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Castro
Gets Stoned
by Emiliano Antunez
The
latest work of noted
Hollywood
producer Oliver Stone is "Looking for Fidel,"
a very warped and distorted look at Fidel Castro's
Cuba
.
One can't help but notice that Mr. Stone,
who conducts the interviews,
is immersed in the septuagenarian’s persona, mesmerized by his power,
and engulfed in his myth (much like a seven year old visiting Neverland
Ranch views Michael Jackson). Watching this so-called
documentary (a very painful hour for some), you can almost visualize
Stone being slowly swallowed whole by the aging tyrant, eventually
becoming a non-entity
within his own production.
Stone's documentary does make one thing perfectly clear:
All
governments are for the most part devoid of common sense,
and derive all their powers through force at the expense of individual
rights. Castro is not the only one guilty of such infractions,
and he is quick to point that out. The relatives of three young men
executed by the regime for attempting to commandeer a ferry and make it
to freedom were featured complaining about the lack of family access to
the prisoners. Castro quickly replies by asking Stone how many family
visits have the "enemy combatants" imprisoned by the
US
government at GITMO (located in
Guantanamo
,
Cuba
)
been allowed. This is clearly a diversionary tactic, but one made
possible by the Bush Administration's
bending and breaking of both individual rights and constitutional law.
One of the most Kafkaesque scenes in this documentary is when six men
accused of attempting to hijack a plane to the
US
are interviewed in the presence of Castro. The men are obviously scared
out of their wits and extremely anxious. They are asked why they
wanted to go to the
US,
to
which they all reply with
"economic" reasons.
Castro,
almost as if on cue,
chimes in about the Cuban Adjustment Act and "Wet Foot, Dry Foot,"
blaming these US policies for the six young men's plight (while not once
mentioning his own repressive tactics, plus draconian and disastrous
economic policies). The communist strongman mentions that these men
probably aspired to one day own a new car, as if that were some sort
of
sin or pornographic thought crime (like wanting an SUV?).
But maybe Castro has been watching American politics closer than we
think. Recent presidential campaigns featuring phrases like
"Compassionate Conservative," "We Feel Your Pain"
and "Paying Your Fair Share" have probably caught the big
socialist lug's
(Compassionate Commies) fancy.
The defense
attorneys
for the six would-be
hijackers (who are employed by the Cuban government)
make a brief appearance at the behest of Castro. Like a marionette on
very tight strings,
one of these sorry excuses for an advocate tells Mr. Stone and anyone
else who
cares to listen that he will provide an arduous defense of his client
and use all the provisions under the "law" to achieve the best
results for him. In the end,
the freedom-seeking
individuals whose sole crime was to act on their dream of liberty and
opportunity (denied them in
Cuba
)
were sentenced to terms of between 30 years and life (most are sure to
die in captivity only dreaming of that new car or SUV and freedom).
Those who make it to the US do not necessarily fare
much better.
Six
young men who took control of a Cuban passenger plane and landed in Key
West (with their wives and children) were arrested, charged and
subsequently convicted on charges of air piracy. The Cuban government
was extremely cooperative with US prosecutors and blocked all the
defense attorneys’ attempts to interview witnesses, tilting the scales
of justice in favor of their willing accomplice, the US Attorney's
office. The men will be spending 20 to 25 years in a US federal
prison
(this makes Fidel very happy). Although these men,
like their Cuban-detained
counterparts,
may never own a new car or SUV (nor
experience true freedom), they at least got to ride
in
a few on the way to court and later prison.
Castro throughout the documentary refers to those who vocally opposed
his rule as "the so-called
dissidents." Throughout his tyranny,
those who have made their objections to Mr. Castro's rule public have
found themselves in either one of the island's
notorious prisons (if they're
lucky) or on the wrong end of the firing squad. In America,
speaking your mind may not necessarily land you in prison (or can it),
but it could lead to an IRS audit, a visit from someone from the
Department of Homeland Security, or questionable fines and
investigations from some other government agency, like
the
FCC, SEC, DEA or FBI,
just to name a few. Recently two South Florida radio DJs were fined by
the FCC for playing a practical joke on Castro,
which caused the demented dictator to spew obscenities over the
airwaves. Why didn't the FCC fine Castro instead of the DJs? Perhaps
because power lust (much like politics) makes strange bedfellows.
During one of the
documentary's
last scenes,
Castro wades into a crowd of Cuban supporters,
who chant his name along with the battle cry of his revolting revolution:
"Patria o Muerte; Venceremos" (Fatherland or death,
we shall be victorious). This scene mirrors the outside of a courthouse
during a Michael Jackson arraignment. When folks in the crowd are asked
if they are happy in
Cuba,
they eagerly answer yes because they have "free" health care
and education. They don't sound much different from US voters,
who want "free" universal health
care
and don't mind spending billions of other taxpayers’ money on
"free" education. Given the mentality of the average
US
voter, if Castro
was
a
US
citizen (shaved his beard and lost the fatigues and the accent),
he
would have an excellent chance of being elected President of the
United States.
What documentary about
Cuba
would be complete without the subject of health
care?
Castro stops into a clinic where
his heart rate and blood pressure is measured.
The
doctor monitoring the equipment pronounces Castro in perfect health and
jokingly says Castro will last another hundred years. The saddest part
of all this
is that
judging from the behavior of both Cubans on the island and many of those
in exile, Castro would rule with impunity for another hundred years if
he could live that long (fortunately he won't). But what will happen to
Cuba
and its inhabitants when Castro finally meets his maker? More
importantly,
what will happen to the
United
States
over the next hundred years? If recent history is any indication,
things do not bode well for the "land of the free and the home of
the brave."
The level of oppression of civil and economic liberties in the
US
can't be compared to that of
Cuba
today. That doesn't mean that it doesn't exist and that we are not
moving (slowly) in the wrong direction. If the current trend continues,
the only difference that will exist between the Cuba of today and the
America of tomorrow is that they (the Cubans) have had the same usurper
of their rights and confiscator of their wealth for 45 years, and we
will be able to elect ours every two, four and six years.
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