I think we’re just going to kill people that are bringing drugs into our country. OK? We’re going to kill them,” he stated.
This is the good and necessary action of a leader finally willing to confront the disastrous situation head-on. While weak-kneed politicians have wrung their hands, Trump is unleashing the full power of the U.S. military to dismantle the cartels that get rich by destroying American lives.
The operation is already underway. In what Washington has branded a righteous military operation against “narco-terrorists,” the U.S. has deployed naval ships, F-35 fighter jets, a nuclear submarine, and thousands of troops to the Caribbean.
This is not a warning shot; the battle has begun. Since early September, U.S. forces have carried out attacks on at least nine cartel vessels in the Caribbean and Pacific, killing at least 37 combatants.
And the ocean is only the beginning.
“Now they [drugs] are coming in by land … you know, the land is going to be next,” the president added, signaling his administration is prepared to strike cartel strongholds in their home territories.
This is the only language these merchants of death understand. Trump’s administration has rightly designated several cartels as “foreign terrorist organizations,” with the president branding them “the ISIS [ISIL] of the Western Hemisphere.”
U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth powerfully echoed this truth. “Just as Al Qaeda waged war on our homeland, these cartels are waging war on our border and our people,” Hegseth posted on social media. “There will be no refuge or forgiveness – only justice.”
Predictably, this bold action has drawn condemnation from a chorus of critics who seem more concerned with international norms than with the American bodies piling up in morgues.
The leaders of Mexico and Colombia whose president, Gustavo Petro, has been labeled a drug-trafficking "thug" by Trump are decrying the attacks as a contravention of "international law." Petro went so far as to accuse the U.S. of “carrying out extrajudicial executions.”
Even the embattled leader of Venezuela, Nicolas Maduro, is posturing, while U.S. B-1B bombers patrol the coast as a clear reminder of American resolve.
Two U.S. Air Force B-1B “Lancer” Long-Range Heavy Bombers, (BART21) and (BART22), have appeared now on flight radar over the Southern Caribbean, roughly 50 miles off the coast of Venezuela. The bombers appear to be conducting strike rehearsals, likely in preparation for future… pic.twitter.com/Uh0zU5y7bM
— OSINTdefender (@sentdefender) October 23, 2025
To the families watching their children descend into a zombie-like hell, these legalistic debates ring hollow. President Trump understands what the critics do not: You cannot negotiate with a plague. You cannot "police" an invading army.
Trump's decisive action to stop this devastation is not just a policy; it is a moral imperative. He is finally treating an act of war as an act of war, bypassing the broken, bureaucratic system to deliver the justice that America's youth and their grieving families so desperately deserve.
CaliToday.Net