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Tuesday, January 02, 2007
Jeff Jacoby :: Townhall.com Columnist
Castro's true legacy is a trail of blood
by Jeff Jacoby
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Freedom House gives Cuba its lowest possible rating for civil liberties and political rights, placing it with Burma, North Korea, and Sudan as one of the world's most repressive regimes. Hundreds of political prisoners are behind bars in Cuba today. Among them, writes Carlos Alberto Montaner in the current issue of Foreign Policy, are "48 young people [imprisoned] for collecting signatures for a referendum, 23 journalists for writing articles about the regime, and 18 librarians for loaning forbidden books." Political prisoners can be beaten, starved, denied medical care, locked in solitary confinement, and forced into slave labor. Castro long ago eliminated freedom of religion, due process of law, and the right to leave the country.

He also wiped out Cuba’s once-flourishing free press. According to the Committee to Protect Journalists, Cuba is one of the world’s leading jailers of journalists, second only to China in the number of reporters behind bars.

? Castro stole Cuba's wealth.

While Cubans grew progressively poorer under communism, Castro exploited them to become one of the world's richest people. Foreign companies doing business in Cuba must pay a significant sum for each worker they hire -- but most of the money goes to Castro's regime, while the workers receive only a pittance. Castro also controls Cuba's state-owned companies, whose profits account for much of his wealth. Castro insists that his personal net worth is zero, but in 2006 Forbes magazine estimates the amount to be $900 million.

? Castro shed far more blood than the dictator he replaced.

According to the Cuba Archive, which is meticulously documenting the deaths of each person killed by Cuba's rulers since 1952, Batista was responsible for killing approximately 3,000 people. Castro's toll has been far higher. So far the archive has documented more than 8,000 specific victims of the Castro regime -- including 5,775 firing squad executions, 1,231 extrajudicial assassinations, and 984 deaths in prison. When fully documented, the body count is expected to reach 17,000 -- not counting the tens of thousands of Cubans who lost their lives at sea while fleeing Castro's Caribbean nightmare.

"Condemn me, it doesn't matter," Castro said long ago. "History will absolve me." But Castro's ultimate day of judgment draws near, and history is not likely to be so kind.

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About The Author

Jeff Jacoby is an Op-Ed writer for the Boston Globe, a radio political commentator, and a contributing columnist for Townhall.com. href="http://www.townhall.com/Secure/Signup.aspx">Sign up today

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on "truth"

The Miami Herald's extremely poor record on covering Cuban affairs is well documented. The hard core of the "exile" population in Miami is one of the most politically connected, well organized and vile groups you can imagine. They have talk radio - and now blogs - galore - to help organize boycotts and generally raise hell. Miami is 60% Cuban and these groups retain much influence. Here are just a few of the more egregious epidosdes:

Most recently, several of the Herald's Spanish language reporters were fired - and then unbelievably rehired- for taking money from the US Government to report on Cuba propoganda shows (and not disclosing it.
http://www.freepress.net/news/17579 In the end, facing boycotts and thousands of cancelled subscriptions, the paper relented and hired back the ethically challenged journalists - and the Publisher stpped down instead. Exiles happy, problem solved.
http://www.cbc.ca/arts/story/2006/10/03/miami-herald.html?ref=rss

Much of their truly terrible, tainted journalism now has been transplanted to their Spanish language publication - El Nuevo Herald. Here is some background on why the Herald created thios competitor:
http://archives.cjr.org/year/00/2/miami.asp

Earlier in the year, the Nuevo Herald got busted for photoshopping a picture supposedly showing a couple Cuban prostitutes right near some oblivious Cuban policement. The headlinewas Prostitutes: Meat of the American Dollar. It was a fake:
http://www.miaminewtimes.com/issues/2006-07-27/news/strouse.html

Investigative Journalist Ann Louis Bardach has studied the issue probably most comprehensively. She concludes: "While the Herald claims that it calls it sown shots, it has been through too many bruises with Jorge Mas Canosa (ex-Cuban American National Foundation boss) and the exile leadership to ever be fully independent." She details the tants, vandalism, blackmailing, bomb and death threats, etc that lead the Inter American Press Association to investigate. Exile groups hire investigators to find dirt of Herald writers. Miami reporters talk about the "witch hunts" and fear of blacklisting that compells them to tread carefully. She details the exodus of many of their best journalists in the 90s after editors killed or altered stories (even less than critical reviews of Gloria Estefan records got axed).

Here is how their coverage of the Elian affair was torn apart by the media watchdog FAIR (Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting):
http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=1027&printer_friendly=1

The Herald has printed several flattering pieces of convinted criminals and terrorists (Orlando Bosch and Luis Posada Carriles) - they happened to be Cuban-Americans who liked America but hated everyone else.
http://archives.cjr.org/year/92/3/miami.asp

Here is where they argued on behalf of plane-bomber terrorist mastermind Carriles just a few months ago (that's just a rumor according to them despite FBI and CIA files to the contrary - and his own admnission):
http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/news/editorial/16002080.htm

Here is how their editorial writers confuse neo-liberalism with democracy:
http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=2796

And if you get new ownership and dare start changing the status quo a bit you get armed cartoonists hijacking the office.
http://today.reuters.com/news/articleinvesting.aspx?view=CN&storyID=2006-11-24T184040Z_01_N24365789_RTRIDST_0_CRIME-GUNMAN.XML&rpc=66&type=qcna

On the question of exiles and immigrants telling themselves lies, maybe I could back that up with some psychology journal articles if I had the time... But think about people I know having left their relatives and county, then not doing terribly well in the US (working 2 jobs, renting, etc) or in many cases missing home. You might begin to tell yourself lies because you can't go back and you want desperately to believe you made the right decision for yourself, your family. Telling your kids and friends about the supposed persecution and lack of freedom is clean and easy - and falls into mainstream American thinking - so why complicate the story?

Fletch vs. leftside
Fletch wrote: "I especially enjoyed how you dismissed my questioning of Cuba's governmental statistics (that I backed up with legitimate reasons for that questioning) while you dismissed the articles from the Miami Herald "

Indeed. This in particular caught my eye:

"conclusions reached by the Miami Herald do not count for much (they lose readers every time they slip up and print a truth regarding Cuba)."

Leftside's use of the word "truth" here is a bit precious, considering that what is being debated, in fact, is what is the truth of the matter. So for the sake of considering this bit, let's substitute "something positive regarding Cuba."

That said: Why, exactly, would printing something positive about Cuba lose the Miami Herald readers? Which readers are they supposedly losing? And why?

A related comment:

"many exiles tell themselves lies...."

Why, exactly? What would their motive be? It is easy and obvious to come up with a motive for why Castro and his regime would lie; why would exiles lie about the truth of the situation back in Havana?

Ockham's Razor, people, my god...!!!
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