THE REAL CHE GUEVARA


Can his reputation survive the publication of his own words?

In December 1953, he wrote to his aunt from San José, Costa Rica, “I have sworn before a picture of our old, much lamented comrade Stalin that I will not rest until I see these capitalist octopuses annihilated.” [1, p. 62]Another letter to the same aunt was signed with the words "Stalin II." [2, p. 167] More important was the fact that when Guevara visited the USSR in his capacity as one of the most important leaders of the victorious Cuban revolution in November of 1960, he insisted on depositing a floral tribute at Stalin's tomb[1, p. 181]. It is important to remember that this was more than four years after Khrushchev's revelations of Stalin's crimes.

This from Che Guevara's Guevara journal of his travels through Latin America: “I now feel my dilated nostrils, savoring the acrid odor of gunpowder and blood, of enemy death; I now tense my body, ready for the struggle, and I prepare my being as a sacred place so that in it resounds with new vibrations and new hopes the bestial howl of the triumphant proletariat.” The Motorcycle Diaries omitted this inconvenient portion of Che's diaries form the film.

A phrase in a letter to his wife on January 28, 1957, not long after disembarking in Cuba, which was published in her book Ernesto: A Memoir of Che Guevara in Sierra Maestra: “Here in the Cuban jungle, alive and bloodthirsty.” It is hardly a surprise that during the armed struggle against Batista, and then after the triumphant entry into Havana, Guevara murdered or oversaw the executions in summary trials of scores of people.

[1] Jorge Castañeda, Compañero: The Life and Death of Che Guevara (New York: Vintage, 1998).

[2] Jon Lee Anderson, Che Guevara: A Revolutionary Life (New York: Grove Press, 1997.

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When a boy in Guevara’s forces stole some food, he ordered him shot. In January 1957, Guevara personally executed a peasant named Eutimio Guerra because he suspected him of passing on information and described the act in his diary:

“I ended the problem giving him a shot with a .32 pistol in the right side of the brain, with exit orifice in the right temporal. He gasped for a little while and was dead. Upon proceeding to remove his belongings I couldn’t get off the watch tied by a chain to his belt, and then he told me in a steady voice farther away than fear: “Yank it off, boy, what does it matter… I did so and his possessions were now mine.” [4, p. 176]

Later he shot Aristidio, a peasant who expressed the desire to leave whenever the rebels moved on. He ordered the death of Echevarría, a brother of one of his comrades, because of unspecified crimes: “He had to pay the price.” At other times he would simulate executions without carrying them out, as a method of psychological torture.

He wrote to a friend in December 1957, “Because of my ideological background, I belong to those who believe that the solution of the world’s problems lies behind the so-called iron curtain....” [3, p. 269]

“If in doubt, kill him” were Che's instructions. On the eve of victory, according to Costa, Che ordered the execution of a couple dozen people in Santa Clara, in central Cuba, where his column had gone as part of a final assault on the island. Some of them were shot in a hotel, as Marcelo Fernándes-Zayas, another former revolutionary who later became a journalist, has written--adding that among those executed, known as casquitos, were peasants who had joined the army simply to escape unemployment.

[3] Carlos Franqui, Diary of the Cuban Revolution (New York: Viking Press, 1980).

[4] Mona Charen, Useful Idiots: How Liberals Got It Wrong in the Cold

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Guevara became “supreme prosecutor” at Havana’s La Cabaña fortress after Batista fled Cuba. Here he presided over hundreds of executions in proceedings that even a sympathetic biographer notes “were carried out without respect for due process.” [1, p. 143]

The "cold-blooded killing machine" did not show the full extent of his rigor until, immediately after the collapse of the Batista regime, Castro put him in charge of La Cabaña prison. Guevara presided during the first half of 1959 over one of the darkest periods of the revolution.

"To send men to the firing squad, judicial proof is unnecessary. These procedures are an archaic bourgeois detail. This is a revolution! And a revolutionary must become a cold killing machine motivated by pure hate. We must create the pedagogy of the paredon! (The Wall)"

The first three months of the Cuban Revolution saw 568 firing squad executions. Even the New York Times admits it. The preceding "trials" shocked and nauseated all who witnessed them. They were shameless farces, sickening charades.

Nazi Germany became the modern standard for political evil even before WWII. Yet in 1938, according to both William Shirer and John Toland, the Nazi regime held no more than 20 thousand political prisoners. Political executions up to the time might have reached a couple thousand, and most of these were of renegade Nazis themselves during the indiscriminate butchery known as the "Night Of The Long Knives." The famous night that horrified civilized opinion worldwide caused a grand total of 71 deaths. This in a nation of 70 million.

Cuba was a nation of 6.5 million in 1959. Within three months in power Castro and Che had shamed the Nazi prewar incarceration and murder rate. Cuban journalist Luis Ortega who knew Che as early as 1954 writes in his book "Yo Soy El Che!" that Guevara sent 1,897 men to the firing squad. In his book "Che Guevara: A Biography," Daniel James writes that Che himself admitted to ordering "several thousand" executions during the first few years of the Castro regime.

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Victorin, you probably think you are enlightening the masses with your quotes and references...

Of course in the comfort of your cousy, boring, WASP, American household it is very easy to judge what people said and did in remote corners of the world.

Have you ever traveled abroad? Have you ever been to the slums or shanty towns on the outskirts of your city (I don´t know where you live but there sure is one). Have you ever starved? Seen your children sick and dying hopelessly? Do you think such people will be outraged out of the killing of some hundred delinquents or corporate lackeys? You are very naif, to say the least. Do yourself a favor, learn to read and start reading. Then you will post real thoughts and not copy and paste stolen data.

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Then you will post real thoughts and not copy and paste stolen data.

valt - You write that as if data (facts) were not necessary to make the case against Che. I bet if all this person did what voice only opinions against Che, you'd be the first person to ridicule him for not providing any facts to make his case.

And consider this: You are defending a known murderer, a Communist, and a doctor who turned his back on his hypocratic oath.





"I want you to hit me as hard as you can." - Tyler Durden

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A doctor? When did he graduate?

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A doctor? When did he graduate?

March of 1953, from the University of Buenos Aires, according to "Spartacus Educational" a website in the UK. He worked as a medic in a Venezuelan leper colony.

According to "The Che Store [dot] com":
Early 1955 Che Guevara finds work as a doctor in the "Hospital Central" of Mexico-City.

and

On July 3 the press agency UPI notifies: "The Argentine doctor Guevara will be deported to his land of origin, because of his presumed participation of the failed conspiracy against the Cuban government of Fulgencio Batista."

And according to "History of Cuba [dot] com":

Guevara went on to become the official doctor of the rebel army, and an important leader and strategist.




"Careful, man, there's a beverage here!" - The Dude

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After watching my grandfather die at the hands of this cold blooded killer, I do not know how you would call him a "delinquent or a corporate lackey". I have relived that image more times in my head than I care to imagine. My grandfather and his before him were simple farmers. We did not live in "shantytowns or slums".

I am no WASP, but I am an American. Cuban-American! I have been in this country since 1971 and love everything that this country has to offer.

So Val do yourself a favor and do not spout off at the mouth about things you have not lived through and know nothing about.

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I dunno.

Anytime I see these ignorant *beep* parading around in their Che t-shirts, I start wondering how long before the ignorant *beep* switch over to Osama or Saddam t-shirts.

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I'll tell you something about the real Che Guevara. My family is from Cuba, one of the wealthiest back then. My mother's family (herself included) lived right next door from Che Guevara's right arm. My mother's family dined with Fidel and Che on numorous occations. My mother even has a picture on Che Guevara's lap. All this changed when Che Guevara personally invited my grandfather to brunch and a special afternoon activity. And do you have any clue of what it could be??? Think really hard!!! Well the answer: an execution. My granpa stood there next to Che who was smoking a cigar and laughing as they executed more than 20 men. After it was over he asked my grandfather to join him the week after to have some fun, to watch them execute more men, women and children. After that everything for my family changed when they opposed to all that. For those of you who wear his t-shirts with Che Guevara on them, to those who have posters, etc., to those of you who admire him you are trully clueless. You admire a man who shot people for fun. The man you admire is nothing more than a murderer.

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Sorry but you lost me when you said execute more men, WOMEN and CHILDREN.
Next time try to avoid those two words, it will raise your story's credibility way more. Nice try.

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Well Che did kill women and children. I mean, there really isn't anything that shocking in that statement. He wiped out entire prisons worth of men, killed peasant families (which usually involve women and children); the man was sick.

He considered mental illness a waste and had many patients killed. He also killed many homosexuals. This guy is not someone to look up to.

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He made the comments about Stalin based on the fact that he felt Stalin and the Soviets were greatly underrated in the victory of WW2. He wasn't honoring the crimes Stalin commited against the Russian people. It is not uncommon for people to visit the graves of former world leaders, or shrines dedicated to them.

The Motorcycle diaries ommited things that were not prudent to the journey tha a young man and his friend were taking. It was not a movie about political che, guerilla che, or revolutionary che. It was a movie about friendship and the thinks that Che saw that would later shape him into the man he became. No matter what you wanna make of it, that is the story.

Question for you, if you are fighting in a revolution or armed struggle against an army, wouldn't you think that killing someone might happen? People killed in armed conflict are casualties, not murdered victims, they too were armed and fighting. So his triuphant entrance into Havana in which 100s of thousands of people showed up to support, was heroic.

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You're just like the guy on the Letters From Iwo Jima board, who tried to justify the Nanking Massacre. Che was a bloodthirsty bastard. He burns in Hell for the atrocities he committed. He was controlled by Satan, his entire life, fueled by anger. His actions speak much louder than his words. Never, ever call him heroic, for he spent his life as a coward, murdering where a brave man would show compassion.

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Because thats how you overthrow a dictator, with compassion? lol, burns in hell and controlled by satan, not much compassion in that statement (you god types as the biggest hypocrites going). Many people would disagree with you.

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Please stop with this tired of line...everytime someone points out attrocities of some supposed hero (in this case che) someone goes 'oh but what about what America did with etc...' Deal with the issue and the arguement that people make rather than trying to retort with the 'Yes but' line.

Che was just a bomb planting terrorist.

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In writing about Pedro Valdivia, the conquistador of Chile, Guevara reflected: “He belonged to that special class of men the species produces every so often, in whom a craving for limitless power is so extreme that any suffering to achieve it seems natural.” He might have been describing himself. At every stage of his adult life, his megalomania manifested itself in the predatory urge to take over other people's lives and property, and to abolish their free will.

He ordered his men to rob banks, a decision that he justified in a letter to Enrique Oltuski, a subordinate, in November of 1958: “The struggling masses agree to robbing banks because none of them has a penny in them.” This idea of revolution as a license to re-allocate property as he saw fit led the Marxist Puritan to take over the mansion of an emigrant after the triumph of the revolution. The urge to dispossess others of their property and to claim ownership of others' territory was central to Guevara's politics of raw power.

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“It was during the last days of December 1959, the sound of the iron door opening was heard as they threw another person into the already crowded cell. It was a boy some 12 to 14 years old at most who had just become our newest cellmate. And what did you do? I defended my father so they wouldn't kill him, I couldn't stop it. Soon Che's goons came back, and they yanked the valiant boy out of the cell.

He gave the order to bring the boy first and he ordered him to kneel in front of the wall. The boy disobeyed the order with a courage that words can't express and responded to this infamous character: “If you're going to kill me you're going to have to do it the way you kill a man, standing, not like a coward, kneeling.”

Walking behind the boy, the Che said “whereupon you are a brave lad.” He upholstered his pistol and shot him in the nape of the neck so that he almost decapitated him.”

Here's a cold-blooded murderer who executed thousands without trial, who claimed that judicial evidence was an ”unnecessary bourgeois detail,” who stayed up till dawn for months at a time signing death warrants for innocent and honorable men, whose office in La Cabana had a window where he could watch the executions – and today his T-shirts adorn people who oppose capital punishment. By his own count, Che sent 2,500 men to "the wall." [5]

[5] Pierre San Martin, El Nuevo Herald , Diciembre 28, 1997.

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You still think you are feeding us fresh news are you? People know that Victorin, that Che killed people summarily. That doesn´t make Batista innocent. That doesn´t make the 40s and the 50s "Cuba´s Golden Years". That doesn´t make the Cuban Revolution bad. And, specially, that doesn´t make this movie good.

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When the Rumanian writer Stefan Baciu visited Havana, Che Guevara
invited him to be present at an execution. Baciu has made reference a few times
to this macabre invitation, the last time in his poem:

"I DO NOT SING TO CHE"

I do not sing to Che,
neither I have sung to Stalin
with Che I spoke enough in Mexico,
and in Havana he invited me,
biting the pure between the lips,
like inviting somebody to a drink in the bar,
to accompany him to see how people are shot at the wall in la Cabaña.

I do not sing to Che,
neither I have sung to Stalin;
let Neruda, Guillen and Cortazar sing to him;
they sing to Che (the singers of Stalin),
I sing to the youth of Czechoslovakia.

The difference between ‘Che’ Guevara and Pol Pot was that Guevara never studied in Paris.

But the mass-executioner gets a standing ovation by the same people in the U.S who opposes capital punishment! Is there a psychiatrist in the house?!

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Che played a principal role in setting up Cuba's first labor camp in the Guanahacabibes region in western Cuba in 1960-1961, to confine people who had committed no crime punishable by law, revolutionary or otherwise. This "crimes" involved drinking, vagrancy, disrespect for authorities, laziness and playing loud music. Che defended that initiative in his own words: “We only send to Guanahacabibes those doubtful cases where we are not sure people should go to jail. I believe that people who should go to jail should go to jail anyway.”

This camp was the precursor to the eventual systematic confinement, starting in 1965 in the province of Camagüey, of dissidents, homosexuals, Catholics, Jehovah's Witnesses, Afro-Cuban priests, and other such scum, under the banner of UMAP, Unidades Militares de Ayuda a la Producción, or Military Units to Help Production. Herded into buses and trucks, the “unfit” would be transported at gunpoint into concentration camps organized on the Guanahacabibes mold. Some would never return; others would be raped, beaten, or mutilated; and most would be traumatized for life, as Néstor Almendros's wrenching documentary Improper Conduct showed the world a couple of decades ago. In the 80s and 90s this non-judicial, forced confinement was also applied to AIDS victims [6].

[6] Samuel Farber, "The Resurrection of Che Guevara," New Politics, Summer 1998.

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valteleki: I strongly suggest you visit Cuba if you can. Stay there a few months, live with the common people (yes, there are social classes in communist Cuba, hard to believe it, isn't it?), share their daily miseries and oppression. Then, and only then, you will be truly qualified to talk and sympathize with something you obviously know very little about.

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Why should it (and how could it) even "make Batista innocent"? Was it the hidden point of the film or something?

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I think you exaggerate some on this More Books praise " Che " then demean him ... More love than hate him ,,

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They love him because they have romanticized him and are ignorant of history and of his brutish thuggishness. He was a cold blooded killer. Many innocent Cubans died or were imprisoned and still remain imprisoned. Is Cuba better off with Castro? Those who know the truth know that it is not. However, socialist and communistists with their utopian ideals will not be deterred. I thought the Lost City, which, after all, is what this thread started out to be about, was a wondeful loving film written by a man who lived it and produced and directed by a man whose family lived it as well. I'll take that truth any time. Che was an animal and Castro no better.

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He was controlled by Satan?! OMG! Go take your pills please.

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I never knew Che, and I've only been to Havana once, but I DO know that Che Guevara was both Argentine and a physician. I can't think of any combination more likely to produce arrogant, pompous superiority. He must have been personally insufferable. (I am a physician, but Mexican)

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Should I assume you don't like Soda Stereo either?

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People (that is, those who have studied the Cuban Revolution)admire Che as a man who fought against oppression. Guevara killed many men, this is true. But one must look at his motivation. He did not "murder" because he enjoyed it, he believed the casualties were necessary for the Revolution to be successful. There can not be a Revolution of such political and social change without casualties. Because, you know, the American Revolution was an entirely bloodless affair.

That said, Guevara is not admired because he "murdered". He's admired as a man who believed in something greater and acted selflessly to attain it. He died fighting for what he believed in. His intentions for Latin America were noble. In retrospect, many argue he was misguided but I'm not sure if that's necessarily true.

Furthermore, because Che Guevara is a Communist that does not make him less respectable or invalidate his actions. I'm not a Communist by any means, but in theory it's a beautiful (also impractical) system. Che may have been naive to think Communism is possible in its true form, but he remains one of Latin America's most beloved figures for a reason. Not everyone admires his actions, but those who do have their specific reasons. Comparisons to Hitler, Stalin, etc are uncalled for.

I admire Che Guevara. Not as a commie. Not as a "murderer". I admire him as a man who loved his people and wanted more for them. A man who died in the jungles of Bolivia for his people.

Cuba, despite the Embargo, isn't doing horribly either. They have decent, universal health care and their literacy rate is close to 100%.

I know some of you will retaliate with "You admire a murderer!" Well, that's what YOU believe Che is. I believe Che is a remarkable, courageous man. He may have killed, but he pulled the trigger himself unlike two certain draft dodgers who send young men and women to die in a desert for a terrible lie.

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He did not "murder" because he enjoyed it


Really? Is that why he wrote his father a letter that said, "I discovered that I really like killing" ?

If God didn't want us to eat animals, He wouldn't have made them out of meat.

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lynchmobJ, this is off-topic, but I love your signature.

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Why is this posted here?! This movie is already anti-Che.

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Thank you. It's also my bumper sticker.

If God didn't want us to eat animals, He wouldn't have made them out of meat.

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Oh Daesu85:

I admire Che Guevara. Not as a commie. Not as a "murderer". I admire him as a man who loved his people and wanted more for them. A man who died in the jungles of Bolivia for his people.


Try this instead:

I admire Joseph Stalin. Not as a commie. Not as a "murderer". I admire him as a man who loved his people and wanted more for them. A man who died in the Soviet Union for his people.


Or maybe:

I admire Pol Pot. Not as a commie. Not as a "murderer". I admire him as a man who loved his people and wanted more for them. A man who died in the jungles of Cambodia for his people.


Or even:

I admire Adolf Hitler. Not as a Nazi. Not as a "murderer". I admire him as a man who loved his people and wanted more for them. A man who died in a bunker in Berlin for his people.


We could go on but I would hope that you see how your statement can be used any number of ways that would appear unflattering.






--------------------------------------
America put the "fun" back into "Fundamentalism".

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We could go on but I would hope that you see how your statement can be used any number of ways that would appear unflattering.


*cough*http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Godwin's_law*cough*

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"*cough*http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Godwin's_law*cough*";

Anyone who stifles discussion by applying Godwin's law is guilty of McCarthyism.

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Someone making sense. Thank you very much.

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Interesting. Sounds like we need a Che in America to settle accounts with the Present Administration and its lackeys in the corporate villages.

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During the Cuban missile crisis on October 1962, Che demanded that nuclear war be unleashed on the United States. He told British reporter Sam Russell that “if the nuclear missiles had been under Cuban control (during the Cuban missile crisis), they would have fired them off.” Reportedly, he was disappointed when Khrushchev decided to draw back his weapons in the missile crisis. "If the rockets had remained, we would have used them all and directed them against the very heart of the United States, including New York, in our defense against aggression." And a couple of years later, at the United Nations, he was true to form: “As Marxists we have maintained that peaceful coexistence among nations does not include coexistence between exploiters and the exploited.”

On December 11, 1964, during a debate in the United Nations General Assembly where Guevara represented de Cuban government, this was severely attacked because of the firing squad executions without any judicial process and evidence as required by the rule of law. Guevara, on his own voiced, responded:

“Shooting people yes, we have shoot people and will continuo to do so until it will be required.” This show that he was a person convinced of what he was doing, and could care less and has not any prejudice to send to the firing squad a lot of people, on condition that his points of view will prevail.

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In April 1967, speaking from experience, he summed up his homicidal idea of justice in his “Message to the Tricontinental”: “hatred is an element of struggle; relentless hatred of the enemy that impels us over and beyond the natural limitations of man and transforms us into effective, violent, selective, and cold killing machines. Our soldiers must be thus; a people without hatred cannot vanquish a brutal enemy.” This use of hatred to encourage the dehumanization of ones enemy is but another manifestation of the doctrine found throughout the centuries to justify mass murder and torture.

Che shout to his captors in Bolivia, “Don't shoot – I'm Che! I'm worth more to you alive than dead!”. Then why didn't he save his last bullet for himself? He could only beg for his life. The murderous, cowardly and epically stupid little weasel named Che Guevara in Bolivia, got a major dose of his own medicine. Justice has never been better served.

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Che Guevara, who did so much to destroy capitalism, is now a quintessential capitalist brand. His likeness adorns mugs, lighters, key chains, wallets, baseball caps, toques, bandannas, tank tops, club shirts, couture bags, denim jeans, herbal tea, and of course those omnipresent T-shirts with the photograph, taken by Alberto Korda. His contemporary followers delude themselves by clinging to a myth, except the young Argentines who have come up with an expression: “I have a Che T-shirt and I don't know why.”

Thanks to Che's own testimonials, his thoughts and his deeds, we now know exactly how deluded so many of our contemporaries are about him.

Those who worship Che aren’t rebels or peace activists. They are dupes furthering the destructive legacy of collectivism and the mayhem it has wrought the world over.

Che's legacy in Cuba is one neighbor spying on another, high suicide rates, and a generation of young Cubans risking their lives on rafts in the Florida Straits rather than continue to live under a despotic government. Che's true legacy is simply one of terror and murder.

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Che didn't think much of Mexicans. In 1956 while residing in Mexico, Che refer to the Mexican as: "a band of illiterate Indians."

Che also delighted in belittling blacks. "The black is indolent and a dreamer; spending his meager wage on frivolity or drink; the European has a tradition of work and saving," that's Che himself in his celebrated Motorcycle Diaries. Can't imagine how Robert Redford left that out of his charming movie.

In his diaries Che also referred to Bolivian villagers as "animalitos" (little animals.) Wonder if Evo Morales has read them? He's too busy ribbon-cutting Che monuments in Bolivian villages.

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Che’s racism comments about blacks and Indians appears in “The Motorcycles Diaries: Notes on a Latin America Journey”, available in print. The reference to the Mexicans is provided by Miguel Sánchez, “el coreano”, Che’s comrade in Mexico responsible of the military instruction of Castro’s Granma expeditionary force.

Quotes from the book “The Motorcycle Diaries”

“The blacks, those magnificent examples of the African race who have maintained their racial purity thanks to their lack of an affinity with bathing, have seen their territory invaded by a new kind of slave: the Portuguese."

"The black is indolent and a dreamer; spending his meager wage on frivolity or drink; the European has a tradition of work and saving, which has pursued him as far as this corner of America and drives him to advance himself, even independently of his own individual aspirations."

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Guevara’s elevation as symbol of goodness, due to the self-indulgence and frivolity of pampered Western pseudo revolutionaries, speaks clearly of their lack of critical objective analysis, forgetting that, as Anthony Daniels states, "The difference between ‘Che’ Guevara and Pol Pot was that Guevara never studied in Paris."

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First of all I have to say that I was one of Che's detractors until I started knowing people who met him and reading about him.

I live just miles away from where he was raised and I personally know and have a good relationship of people who knew him, including Chichina's family (Chichina Ferreyra, his youth girlfriend, portrayed in Motorcycle Diaries). In fact, one of them I know is mentioned as a collaborator in Jon Lee Anderson's biography.
Most of them never agreed with his ideas, but EVERYBODY respected him as a person.
Victorin, you are misquoting him to your own favor and what you are doing is completely dishonest. For instance:

“The blacks, those magnificent examples of the African race who have maintained their racial purity thanks to their lack of an affinity with bathing, have seen their territory invaded by a new kind of slave: the Portuguese."

Che was known to have a very sarcastic humor and many didn't understand him at first. People used to care about him when they finally understood him.

First, he describes people as black with no harmless intentions, it is very common in the place where he was raised (and where I live - Cordoba's province) to name or nickname somebody due to his external characteristics. You can find a lot of people nicknamed "negro" (black), "Gordo" (fat), "pelado" (bald).

You forget to mention, that Che's nickname when younger was "Chancho" or "La Chancha" (nicknamed by Carlos "Gordo" Figueroa as pig or female pig - it's very common in Cordoba nicknaming as a female too - later as a sports journalist he used to sign his work as Chang-Cho, a game of words with asian phonetics since he was maoist), due to his scarce affection to self-cleanliness, thing that he often used to show with pride.
In fact, when Chichina went to see Motorcycle Diaries she said something like: "one of the things that the movie fails is that the motorcycle and them were too nicely dressed. The motorcycle was a disaster and they were a disgrace".

Besides, as you mention his disrespect for the indian, I should tell you his house in Alta Gracia (Cordoba) was a shelter of poor people with indian roots. In fact, if you care to go there someday (I've been twice at his house and I've been in Alta Gracia countless times), you can ask the old people and they will tell you his friends were rich people but mostly people from the street.

Now, that as an example, just to dismiss your words cause you might confuse people with your bias.


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positivelight - sorry but i really dont see how your post changes any opinion on che. i'm sure he wasn't 100% evil during his younger years. he was probably idealistic and wanted to help ppl and that was great. That's why he became a doctor. but somewhere along the way he changed into a brutal, cold-blooded killer. i don't care what Chichina or anybody else says about him. those ppl knew a different che, a youthful che who had not yet become the executioner of cuba.

Who cares about nicknames? And so what if the OP has taken a few things out of context. Don't get hung up on minor details. Focus on the main, real, past events. Don't take my word for it. Look at the facts. I applaud the OP for bringing all of this to light and helping to expose che for what he really was.

By the way. I live in buenos aires, argentina. I see the weekly protests that the ppl have in microcentro, some of them with their banners showing che's face. I wonder how many of them know the real truth about him. I think it's nice for ppl to want to believe in an idea. An idea that perhaps che had but his means certainly did not justify the end result. Just ask any Cuban.







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Victorin1, you are absolutely right.

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Victorin1, thank you for posting the truth about that murderer Che... The only people who support him are foreigners who want to dismiss the truth of that murdering bastard....

I was born in Cuba, and as most Cubans who have left the dictatorship of castro will tell you, Che was castro's main executioner. Even castro became afraid of Che ebcause he was very unpredictable and could have taken power from castro, which is why he was sent to Colombia.

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Victorin1, thank you for posting the truth about that murderer Che... The only people who support him are foreigners who want to dismiss the truth of that murdering bastard....

I was born in Cuba, and as most Cubans who have left the dictatorship of castro will tell you, Che was castro's main executioner. Even castro became afraid of Che ebcause he was very unpredictable and could have taken power from castro, which is why he was sent to Colombia.

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Ironically, he sounds just like our president!

“As Marxists we have maintained that peaceful coexistence among nations does not include coexistence between exploiters and the exploited.”

Substitute 'Marxists' for 'Capitalists' or 'Democrats' (not the political party, the form of government) or whatever, and you have 'pre-emptive attack' in a nutshell.

Does that mean in 50 years people will be wearing shirts with George Bush wearing a cowboy hat, chewing his cud?

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I see that you're just another victim of Bush Derangement Syndrome eh? Typically, you don't even know the basics of govt because even my 8yr old knows that Marxists are NOT capitalists... (BTW- It's liberals/Democrats who have an affinity for Marxism). It always gives me a good chuckle when I hear moonbats compare President Bush to other despotic leaders of the world b/c if they lived under one of those leaders they'd have been executed long ago for their criticism.

One other thing that you should be aware of is that we are a Republic... NOT a democratic form of govt.

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It was supposed to give you a chuckle, because it was a joke, like ironic ya know? How did you get the impression that I thought Marxists were capitalists?

And yes, I realize we are a republic.

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*Laughs*

Yup, some people are very slow - or even unaware - in getting to grips with that tricky thing called irony. And while he/she tells us all what gives him the chuckles, it coincidentally gives me the chuckles as well to see how many people still rely on any version of this old catchphrase, "liberals/dems love marxism"...

At the same time, it just fills me with despair.

When all else fails, some figure all they need to do is exclaim "hey you commie-lovin scum! yeah, howzat for flooring ya with logic!", followed by lots of self-congratulations and chest-thumping. To accommodate various beliefs, it must be safe to say that either they were created that way, or the evolutionary process slowed down.

But I digress. This thread is actually about Che, and maybe a little bit about The Lost City as well. Sorry!

So let's count down the seconds 'til somebody calls me a marxist wearing a Che-shirt...

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"And while he/she tells us all what gives him the chuckles, it coincidentally gives me the chuckles as well to see how many people still rely on any version of this old catchphrase, "liberals/dems love marxism"...

At the same time, it just fills me with despair."

I'm completely with you on both counts, especially since the point of my post (if there was one), was about the silliness of labels in general. Actually, not so much silliness but shallowness and injurous nature.

And it's not like I'm some complete relativist who believes there isn't any wrongdoing in the world. But stick a label on something, and you relieve yourself of the responsibility (and benefit) of actually trying to further your understanding of the world.

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"And it's not like I'm some complete relativist who believes there isn't any wrongdoing in the world. But stick a label on something, and you relieve yourself of the responsibility (and benefit) of actually trying to further your understanding of the world."

Madmaxmedia, that observation is just spot-on!

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Interesting. Sounds like we need a Che in America to settle accounts with the Present Administration and its lackeys in the corporate villages.

finger - Yeah, and lets hope that this new Che puts a gun to your head for some petty reason, because he also believes he's above any kind of law or morality, all the while you're trying to tell him that you're actually on his side. Then POW! A bullet in the brain. Sounds good to me, then. Let's hope your idea comes true. What a great American.







"I want you to hit me as hard as you can." - Tyler Durden

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Noguff, is being stupid painful?

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findley - So you think I'm stupid for trying to tell a Che supporter that he shouldn't be a Che supporter? I thought you were not a Che supporter, but I guess I read it wrong.




"I want you to hit me as hard as you can." - Tyler Durden

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In 1956, when Che linked up with Fidel, Raul and their Cuban chums in Mexico city, one of them (now in exile) recalls Che railing against the Hungarian freedom-fighters as "Fascists!" and cheering their extermination by Soviet tanks.

In 1962 Che got a chance to do more than cheer from the sidelines. He had a hand in the following: "Cuban militia units commanded by Russian officers employed flame-throwers to burn the palm-thatched cottages in the Escambray countryside. The peasant occupants were accused of feeding the counterrevolutionaries and bandits."

At one point in 1962, one of every 19 Cubans was a political prisoner. Fidel himself admits that they faced 179 bands of "counter-revolutionaries" and "bandits."

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ahhh... so much hate speech in here...

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Che Guevara was monumentally vain and epically stupid. He was shallow, boorish, cruel, and cowardly. He was full of himself, a consummate fraud and an intellectual vacuum. He was intoxicated with a few vapid slogans, spoke in cliches and was a glutton for publicity. But ah! he did come out nice in a couple of publicity photos, high cheekbones and all! And we wonder why he's a hit in Hollywood? [1]

[1] Humberto Fontova, Che Guevara: Assasin and Bumbler, The Cuban American National Foundation, Feb. 23, 2004

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One thing is certain: Guevara’s desire for the development of the New Man did not emerge from his empirical experience of actual men. In the Motorcycle Diaries, he meets many excellent and indeed magnificent men, rich and poor alike. Guevara’s desire for the development of the New Man, I believe, comes from his need to control the lives of others, his urge to power. With unique lack of self-knowledge, with an absolute absence of irony, he describes the character of Valdivia, the conquistador of Chile:

Valdivia’s actions symbolize man’s indefatigable thirst to take control of a place where he can exercise total control… . He belonged to that special class of men the species produces every so often, in whom a craving for limitless power is so extreme that any suffering to achieve it seems natural.

Could there be a better description of Guevara’s career itself?

In presenting Guevara as a romantic figure, generous and compassionate rather than ruthlessly priggish and self-centered, and by suggesting that he has anything to teach us other than negatively, the director is guilty of mendacity of a very high order. The film is an exercise in moral frivolity and exhibitionism, self-congratulation, of course, opportunism. It should sell as well as Guevara T-shirts. [1]

[1] Anthony Daniels, New Criterion, October, 2004

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My brother saw a great t-shirt. It had that infamous image of Che, but underneath it said, "I have no idea who this is". That t-shirt sums it all up perfectly.

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Thirty nine years ago Ernesto "Che" Guevara got a major dose of his own medicine. Without trial he was declared a murderer, stood against a wall and shot. Historically speaking, justice has rarely been better served. If the saying, "what goes around comes around" ever fit, it's here. The number of men Che's "revolutionary tribunals" condemned to death in the identical manner range from 400 to 1892. The number of defenseless men (and boys) Che personally murdered with his own pistol runs to the dozens.

"Executions?" Che Guevara exclaimed while addressing the hallowed halls of the UN General Assembly December 9, 1964. "Certainly, we execute! " he declared to the claps and cheers of that August body. "And we will continue executing (emphasis HIS) as long as it is necessary! This is a war to the DEATH against the Revolution's enemies!" [1]

[1] Humberto Fontova, “Che Guevara 39 Years of Hype”, Guacarabuya, October 2006

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"I don't need proof to execute a man" snapped Che to a judicial underling in 1959. "I only need proof that it's necessary to execute him!"

Not that you'd surmise any of the above from the mainstream media or academia-- much less Hollywood. From the high priests of the Fourth Estate Che Guevara gets only accolades. Time magazine, for instance, honors Che Guevara among "The 100 Most Important People of the Century."

The man who declared, "a revolutionary must become a cold killing machine motivated by pure hate," (and set a spirited example,) who boasted that he executed from "revolutionary conviction" rather than from any "archaic bourgeois details" like judicial evidence, and who urged "atomic extermination" as the final solution for those American "hyenas," (and came hearth-thumpingly close with Nuclear missiles in October 1962) is hailed by Time--not just among the "most important" people of the Century--but in the "Heroes and Icons" section, alongside Anne Frank, Andrei Sakharov and Rosa Parks.

"If the Nuclear missiles had remained we would have used them against the very heart of America, including New York City," Che Guevara confided to the London Daily Worker in November of 1962. "We will march the path of victory even if it costs millions of atomic victims...We must keep our hatred alive and fan it to paroxysm." This was Che's prescription for America almost half a century before Osama Bin Laden, Mullah Omar and Al-Zarqawi appeared on our radar screens.

But for the prudence of Nikita Khrushchev, Che Guevara's fondest wish would have made New York's 9-11 explosions appear like an errant cherry bomb. Yet listed alongside Che Guevara in Time's "Heroes and Icons of the Century," is Mother Theresa. From here the ironies only get richer. [1]

[1] Humberto Fontova, “Che Guevara 39 Years of Hype”, Guacarabuya, October 2006

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The most popular version of Che T-shirt, for instance, sports the slogan "fight oppression," under his famous face. This is the face of a man who co-founded a regime that jailed more of it's subjects than Hitler or Stalin's and declared that "individualism must disappear!" In 1959, with the help of Soviet GRU agents, the man celebrated on that T-shirt helped found, train and indoctrinate Cuba's secret police. "Always interrogate your prisoners at night," Che ordered his goons. "A man's resistance is always lower at night." Today the world's largest Che mural adorns Cuba's Ministry of the Interior, the headquarters for Cuba's KGB and STASI trained secret police. Nothing could be more fitting.

Yet somehow, this same image is considered the height of hipness on everything from shirts, watches and snowboards, to thong underwear and an undisclosed location on Angelina Jolie's epidermis. Ms Jolie, by the way, recently won the U.N.'s "Global Humanitarian Award" for her work with refugees.

Will someone please inform Angelina Jolie that her tattoo idol, with his firing squads and prison-camps, provoked one of the biggest refugee crises in the history of this hemisphere. On top of the 2 million who made it with only the clothes on their back, the Cuban Archives project meticulously compiled and documented by scholars Maria Werlau and Dr Armando Lago, estimate that close to 80,000 Cubans have died of thirst and exposure, drowning, or been ripped apart by sharks attempting to flee the handiwork of the man "Ms Global Humanitarian" honors by having him permanently emblazoned on her skin. [1]

[1] Humberto Fontova, “Che Guevara 39 Years of Hype”, Guacarabuya, October 2006

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Yeah, that's a really good book. To anyone who thinks Che was great simply because you've heard celebrities say so or because you read, say, Anderson or Castaneda's biographies (whose primary source was the Cuban propoganda ministry), I suggest reading the book the OP is quoting from:

Exposing the Real Che Guevara by Humberto Fontova (who is Cuban, unlike those who deify Che).

