Nicaragua - A Nation's Right To Survive
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description
John Pilger's 1983 film about the small nation of Nicaragua and its right to survive investigates the corruption in Central America. In 1979, the Sandinistas won a popular revolution in Nicaragua, putting an end to decades of the corrupt US-backed Somosa dictatorship. They based their reformist ideology on that of the English Co-operative Movement, but proved too 'radical' for the Reagan administration. In this film, Pilger describes the achievements of the Sandinistas and their "threat of a good example".
OUR COMMENTS
Right now Latin America has many leftist governments. But things weren't always this way. This film overviews the U.S. involvement in Latin America and discusses the Ronald Reagan supported Samosa regime which was ultimately overthrown by populist Sandinistas who later established democratic elections with the wide support of the people. The Sandanista government which was in power during the making of this film faced a US and England bent on pressuring regime change. I find this documentary, as well as others regarding US involvement in Latin America, significant because they show that US governmental interests in the past were not always with the benefit of the people in mind. The chaos now engulfing the Middle East was once in Latin America.
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