The tragedy in Caracas is not merely a disaster; it is the culmination of decades of mismanagement, corruption, and intellectual decay. British experts rightly warn that this marks Venezuela’s darkest hour since the founding of the modern state. But let us not be naive: this is not an accident of geography or a quirk of fate.
It is a verdict on a failed ideology, a bankrupt system, and a people betrayed by their own leaders. We have seen this before. The fall of Rome was not a single event but a series of blows, each one more devastating than the last.
Venezuela’s descent into chaos mirrors the decline of great civilisations: the hollowing out of institutions, the weaponisation of poverty, the flight of the educated classes. The current crisis is the logical endpoint of a regime that traded oil wealth for authoritarian control, that swapped democracy for demagoguery. The international community wrings its hands, but the rot was visible for years.
Where were the warnings? Where was the decisive action? The answer is uncomfortable: we were too busy with our own affairs, too distracted by our own decadence.
Caracas is a warning to the West. If we continue to ignore the lessons of history, if we continue to pamper our elites and neglect our foundations, we will follow suit. The parallels to the late Victorian era are striking: an age of unparalleled prosperity masking deep social fissures, a ruling class divorced from reality, a populace anaesthetised by bread and circuses.
Venezuela’s collapse is a tragedy, but it is also a mirror. Let us look and see our own reflection before it is too late.









