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An Ode to Cuban Cigars
Anyway, that’s not what I want to talk about today. No. Because, quite frankly, I don’t care if McGreevey’s a homosexual. It affects me about as much as it seems to be affecting his wife—which is to say it doesn’t affect me at all. The only thing I’m bothered by is the idea that the press should leave him alone and “let him do his job” until he officially moves out of Drumthwacket Mansion in November. If “doing his job” includes making unqualified appointments—on homeland security, no less—in return for sexual favors, I say hound him till the Jersey cows come home. But I don’t walk to talk about that today, either. What I want to talk about is this: I am a Castro supporter. Let me explain. I
am not, in the literal sense, a fan of Fidel. I have no sympathies for
communist despots. I am a freedom-loving libertarian-type of person; I am
not a team player, and I abhor central planning. But I am, by
conventional wisdom, a Castro supporter. I came to this conclusion when I
returned to the States from Aruba last week with a single Cuban cigar.
They’re easy to buy in Aruba, you know—like buying a box of Blueberry
Morning. The one I brought home was a $25 Cohiba. I smuggled it into the
country by wrapping it in a hotel washcloth and stuffing it in between
toothpaste and hairspray. True. But I went ahead and helped Castro’s economy in some small, incalculable way nonetheless. So why would I do this? Why would I make a purchase the equivalent of wearing a Che Guevara t-shirt? Well, the best way to explain it is to share with you an anecdote. During my trip, an Aruban asked me why it was, exactly, that Americans weren’t allowed to bring Cuban cigars through U.S. customs. “Because we live in a dictatorship,” I told him, unironically. My wife quickly shot back, “No, it’s because Cubans live in a dictatorship.” In fact, I think we were both right. America’s Cuban embargo is based on the [insane] belief that somehow, if we just stop buying Cuban products, Castro will go away. And the ends are desirable, of course; Castro sucks as a person. But if you ask me, breaking the locks off my luggage looking for smokes—as the Transportation Security Administration did—makes our government no better than his. And so I have three reasons for opposing the embargo. First of all, it’s been around since 1961. That’s a pretty long time. If it was going to work, you have to assume it would’ve worked by now. But it hasn’t. Castro’s still in power. He’s the world’s longest reigning dictator. Presidents Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon, Ford, Carter, Reagan, Bush I, and Clinton have all come and gone since he first came to power. The man’s even outlasted the entire combined run of M*A*S*H, Seinfeld, and Cheers. If the embargo was meant to isolate Cuba and flatten its communist framework, it’s failed. (They say insanity is using the same method over and over, expecting different results. That’s a good way of looking at this situation. It’s also why I’m not looking forward to the Joey spin-off of Friends.) Secondly, what’s the knock on communism? That it necessarily strangles the free market? Well, if you’re against that, I’m with you all the way. But forbidding the purchase of Cuban cigars is a funny way of striking a blow for free market economics. In a free market, consumer demand writes the rules. So if America’s interested in leading the free world—an oxymoronic concept, but work with me here—we would do well to lead by example instead of by force and protectionist tactics. Open the market. Lift the restrictions. Let freedom ring, and people will hear it. That’s a money-back guarantee. Finally, the third reason I disagree with the embargo is because it is dumb. I love a good stogie, but I’m no connoisseur. From what I can tell, though—after visiting Aruba—Cuban cigars aren’t that much better than others. They’re better; just not that much. But you’d never know this based on the way Americans savor them. Here, they’re seen as deliciously wicked forbidden fruit. And that’s just the thing: The Cubans I smoked in Aruba weren’t more enjoyable because they were better; they were more enjoyable because I wasn’t supposed to be enjoying them. It was an act of civil disobedience, and this gave me great satisfaction. Smoking a Cuban was like smoking the plank in Big Brother’s eye. It served him right. And it tasted good. So if, by conventional wisdom, this makes me a Castro supporter—so be it. Guilty as charged. If I’m going to give up some freedoms, it’s going to be to my wife. She’s at least earned it. Our government—under the reigns of such men as Jim McGreevey, whose actions are despicable no matter who the hell he sleeps with—has not. Viva la revolucion. discuss this column in the forum Jonathan David Morris is a political satirist based in New Jersey. His website is www.readjdm.com. |