It really sickens me how clueless people are. Che is a hippie icon, but in fact he imprisoned and executed Cuban hippies left and right. Carlos Santana, a famous rock star, likes to sport a Che shirt despite the fact that under Che, rock and roll music was outlawed in Cuba. Get educated, guys. Che was no better than Saddam or Stalin.

I don't know but I've been told,
You never slow down,
You never grow old.

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When Carlos Santana and Eric Burdon, (among many other rockers) smugly sport their elegant Che T-shirts they plug a regime that in the mid to late 60's rounded up "roqueros" (Cuban rock & Roll fans) and long hairs en masse, and herded them into prison camps for forced labor under a scorching sun. These young prisoners' "counter-revolutionary crimes" often involved nothing more than listening to music by The Animals and Santana.

When Madonna camped it up in her Che outfit for the cover of her American Life CD she plugged a regime that criminalized gays, and anything smacking of gay mannerisms. In the mid 60's the crime of effeminate behavior got thousands of youths yanked off Cuba's streets and parks by secret police and dumped in prison camps with "Work Will Make Men Out of You," in bold letters above the gate (the one at Auschwitz' gate read: "Work Will Set You Free) and with machine gunners posted on the watchtowers. The initials for these camps were UMAP, not GULAG. But the conditions were identical.

When the crowd of A-list hipsters and Beautiful People at the Sundance Film Festival (which included everyone from Tipper and Al Gore to Sharon Stone, Meryl Streep and Paris Hilton) exploded in a rapturous standing ovation for Robert Redford's The Motorcycle Diaries, they were cheering a film glorifying a man who jailed or exiled most of Cuba's best writers, poets and independent film-makers while converting Cuba's press and cinema--at Czech machine-gun point-- into propaganda agencies for a Stalinist regime.

Executive producer of the movie, Robert Redford (who always kicks off the film festival with a long dirge about the importance of artistic freedom) was forced to screen the film for Che's widow (who heads Cuba's Che Guevara Studies Center) and Fidel Castro for their approval before release. We can only imagine the shrieks of outrage from the Sundance crowd--about "censorship!" and "selling out!"-- had, say, Robert Ackerman required (and acquiesced in) Nancy Reagan's approval to release HBO's "The Reagans" that same year. [12]

[12] Humberto Fontova, “Che Guevara 39 Years of Hype”, Guacarabuya, October 2006

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More than his cruelty, megalomania or even his epic stupidity, what most distinguished Ernesto "Che" Guevara from his peers was his sniveling cowardice. His groupies can run off in a huff, slam their bedroom door, and dive headfirst into their beds sobbing and kicking and punching the pillows all they want-- but Che surrendered to the Bolivan Rangers voluntarily, from a safe distance, and was captured physically sound and with a fully loaded pistol.

One day before his death in Bolivia, Che Guevara--for the first time in his life--finally faced something properly describable as combat. So he ordered his guerrilla charges to give no quarter, to fight to their last breaths, and to their last bullet. A few hours later his "untamable defiance," lack of hypocrisy and "walking of the walk " all manifested themselves. With his men doing just what he ordered ( fighting and dying to the last bullet) a slightly wounded Che snuck away from the firefight and surrendered with a full clip in his pistol while whimpering to his captors: "Don't Shoot! I'm Che I'm worth more to you alive than dead!" [13]

[13] Humberto Fontova, “Che Guevara 39 Years of Hype”, Guacarabuya, October 2006

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Victorin1, I have thoroughly enjoyed your dismantling of Che and his groupies. People really need to know this before they ignorantly sport the stupid shirts, etc.

Do us all a favor, however, and bring this thread over to the "Guerilla" (The Steven Soderbergh film about Che starring Benicio Del Toro) message board. like you did on the Motorcycle Diaries board. The neo-marxists are ganging up on the Che haters there, and need some serious re-education. If you don't, I will.

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blueboy777, thanks for your kind words and information. I will bring the tread to the "Guerilla" message board.
Regards, Victorin.

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Surprising. I see the nutcases aren't climbing up your a$$. Maybe they're familiar with the other boards you've posted to. One of them seems to think that I am you, actually, on another thread.

Also, forgot to tell you about The Argentine, but I see you found it.

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People (that is, those who have studied the Cuban Revolution)admire Che as a man who fought against oppression. Guevara killed many men, this is true. But one must look at his motivation. He did not "murder" because he enjoyed it, he believed the casualties were necessary for the Revolution to be successful. There can not be a Revolution of such political and social change without casualties. Because, you know, the American Revolution was an entirely bloodless affair.

That said, Guevara is not admired because he "murdered". He's admired as a man who believed in something greater and acted selflessly to attain it. He died fighting for what he believed in. His intentions for Latin America were noble. In retrospect, many argue he was misguided but I'm not sure if that's necessarily true.

Furthermore, because Che Guevara is a Communist that does not make him less respectable or invalidate his actions. I'm not a Communist by any means, but in theory it's a beautiful (also impractical) system. Che may have been naive to think Communism is possible in its true form, but he remains one of Latin America's most beloved figures for a reason. Not everyone admires his actions, but those who do have their specific reasons. Comparisons to Hitler, Stalin, etc are uncalled for.

I admire Che Guevara. Not as a commie. Not as a "murderer". I admire him as a man who loved his people and wanted more for them. A man who died in the jungles of Bolivia for his people.

Cuba, despite the Embargo, isn't doing horribly either. They have decent, universal health care and their literacy rate is close to 100%.

I know some of you will retaliate with "You admire a murderer!" Well, that's what YOU believe Che is. I believe Che is a remarkable, courageous man. He may have killed, but he pulled the trigger himself unlike two certain draft dodgers who send young men and women to die in a desert for a terrible lie.

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Have you been to Cuba? I´ve just come back and have never seen such a miserable and poverty-stricken land.

I was regularly accosted by Cubans, who in their words are just trying to "survive". I personally don´t dig spending time in a country where I can eat anything in an air-conditioned restaurant and hotel, just because I have the right currency, whereas a Cuban gets monthly food ration which lasts for 2 weeks. It´s also illegal for Cubans to "accost" tourists, but as said, they are just trying to survive.

I am sure most Cubans would rather have something decent to eat, the freedom to travel to other countries, and the freedom of speech rather than 100% literacy and "great" healthcare (bring your own blankets, meds, food - sounds great doesn´t it?). What's the point of educating the whole country if people aren't allowed to think for themselves?

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Che and Cuban Industrialization

In 1961 Guevara was appointed as minister of industry, and in the name of diversification the cultivated area was reduced and manpower distracted toward other activities. Cuban industrialization failed due to the lag of raw materials for the new industries.

By 1963, all hopes of industrializing Cuba were abandoned, and the revolution accepted its role as a colonial provider of sugar to the Soviet bloc in exchange for oil to cover its needs and to re-sell to other countries. For the next three decades, Cuba would survive on a Soviet subsidy of $120 billion.

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The myths that surround Che are much more interesting than the man; problem is, they simply do not resemble reality.

In February 1959, Che began training foreign guerrillas and terrorists in Cuba. His first guerrilla attack (planned with the brothers Fidel and Raul Castro) was to “liberate” Panama in April 1959. But by May 1, he suffered a humiliating defeat by Panama’s National Guard. On June 14, 1959, Fidel Castro sent Che’s guerrillas to the neighboring island of the Dominican Republic to fight against dictator Trujillo. But Che’s guerrillas again failed miserably.

After Che’s failure in Africa, he was summoned to Havana for two days of secret conversations with Castro. He was then sent back to Africa with 200 Cuban soldiers to help a Congolese leftist group. After he failed there, in late 1965, he secretly returned to Cuba, leaving his soldiers behind. Che was kept hidden all through 1966.

Along with 17 Cubans (clandestinely smuggled into Bolivia), he began organizing a guerrilla movement. But he was able to recruit only 15 Bolivians. By the end of March 1967, Castro stopped supplying Che’s guerrillas. The last contact with Havana was in July 1967.

Denounced by the peasants and Indians in the region (who never supported his intrusion), Che and his guerrillas were finally apprehended by the Bolivian army on October 7, 1967. As we all know Che was executed and Castro at last had the martyr he was longing for. His amputated hand is proudly displayed in the Museum of the Revolution in Havana.

For heaven sake, there is more hatred from the left in America directed against Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush than against a real bad guy and a mass murderer: Che Guevara. [14]

[14] Agustín Blázquez with the collaboration of Jaums Sutton
Guaracabuya, January 2006

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I think victorin1 needs help, so much hate for a man.....why don't you do the same to other men like hitler, stalin, mao tsé tung or george bush?~They killed more men then Che did, upss...sry they didn't kill, they ordered others to kill for them, and know what? They killed many innocents, not like Che did in a war or at trials of real murderers.

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If you think that most of the people Che killed were "real murderers," get a brain transplant.

If God didn't want us to eat animals, He wouldn't have made them out of meat.

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wow, what an argument, why don't you try to read some history books first?

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Che at the Oscars

Carlos: in the mid 1960's Fidel and your charming t-shirt icon set up concentration camps in Cuba for, among many others, "anti-social elements" and "delinquents." Besides Bohemian (Haight-Ashbury, Greenwich Village types) and homosexuals, these camps were crammed with "roqueros," who qualified in Che and Fidel's eyes as useless "delinquents."

