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  • Originally posted by Velociryx
    Wait....to put Castro (a nutjob a scant 90 miles from the USA, with weapons that could reach out and touch US cities if he wanted to pick a fight)....but it's silly to compare him to a bunch of LUNATICS ruling a land-locked country ten thousand miles from us that have no weapons that can reach us?
    -=Vel=-
    You call Castro a nut job? What has he done that was crazy? He may not be the greatest person in the world, but he isn't crazy. Jong-Ill is crazy, Saddam's son were psychopathic, Fidel is neither.

    Cuba has WMD, he doesn't have missles that can deliever them to the US in any quantity. His military is in worse shape than Iraqs was. He has nothing to get hard cash from to update his pencil sharpener much less his war machine. He has made no direct threats against the US in years. The worst he has done (That I am aware of) is to call every President since JFK liars, nothing worse than we do, and he was probably right at least some of the time.

    I won't agrue the merits of invading Iraq in this thread. It isn't for that purpose. I will just repeat, that if you can show any threat from Cuba in the last 15-20 years (other than unloading his prisons to save money). Put it forth.

    Comment


    • Originally posted by Velociryx
      they're asking for political asylum, not insta-citizenship. But again, there's nothing in Cuba we want, so of course we can't be arsed to give a damn, right?
      There's plenty in Cuba that the US wants. This explains nearly 200 years worth of policy in the region. US policy in the region has for the most part been to support repressive elites in exchange for US friendly policy: perhaps the best example of this is the US undermining of the Guatemalan reformist movement in the 50s. Of course this was aimed at "communists" but in context that really means "social democratic nationalists" or "anyone who wants to change policy in favour of their own citizens rather than the US".

      Anyone who paints Fidel Castro as some sort of satanist is an idiot pure and simple. Fidel is probably the most popular political leader in the world. You can't understand Cuba unless you understand that the vast majority of Cubans really love the guy. I wish I had a dollar for every travel writer without a political agenda who's been to Cuba and been astonished by this fact.

      Cuba represents a major policy blunder by the US. All Fidel really wanted was to free Cuba from foreign (read US) domination. He'd wanted this long before he became a communist and was laying plans well before Che Guevara (who was a real hard line communist) convinced him that communism was the answer. Nevertheless, communism for Fidel is a means to an end, which is political independence. The scum in Miami are the remnants of the various criminals that flourished under the Batista government (which was actually massacring people).

      If the US Government wanted him onside all they had to do was recognize his government and trade with him. But they were afraid of the threat of a good example: if the Cubans could run their own country then the rest of Latin America might start getting funny ideas. I mean, how dare they want to run their own countries? The impudence of it.

      That's why the embargo is still in place, even though communism is no longer a great threat to the world in the eyes of the US. Get rid of that and treat Cuba as an independent state and you'd see the kind of changes that people want in Cuba. One reason for political detentions is that Cuba is under constant threat from the US. Remove that, and you remove the necessity for such actions. But that is unthinkable for the US since it would make manifest the threat of a good example.

      The Cubans aren't stupid, they know this: that's why they support Fidel. And that's why I do.
      Only feebs vote.

      Comment




      • One would think that, having an active anti-Castro press in Maimi, if the situtation you seem to imagine is the case in Cuba were true, that it would be all over the news (at least spanish psekaing news) all the time.

        Sorry, but you imagination about the level of political repression in Cuba is gettign away from you. This is a state were political dissidents (these are peoiple who acitvely speak out against the gov) get 28-30 years in prison, not a trip to a detention camp. Again, when 3 hijackers of a boat were sentenced to death and executed, there was a huge outcry...3 executions of people who had commited an act of terrorism (as define here) brings a huge press outcry, yet you imagine people disappearing at night....

        Reality check is in order.
        If you don't like reality, change it! me
        "Oh no! I am bested!" Drake
        "it is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong" Voltaire
        "Patriotism is a pernecious, psychopathic form of idiocy" George Bernard Shaw

        Comment


        • To those who insist this is a "law" and not an executive department policy, here is a story that says it a policy, set down only a few years ago by Bill Clinton.

          Bush has not reversed it. He is just as wrong as Clinton.

          truckflix.com is your first and best source for all of the information you’re looking for. From general topics to more of what you would expect to find here, truckflix.com has it all. We hope you find what you are searching for!
          http://tools.wikimedia.de/~gmaxwell/jorbis/JOrbisPlayer.php?path=John+Williams+The+Imperial+M arch+from+The+Empire+Strikes+Back.ogg&wiki=en

          Comment


          • Originally posted by Ned
            Meldor, Ike pulled the plug on Batista and allowed Castro to win. Castro was the darling of the US at the time, even though members of his guerilla band were communists. Ike was even going to meet with Castro when he visited, but he didn't. Why? It wasn't because he was a communist. It was because he began summary executions of a large number of the former regime.

