Hollywood
Movie and Bestselling Book Parrot Castroite Propaganda
by
Humberto Fontova
by Humberto Fontova
A recent bestseller
titled How
the Mob Owned Cuba, and Lost it to the Revolution, by T.J.
English parrots Fidel Castros script down to very "ands"
and "thes."
Stephen Soderbergh
and Benicio del Toros Movie, Che, is every bit as slavishly
compliant to a script from a totalitarian propaganda ministry. (With
apparently a straight face) Soderbergh and del Toro followed a screenplay
confected by Castro's propaganda ministry (Che Guevara's Diaries),
with the forward written by Fidel Castro himself ("I am not
a Communist! I am an Christian Humanist! I am a lover of liberty!
1958)
Soderbergh
del Toro and their film crew visited Cuba seven times during their
movies' production and thanked the Stalinist regime's propaganda
ministry profusely in the movie's credits.
Astoundingly,
many facts get in the way of this book and movie. Let's start with
T.J. English's very title. How the Mob Owned Cuba, and
Lost it to the Revolution.
Actually: Cuba's
Gross Domestic product in 1957 was $2.7 billion. Cuba's foreign
receipts in 1957 were $752 million of which tourism made up only
$60 million. Gambling was a small fraction of this $60
million. How could the beneficiaries of that tiny fraction of Cuba's
income OWN the entire country, and "infiltrate its levers of power
from top to bottom," as the author (goaded by his Castroite mentors)
claims?!
As far as the
mob "owning" a town in the 1950's, T.J. English definitely had a
point but it was named Las Vegas, Nevada. And I've yet to hear
a historian-commentator recommend that Nevada undergo a Stalinist
slaughter-revolution in order to rectify that revolting and degrading
state of affairs.
Another interesting
statistic in 1953, more Cubans vacationed in the U.S., than Americans
vacationed in Cuba. "Primarily for the gambling" my parents tell
me, Las Vegas, Tahoe, etc. "Primarily for all the cheap prostitutes,"
my older cousins tell me, "they swarmed in New Orleans French Quarter
and were much cheaper than Cuba's ladies of joy."
Also, there's
no mention by English of how the Castroite nomenklatura has made
multiple times that measly portion of that measly $60 million in
the 1950's, in cahoots with Colombia's cocaine cowboys in the 70's
and 80's. "We lived like kings in Cuba," revealed Medellin
Cartel bosses Carlos Lehder and Alejandro Bernal during their trials.
"Fidel made sure nobody bothered us."
The cocaine
cartels deal with Castro made Meyer Lanskys with Batista look
like a nickel and dime gratuity.
It gets better
(worse). "The financial largesse that flooded Cuba could have been
used to address the country's social problems" continues the bestselling
(and proudly Irish-American) author who lists them while checking
off the list his helpful Castroite hosts so helpfully provided:
"High infant
mortality" (in fact, Mr. English, Cuba's infant mortality in 1958
was the 13th lowest not in Latin America, not in the Hemisphere
but in the WORLD lower than Ireland's.)
"Subhuman housing"
(in fact, Mr. English, Cuba's per capita income in 1958 was higher
than half of Europe's, including Ireland's.)
"Dispossession
of small farmers" (in fact, Cuba's agricultural wages in 1958
were higher than half of Europe's, including Ireland's.
And far from huge latifundia hogging the Cuban countryside the
average Cuban farm in 1958 was SMALLER than the average in the U.S.)
"Illiteracy"
(In fact, Mr. English, in a mere 50 years since a war of independence
that cost Cuba almost a fifth of her population, Cuba managed 80
per cent literacy and budgeted the most (23% of national expenses)
for public education of any Latin American country (more than Ireland,
by the way). Better still, Cubans were not just literate but also
educated, allowed to read George Orwell and Thomas Jefferson
along with the arresting wisdom and sparkling prose of Che Guevara.
You will be
shocked to hear that English's sources (like Jon Lee Anderson's
sources for Che,
A Revolutionary Life) are primarily officials of Cuba's
Stalinist regime which English visited often. Indeed, English dedicates
his book to one such official, Enrique Cirules, who he calls a "Cuban
author." Fine, I'll call Julius Streicher "a German author." and
Ilya Ehrenburg "a Russian author. "
The Willion
& Morrow published book continues the "Idiot's Guide"
manual in Cuban history by rationalizing Castro's Stalinist regime
from the get-go. "U.S. business owned much of the prime land."
