well, have the same thing but from the right:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7pDAxKrSvPQMakes the same point near the end about the Guaido rallies being populated by very white people well-dressed with cellphones, rather than the starving masses that you'd assume from the media. The different racial profile of the two parties seems to be a thing that commentators on both the right and left are noticing. The pro-Guaido politicians are very white people in a very non-white nation.
It's the elite who want Guaido. They'll send all your oil to Texas and all your money to Miami. That's the plan, basically. They want the good old days back, when about 5% of the Venezuelan population are reaping about 95% of the oil money, who all have holiday homes in Florida and send their kids to ivy-league colleges in the USA.
Sure Maduro sucks. Maybe he's Stalin. But, that doesn't mean you nod and say "Maybe Mr Hitler over here would do a better job". The plan actually is that they starve you down with sanctions until you're willing to accept the blatant oil-company lackeys taking over the country with open arms.
EDIT: Actually, the core problem probably comes down to the oil industry, and virtually every other difference of policy is meaningless before that:
https://www.forbes.com/sites/rrapier/2019/01/29/charting-the-decline-of-venezuelas-oil-industry/#67dd5cce4ecdGuaido's plan is to return to past policies of bringing in foreign companies to pump the oil. i'll just note that in the good old days, oil companies paid only 1% of the value of oil in royalties to Venezuela, and oil is a capital-intensive industry, so creates almost no jobs:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/3732224.stmBBC: Venezuela has announced that it is increasing the royalties paid by foreign oil companies from 1% of the sale price to 16.6%.
Given that basically before Chavez foreign oil companies paid nearly
zero percent of the oil-revenue as taxes, then the decline in revenues can't really be blamed on falls in oil price/oil production. It is in fact down to the sanctions mostly.
Here's the general pattern of oil-rich nations:
https://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/02/13/avoiding-the-curse-of-the-oil-rich-nations/... which pretty much describes Venezuela even before the socialists had anything to do with it. Back when oil companies paid a whopping 1% of the value of the oil to the nation that owned the oil.