A "roquero" was a hapless youth who tried to listen to Yankee-Imperialist rock music in Cuba.

Yes, Mr Santana, here you were grinning widely – and OH-SO-hiply! – while proudly displaying the symbol of a regime that: MADE IT A CRIMINAL OFFENSE TO LISTEN TO CARLOS SANTANA MUSIC!

I'll pass along the thoughts from Cuban music legend, Paquito D'Rivera. He wrote his recent letter to you in Spanish. "My command of English wouldn't allow me to fully express my indignation" at your cheeky Oscar gig, he explained. Seems that Mr D'Rivera had relatives among those your t-shirt icon jailed, tortured and murdered.[15]

[15] Humberto Fontova
LewRockwell.com, April 2, 2005

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A Cuban gentleman named Pierre San Martin was also among those jailed by the gallant Che. A few years ago he recalled the horrors in a El Nuevo Herald article.

"One morning the horrible sound of that rusty steel door swinging open startled us awake and Che's guards shoved a new prisoner into our cell. His face was bruised and smeared with blood. We could only gape. He was a boy, couldn't have been much older than 12, maybe 14.

"What did you do?" We asked horrified. "I tried to defend my papa," gasped the bloodied boy. "I tried to keep these Communist sons of b**tches from murdering him! But they sent him to the firing squad."

Soon Che's goons came back, the rusty steel door opened and they yanked the valiant boy out of the cell.

"Kneel Down!" Che barked at the boy.

" I said: KNEEL DOWN!" Che barked again.

The boy stared Che resolutely in the face. "If you're going to kill me," he yelled. "you'll have to do it while I'm standing! MEN die standing!"

"And then we saw Che unholstering his pistol. It didn't seem possible. But Che raised his pistol, put the barrel to the back of the boys neck and blasted. The shot almost decapitated the young boy.

To a man (and boy) Che's murder victims went down in a blaze of defiance and glory. So let's recall Che's own plea when the wheels of justice finally turned and he was cornered in Bolivia. "Don't Shoot!" he whimpered. "I'm Che! I'm worth more to you alive than dead!"


This swinish and murdering coward, this child-killer, was the toast of the Oscars.[15]

[15] Humberto Fontova
LewRockwell.com, April 2, 2005

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Telmalex, there must have been a LOT of "real murderers" then since Cuba ended up executing over a hundred thousand people and incarcerated 5% of the population as political prisoners. Execution orders were posted before trials began and many of the dead were children. Others were beaten to death during interrogation or in the labor camps.

Che was incompetent at everything but murder. It was his passion. He wrote letters to his family telling them how much he liked killing. Castro noticed this and made him his chief executioner. Che helped set up Cuba's labor camps and secret police. 20% of Cuba's population fled the tyrannies of the regime and even more would have left if they had had the chance. To this day Cuba cannot send athletes, doctors and performers abroad and have them all return. This is what has become of a country that at one time had more immigrants as a percentage of its population than even the US. Before the revolution Cuba's economy was as good as most Europen countries with a very high per capita income. Che's running of the Ministry of Industries put an end to that in a fashion considered spectacular by even the communists in the Soviet Union. Fidel had to sack him and give up any hopes of being a modern economy.

Che is one of those people you run across in history who has no real redeeming qualities. His idea of the perfect government was North Korea and his racial views were just as progressive, describing black people as indolent and lazy compared to the more intelligent and industrious Europeans. Even Fidel was glad when Che was killed.

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The cult of Ernesto Che Guevara is an episode in the moral callousness of our time. Che was a totalitarian. He achieved nothing but disaster. Many of the early leaders of the Cuban Revolution favored a democratic or democratic-socialist direction for the new Cuba. But Che was a mainstay of the hardline pro-Soviet faction, and his faction won. [16]

[16] Paul Berman, THE CULT OF CHE, slate.com, Sept. 24, 2004

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mpc1 i respect your opinion but any of the facts you describe are true, the only thing you said and it's true, is the opinion Che once expressed about black people, but if you are a honest person, you must recognize that he said those things in his youth, later he totally changed his ideas. If he was a racist has you try to say then answer me: why the hell a racist guy goes to Congo starting a war to try make justice in Africa, taking serious risks on his own life? Do you still think he was racist? Can you give some value to someone that risks his life to defend others in their foreign countries?

Don't say Che was a murderer, he only killed during war has any soldier would do, and he ordered executions of real criminals, other murders he comiited are just his oppositors imagination...

If Fidel and Che are the monsters you said, why didn't they execute the 1200 war prisoners arrested in the Bay of Pigs? They didn't even arrested them, they gave them back to the U.S.A.....can you imagine the "great" politicians from U.S.A. do that to war criminals? ;)

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Che presided over the Cuban Revolution's first firing squads. He founded Cuba's "labor camp" system—the system that was eventually employed to incarcerate gays, dissidents, and AIDS victims. To get himself killed, and to get a lot of other people killed, was central to Che's imagination. In the famous essay in which he issued his ringing call for "two, three, many Vietnams," he also spoke about martyrdom and managed to compose a number of chilling phrases: "Hatred as an element of struggle; unbending hatred for the enemy, which pushes a human being beyond his natural limitations, making him into an effective, violent, selective, and cold-blooded killing machine. This is what our soldiers must become …"— and so on. He was killed in Bolivia in 1967, leading a guerrilla movement that had failed to enlist a single Bolivian peasant. [16]

[16] Paul Berman, THE CULT OF CHE, slate.com, Sept. 24, 2004

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The present-day cult of Che—the T-shirts, the bars, the posters—has succeeded in obscuring this dreadful reality. And Walter Salles' movie The Motorcycle Diaries will now take its place at the heart of this cult. It has already received a standing ovation at Robert Redford's Sundance film festival (Redford is the executive producer of The Motorcycle Diaries) and glowing admiration in the press. Che was an enemy of freedom, and yet he has been erected into a symbol of freedom. He helped establish an unjust social system in Cuba and has been erected into a symbol of social justice. He stood for the ancient rigidities of Latin-American thought, in a Marxist-Leninist version, and he has been celebrated as a free-thinker and a rebel. And thus it is in Salles' Motorcycle Diaries. [16]

[16] Paul Berman, THE CULT OF CHE, slate.com, Sept. 24, 2004

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The modern-day cult of Che blinds us not just to the past but also to the present. Right now a tremendous social struggle is taking place in Cuba. Dissident liberals have demanded fundamental human rights, and the dictatorship has rounded up all but one or two of the dissident leaders and sentenced them to many years in prison. In the last couple of years the dissident movement has sprung up in yet another form in Cuba, as a campaign to establish independent libraries, free of state control; and state repression has fallen on this campaign, too. [16]

[16] Paul Berman, THE CULT OF CHE, slate.com, Sept. 24, 2004

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I wonder if people who stand up to cheer a hagiography of Che Guevara, as the Sundance audience did, will ever give a damn about the oppressed people of Cuba—will ever lift a finger on behalf of the Cuban liberals and dissidents. It's easy in the world of film to make a movie about Che, but who among that cheering audience is going to make a movie about Raúl Rivero? [16]

[16] Paul Berman, THE CULT OF CHE, slate.com, Sept. 24, 2004

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I wonder if people who stand up to cheer a hagiography of Che Guevara, as the Sundance audience did, will ever give a damn about the oppressed people of Cuba—will ever lift a finger on behalf of the Cuban liberals and dissidents. It's easy in the world of film to make a movie about Che, but who among that cheering audience is going to make a movie about Raúl Rivero? [16]

[16] Paul Berman, THE CULT OF CHE, slate.com, Sept. 24, 2004

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The world is awash in Che paraphernalia, and this is an ongoing offense to truth, reason, and justice (a fine trio). Cuban Americans tend to be flummoxed by this phenomenon, and so do others who are decent and aware. There is a backlash against Che glorification, but it is tiny compared with the phenomenon itself. To turn the tide against Guevara would take massive reeducation - a term the old Communist would very much appreciate. [17]

[17] Jay Nordlinger, National Review, December 31, 2004

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You find his items in the most surprising places. Or maybe they are not so surprising. The New York Public Library has a gift shop, and until just the other day, it sold a Guevara watch…

That one of the world's most prestigious libraries should have peddled an item puffing a brutal henchman was not big news, but some Cuban Americans, and a few others, reacted. On learning of the watch, many sent letters to the library, imploring its officials to come to their senses. One Cuban American - trying to play on longstanding American sensibilities - wrote, "Would you sell watches with the images of the Grand Dragon of the KKK?" It was also pointed out that Communist Cuba, which Guevara did a great deal to found and shape, is especially hard on librarians. The independent-library movement has been brutally repressed, and some of the most inspiring political prisoners stem from that movement.

In any event, the New York Public Library withdrew the watch just before Christmas, offering no statement.[17]

[17] Jay Nordlinger, National Review, December 31, 2004

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Who are you kidding? Do you think anyone believes your nonsense? You just go from thread to thread stating counterfeit arguments on Che. You're an obtuse fanatic Victorin... Liar.