In fact, of
Cuba's 161 sugar mills 1958, only 40 were U.S. owned. And United
Fruit the outfit generally cast as the Boss Hog/Luigi Barzini/J.R.
Ewing/Snidely Whiplash/Hannibal Lecter in this episode owned only
a third of these. And according to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce,
in 1958 U.S. investments in Cuba accounted for only 13 per cent
of Cuba's GNP.
"44 per
cent of Cubans a higher percentage than Americans are covered
by social legislation," starts a report on Cuba dated 1957.
"One feature of the Cuban social structure is a large middle
class. Cuban workers are more unionized (proportional to the
population) than U.S. workers. The average wage for an 8-hour day
in Cuba in 1957 is higher than for workers in Belgium, Denmark,
France and Germany. According to the Geneva-based International
Labor Organization, the average daily wage for an agricultural worker
was also among the highest in the world, higher than in France,
Belgium, Denmark, or West Germany. Cuban labor receives 66.6 per
cent of gross national income. In the U.S. the figure is 70 per
cent, in Switzerland 64 per cent."
Prior to Castro,
Cuban industrial workers had the 8th highest wages not in Latin
America, not in the hemisphere but in the world. Cuba
had established an 8-hour work-day in 1933 five years before FDR's
New Dealers got around to it. The much-lauded (by liberals) Social-Democracies
of Western Europe didn't manage this till 30 years later.
These aren't
the ravings of a "Cuban exile right-wing crackpot!" (me)
this right-wing crackpot is only regurgitating a UNESCO (United
Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization) report
on Cuba from 1957.
When no New
York Times reporters, CNN correspondents, and eminent American
Ivy League and Think-Tank scholars are within hearing range, Commies
can be extremely frank with each other.
Early in the
Cuban revolution, for instance, Czech economist Radoslav Selucky
visited Cuba and was rudely awakened: "We thought Cuba was
underdeveloped except for a few sugar refineries?!" he wrote
when he got home to Prague. "This is false. Almost a quarter
of Cuba's labor force was employed in industry where the salaries
were equal to those in the U.S.!"
Now here's
Che Guevara himself in 1961 after he returned to Cuba with his Cuban
underlings from a lengthy tour of Eastern Europe: "We're not
going to say we only saw marvels in those countries, " admitted
Che who (given their national propensity for sarcasm had undoubtedly
heard much scoffing and snickering from his Cuban subalterns about
the to them pathetic socio-economic conditions in the major
capitols of Eastern Europe that Cuba was supposed to emulate!!)
"Naturally
for a 20 th Century Cuban with all the luxuries which Imperialism
has accustomed him," Wrote Che Guevara, "much of what he saw (in
eastern Europe) struck him as belonging to undeveloped countries."
But fear not!
As Cuba's Economics minister, Che Guevara was already plotting on
how to wipe those snickers from those Cubans faces!
He (Che Guevara)
as Cuba's Economic Czar, converted a nation with a higher per capita
income than half of Europe, the lowest inflation rate in the Western
hemisphere, a larger middle class than Switzerland, a huge influx
of immigrants and whose workers enjoyed the 8th-highest
industrial wages in the world into one that repels Haitians. And
this after being lavished with Soviet subsidies that totaled almost
ten Marshall Plans (again, into a nation of 6.4 million) an economic
feat that defies not only the laws of economics but seemingly the
very laws of physics. One place where Cuban exiles agree wholeheartedly
with Castro and Che is regarding their exalted posts as Third World
icons. He and Che certainly converted Cuba into a Third World nation.
We
turn now to a United Nations (no less!) study of Cuba circa 1958.
"Cuba has a tremendous advantage in national integration over
other Latin American countries because of a largely homogeneous
white Spanish immigrant base. Cuba's smaller Negro population is
also culturally integrated. Those feudal modes of labor that exist
in the rest of Latin America, don't exist in Cuba. The Cuban campesino
does not resemble the one in the rest of Latin America who is tied
to the land, and is profoundly tradition-bound and opposed to innovations
which would link him to a market economy. The Cuban campesino, in
all respects, is a modern man. They have an educational level and
a familiarity with modern methods unseen in the rest of Latin America."
PLEASE NOTE!!
A professor/U.N. technician named Juan Noyola (Mexican, no less!)
wrote the above passage not me! So bash HIM as a "racist"
or a Falangist if you like.
February
21, 2009
Humberto
Fontova [send him mail]
is the author of Exposing
the Real Che Guevara and the Useful Idiots Who Idolize Him.
Visit his website.
Copyright
© 2009 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
Humberto
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