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Politics : About that Cuban boy, Elian -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Yogizuna who wrote (4643)5/10/2000 10:00:00 AM
From: The Barracuda™  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 9127
 
Critique of Miami Cubans from our side

From: FreeElian@capitalism.

Subject: A "Cuban" American explains Why "non-Cuban" Americans do not support the "Cuban" Americans


A "Cuban" American explains Why "non-Cuban" Americans do not support
the "Cuban" Americans
By Agust¡n Bl zquez

The Cuban exiles living in the U.S. for 41 years have not learned much.
The constant display of Cuban flags, signs and chanting in Spanish at
demonstrations, excludes the American people who could be, and should
be, our ally. The anti-Castro stand, rather than pro-democracy or
pro-freedom, separates us from the rest of America.

I have noticed lately that average Americans are speaking out and
strongly recent this attitude. If we want to communicate with the great
majority in this country, especially since we are surrounded by a highly
hostile press, we have to do it in ENGLISH.

Americans do not understand what we mean when we carry Cuban flags at a
demonstration in the U.S. Are we anti-American? Are we pro-Cuba?

NO MORE SIGNS AND CHANTING IN SPANISH IF WE WANT TO COMMUNICATE OUR
MESSAGE! Say "Freedom!" instead of "Libertad!" It is not that difficult.
The CUBAN FLAG and the singing of the CUBAN NATIONAL ANTHEM is NOT
helping us a bit. Learn the AMERICAN NATIONAL ANTHEM if you do not know it.
It is a joy to sing, and it is beautiful. We need a 180 degree turn in
an effort to reach America, the country where we live. Listen to
Americans who want to help us and join in our effort to give liberty to
Eli n.

What "Mothers Against Repression" are doing by staging silent dignified
demonstrations dressed all in black is good and non-threatening to
Americans. But please, carry the AMERICAN FLAG. You are in America-so
behave like one.



They don't look like people who are proud to be Americans. As an
American, why should I want to support someone who doesn't appear to be in
support of the US?

An American Explains Why Most Americans Are Not On the Side of "Cuban"
Americans
By Jaums Sutton

I write this as a born-in-the-US American who has a familiarity with
the situation with Cuba because I have many Cuban Americans as friends
for many years. All of what I have to say is in my reaction to what I see
in the media compared to my beliefs, developed mostly through my
friendships. I mean to be constructive and supportive.

An article in the Washington Post, Elian Impasse Widens Miami's Ethnic
Divides, by April Witt; Page A1, (
washingtonpost.com )
talks about the fact that many Cuban Americans do not understand why so
many Americans are not on their side.

If Cuban Americans want the US behind them, they must reach out to the
Americans in terms that Americans understand. If the American people
are behind them, then most of the politicians will have no choice but to
be behind them. The media (OK, at least most of the media) will have no
choice either. And so on.

But how do you get the American people behind you? Reach out to them at
every opportunity in their language. Perhaps the most pervasive way is
through TV. When I see protesters on TV in Miami or in Bethesda, where
Juan Miguel is being held, I see a lot of posters in Spanish. I see a
lot of Cuban flags. As an American, I do not see someone who is reaching
out to me. I see Cubans who want to reach other Cubans. If the goal is
to get the US behind you on the issue of Elian, for example, then you
need to reach out to Americans, not to Juan Miguel, not to the family in
Miami nor to each other. Juan Miguel can't see the sign from so far
away and through the trees and closed blinds, anyway. And on TV you can be
sure he won't see it either, because his handlers are not letting him
watch live TV, but tapes of the things they want him to see. The family
in Miami already agrees with you, so they don't need to see the signs.
And, as for each other, you already know the story.

Seeing signs in Spanish and Cuban flags makes me, an American, wonder
if the Cubans in Miami want to pretend they are in Cuba. They don't look
like people who are proud to be Americans. As an American, why should I
want to support someone who doesn't appear to be in support of the US?
I realize that they may very well be in support of the US, but that is
not the impression they are giving.

Historically, we have welcomed immigrants here and I think we should
continue to do so. But, if the immigrants are proudly waving a "foreign"
flag and holding up signs in a "foreign" language, I don't feel they
are asking for my concern or my support. The impression given off is that
they seem to be ignoring the fact that they are in the US. Reach out to
the ones who can help you. Make us feel that we are all in this
together. Americans like to help other Americans, no matter where they were
born.

KEEP ELIAN FREE: ELIAN'S INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS COME FIRST
Get the Facts. Read the FAQ. Sign the online petition:
capitalismmagazine.com



To: Yogizuna who wrote (4643)5/10/2000 10:08:00 AM
From: The Barracuda™  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 9127
 
Eli n Gonz lez Has a Right
Not to Live in Slavery
by Paul Blair

Who could abridge a right so obvious, violate a relationship so sacred, as to separate a boy from his father?

Fidel Castro, for one. In the early 1960's, Castro shut down Catholic schools and shipped children to the Soviet Union for "education" on collective farms. Rather than submit, Cuban parents smuggled 14,000 children, unaccompanied, to the United States.

Today the Catholic schools remain shut; most older children must attend boarding schools where half their time is spent on farm labor.

As recently as 1997, Cuban state security officers threatened human rights activists with the loss of their children for not raising them "within the revolution."

And Castro notoriously blocks families from reuniting with exiles. Suppose Juan Miguel Gonz lez had fled to Miami before Eli n and his mother?and that Eli n had drifted back to Cuba. Can anyone doubt Castro would keep the boy?

"[Eli n] is a possession of the Cuban government," according to Cuba's unofficial Washington embassy. "No other entity can remove this."

In Cuba, where Juan Miguel Gonz lez wishes to raise Eli n, he has no right to his child. The state has taken it from him.