            Also, IIRC, Castro confiscated a large amount of US property without compensation. Then he allied himself with the USSR. Then he allowed the Russians to station nuclear missiles in Cuba.

            There are good reasons for the cold relations between Castro and the United States.
            I know full well the history of Cuba and Castro. I lived through it. My father was whisked away to Florida when we were but hours away from invading. It was a scary time, but as much as Cuba was a threat then, they are not a threat now.

            Castro has held no pruges in the last 20 years. He doesn't kill them in mass, he let's them build rafts and ships them here.

            The bigest obstruction to better relations with Cuba is their natioanlization of a lot of US owned property. A lot of Cuban Americans today still have claims. But a lot of other countries also have done the same thing and we still trade with them. Mexico tool its oil national, so did several South American Countries. Do we still hold it agianst them?

            I am not here to defend Castro, I would as soon see him gone, but rather I am here to defend against them misstatements that seem to expand here, such as...

            "This is a Bush policy"...its been in place forever...
            "Castro is a dangerous nutjub"...he is no Stalin or Jong-Ill.
            "Cubans are treated differently"... not the case.
            "Returned Cubans are killed or jailed"...well, a lot of them do go to jail for some period of time, but Castro can't afford to feed them for free for long. The only ones in recent memory who were killed where the idiots trying to take a short haul ferry across the gulf. They would have most likely killed themselves and most of the people on board by taking that ferry out on the open seas. Did that merit death, that we can debate, but it isn't my country or laws. I will even allow that they probably got the death sentence for embarrassing the government.

            Now, I have argued against Castro on other threads and I am not going to defend him here, I just think it silly to compare him to folks a whole lot worse. If he was the most evil dictator in the world right now, I would be happy to sing in his parade.

            Comment


            • Meldor, check out the link in the post just prior to yours. The policy of returning Cuban refugees is a Bush policy, not the law.
              http://tools.wikimedia.de/~gmaxwell/jorbis/JOrbisPlayer.php?path=John+Williams+The+Imperial+M arch+from+The+Empire+Strikes+Back.ogg&wiki=en

              Comment


              • This guy has it right

                Seumas Milne: Hostility to the Castro regime doesn't stem from its failings, but from its achievements.
                Only feebs vote.

                Comment


                • GePap - I think you misunderstand... we're not talking about whats in the papers here.

                  In a supposedly Democratic country, do you know what my uncle did for a living?

                  He tortured people. He was the Chief of Police of Joao Pessoa... the same man who used to come home at night and kiss my grandmother... the man who bought me my first prostitute... used to put men in tires and light them on fire...

                  My father once, almost was killed because he was on a bus during a police check point and he was carrying a Luger. But since the cops knew him, they didn't hassle him. If they had searched him, and found the gun, he never would have left their custody alive.

                  We have a press in Brazil... why wasn't this kind of brutality reported? Why didn't anybody make a stink about the 10,000 people who disappeared in the middle of the night during the 1970s?! By comparison to Cuba, Brazil's government was LAX....

                  Even today! Even today people are murdered in back allies by the police for stealing fvcking bread! And nobody knows because for the most part... nobody cares... do you think the media is keeping tabs on these people who are sent back to Cuba??

                  Don't feed me this horse****... you know goddamn well that plenty goes on behind the scenes..

                  And not that it matters by this point, but I was being facetious about the bullets thing... and you say that they don't even spend a few days in prison? then you proved my initial point... they aren't really a drain on Castro's resources.
                  Dom Pedro II - 2nd and last Emperor of the Empire of Brazil (1831 - 1889).

                  I truly believe that America is the world's second chance. I only hope we get a third...

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by Ned
                    To those who insist this is a "law" and not an executive department policy, here is a story that says it a policy, set down only a few years ago by Bill Clinton.

                    Bush has not reversed it. He is just as wrong as Clinton.

                    http://www.truckflix.com/news_article.php?newsid=165
                    Yes, before they were all returned unless they could prove political reason to stay. The policy that Clinton set forth and that Bush has allowed to stand actually allows more Cubans to stay here than used to be allowed. Yet another spin that gets it wrong. BTW here is the statement:

                    Under a policy established during the Clinton administration, if Cuban refugees make it to American soil, they are allowed to stay. If caught on the ocean, they are returned to Cuba.
                    This doesn't say what the policy was prior to Clintons order (which was to make most of those that reached American soil go back as well).

                    [EDIT] Am I the only one old enough to remember the flap when Clinton set this policy? Come on I know some of you have dry ears...
                    Last edited by Meldor; July 31, 2003, 16:59.

                    Comment


                    • Killing escapees doesn't have to be official policy for it to still happen.
                      Dom Pedro II - 2nd and last Emperor of the Empire of Brazil (1831 - 1889).

                      I truly believe that America is the world's second chance. I only hope we get a third...

                      Comment


                      • Meldor, et al.

