Jacobo Árbenz, born on this day in 1913, was a Guatemalan President who earned the ire of the United Fruit Company, the largest private landowner in the country, by instituting widespread land reforms. He was ousted in a U.S-backed coup in 1954.

Árbenz served as the Minister of National Defense from 1944 to 1951 and the second democratically elected President of Guatemala from 1951 to 1954. He was a major figure in the ten-year Guatemalan Revolution, which represented some of the few years of representative democracy in Guatemalan history.

Árbenz instituted many popular reforms, including an expanded right to vote, the right of workers to organize, legitimizing political parties, and allowing public debate.

The centerpiece of Árbenz’ policy was an agrarian reform law, under which uncultivated portions of large land-holdings were expropriated in return for compensation and redistributed to poverty-stricken agricultural laborers. Approximately 500,000 people benefited from the decree, the majority of them indigenous people whose forebears had been dispossessed after the Spanish invasion.

Opposition to these policies led the United Fruit Company to lobby the U.S. government to have him overthrown. The U.S. was also concerned by the presence of communists in the Guatemalan government, and Árbenz was ousted in a coup d’état engineered by the U.S. government on June 27th, 1954.

“Our only crime consisted of decreeing our own laws and applying them to all without exception. Our crime is having enacted an agrarian reform which effected the interests of the United Fruit Company. Our crime is wanting to have our own route to the Atlantic, our own electric power and our own docks and ports. Our crime is our patriotic wish to advance, to progress, to win economic independence to match our political independence. We are condemned because we have given our peasant population land and rights.”

  • Jacobo Árbenz

Jacobo Arbenz, Spartacus

Jacobo Árbenz, “Árbenz’s Resignation Speech” (1954)

Bitter Fruit: The Story of the American Coup in Guatemala by Stephen Kinzer

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  • DayOfDoom [any, any]@hexbear.net
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    10 months ago

    That’s fair but it’s not hustling, but like, slower than that. Had to train like 3-4 people. Teenagers are slow. The elderly are slow, understandably.m, but still not as slow as the teens. I wasn’t this slow back then.

    • wantonviolins [they/them]@hexbear.net
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      10 months ago

      could have just got a bunch of AuADHD kids, I was always painfully slow starting out until I completely understood a process and why every part of that process was necessary

      and after that I was painfully slow because I was trying to do everything as cleanly and correctly as possible, which is incompatible with speed. got fired from a lot of foodservice jobs for being too slow, but I was just trying to do a good job and not make a huge mess. also I’d just space out in the middle of actions because my brain decided to do something else.

      eventually I got a job working in packing/shipping and was able to take meds and listen to music and I became the fastest person there, so like, maybe they just need adderall