Posted by Ron Nehring at 10:53 pm on Dec 04, 2013 Comments Off on Socialism takes a hit in key Central American election
Communism may have been relegated to that “ash heap of history”
Ronald Reagan described in his 1982 address to the British
Parliament, but a new strain of “21st century socialism” as
envisioned by former Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez is on the
march in Central and South America.
Fortunately, that march came to a halt ten days ago with the
election of a new conservative President of Honduras.
For years, socialists south of our border have led a drive to
move Central and South America to the radical left. In 2004,
Venezuela under Hugo Chavez and Cuba under Fidel Castro founded the
Bolivarian Alliance for the Americas (ALBA) as a new socialist club
to serve as a counterweight to the United States in the region and
strengthen socialist regimes in the member states. In the 9
years since its founding, it has grown to 9 members, all with
socialist governments: Antigua/Barbuda, Bolivia, Cuba,
Dominica, Ecuador, Nicaragua, Saint Lucia, St. Vincent and the
Grenadines and Venezuela. In addition, the group has three
“observer” countries: Haiti, and the virulent anti-US regimes of
Iran and Syria.
In 2008, then-Honduran President Manuel Zelaya,… Read More