Farms and Frontlines

Blessed are the Activists with Dr. Michael Cangemi

1 h 0 min · 15. juni 2026
episode Blessed are the Activists with Dr. Michael Cangemi cover

Beskrivelse

After the CIA-backed coup that transformed Guatemala, what happened to the people left behind? Historian Dr. Michael Cangemi joins Farms & Frontlines to explore activism, faith, indigenous self-determination, and the remarkable story of Father Greg and the community of San Lucas Tolimán. This is a story not just about Cold War intervention, but about what ordinary people do when confronted with injustice. Follow our newsletter! [farmsandfrontlines.aubstack.com] Buy "Blessed are the Activists" [https://www.booksamillion.com/p/Blessed-Activists/Michael-J-Cangemi/9780817361266].

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Alle episoder

40 episoder

episode Guatemala: From Postal Service to Coup d'etat cover

Guatemala: From Postal Service to Coup d'etat

In 1901, the Guatemalan government hired the United Fruit Company to deliver its mail. It seemed like a practical arrangement — a cash-strapped government, a well-organized American company with logistics infrastructure already in place across the Caribbean. Attached to the contract were land grants. Small parcels, at first. By 1950, United Fruit owned 42% of all Guatemalan land. 85% of it sat uncultivated. In this episode, Max and Jess trace how a postal contract became the foundation of an economic empire — and how that empire, when threatened by a democratic land reform law, triggered the CIA's first successful coup d'état. We cover the concession system that built El Pulpo, the October Revolution that briefly interrupted it, Jacobo Árbenz and Decree 900, Edward Bernays and the manufacture of a Cold War emergency, and Operation PB Success — the covert operation that reversed it all in a matter of days. We also follow the thread forward. From Bananagate to a 2024 federal jury finding Chiquita Brands liable for funding a paramilitary death squad in Colombia, the structural logic that organized United Fruit's operations in Central America didn't disappear when the Marines went home. It traveled. The Banana Wars officially ended in 1934. Guatemala shows what that actually meant. Farms and Frontlines is supported by our newsletter at farmsandfrontlines.substack.com [farmsandfrontlines.substack.com] — sources, photos, maps, and more for every episode.

25. maj 202639 min
episode Nicaragua: The Man Who Said No to Empire cover

Nicaragua: The Man Who Said No to Empire

In 1927, every faction in Nicaragua agreed to peace on American terms. Every faction except one. Augusto César Sandino returned to the mountains of Las Segovias and spent the next seven years proving that the United States Marine Corps could not make him come down. This episode, Max and Jessica trace how Nicaragua — a country whose major crop was coffee, not bananas — got pulled into the orbit of American empire anyway. From Cornelius Vanderbilt's transit corridor to the Bryan-Chamorro Treaty, from the Marines' failed aerial bombardment campaign to the journalist who found Sandino when the military couldn't, Nicaragua is the story of what happens when the system meets someone who simply refuses to cooperate with it. And when Sandino finally did come down from the mountains? The man who killed him became Nicaragua's dictator for twenty years. The revolution that ended his dynasty named itself after the man he murdered. Also: the banana that everyone ate before 1950 was called Big Mike, and it's gone forever. It's all connected. Sign up for our newsletter! [farmsandfrontlines.substack.com]

11. maj 202638 min
episode Hispaniola: Next Exit - Unknown cover

Hispaniola: Next Exit - Unknown

One island. Two occupations. One Senate committee that looked at what the United States military had been doing in the Caribbean — and then filed the paperwork and moved on. In this episode, we're in Haiti and the Dominican Republic. The Marines landed in Haiti in 1915. The Dominican Republic had already been under U.S. financial administration since 1907. By 1916, the United States was running military occupations of both countries simultaneously, using the same personnel, the same institutional structures, and the same justificatory language: order, stability, protection of American interests. What it lacked was an exit plan. We follow the money that arrived before the Marines, the forced labor system that turned a Haitian community tradition into a counterinsurgency tool, the resistance fighter who became a martyr when the photograph meant to end his movement made him immortal, and the 1921 Senate hearings that produced 1,800 pages of sworn testimony about what the occupations actually looked like — and changed almost nothing. Cuba had a constitutional clause. Panama had a canal zone. Honduras had a concession system. Haiti and the Dominican Republic had the occupations themselves. And when the occupations ended, they left behind the tools of indirect control. Next exit: Nicaragua. For full source citations, a written recap, and everything else from the Banana Wars series, visit us at farmsandfrontlines.substack.com [https://farmsandfrontlines.substack.com]

27. apr. 202643 min
episode Honduras: The Uncrowned Kingdom cover

Honduras: The Uncrowned Kingdom

In 1904, a writer on the run from embezzlement charges coined a phrase that would outlast every government he was describing. This week, Max and Jess dig into Honduras, the country O. Henry was watching when he coined the term "Banana Republic". The story of how three American fruit companies turned a nation's north coast into a private empire: buying land with railroad promises, installing presidents with mercenary armies, and writing internal memos about how keeping the country unstable was good for business. We cover the formation of the United Fruit Company, the wildly improbable coup of 1911 (a Russian-born banana trader, a mercenary named Lee Christmas, and a gangster named Machine Gun Maloney), what "dollar diplomacy" actually looked like on the ground, and why Honduras had more railroad track per capita than almost any country in Central America, with none of it connecting to the capital. We also end somewhere surprising: 1954, when 100,000 banana workers shut it all down. Sign up for our newsletter! [farmsandfrontlines.substack.com] Get recaps, photos, sources, and additional fun facts relating to our latest episodes. For instance, did you know Tulane University Presidents reside in Sam the Banana Man's old mansion?

13. apr. 202652 min