America, by contrast, respects individual rights. So why question Juan Miguel Gonz lez' wish to take his son to Cuba?

The rights of parents are not unlimited; they yield before the rights of the child. Parents may not abuse their children, no matter what they think. They may not withhold life-saving blood transfusions, regardless of religious conviction. Nor may they consign their children to slavery.

The notion that Eli n's father has a right to take him back to Cuba is as incoherent as the idea that convicts have the right for their children to join them in prison, or that the escaped children of slaves should have been returned. It is the "right" to make his son surrender his liberty for the rest of his life.

Janet Reno argues that in law, a child belongs with his sole surviving parent. This is egregious context-dropping: it assumes the child is not being bound into slavery. Nor is the issue one of judging Juan Miguel Gonz lez' political beliefs. His beliefs are irrelevant; what matters are the objective conditions into which he puts the child.

What are those conditions?

Referring to life in Cuba as slavery is no rhetorical exaggeration; it is the literal truth.

In Cuba, the state alone controls your education. Contrary influences are illegal. Your eligibility for higher education?and the fields of study you may pursue?depends on your "revolutionary attitude" and participation in Communist youth groups. After university studies, you must work for years in a job designated by the state.

The state is virtually the sole legal employer and sets your salary; you have no alternative. Absenteeism is illegal. You might earn as much selling flowers in two days as you normally do monthly?but that's illegal too. Selling beef on the black market can get you 30 years in jail.

People talk about nothing but what they are going to eat next: the state rations food and necessities. Nine eggs and some rice and beans are supposed to last you a month. Toilet paper is unheard of.

If the equipment at your medical clinic is not working (a common occurrence) you are not permitted to visit a clinic with a working machine; you must wait. Finding medicine and medical supplies is virtually impossible.

Because nobody can survive on the government ration, and production for one's own profit is illegal, everyone steals. Robberies have skyrocketed. Factories lie to the government about their output, selling half on the black market and dividing the take among workers.

Nowadays religious services may be held, but only in existing churches under government surveillance. Uncooperative clergy are expelled. Building new churches is prohibited, and holding services anywhere else is an illegal assembly.

Your mail is read and phone calls monitored. Neighborhood committees police your state of mind and organize mandatory activities to make sure you are an enthusiastic supporter of the revolution. Many Cubans even fear being overheard speaking Castro's name; instead, they stroke their chins.

What can get you branded as "dangerous"? In 1997 Dr. Dessy Mendoza got 8 years in jail for trying to alert Cubans, through the international media, to an outbreak of dengue fever. Last year, police stopped an environmental protest by arresting its leaders.

There is even a Cuban law to prevent criminality before it occurs: no illegal act is required for you to be jailed. On the other hand, if you are a victim of domestic violence, don't expect the police to intervene.

If you get fed up and start handing out "Down With Castro" leaflets you can get 20 years in prison, under nightmarish conditions?a term that can be lengthened at the discretion of a "reeducation officer." Collective punishments are imposed: a spouse may lose a job?the sole legal means of support; a child may lose a chance at higher education.

If you flee by boat and are not caught, you face a one in three chance of perishing?even if Castro does not send helicopters to drop sandbags on your raft or boats to ram it.

In Cuba, ordinary human beings must lie, steal and break the law in order to survive. They live in fear of each other, without hope. It is a system in which human beings have no right to exist: "[It] is like a novel by Kafka illustrated by Salvador Dali," a former Cuban official told Newsweek.

None of this is news. Everyone knows Cuba is a one-party dictatorship that imprisons and executes people for "political" crimes. Everyone knows Cuba has no freedom of speech, assembly or religion, that private ownership is forbidden, that emigration is restricted. In such a society there is no rule of law; in every aspect of life, the individual is at the mercy of the arbitrary, changing whims of state officials.

True, people still smile in Cuba, and dance, and play baseball. But this makes Cuba "complex" only to those who refuse to conceptualize, to identify essentials and look past the range of the moment. If Southern slaves sometimes laughed, is slavery therefore tolerable? The "Castro-hasn't-shot-anyone-this-week" mentality evades the fact that nothing essential has changed: Castro's regime remains fully committed, in theory and practice, to the repudiation of individual rights.

It is just as illegitimate to be moved by the immediately evident anger of Eli n's father while ignoring everything else. Those who refuse to judge political systems, taking no stand between freedom and totalitarianism, are truly the ones who care nothing about the boy.

In Cuba, how will Eli n handle his "reeducation"? How will he tell others about America? What of future school assignments to describe his victimization in Miami? What if one day Eli n falls ill and fails to appear for a government-orchestrated "spontaneous demonstration"? What if an acquaintance confides plans to flee to America?is it real, or a ploy to test his loyalty? What will Eli n do when his neighborhood committee requires him to participate in an "act of repudiation" against friends, shouting obscenities and trashing their house?will he refuse, and risk government reprisals?

Eli n Gonz lez has a right not to live under such conditions. His father has no right to consign him to slavery. Parental rights end where totalitarianism begins.

From the beginning, American policy should have been: "Juan Miguel Gonz lez is free to come seek his child and go to whatever free country he chooses. But we will not cooperate with sending Eli n back to Cuba."

For Janet Reno to wrap herself in the rule of law while contradicting its foundation is hypocrisy. For the American government to hand a child over to a Communist dictatorship is a disgrace. Today, the true Americans are the Cuban exiles in Miami and their allies.

Paul Blair is former editor of The Intellectual Activist.
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To: Yogizuna who wrote (4643)5/10/2000 10:08:00 AM
From: The Barracuda™  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 9127
 
Actually, the personal insults do have meaning. They indicate he is not sure of his position. He's bluffing.