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- From: harelb@math.cornell.edu (misc.activism.progressive co-moderator)
- Subject: POLITICAL DISSENT: Was Nicaragua More Democratic than the U.S.?
- Message-ID: <1992Nov18.105959.19480@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
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- Date: Wed, 18 Nov 1992 10:59:59 GMT
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-
- POLITICAL DISSENT: Was Nicaragua More Democratic than the U.S.?
-
- [From:
- ========================================================
- I s N i c a r a g u a M o r e D e m o c r a t i c
- ========================================================
- T h a n t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s ?
- ========================================================
- By Michael Parenti (*)
-
- [From: Covert Action Information Bulletin, Number 26, Summer 1986]]
-
-
- =================================
- P o l i t i c a l D i s s e n t
- =================================
-
- There is the more general question of Freedom of communication for
- dissenting ideas. _La Prensa_ is not the only opposition voice in
- Nicaragua. About half of the radio and television stations in the
- country are privately owned and most of these give the government a
- daily ideological pounding that makes National Public Radio look like
- the tepid establishment mouthpiece it is. The various political
- parties also produced their own newspapers during the campaign. There
- is a war going on in Nicaragua. The country is encircled by hostile
- forces, has endured invasions on both of its borders and has suffered
- much loss of life and destruction of property. Yet the censorship
-
- --> [Use GET with WHO-WERE CONTRAS for a documented account of ]
- [the contras practices, as well as origins and makeup. --HB]
-
- imposed is no worse and probably less restrictive than what the U.S.
- government imposed during World War II, and Managua's treatment of
-
- [in fact compares very favorably to U.S. wartime censorship,
- as documented in several installments in this series --HB]
-
- dissenters and collaborators has been far more tolerant and liberal
- than the treatment accorded Tory sympathizers during and immediately
- after the American revolution or dissenters who received long prison
- terms during World War I.
-
- In the United States, dissenting views that go beyond the mainstream.
- or even much left of center, are rarely allowed time or space in the
- major media, but are consigned to small-circulation magazines that
- teeter on the edge of insolvency. In short, there is a greater
- plurality of ideas, ideologies, and debate in Nicaragua than in the
- United States. On this score Nicaragua is a more open, more
- pluralistic society. It may not always remain so however. Subject to
- enough threat and siege, assault and murder, the Nicaraguans will
- start tightening up, choosing security over dissent, survival over
- pluralism. Indeed, it is miraculous that they haven't already done so.
- The signs are there; President Daniel Ortega has said: "In the hardest
- moments we have to convert the defeats into more ideological unity,
- more political unity ... [and] more organization." (_Miami Herald_,
- August 4, 1985).
-
- If the U.S. Government were really interested in encouraging
- pluralistic dissent in Nicaragua it would pursue a policy quite the
- opposite of the one now in the saddle, offering Managua friendship and
- support and the hope for peaceful independence and security. Democracy
- is a delicate flower that does not do well when repeatedly stomped
- upon.
-
- =================================
- R e l i g i o u s F r e e d o m
- =================================
-
- The Reagan administration has charged that there is religious
- persecution in Nicaragua. But the Catholic church is alive and well.
- Elements of its clergy and laity can be found playing prominent roles
- on both sides within Nicaragua, struggling hard to build -- or destroy
-
- [Parenti could have mentioned Father Ernesto Cardenal, who
- served in the Sandinista government --HB]
-
- -- the revolution. Religious practice is not interfered with. The Rev.
- Miguel Gray, a Nicaraguan Baptist minister, hailed the religious
- freedom enjoyed in that country and pointed to the building of 19
- additional churches since 1979 in a desperately poor country where not
- too many buildings of any kind are going up.
-
- --> [Use GET with FSLN NICAJEWS for a debunking of charges]
-
- The level of religious tolerance in the United States today is as good
- as might be found anywhere. But in recent years the disturbing
- intolerance manifested by such groups as the Moral Majority, and the
- President's open association with the religious Right, including his
- announcement that "ours is a Christian nation," might cause us to give
- more attention to the question of religious tolerance here at home.
-
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- --> [Send the 1-line message GET FAIRNESS NICA-USA ACTIV-L to]
- [LISTSERV@MIZZOU1.BITNET for a copy of this file. ]
-
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- [listing with brief descriptions of other files available]
-
- [To get a file named FILE NAME from the archiver (files are ]
- [two words separated by a space), send the 1-line message: ]
-
- --> GET FILE NAME ACTIV-L
-
- to: LISTSERV@MIZZOU1.BITNET [or: LISTSERV@MIZZOU1.MISSOURI.EDU]
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