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The fog of time and the strength of antiyanqui-Communism have obscured the real Che. Who was he? He was an Argentinian revolutionary who served as Castro's primary thug. He was especially infamous for presiding over summary executions at La Cabaña, the fortress that was his abattoir. He liked to administer the coup de grace, the bullet to the back of the neck. And he loved to parade people past El Paredón, the reddened wall against which so many innocents were killed.

Furthermore, he established the labor-camp system in which countless citizens - dissidents, democrats, artists, homosexuals - would suffer and die. This is the Cuban gulag. A Cuban-American writer, Humberto Fontova, described Guevara as "a combination of Beria and Himmler." Anthony Daniels once quipped,"The difference between [Guevara] and Pol Pot was that [the former] never studied in Paris."[17]

[17] Jay Nordlinger, National Review, December 31, 2004

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One of the most nauseating recent celebrations of Guevara took the form of a movie, The Motorcycle Diaries, whose executive producer was Robert Redford (one of the most dedicated Castro apologists in Hollywood, which is saying something). The movie received a standing ovation at the Sundance Festival. About this obnoxious hagiography and whitewash, I will confine myself to quoting Tony Daniels: "It is as if someone were to make a film about Adolf Hitler by portraying him as a vegetarian who loved animals and was against unemployment. This would be true, but rather beside the point."[17]

[17] Jay Nordlinger, National Review, December 31, 2004

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There are some who will always have romantic feelings about Guevara, and the Cuban revolution. For this type, Guevara was a true man, not a namby-pamby liberal, but hardcore - pure in his willingness to do the necessary. An anti-Communist of my acquaintance asked a friend of his why she admired Guevara. She answered, "He never sold out." Frank Calzón, executive director of the Center for a Free Cuba, says, "Yes, Guevara was 'courageous' and 'committed.' So are many bank robbers." In the run-up to the Iraq War, I asked Bernard Kouchner - the great French humanitarian and politician - why so many of his countrymen seemed enthusiastic about Saddam Hussein. He said their enthusiasm for Saddam was akin to their attachment to Che: It was a way of expressing anti-Americanism (in brief), the facts about the two men aside.[17]

[17] Jay Nordlinger, National Review, December 31, 2004

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A few weeks ago, the Hartford Courant ran a photo of a Trinity College freshman who was protesting the execution of a serial killer. He carried a sign that said, "Why do we kill people who kill people to show that killing people is wrong?" - and he was wearing a Che Guevara hat! Talk about sending mixed messages.

Some people take comfort in the fact that Guevara, the Communist who wanted to destroy everything capitalist, has become a commodity. But that comfort is cold - because the unending glorification of this henchman is, yes, an offense to truth, reason, and justice. Think of those who might take his place on those shirts - for instance, Oscar Elías Biscet, one of Castro's longtime prisoners. He is a democrat, a physician - a true one - and an Afro-Cuban (for those who care). He has declared his heroes and models to be Mohandas Gandhi and Martin Luther King. Not only does he deserve celebration, he could use the publicity - but nothing.[1]

[17] Jay Nordlinger, National Review, December 31, 2004

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Guevara is not just a dead white guy from a well-to-do family who terrorized a racially mixed nation and executed hundreds of innocents in the late 1950s and 1960s. He is also a symbol of the totalitarian regime that persists in Cuba, which still practices his ideology of intolerance, hatred and repression. It is not the torture and killing alone that make the tragedy. That only describes the methodology. Guevara's wider goal -- to forcibly strip a population of its soul and spirit -- is what is truly frightening and deplorable.[18]

[18] MARY ANASTASIA O'GRADY, “Che, Cuba and Christmas”
Wall Street Journal December 22, 2006.

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"The Black Book of Communism," published in 1999 by Harvard University Press, notes that early in his career Guevara earned a "reputation for ruthlessness; a child in his guerrilla unit who had stolen a little food was immediately shot without trial." In his will, the book says, "this graduate of the school of terror praised the 'extremely useful hatred that turns men into effective, violent, merciless and cold killing machines."[18]

[18] MARY ANASTASIA O'GRADY, “Che, Cuba and Christmas”
Wall Street Journal December 22, 2006.

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Defenders of Guevara can't even claim that his cruelty brought about equality. Today state policy makes it a crime for the raggedly dressed, malnourished and mostly black Cuban people to visit the beaches, museums and amply stocked stores of their own country, while well-fed tourists in fashionable cruise-wear go where they like. This amounts to de facto apartheid.[1]

[18]MARY ANASTASIA O'GRADY, “Che, Cuba and Christmas”
Wall Street Journal December 22, 2006

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Now that Fidel is stepping down, do you see a new course being charted for Cuba and revisionist, true view of Che coming out of Cuba?

When Kruschev took over in the Soviet Union, he began airing out the evils of the Stalin era.

After Mao died, the new Chinese regime reversed most of Mao's anti-capitalist ideas.

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No change. The old guard still in power(age above 70), sorry.

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Ernesto "Che" Guevara dreamed of creating the "New Man" at any cost. During the Cuban missile crisis, he was in favor of a nuclear war because he believed that a better world could be built from the ashes, regardless of the cost in millions of lives. By adhering to his anti-American feelings and pro-Soviet stance, he achieved a role in history that stands for one failure after another, both in Cuba, as well as in all the other countries where he went to promote and disseminate Castro’s Revolution.

Ernesto "Che" Guevara had all the characteristics of a ruthless dictator and opponent of freedom. He believed that the end justifies the means, and he fanatically adhered to this gospel. This "idealized icon" is the one who, as a modern day Grand Inquisitor, eliminated many of his foes with a single pistol shot to the back of their heads. And he is also the same one who authored these enhancing words printed in the identity booklets of young Cuban soldiers sent to fight in Angola: "Blind hate against the enemy creates a forceful impulse that cracks the boundaries of natural human limitations, transforming the soldier in an effective, selective and cold killing machine. A people without hate cannot triumph against the adversary." [19]

[19] Sara Lequerica De La Vega, CHE SHOW ONLY GLORIFIES PORTRAIT OF A RUTHLESS KILLER, UCLA Today, October 2004

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Mexico City, Oct. 17, 2006 (EFE) - The revolution in Cuba "was not democratic" and neither is it communist now, "but rather a vulgar State capitalism also called 'Fidelismo,'" affirmed the grandson of Ernesto "Che" Guevara, Canek Sanchez Guevara.

In a letter and a "self-interview" that is being published today in the Mexican weekly "Proceso," Canek harshly criticized the "messianism" of Fidel Castro and the change of direction he made for the revolution, transforming himself from "the young revolutionary to the elderly tyrant" who "falsified" an ideal.

The eldest grandchild of Che Guevara stated that the repression that exists in the island, with its "perpetual surveillance over individuals" and "the prohibition of associations that might exist at the margin of the State" is nothing but "a vulgar State capitalism" that, according to him, will die with Fidel.

The eldest grandchild of Che Guevara was born in Cuba; he is 30 years old and is now a Mexican citizen. He presently lives in Oaxaca and is a writer and graphic designer. His mother, Hilda Guevara, was the first child of the guerrilla leader.

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I'm pretty sure most of the people wearing the shirts don't actually support the jailing of poets, homosexuals and roqueros (kids who like to rock out). Guevara's own musician grandson fled Cuba after he and his rock'n'roller friends had been terrorized one too many times by the Cuban fuzz for the popular charge of "pre-criminal dangerousness".[20]

[20] Cassandra Wilkinson, “The unpalatable truth about Che Guevara”
The Australian, July 14, 2007.

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The digest may also include the fact that Cuban women had three months' maternity leave before the revolution but not after. Cuba had more female university graduates than the US before the revolution but not after. Cubans had the eight-hour day before the revolution but not after. For all those sensibly upset about Australia's lack of compassion for refugees, I would urge them to consider that before Guevara's revolution, Cuba accepted more immigrants per head of population than the US. Indeed, more Americans moved to Cuba than Cubans moved to the US.[20]

[20] Cassandra Wilkinson, “The unpalatable truth about Che Guevara”
The Australian, July 14, 2007.

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Those who wear the revolutionary's T-shirt on university campuses should also reflect that one of the key dissident movements in Cuba is the campaign for free libraries. In the upside-down world of Cuba's continuing repression, librarians have become enemies of the state and are being jailed for promoting the counter-revolutionary activity of reading.[20]

[20] Cassandra Wilkinson, “The unpalatable truth about Che Guevara”
The Australian, July 14, 2007.

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WHO IS CHE GUEVARA?

Che Guevara is the Great Salesman of Communism. He started his glamorous life by killing people who didn't buy his ideas of universal happiness and equality. Although this selling method worked well in South American and African countries, young Ernesto quickly realized that to conquer the world he had to learn other techniques.

He noticed that in the Land of Big Capital some idealistic college students, as well as pimple faced white middleclass teens had already begun to put his unwashed visage on their T-shirts and dorm room walls. Bingo! Like all communists faced with the prospect of making a few dollars, Che decided to try his hand at the mysterious entity known as "work" and "business investment".

A brilliant salesman, Che performed an ingenious maneuver by faking his own death and thus achieving the Jim Morrison type icon status. As the progressive world mourned and idolized his image, Che quietly started printing his own T-shirts in the humble basement of a Bogota Laundromat.

At first the process involved dunking his head in a bucket of ox blood and physically pressing his face on the T-shirt. After sales began to pick up he was able to apply for a small business loan and purchased a screen printing machine.