                        Good. I’m glad you’re not trying to defend Castro. He is unworthy of such defense.

                        The point…the ONLY point I have been trying to ram through thick, bony skull in this forum has NOTHING to do with comparing Castro to other dictators ‘round the world (which everyone SEEMS to be missing), it has to do with the US administration.

                        The President of the USA has gone on national television and said that one of the (implied main, major) reasons for the war was the liberation of the Iraqi people.

                        That’s the WhiteHouse position. Believe it, don’t believe it. I don’t really care. That’s the White House position.

                        And BECAUSE that is the official position, it is disingenuous in the EXTREME to send Americans to fight and die for Iraqi liberty, but to send oppressed Cubans back to their homeland.

                        This suggests then, that the official White House position is….bull****e.

                        Not that that’s news to anybody, but it underscores the point.

                        IF we were really in it for liberty for the oppressed, then the boat would not have been turned ‘round.

                        Gods....it’s like pulling teeth sometimes.

                        -=Vel=-

                        PS: And the numbers argument is a very poor one. Just because Castro isn’t in the big leagues as far as mass killings go….just because whole towns do not disappear in the night doesn’t make him ANY less wrong.
                        The list of published books grows. If you're curious to see what sort of stories I weave out, head to Amazon.com and do an author search for "Christopher Hartpence." Help support Candle'Bre, a game created by gamers FOR gamers. All proceeds from my published works go directly to the project.

                        Comment


                        • Unless I missed it here in the various postings I see no disconnect in the policy enforced and the reasons/motives for war 'gainst Iraq.

                          Both are reinforced by the events of 9/11.

                          Illegal immigration has been a constant source of concern in the security sector. The INS has been repeated lambasted for their lack of control over borders and policing of illegals.

                          Obviously (IMO) the war in Iraq revolves around either the direct ability to remove WoMD from an obvious enemy to the US or to send a message to the leaders of Islamic nations harboring terrorists that the US takes seriously its war on terrorism. (Other's of a more cynical frame of mind will obviously say that the war in IRaq was simply a means to secure future oil, which prolly also played a role but not a primary one IMO)

                          Seen through the eyes of a security paranoia the two events do not seem disconnected at all to me.
                          "Just puttin on the foil" - Jeff Hanson

                          “In a democracy, I realize you don’t need to talk to the top leader to know how the country feels. When I go to a dictatorship, I only have to talk to one person and that’s the dictator, because he speaks for all the people.” - Jimmy Carter

                          Comment


                          • Dom Pedro: reality in Brazil proves nothing. I ived in a non0democratic regime, and the few people who disapeared were important dissidents, and that only happend a few times. Mostly, you ended up in prison (a horrible prison, yes) .

                            The crux of your agurmenet, is that because in Brazil you have violent politics, well, ditto everywhere else in Latin America...well, that is not true.

                            And BECAUSE that is the official position, it is disingenuous in the EXTREME to send Americans to fight and die for Iraqi liberty, but to send oppressed Cubans back to their homeland.


                            And the same people who "cried" when Iraq was liberated don;t want to "get into another mess in Africa". We send oppresed Chinese back, and we trade with China. China is a communist dictatorship. I really do fail to see the fine distinction some try to make.'

                            As for the numbers bit: Castro is run of the mill repression, and the US has never done **** about run of the mill repression (specially if we benefit from it, as in the case of a place like Uzbekistan).
                            If you don't like reality, change it! me
                            "Oh no! I am bested!" Drake
                            "it is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong" Voltaire
                            "Patriotism is a pernecious, psychopathic form of idiocy" George Bernard Shaw

                            Comment


                            • Og, I would agree with that statement in general, except that we have always made a special case for people fleeing from oppressive regiemes.

                              Given the Shrub's new, tougher stance, and the fact that he's put dictators "on notice" around the globe, and that he has used the "liberation" card in Iraq, it only paints him to be that much more of a phony when he ships other oppressed folks back home.

                              And let's face it, we like ingenuity in this country. Anybody who can take a beat up Chevy truck and make a working boat out of it deserves to stay!

                              But, Castro's been laying low, and Cuba doesn't have oil, so....

                              They got kicked to the curb.

                              And the fact that they got kicked to the curb only underscores the lie that the Bush administration really ISN"T in it to liberate anybody....unless it coincides with something else they want.
                              The list of published books grows. If you're curious to see what sort of stories I weave out, head to Amazon.com and do an author search for "Christopher Hartpence." Help support Candle'Bre, a game created by gamers FOR gamers. All proceeds from my published works go directly to the project.

                              Comment


                              • GePap....why does that not surprise me?

                                -=Vel=-
                                The list of published books grows. If you're curious to see what sort of stories I weave out, head to Amazon.com and do an author search for "Christopher Hartpence." Help support Candle'Bre, a game created by gamers FOR gamers. All proceeds from my published works go directly to the project.

                                Comment

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