She Stormed Off? Watch AG Pam Bondi Trigger the Hell Out of This...
The Canadian School Shooter Has Been Identified. Yes, It's a Transgender Person.
OpenAI Fires Executive Who Warned About 'Adult Mode'
You Won't Believe What Iran's President Just Said About His Regime Murdering Protesters
Canada's MAiD Program Is About to Get Even More Horrifying
Backlash Grows Over the University of Notre Dame's Appointment of Pro-Abortion Professor
Somali Immigrants Are Now Claiming Parts of Minnesota Belong to Somalia
Wisconsin Students Left Out in the Cold As Evers Vows to Veto Federal...
'Dawson's Creek' Actor James Van Der Beek Dead at 48
Missouri Bill Seeks to Protect Gun Owner Privacy
Gallup Admitted What Voters Already Know
The Slaughter Continues in Iran, As Nikki Haley Encourages Trump to Make a...
Rep. Ted Lieu Blasts AG Pam Bondi for Not Interviewing an Epstein Witness,...
The Con Consuming American Politics
If ICE Is Hamstrung, Hold on to Your Wallets
Tipsheet

NYT's Helene Cooper Dismisses the 'America-Centric' View of Castro

Fidel’s Castro’s death on Friday came as a relief for many in America, particularly those who either escaped or whose parents fled Cuba during his regime. The dictator is infamously known for human rights abuses rampant throughout his rule. In Miami, Cuban-Americans and all those who are a part of the exile community celebrated the dictator’s demise.

Advertisement

While they celebrated, world leaders took a softer line on commenting on Castro’s life. USA Today reported that North Korea is implementing a 3-day mourning period for the dictator, that Kim Jong-un sees as a “rare comrade-in-arms against the common enemy of the United States.” Four famous Americans, including our President, and Canada’s Prime Minister released statements that essentially expressed pity for the Cuban people who are, as Trudeau phrased, in “mourning the loss of this remarkable leader.”

We can add another example to that list of embarrassing reactions to Castro’s death.

The New York Times’ Helene Cooper defended the dictator on MSNBC’s Meet the Press. Cooper, who was born Liberia, remembered Castro as a force against an ‘apartheid regime’ supported by the United States. She dismissed Marco Rubio’s comments as “America-centric” while President Obama’s statement represented the reality that “nobody in the rest of the world sort of agrees with you.”

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement