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Ortega’s Citizenship Knife: How Nicaragua’s Dictator Erases Freedom

calendar_today March 31, 2026 · person Jonathan A.
Ortega’s Citizenship Knife: How Nicaragua’s Dictator Erases Freedom

When a government decides your life means nothing, they’ve basically declared war on your basic human dignity. Ortega’s latest legal move isn’t just another law — it’s a brutal punch aimed at crushing Nicaragua’s rebellious spirit. Ortega’s constitutional assault isn’t legislation — it’s a cold, calculated weapon meant to kill any hope of fighting back. On January 16, 2026, Nicaragua’s so-called National Assembly — a total joke of democracy — unanimously passed a reform that’ll brutally kick hundreds of thousands of Nicaraguans to the curb. This isn’t just paperwork — it’s a ruthless attack on human freedom. This isn’t bureaucracy — it’s a razor-sharp knife slicing straight through liberty.

Who Gets Hurt?

Every single Nicaraguan bold enough to dream of a life beyond Ortega’s suffocating, iron-fisted control. Get a foreign passport, and you’re instantly erased from your own country. Grab a passport from another country, and you’ll be wiped clean from Nicaragua’s records. Nicaragua is spiraling dangerously close to becoming another Venezuelan hellscape of oppression. My dad always said a country that forces you to choose between your heritage and your future isn’t a country — it’s a soul-crushing prison.

The International Silence

While the world watches, Ortega systematically dismantles Nicaraguan identity. This constitutional amendment isn’t just a policy change — it’s psychological warfare.

What Americans Must Understand

This isn’t just a Latin American problem. When dictators learn they can erase citizenship with the stroke of a pen, no democracy is safe. The message is clear: submit or disappear.

The Resistance Continues

Ortega might control the paperwork, but he can never control the Nicaraguan spirit. Every exiled citizen carries their homeland in their heart — a flame no decree can extinguish.

Final Warning: Freedom isn’t granted. It’s defended. And Nicaragua’s fight is America’s fight.

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Jonathan A.

I believe in freedom — for Cuba, Venezuela, Nicaragua, and every nation across Latin America. My opinions come from watching what's happening in the world today and calling it like I see it. Pro-liberty, pro-democracy, pro-free markets.

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