Cliff Kincaid
America's enemies are laughing at us
By Cliff Kincaid
Time magazine is out with a colorful and glossy "Inside the New Cuba" special edition, featuring smiling Cuban kids wearing Communist garb on the cover. Page 64 has a photo showing "Cuban fans" holding up "their national flag" at a baseball game. It turns out that the really happy Cubans are those who have been defecting from the island "paradise," as Time magazine calls the prison camp country.
Credit goes to Christine Rousselle of Townhall.com for covering these defections. They seem to be developing into a regular feature, with Rousselle providing regular updates about additional defections.
So far, eight players from the Cuban men's field hockey team, four rowers from the Cuban national team, and two members of the Cuban soccer team have defected.
The defections completely undercut the chapter of the special Time magazine issue on Cuba that is titled "The Big League Next Door," which speculates that normalization of relations between the U.S. and Cuba could "stop Cuba's top talent from fleeing...." This chapter is written by Robert Siegel, senior host of National Public Radio, and Eyder Peralta, an NPR reporter.
Washington Nationals infielder Yunel Escobar defected from Cuba when he was 21. The Washington Post covered his story in a May 7 article, noting:
These are the immigrants we should welcome, since they have developed an appreciation of the struggle between freedom and totalitarianism. They want to enjoy and celebrate American freedom, not distort and transform the country into a Third World welfare state of cheap labor for corporations and paid-for votes for the Democratic Party.
In the Time magazine version of Cuba, we are told in the section "Scenes from the Revolution," Fidel Castro "promised to clean up the government, restore democracy and civil liberties, and promote social justice." Nothing is said about whether he fulfilled those promises.
By contrast, we are told that his predecessor, Fulgencio Batista, was a "ruthless dictator" who ran a system characterized by "economic and social inequality and a corrupt government." The implication is that Castro changed all of that for the better.
A caption on a page of pictures of Cuban cowboys on the communist island informs us that "Before Castro nationalized all farms, almost three quarters of Cuba's arable lands was owned by fewer than 3,000 individuals and corporations, many of them American, while most farmworkers were renters." One of the Cuban cowboys proclaims, "It is no longer of Communism or no Communism. It belongs to us."
You mean communism works after all? That seems to be the message of this special Time magazine Cuba edition.
It's completely absurd but this is what passes for serious journalism. It reminds me of the old Ronald Reagan joke, reportedly told to Mikhail Gorbachev, about two men walking down a street in Moscow, when one asks, "Is this pure communism? Have we passed through the stage of socialism and reached pure communism? The other replies, "Hell, no. It's gonna get a lot worse."
Ben Lewis wrote an article, "Hammer & tickle," noting that "Communism is the only political system to have created its own international brand of comedy."
These days, Oleg Atbashian makes fun of the Marxists and their apologists on a regular basis, on his "People's Cube" website. One of his latest offerings is the new poster featuring the "Rebel without a gender." The People's Cube proclaims, "Che is dead, long live Conchita: a new rebel icon."
His tribute to the Museum of Communism in Prague is a lot of laughs, as he displays some of the posters from the old communist days, such as the one announcing that communist women would have burnt their bras like their sisters in the West, "if there were any in the shops."
Another communist poster said: "Sometimes there was no toilet paper in the shops. Luckily there was not much food, either."
Meanwhile, believe it or not, the comedian Jack Black is being featured in a video campaign from the group Global Zero to sell the Iranian nuclear deal. He previously starred in such films as "Shallow Hal," "School of Rock," "Nacho Libre," and the Kung Fu Panda films.
A comedian as the face of the Iranian nuclear deal? This is where the laughing begins to die down.
The Iranians and their Russian sponsors are the ones laughing at us now.
So are the Cuban Communists.
They may lose some people through defections, but they get an embassy on American soil where they can base their spies and recruit agents inside the U.S. government.
© Cliff Kincaid
July 30, 2015
Time magazine is out with a colorful and glossy "Inside the New Cuba" special edition, featuring smiling Cuban kids wearing Communist garb on the cover. Page 64 has a photo showing "Cuban fans" holding up "their national flag" at a baseball game. It turns out that the really happy Cubans are those who have been defecting from the island "paradise," as Time magazine calls the prison camp country.
