Daily Archives: August 11, 2021

2021-08-11: News Headlines

Peter Bolton (2021-08-11). The Media's Lies, and Lies by Omission, About Migration Out of Nicaragua. orinocotribune.com By Peter Bolton — Aug 8, 2021 | On July 29, an Associated Press (AP) article appeared online titled With turmoil at home, more Nicaraguans flee to the U.S. As is so often the case with media reports these days, the article starts off with a melodramatic anecdote that sets the tone and argumentative thrust for the rest of the piece. Emotionally manipulative rhetoric is, after all, more viscerally effective in pulling at the heart strings than facts and figures could ever hope to be. This particular article tells the tale of one Alan Reyes Picado. Picado, the AP tells us, is "one of the thousands of Nicaraguan…

Francisco Dominguez (2021-08-11). Nicaragua: The Right to Live in Peace. globalresearch.ca

Staff (2021-08-10). Nicaragua Congratulates Venezuela for PSUV Primaries. orinocotribune.com This Monday, August 9, the government of the Republic of Nicaragua congratulated the Venezuelan people, the President of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, Nicolás Maduro, and the authorities of the United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV) for holding the Open Primary Elections to choose the candidates who will represent this political organization in Venezuela's regional elections scheduled for November 21. | Last Sunday, August 8, the PSUV held its primaries, aimed at securing the best candidates for the upcoming regional elections. More than 5.5 million voters were mobilized for the democratic fiesta, and…

John Perry (2021-08-10). Sanctions May Impoverish Nicaraguans, But are Unlikely to Change Their Votes. counterpunch.org In 1985, when President Reagan declared Nicaragua "an unusual and extraordinary threat to the national security and foreign policy of the United States," his words were followed by a trade blockade, a ban on commercial flights and—most seriously of all—the financing of the "Contra" war, which led to 30,000 deaths. When, 33 years later, Donald

John Perry (2021-08-10). Sanctions May Impoverish Nicaraguans, But is Unlikely to Change Their Votes. counterpunch.org In 1985, when President Reagan declared Nicaragua "an unusual and extraordinary threat to the national security and foreign policy of the United States," his words were followed by a trade blockade, a ban on commercial flights and—most seriously of all—the financing of the "Contra" war, which led to 30,000 deaths. When, 33 years later, Donald

Latin America News Dispatch (2021-08-10). Senate Pushes New Sanctions on Nicaragua. latinorebels.com The law, called the RENACER Act (Reinforcing Nicaragua's Adherence to Conditions for Electoral Reform), would allow the Biden administration to impose targeted sanctions against "Nicaraguan officials who seek to derail the country's electoral process."

Linda Mannheim (2021-08-10). The Arrest of Dora María Téllez Marks a New Low for Nicaragua. thenation.com The Arrest of Dora María Téllez Marks a New Low for Nicaragua…

Staff (2021-08-10). CEO Pay Rose 1,322 Percent Over 42 Years, While Worker Pay Rose Only 18 Percent. truthout.org A new analysis released Tuesday by the Economic Policy Institute finds that CEO pay in the United States rose by a staggering 1,322% between 1978 and 2020 — a sharp contrast to the pay increase of the typical worker, which was just 18% during that same period. | In 2020, a year of pandemic and widespread economic dislocation, the top executives at the largest public firms in the U.S. were paid 351 times as much as the typical worker, with CEO pay measured by salary, bonuses, long-term…

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