• Best of Web
  • Home
  • Classics
  • Blog
  • Radio
  • Heroes
  • Books
  • Quotes
  • Talks
  • News
  • About
Menu

Lawrence W. Reed

  • Best of Web
  • Home
  • Classics
  • Blog
  • Radio
  • Heroes
  • Books
  • Quotes
  • Talks
  • News
  • About

Daniel Ortega, Evil Dictator

June 11, 2021

His entire adult life is a story of power lust—of fighting for power, abusing it when he got it, being ousted when it made him over-confident, then fighting to regain it, and now doing his best to keep it for life.

Read More

Nicaragua’s New Somoza

By Lawrence W. Reed

Half a century ago, a young Daniel Ortega pledged himself against dictatorship. As one of the founders of the Frente Sandinista de Liberación Nacional (Sandinista National Liberation Front or FSLN) in Nicaragua, he worked for the overthrow of the regime of Anastasio Somoza. When the Sandinistas took power, Ortega bullied the country as President from 1979 to 1990.

Earlier this month, and once again as Nicaragua’s President, Ortega proved himself every bit the tyrant Somoza ever was. In advance of November elections in which Ortega is seeking a fourth term, he arrested more than a dozen prominent members of opposition parties, including four who would likely have challenged him for the presidency. “The wave of arrests,” writes Wall Street Journal reporters José de Córdoba and Ismael López on June 15, is “seen by some analysts as among the worst crackdowns against civil society in Latin America in decades.”

The only people who might be surprised at these recent developments are the brain-dead. Ortega’s entire adult life is a story of power lust—of fighting for power, abusing it when he got it, being ousted when it made him over-confident, then fighting to regain it, and now doing his best to keep it for life. With his wife as vice-president since 2016, Daniel Ortega has crafted a family kleptocracy that Somoza himself would envy. To Nicaraguans, it must seem as though this corrupt and brutal oligarch has been around forever and intends to keep it so.

Ortega is a professional thug intoxicated by power. He possesses no known skills or talents beyond those of a stupid bully. His career is soaked in the blood and tears of the oppressed he once claimed to champion, though as a Marxist-Leninist in his early days, that “man of the people” stuff was only intended for the gullible. He is precisely the sort of creep that philosopher Eric Hoffer wrote about in his 1963 book, The Ordeal of Change:

When watching men of power in action it must be always kept in mind that, whether they know it or not, their main purpose is the elimination or neutralization of the independent individual--the independent voter, consumer, worker, owner, thinker--and that every device they employ aims at turning men into a manipulable animated instrument which is Aristotle's definition of a slave.

During Ortega’s first tenure as President (1979-1990), I visited Nicaragua five times and observed in person the chains that he and his Sandinista buddies were forging for the Nicaraguan people. At first, he and his comrades promised to bring pluralism, liberty and democratic values to the nation. But the mask began to fall early in Ortega’s rule. A leaked internal document of the FSLN made it clear that those promises were a “temporary expedient” designed to buy time and Western apathy while a totalitarian state allied with Cuba and the Soviet Union was put in place. The regime muzzled the press, confiscated private property, harassed the Catholic Church, and imprisoned dissenters.

I interviewed scores of citizens—in the capital of Managua and in nearby provinces and in refugee camps in neighboring Honduras. Over and over again, I heard stories of Ortega’s deceit and repression, as well as resentment for the undeserved, personal wealth he accumulated because of the power he wielded.

By the end of the 1980s, Ortega felt comfortable enough in power to stage an election. In spite of all the fraud and suppression his side deployed, he and his Sandinistas lost to Violeta Chamorro. For the next 16 years, Ortega schemed behind the scenes to regain power. In 2006, with 38 percent of the vote in an election of dubious integrity, he became President again. For the past 15 years, he has relentlessly worked to corrupt all branches of the Nicaraguan government to guarantee his continued hold on power.

After blocking both domestic and international poll watchers in 2011, Ortega “won” re-election to a second term. In 2016, he put his own wife on the ticket as vice-president, arranged to disqualify the main opposition party’s presidential candidate, and waltzed to another rigged re-election.