Credit goes to Christine Rousselle of Townhall.com for covering these defections. They seem to be developing into a regular feature, with Rousselle providing regular updates about additional defections.
So far, eight players from the Cuban men's field hockey team, four rowers from the Cuban national team, and two members of the Cuban soccer team have defected.
The defections completely undercut the chapter of the special Time magazine issue on Cuba that is titled "The Big League Next Door," which speculates that normalization of relations between the U.S. and Cuba could "stop Cuba's top talent from fleeing...." This chapter is written by Robert Siegel, senior host of National Public Radio, and Eyder Peralta, an NPR reporter.
Washington Nationals infielder Yunel Escobar defected from Cuba when he was 21. The Washington Post covered his story in a May 7 article, noting:
-
"Escobar's love of baseball was fueled by television broadcasts and video games, both forbidden in Cuba. He paid to watch MLB games and favorite players such as Alex Rodriguez, Roberto Alomar, Omar Vizquel and fellow Cuban Livan Hernandez on a TV with a hush-hush antenna at a friend's house. He also grew to love Ken Griffey Jr. because of a video game he played often in secret. A friend had smuggled in a console and charged the equivalent of 50 cents per hour to play."
These are the immigrants we should welcome, since they have developed an appreciation of the struggle between freedom and totalitarianism. They want to enjoy and celebrate American freedom, not distort and transform the country into a Third World welfare state of cheap labor for corporations and paid-for votes for the Democratic Party.
In the Time magazine version of Cuba, we are told in the section "Scenes from the Revolution," Fidel Castro "promised to clean up the government, restore democracy and civil liberties, and promote social justice." Nothing is said about whether he fulfilled those promises.
By contrast, we are told that his predecessor, Fulgencio Batista, was a "ruthless dictator" who ran a system characterized by "economic and social inequality and a corrupt government." The implication is that Castro changed all of that for the better.
A caption on a page of pictures of Cuban cowboys on the communist island informs us that "Before Castro nationalized all farms, almost three quarters of Cuba's arable lands was owned by fewer than 3,000 individuals and corporations, many of them American, while most farmworkers were renters." One of the Cuban cowboys proclaims, "It is no longer of Communism or no Communism. It belongs to us."
You mean communism works after all? That seems to be the message of this special Time magazine Cuba edition.
It's completely absurd but this is what passes for serious journalism. It reminds me of the old Ronald Reagan joke, reportedly told to Mikhail Gorbachev, about two men walking down a street in Moscow, when one asks, "Is this pure communism? Have we passed through the stage of socialism and reached pure communism? The other replies, "Hell, no. It's gonna get a lot worse."
Ben Lewis wrote an article, "Hammer & tickle," noting that "Communism is the only political system to have created its own international brand of comedy."
These days, Oleg Atbashian makes fun of the Marxists and their apologists on a regular basis, on his "People's Cube" website. One of his latest offerings is the new poster featuring the "Rebel without a gender." The People's Cube proclaims, "Che is dead, long live Conchita: a new rebel icon."
His tribute to the Museum of Communism in Prague is a lot of laughs, as he displays some of the posters from the old communist days, such as the one announcing that communist women would have burnt their bras like their sisters in the West, "if there were any in the shops."
Another communist poster said: "Sometimes there was no toilet paper in the shops. Luckily there was not much food, either."
Meanwhile, believe it or not, the comedian Jack Black is being featured in a video campaign from the group Global Zero to sell the Iranian nuclear deal. He previously starred in such films as "Shallow Hal," "School of Rock," "Nacho Libre," and the Kung Fu Panda films.
A comedian as the face of the Iranian nuclear deal? This is where the laughing begins to die down.
The Iranians and their Russian sponsors are the ones laughing at us now.
So are the Cuban Communists.
They may lose some people through defections, but they get an embassy on American soil where they can base their spies and recruit agents inside the U.S. government.
© Cliff Kincaid
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