Tag Archives: Nicaragua

America’s Role In A Darkening Age

By Breaking News

United States map SC America’s Role in a Darkening Age

When, in the 1950s, Nikita Khrushchev said, “We will bury you,” and, “Your children will live under communism,” Eisenhower’s America scoffed.

By 1980, however, the tide did indeed seem to be with the East.

America had suffered a decade of defeats. Southeast Asia had fallen. The ayatollah had seized power in Iran. Moscow had occupied Afghanistan. Cuban troops were in Ethiopia and Angola. Grenada and Nicaragua had fallen to the Soviet bloc. Eurocommunism was all the rage on the continent.

Just a decade later, the world turned upside-down.

The Berlin Wall fell. Eastern Europe was suddenly free. The Soviet Union disintegrated. China abandoned Maoism for state capitalism.

Read More at takimag.com . By Patrick J. Buchanan.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

Absent but omnipresent, Chavez a powerful symbol

Evita Peron. Che Guevara … and now, Hugo Chavez?

While Venezuela‘s sick president recuperates from surgery in Cuba, in Venezuela he is alive and well — at least in spirit.

There he is gazing from huge murals lining the streets of Caracas, on T-shirts sported by his followers, on television booming “I am a nation!”

The cult of personality that Chavez long nurtured has been flourishing like never before as he confronts an increasingly difficult struggle against the mysterious cancer that afflicts him.

Leftover campaign posters from his last election in October still hang from windows and above doorways in the slums, while his supporters’ devotion has intensified into a fervor that borders on deification.

One woman at a pro-government demonstration on Wednesday held a portrait photo of Chavez next to an image of Jesus. New murals showing only the president’s eyes have appeared on city walls along with a new slogan, “I am Chavez.”

The iconic eyes-only design sends a message that he is always watching and still with his adoring constituents. Many credit him with easing their poverty and expanding public services. To them, it does not matter that Venezuela suffers from 20 percent inflation, that the oil-producing nation is often short on cooking oil and sugar, that it has one of the world’s highest murder rates, that the president will not divulge the details of his cancer.

“I am Chavez!” his supporters yell at the rallies in his honor. “We’re all Chavez!” the crowds shout in unison.

Filling the void of Chavez’s 6-week absence following a fourth surgery in Cuba, the government has been churning out a steady stream of emotional images, slogans and Chavez sound bites that appear poised to solidify Chavez’s legacy as a messianic savior of the poor.

In newspapers, the government has been running one ad showing a photo of the president superimposed on a mosaic of smiling faces of Venezuelans: Chavez men, Chavez women and Chavez children of all ages.

Juan Pablo Lupi, a Latin American literature scholar, sees parallels with the way Evita Peron became an enduring political symbol in Argentina, and the way “Che” became a revolutionary icon after his death. In the case of Chavez, he said, “this has been very well-staged, all this process of myth-making and appealing to the feelings and religious sentiment of the people. This is something that is quasi-religious.”

Lupi, a Venezuelan associate professor at the University of California Santa Barbara, said he expects Chavismo to go on without Chavez. “The myth is already there, and all this has been very, very well-crafted.”

The connections between Chavez and Jesus are surfacing more often, having begun with Chavez himself praying to God on television for more time, and repeatedly kissing a crucifix.

In one television spot, a beaming Chavez hugs children while a singer croons: “Chavez is pure and noble love.” And for block after block in downtown Caracas, lampposts are festooned with new banners showing a smiling, healthy Chavez with the words “We love you!”

Daisy Castillo, who studies law at a free university established by Chavez, joined Wednesday’s demonstration, and says she, like many other Chavistas, is praying for the president.

“”There has never before been a president like our Comandante Chavez,” she said.

There is plenty of precedent, however, for the ubiquitous presidential imagery elsewhere, with leaders such as Saddam Hussein in Iraq, Daniel Ortega in Nicaragua, the late Kim Jong Il in North Korea — not to mention Mao Zedong and Josef Stalin.

In Venezuela, the relentless omnipresence of a missing leader is a way to reinforce his party, said Juan Carlos Bertorelli, creative director at a marketing company in Caracas that focuses on branding.

“Now that he’s not here physically or in voice at this time, the people who are maintaining the structure of his party,” he said, “are trying to maintain a presence that legitimizes them.”

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Associated Press photographer Fernando Llano contributed to this report.

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Ian James on Twitter: http://twitter.com/ianjamesap

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Nicaragua sentences 18 Mexicans to 30 years

A Nicaraguan judge has sentenced 18 Mexicans who posed as a television crew to 30 years in prison for drug trafficking and money laundering stemming from $9.2 million found in their news vans.

Judge Edgard Altamirano says the 17 men and one woman deserve the harshest penalty possible under the Central American nation’s law. Altamirano said Friday’s sentencing that each of those convicted must also pay a $9.2 million fine.

The 18 fake journalists were arrested in August near Nicaragua‘s northern border with Honduras in six vans bearing logos like those used by Mexican television giant Televisa. Gym bags stuffed with bundles of cash were found stashed in compartments inside the vehicles.

Televisa says none of the 18 worked for it and the vans aren’t part of the company’s fleet.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Fed: 12 indicted in Southeast sex trafficking case

Federal authorities say they have uncovered an illegal sex trafficking network that forced women into prostitution and traded them between cities in Georgia, Florida and the Carolinas.

U.S. Attorney Edward Tarver of Georgia‘s Southern District announced Thursday that 12 people have been indicted on sex-trafficking charges in connection with the case.

Authorities say 11 young women from Mexico and Nicaragua were rescued from lives of forced prostitution. They say the women, most in their 20s, were brought to the United States illegally on false promises of prosperity.

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Director John Morton says the indicted suspects acted as pimps who traded the women between states. He says the women were forced to have sex with up to 30 men every day.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News