Now at 75, with still no productive, private-sector employment on his resume, this life-long political animal is jailing people to ensure his grip on power. He lives in luxury as he tramples on both the liberties and the livelihoods of the poor citizens of his beleaguered country.

If Nicaraguans had good reasons to oust Somoza in 1979—and in my belief, they did—then they have even more and better reasons to oust the criminal who oppresses them today.

For additional information, see:

Eric Hoffer on Power by Lawrence W. Reed

https://fee.org/articles/the-wisdom-of-eric-hoffer-part-ii/

Nicaragua Spirals Deeper Into Repression by Adriana Brasileiro

https://tinyurl.com/hbvh8nyt

← Utopian Communalism: One Flop After AnotherA Tale of Two Henrys (and Inflation Too) →

Recent “Best of Web”

Featured
Millions Gather to Express Total Ignorance
Oct 18, 2025
Millions Gather to Express Total Ignorance
Oct 18, 2025

“We're going to join our voices together and let the message ring loud and clear that we are uneducated rubes in desperate need of a middle-school social studies class,” said one man. Problem is, they DID have middle-school social studies, at great expense to the taxpayer, and still turned out to be rubes. Maybe there’s a connection??

Oct 18, 2025
Argentina's Economy Didn't Collapse; It Roared Back to Life
Sep 25, 2025
Argentina's Economy Didn't Collapse; It Roared Back to Life
Sep 25, 2025

Writes Dionysis Partsinevelos, “Experts warned that electing a chainsaw-wielding libertarian outsider as president would push the country over the edge. Instead, the unthinkable happened: Argentina’s economy started working again.”

Sep 25, 2025
The Downfall of the Roman Empire and the Future of American Democracy
Sep 18, 2025
The Downfall of the Roman Empire and the Future of American Democracy
Sep 18, 2025

Dr. George Maher asks, “For all the noise and the heat of today’s debates the important questions are: Do those who are running our system know what they are doing, and do they care?” 

Sep 18, 2025

Recent Quotes

Featured
Murphy on America
Feb 11, 2025
Murphy on America
Feb 11, 2025

“The true meaning of America, you ask? It’s in a Texas rodeo, in a policeman’s badge, in the sound of laughing children, in a political rally, in a newspaper. ... In all these things, and many more, you’ll find America. In all these things, you’ll find freedom. And freedom is what America means to the world. And to me” — Actor, poet, and the most decorated American of World War II, Audie Murphy.

Feb 11, 2025
Mill on Freedom
Feb 1, 2025
Mill on Freedom
Feb 1, 2025

“The only freedom which deserves the name is that of pursuing our own good in our own way, so long as we do not attempt to deprive others of theirs, or impede their efforts to obtain it. Each is the proper guardian of his own health, whether bodily, or mental and spiritual. Mankind are greater gainers by suffering each other to live as seems good to themselves than by compelling each to live as seems good to the rest.”

Feb 1, 2025
Best-Selling Japanese Novelist Eiji Yoshikawa on Do-Gooders
Mar 20, 2023
Best-Selling Japanese Novelist Eiji Yoshikawa on Do-Gooders
Mar 20, 2023

“There’s nothing more frightening than a half-baked do-gooder who knows nothing of the world but takes it upon himself to tell the world what’s good for it — from his book, Musashi.

Mar 20, 2023

Recent Blogs

Featured
The Velvet Glove and the Iron Fist
Oct 21, 2025
The Velvet Glove and the Iron Fist
Oct 21, 2025

Power rots the soul. Rare is the individual who becomes a better person for having possessed it.

Oct 21, 2025
A Better You, A Better World
Oct 20, 2025
A Better You, A Better World
Oct 20, 2025

In my mind, becoming a better person means striving to be a model in everything we do so that others will be inspired by our examples.

Oct 20, 2025
For the Love of Critters
Oct 18, 2025
For the Love of Critters
Oct 18, 2025

Few things anger me more than when an innocent animal is abused or neglected; such occasions make me wish I was a judge so I could throw the book at the guilty.

Oct 18, 2025