P.S: minor spelling mistake, it’s overthrew. Sorry!
IchBinHandy on
Here’s to freedom and the power of people coming together! 🇵🇹🇪🇺
MaterialNervous7653 on
And yet the autocracy still seems popular and common in Europe nowadays. You just can’t rid of it entirely.
IAmLoved_p1 on
Freedom and peace FTW!
totallyclips on
I was in Porto then, 16yrs old RN HMS Apollo
halee1 on
Four months from now on, the 50th anniversary of the failed last-ditch attempt to install a far-left dictatorship in Portugal (whereas in Spain there were some attempts to restore the far-right Franco dictatorship) will be held, after which, in 1975, the country’s democracy began to be stabilized. However, despite this, polarization would remain high, with occasional terrorist attacks, and with terrible far-left economic policies being adopted, which led to two IMF bailouts in 1977 and 1983. The latter’s adjustment process itself led to an economic crisis.
The one good outcome from these years was that Portugal was one of the few European countries in this period where inequality declined. Also, there was a genuine commitment to democratic and economic reforms, and after Greece in 1981, Portugal, together with Spain, entered the EEC (to be transformed into the EU in 1993) in 1986 and adopted a more sensible path on the economic front, leading to a boom that would broadly last until 2000. The highly contested 1985 legislative and especially the 1986 presidential elections would be the last outpourings of the social changes resulting from the 1974 Carnation Revolution, after which the country, buoyed by an ongoing prosperity, stabilized for good.
The lesson: centrist democracy is much better than anything else. An attempt to just do the opposite of the Salazar dictatorship, with all of its human rights violations, would also have bad results. Spain saw this and learned to not either swerve into the far-left or restore the far-right dictatorship in either politics or the economy, leading to a better economic performance in the decade following democratization and arguably less polarization.
Skattan on
*overthrew its
Golden_Ace1 on
April 25th, always.
vitainpixels on
Funny that only 51 years ago there was a dictatorship in a European Union country. Thanks Portugal, you give my homeland Turkey hope!
JimTheSaint on
Lets see if the US can follow their great example!
Bulawayoland on
which (with Castro’s and the Soviet Union’s help) ultimately led to independence in Guinea Bissau, Angola and Mozambique, and finally to the end of apartheid in South Africa!
Blandinio on
I know Salazar was a dictator, was he also fascist like some people claim?
EndlessExploration on
Based
OptimismNeeded on
What are the lessons we can learn? We better learn fast.
TotallyBrandNewName on
Fuck yeah!!
Currently laying in bed enjoying such freedom for salazar and the PIDE(State police)
Also, bloodless overthrow!
CapeTaun on
Buon 25 aprile, here in Italy as well we are remembering the end of Fascism in 1945.
Ora e sempre Resistenza!
intentionalAnon on
Portugal had a dictator? 😳
Actually I never heard that before. But, ok.. we here in Germany „created“ enough history ourselves to fill all the lessons in school with that.
MasterChiefOriginal on
Unfortunately this revolution gave to much power to the Far Left and they tried to take over the country, thanks God they failed,I hope 25 of November gets celebrated as hard as 25 of April.
18 commenti
[A perfect time to remember the evil authoritarianism has caused](https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carnation_Revolution)
P.S: minor spelling mistake, it’s overthrew. Sorry!
Here’s to freedom and the power of people coming together! 🇵🇹🇪🇺
And yet the autocracy still seems popular and common in Europe nowadays. You just can’t rid of it entirely.
Freedom and peace FTW!
I was in Porto then, 16yrs old RN HMS Apollo
Four months from now on, the 50th anniversary of the failed last-ditch attempt to install a far-left dictatorship in Portugal (whereas in Spain there were some attempts to restore the far-right Franco dictatorship) will be held, after which, in 1975, the country’s democracy began to be stabilized. However, despite this, polarization would remain high, with occasional terrorist attacks, and with terrible far-left economic policies being adopted, which led to two IMF bailouts in 1977 and 1983. The latter’s adjustment process itself led to an economic crisis.
The one good outcome from these years was that Portugal was one of the few European countries in this period where inequality declined. Also, there was a genuine commitment to democratic and economic reforms, and after Greece in 1981, Portugal, together with Spain, entered the EEC (to be transformed into the EU in 1993) in 1986 and adopted a more sensible path on the economic front, leading to a boom that would broadly last until 2000. The highly contested 1985 legislative and especially the 1986 presidential elections would be the last outpourings of the social changes resulting from the 1974 Carnation Revolution, after which the country, buoyed by an ongoing prosperity, stabilized for good.
The lesson: centrist democracy is much better than anything else. An attempt to just do the opposite of the Salazar dictatorship, with all of its human rights violations, would also have bad results. Spain saw this and learned to not either swerve into the far-left or restore the far-right dictatorship in either politics or the economy, leading to a better economic performance in the decade following democratization and arguably less polarization.
*overthrew its
April 25th, always.
Funny that only 51 years ago there was a dictatorship in a European Union country. Thanks Portugal, you give my homeland Turkey hope!
Lets see if the US can follow their great example!
which (with Castro’s and the Soviet Union’s help) ultimately led to independence in Guinea Bissau, Angola and Mozambique, and finally to the end of apartheid in South Africa!
I know Salazar was a dictator, was he also fascist like some people claim?
Based
What are the lessons we can learn? We better learn fast.
Fuck yeah!!
Currently laying in bed enjoying such freedom for salazar and the PIDE(State police)
Also, bloodless overthrow!
Buon 25 aprile, here in Italy as well we are remembering the end of Fascism in 1945.
Ora e sempre Resistenza!
Portugal had a dictator? 😳
Actually I never heard that before. But, ok.. we here in Germany „created“ enough history ourselves to fill all the lessons in school with that.
Unfortunately this revolution gave to much power to the Far Left and they tried to take over the country, thanks God they failed,I hope 25 of November gets celebrated as hard as 25 of April.