May 01, 2005

Pure evil in Nicaragua

Marxist animals are taking over Nicaragua again. These odious scum, truly some of the foulest people on earth, have repeatedly been defeated at the Nicaraguan ballot box. But that is no obstacle for them. Now that the era of rifles and cassocks is over (thank you President Reagan and Cardinal Ratzinger!) their glistening new weapon for a coming communist takeover is: Left Wing Lawyers.

That's right. They are subverting Nicaragua's weak institutions, through its courts and its legislature to effectively take over the country in a way they never could at the ballot box. Aligned with some supposedly rightwing gangsters who are on the run from corruption charges, they and their hoodlum allies have manipulated the system to effectively let the man who repelled Ronald Reagan so badly he identified him a 'skunk' - the designer-sunglassed Daniel Ortega - take over the country. He's now free to join fidel's punk party with Hugo Chavez, Evo Morales, Schafik Handal and other foul things to destabilize our entire hemisphere. Even Ortega's brother is appalled. Back in the 1980s, we fought a bitter war, expending blood and treasure to keep fidel in his hole. Now, he's out and about, gulping down weak countries. This is pure evil on the rise.

Here are some photos of the ugly spectacle in Nicaragua and Oppenheimer has a good column here.

Posted by Mora at May 1, 2005 05:46 AM

Comments

It is truly disturbing to see an evil empire growing wild and unchallenged in our own backyard. All the inspiration comes from cagastro.

Posted by: CB at May 1, 2005 08:16 AM

Now that I remember, Daniel Ortega was investigated and convicted for being a sexual offender. Nice guy!

Posted by: CB at May 1, 2005 09:37 AM

Yeah, that pig. Isn't that gross? The pervert in it with the gangsters and the two of them dividing the spoils. That place needs a good invading. Ortega The Skunk ought to know better. But he so wants to be like Hugo Chavez and steal an election. That Oppenheimer interview with Nicaragua's poor beat-up president tells it all.

Posted by: A.M. Mora y Leon at May 1, 2005 09:59 AM

The Real Daniel Ortega and his lowly nature

The following article speaks for itself, showing the hell to which Ortega took his own stepdaughter. In the States, this skunk would end his days up in the slammer. And we all know what happens to children molesters in jail.

Nicaragua News Service
Published by the Nicaragua Network Education Fund
Volume 6, No. 10
March 2 - 8, 1998
by Donna Vukelich, Guillermo Perez Leiva, and Aynn Setright

Daniel Ortega charged with sexual abuse.


Daniel Ortega charged with sexual abuse.

Only two days after suffering a defeat in the Caribbean Coast
elections, the FSLN was hit broadside with public accusations by
Zoliamerica Ortega (now Narvaez), Daniel Ortega's stepdaughter, that
she had been physically, sexually and psychologically abused by the
FSLN leader since age 11. The charges were made in a letter to her
friends, published in the daily news summary "Bolsa de Noticias" on
March 3. Later that day, she held a press conference accompanied by
her estranged husband and former secretary general of the Foreign
Ministry under the FSLN, Alejandro Bendana and her aunt, Violeta
Murillo.

At that conference she stressed that her goal is to recover her
history, her identity as a woman, and to deal with and overcome her
past. She announced that she would now go by the last name of her
biological father, Narvaez. However, he said she has forgiven Ortega
and does not intend to take any legal action against him. She
emphasized her concern and love for her mother and siblings and
stressed the difficulties the family is going through.

Another press conference was held that day, this one called by Ortega
and his wife, Rosario Murillo. They were accompanied by all their
other children, except one son, as well as National Directorate
members Bayardo Arce and Monica Baltodano. Ortega spoke very briefly,
essentially turning the microphone over to Rosario. She denied the
charges, and then read a statement that was full of religious
allusions and references both to the pain the whole family feels and
the love they feel for Narvaez. Ortega was visibly shaken, and
religious allusions and references both to the pain the whole family
feels and many commentators noted that his face was similar to that
seen on February 26, 1990, if measurably less serene.

Three general camps have formed around this issue. One, voiced
primarily by men (of all political stripes), is that this is
essentially a family issue and as such should not be aired in public.
This view is generally accompanied by the opinion that not enough is
yet known to make any decisions or take any action. Interestingly,
the key Liberal deputies in the Assembly have publicly taken this
line.

