Farms and Frontlines
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]
39 episodios
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