From Castro to Trump
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I first became aware of Castro when a neighborhood friend told me how great it was that he, along with his revolutionary force, overthrew the Cuban dictator Fulgencio Batista. I was thirteen years old, and had no idea of what was going on in Cuba, and couldn't care less. Politics was not discussed at home until I was older, and my attention was directed mostly at idle concerns - fun, sports, television, rock 'n roll.
In the Catholic high school I attended a couple of Cuban refugees arrived - a student and a teacher. We paid them little mind, and largely ignored the exhortations of the priests and nuns to care about communism and what was going on in Cuba.
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In November 1963, President Kennedy was assassinated. Attempts were made to blame the assassination on Fidel Castro, but they didn't get very far. The reputed "lone gunman" Lee Harvey Oswald, had been a member of the "Fair Play for Cuba Committee," and had made contact with the Cuban Government. He may well have been a U.S. spy, and his secret life has never been convincingly revealed. Whatever the case, no evidence was ever presented that Fidel Castro had anything to do with the JFK assassination. By contrast, Castro survived over 600 U.S. assassination attempts and one invasion, the infamous Bay of Pigs fiasco of 1961.
I mostly didn't pay attention to anything about Cuba until a song changed my perception like a pinball machine going "tilt." It was in my sophomore year in college, and I bought the Another Side of Bob Dylan LP. It was his fourth album, and had songs that became legendary: It Ain't Me Babe, All I Really Want to Do, Chimes of Freedom. and My Back Pages. One song from the album, Motorpsycho Nitemare, was a "talking blues" ballad that was a variation of the traveling salesman and the farmer's daughter jokes that were popular in those days. In order to escape the situation, Dylan blurted out "I like Fidel Castro, I like him and his beard" to start a ruckus and get free. It was so goofy and outlandish that it made me think about Castro in a different light. I realized that I liked him too, that I thought he was funny, charismatic, and that he stood up to his giant neighbor to the north in spite of the great imbalance of power.
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For me personally I have had a soft spot, or blind spot for Fidel Castro, realizing his imperfections, but finding him an inspiration when few have been available. Over the years I became aware of the ongoing U.S. terror campaign against him and his government. At one point Cuba sent spies to the U.S. to get information on terror groups emanating from Miami's Cuban exile community. They got caught, tried and convicted, and became a cause célèbre among the counterculture, known as the Cuban Five. I donated small amounts of money to their freedom fund from time-to-time.
I have also donated small amounts of money to the Madison-Camagüey Sister City Association and the Wisconsin Medical Project, which have brought medical supplies to Cuba since 1994. Madison has sister city relationships with eight municipalities around the world, promoting cultural, educational and social exchanges to further international understanding.
Now Fidel Castro is gone, and around the planet he is revered as a great revolutionary. In the "U.S." corporate media he is mostly reviled as a communist dictator who imprisoned and executed people. I look at him as a man who overthrew a brutal dictator and mafioso, and established a distributive economic and social system. Cuba isn't a perfectly equal society, but it is far more egalitarian than its neighbor to the north.
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Here's Motorpsycho Nightmare, not Dylan, but close.
Here's an old favorite in Cuba.
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Buena Vista Social Club.
Here's a song to celebrate the return of Guantanamo Bay to Cuba.
Here's the Rolling Stones in Havana, March 25, 2016.
1 Comments:
Greetings from the other side of The Lake.
I too was saddened by the death of Fidel. Sorry that he and Hugo didn't live to see the age of Trump. It takes a lot of courage to stand up to the United States. Salvador Allende is testament to that.
Remember when Vice President Nixon's motorcade was attacked in Venezuela? Latin America needs to embargo the U.S.
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