The second is the line taken by the orthodox members of the FSLN.
They hold that Narvez's accusations are purely political and that
she has made them now in order to definitively discredit Daniel Ortega
before the FSLN's party Congress in May. Narvaez, who stressed
her party militance and spoke of "abuses of power," is the vice
president of the committee entrusted with hammering out a proposal for
the structural transformations and then presenting it to the Party
Congress in May. People in this group have called Narvaez a liar
and essentially give no credence whatsoever to her charges. FSLN
National Directorate member Monica Baltodano, speaking on La
Primerisima radio several nights running, essentially promoted the
line, popular among many in the FSLN grassroots, that Ortega is a kind
of untouchable leader. She was very harsh in her criticism of the
independent women's movement and attacked the movement for jumping to
the defense of any woman without first verifying charges.

The third position is that expressed by Nicaragua's independent
women's movement, particularly the Women's Network Against Domestic
Violence. Asked if they were supporting Narvaez, the group's coordinator
Violeta Delgado said that they were, as indeed they would any victim
of sexual abuse or violence. The movement has seized upon this
opportunity to underscore the massive and insidious nature of the
problem of sexual violence in Nicaragua and notes that, in many ways,
Narvaez's is a textbook case.

While she has been both criticized and questioned for waiting so long
to go public, the Network says this is extremely common and points to
fear and shame as two key reasons why women often do not speak up
immediately. They also say that it is not unusual for a woman to go
public with charges of sexual abuse when a younger sister is nearing
the age they were when the abuse began. As to the point of view that
this is a "family issue," the Network highlights the long struggle that
the Nicaraguan women's movement engaged in to see domestic violence
finally criminalized and taken out of an exclusively private sphere.

Many activists in the women's movement note as well that the venom
with which some at the grassroots level have attacked Narvaez is
due to the way that the FSLN has essentially set Ortega up as both
caudillo and patriarch--for many, the only moral touchstone left in
the party.

FSLN Central American Parliament deputy Xanthis Suarez has called for
Ortega to resign his post in the National Assembly and the party, and
FSLN National Assembly deputy and Baptist minister Miguel Angel Casco
urges a generalized reflection in Nicaraguan families. Nicaraguan
Center for Human Rights (CENIDH) president Vilma Nunez said, "as a
woman, as a Sandinista militant, as a Nicaraguan, I am hit hard, I
feel destroyed." She refers to this as a human rights case, citing
the Vienna agreements that make sexual aggression a human rights
violation, and said CENIDH will be looking into the case.

The Sandinista-affiliated radio station La Primerisima devoted most of
its "Without Fronters" show on March 5 to the case. The basic line, as
expounded by transport worker Julio Rodriguez is that Narvaez and
her associates are suspect because 1) they don't think Daniel Ortega
should continue to be Secretary General; 2) there were strange US
people present at the meeting, allegedly "specifically there to help
Zoliamerica in her crisis"--Rodriguez seized on this as "evidence of
foreign influence," that "could possibly be the CIA". [Narvaez is
completing a Master's program at Eastern Mennonite University in
Virginia and has said that her friends/colleagues there have been
crucial in supporting her, largely because they are wholly uninvolved
in politics here]. Rodriguez even dragged Sergio Ramirez into it.
This has long been the line of a certain group within the FSLN--if
anything goes wrong, blame any and everyone from the MRS. The bottom
line of what Rodriguez said is that Narvaez and friends are
politically opposed to Ortega's continued leadership of the FSLN--as
if this is not permitted within the confines of a normal political
party.

What has been said by many politicians from across the political
spectrum, including some FSLN members, is that Ortega is mortally
wounded in terms of ongoing and effective political participation in
Nicaragua. Coming on the heels of Barricada's closing and the
disastrous showing of the FSLN in the Coast elections, it has also
sent the FSLN reeling. Members of the FSLN Departmental Committee
for Managua, Henry Petrie and William Rodriguez, were removed from
their positions within the departmental party structure for not having
forewarned the party structure of the intended accusations. Both have
publicly supported Narvaez. (All news mediums 3/4/98 - 3/7/98)

Posted by: CB at May 1, 2005 08:01 PM

A stinking little pervert. And how he is usurping power in Nicaragua despite the fact that he belongs in jail. Somebody just shoot the puke.

Posted by: A.M. Mora y Leon at May 1, 2005 11:42 PM

Fidel's regime is going to fall just like the Soviet did. I am sure Cuba will quickly catch up with the economic development. Piece of advice from a former citizen of a former Soviet republic - grab & save Communist & Revolutionary memorabilia - it will cost $$$ after the regime falls.
regards, balozi

Posted by: balozi at May 4, 2005 01:54 AM


You have reached an old version of a post at BabaluBlog.com, probably because a search engine referred you or you followed an old link. If you'd like to view this post at its new home you can do so by clicking here and searching for the post on our new site. Tip: Take note of the date of this post and use our calendar feature to find it in its new home.