Che has marketed his brand name brilliantly over the years, selling to specific niche in the market: young people who have no clue what Che has done or what he stands for. The cash keeps flowing as most college dorms world-wide are being adorned with his face, and more and more middle class sons and daughters wear Che products in order to, among other things, wash away the guilt of their well-heeled upbringing.

"It's just cool to wear my stuff. Who cares what I'm about!" says a confident Guevara from his 36th floor office of his world headquarters on Madison Avenue in New York City. His unique product sells solely on popularity, coolness and young people looking to gain acceptance in social circles. "You can essentially turn out complete junk and people will still wear it because they want to be in," declares John Hayden of Consumer Reports magazine.

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"Sales go through the roof as anti-war protests grow in popularity!"

In the near future Che-Mart intends to diversify its global image into several different product lines. There's an Apprentice-style TV show called "The Revolutionary" in the pipeline. The show will pit several left-leaning young people against each other, charging them with such tasks as fermenting revolution in small counties, organizing protests against McDonalds and attacking the police. The winner will receive.????

Today Mr. Guevara commands a huge global business empire with offices in New York, Paris, London and Tokyo. He has been featured in Forbes and Fortune magazines no less than 8 times. With houses in New York, Los Angeles and Aspen, Che has come a long way from his humble revolutionary beginnings. His company has been listed in the Fortune 500 for the last 6 years and Che-Mart has been voted one of the Ten Best Employers in the United States. Recently featured in Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous, he is an avid collector of fine art and Ferraris. Che spends his spare time on the slopes of Aspen or socializing with his good friend and business associate Donald Trump. With a fleet of Leer jets he is never too far from corporate boardrooms of the world.

The future is looking bright for Che-Mart as the endless supply of liberal college professors and college students will keep his global empire afloat for the foreseeable future.

Why is it so hard to notice sarcasm these days, or irony for that matter.?

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[deleted]

[deleted]

DEATH COUNT:

Che Guevara = few hundred of Batista's henchmen, torturers, and rapists.


Reagan = 1 million Iraqi/Iranians by selling weapons to both sides

CONTRA death squads lead to the deaths of 70,000 in El Salvador, more than 100,000 in Guatemala, and 30,000 in Nicaragua.


CHE< REAGAN "the real Butcher"




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How the American REICH-WING MIND WORKS ...


Nuking 250,000 Japanese civilians = Good
Che overseeing the execution of former Dictator Batista’s torturers = Bad


Slave Owners & Genocidal Presidents (millions of Natives) on US $ = Good
T-shirt with Cuba's National Hero’s face on it = Bad


US Jets Shock and Aweing Iraq and killing thousands of people = Freedom
Che traveling to Bolivia to fight for the landless peasants = Terrorism


Guerrilla & Slave Owner George Washington shooting the enemy = Hero
Guerrilla Che Guevara shooting the enemy = Assassin


The US invading Vietnam and causing 2 million civilian deaths = Freedom
Che killing a total of around 50 Bolivian soldiers in an attempt to topple an oligarchy = Terrorism


Reagan aiding in the death of 1 million Iraqi/Iranians by selling weapons to both sides = OK
Reagan's CONTRA death squads leading to the deaths of 70,000 in El Salvador, more than 100,000 in Guatemala, and 30,000 in Nicaragua = AWESOME ! Best President Ever !
Che having a few hundred rapists and murderers of the former dictator shot after found guilty in tribunals = He's a Butcher !


Etc etc etc .... damn the Reich Wing is STUPID !

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The first synonym for "Terrorism" is ---> "American Foreign Policy"

THIS BELOW IS WHAT THE HEROIC CHE FOUGHT AGAINST !



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sbjr_cPS9_A





"America is the only country that went from barbarism to decadence without civilization in between." ~ Oscar Wilde

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"why the hell a racist guy goes to Congo starting a war to try make justice in Africa"

What "justice in Africa" are you talking about now?

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"If Fidel and Che are the monsters you said, why didn't they execute the 1200 war prisoners arrested in the Bay of Pigs? They didn't even arrested them,"

Hundreds of other prisoners were executed following the invasion (including CIA agents who were American citiziens). Several of captured raiders were also executed or died in (months of) captivity.

"they gave them back to the U.S.A.....can you imagine the "great" politicians from U.S.A. do that to war criminals? ;)"

What were their "war crimes"?

And as you probably know, foreign fighters and suspected al-Qaeda terrorists held in Guanatanamo are being sent back to their home countries or third countries.

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QUOTES ABOUT THE HEROIC ICON - CHE GUEVARA




"Che's life is an inspiration for every human being who loves freedom. We will always honor his memory."

~ Nelson Mandela





"He was demanding of everyone and practiced being a personal example. Once, Guevara and other ministry officials were served steaks during a severe food shortage. Steaks are a treasured meal for Argentines, but Guevara became incensed and ordered it all removed. "What is this?" Saenz quoted Guevara as saying in his biography. "No one is touching this meat. Take it away."

~ Tirso Saenz, fought under Che





"On his trips, he would receive gifts from his hosts, some of them very expensive. He would get presents for me as well, and he would give them away if he considered them too ostentatious. I was given a color TV only to see Che pass it on to a factory worker. And back then, it was sort of an unimaginable item. Once, after a trip to Algeria, he received a barrel of an excellent wine. When he arrived home, he told me to give it to the army barracks near our home. I would not always unconditionally obey his mandates. Knowing that wine was one of the few treats he allowed himself, I kept five liters."

~ Aleida March, Che's Wife





“He taught me to think - he taught me the most beautiful thing which is to be human"

~ Urbano - Former Cuban rebel fighter





“Che is not only an intellectual, he was the most complete human being of our time – our era’s most perfect man.”

~ Jean Paul Sartre, renown philosopher and author who knew him





"It was like a Christ taken down from the Cross."

~ Peter Weiss, playwright





"I make a halt in day-to-day combat to bow my head, with respect and gratitude, before the exceptional fighter who fell 40 years ago."

~ Fidel Castro





“Che sowed the seeds of social conscience in Latin America and the world, he was a flower prematurely cut from its stem.”

~ Fidel Castro





“He always did what he said he was going to do, that's why he is still timely.”

~ Alberto Granados, lifelong friend





“But what actually was he? A mythic doctor who traveled the length of Latin America? A guerrilla fighter? Comrade-in-arms of Fidel Castro? A revolutionary who tried to liberate the world from the shackles of imperialism? Ernesto Che Guevara was all that and much more.”

~ Op Rana, senior editor for the China Daily





“Why did they think that by killing him, he would cease to exist as a fighter? ... Today he is in every place, wherever there is a just cause to defend.”

~ Fidel Castro





"Che was loved, in spite of being stern and demanding. We would give our life for him."

~ Tomas Alba, fought under Che





"Even his ideological foes admire him because he represents the great virtues it takes to be a revolutionary. Bravery, fearlessness, honesty, austerity and absolute conviction. Those are the prerequisites to carry others into what is actually quite a miserable existence."

~ Jon Lee Anderson, Che Biographer





“Che stands out as a latter-day mythological hero, admired for his daring and his faith -- and some would say his innocence – in trying to achieve the impossible.”

~ Jon Lee Anderson, Che Biographer





"I have yet to find a single credible source pointing to a case where Che executed an innocent."

~ Jon Lee Anderson

(* author of the 814 page – Che: A Revolutionary Life)





“Guevara remains a national hero in Cuba where he is remembered for promoting unpaid voluntary work by working shirtless on building sites or hauling sacks of sugar. To this day, he appears on a Cuban banknote cutting sugar cane with a machete in the fields.”

~ Reuters, Oct 8 2007





“In Bolivia, images of Che hang next to images of Jesus, the Virgin Mary, & Pope John Paul II.”

~ The Observer, September 23, 2007





“In Bolivia, Che is compared to a medieval painting of John the Baptist, who then became the iconic figure in death for millions who had paid little or no attention to him while he was alive.”

~ Christopher Roper





“For my mother who is sick, I pray to the Lord and hesitantly to Saint Ernesto, to the soul of Che Guevara.”

~ Father Agustin - Polish priest in Vallegrande, Bolivia (reading a written prayer by a parishioner)





“It was difficult to recall that this man had once been one of the great figures of Latin America. It was not just that he was a great guerrilla leader; he had been a friend of Presidents as well as revolutionaries. His voice had been heard and appreciated in inter-American councils as well as in the jungle. He was a doctor, an amateur economist, once Minister of Industries in revolutionary Cuba, and Castro's right-hand man. He may well go down in history as the greatest continental figure since Bolivar. Legends will be created around his name.”

~ Richard Gott - Guardian journalist, 1967 dispatch on the day of Guevara's death





“He was just like a Christ, with his strong eyes, his beard, his long hair. He is very miraculous.”

~ “Susana Osinaga, the nurse who cleaned Guevara's corpse





“Today the laundry where Guevara's corpse was laid is a place of pilgrimage. On the wall above, an engraving reads: ‘None dies as long as he is remembered’.”

~ The Observer, September 23, 2007





“Che is a figure who can constantly be examined and re-examined. To the younger, post-cold-war generation of Latin Americans, Che stands up as the perennial Icarus, a self-immolating figure who represents the romantic tragedy of youth. Their Che is not just a potent figure of protest, but the idealistic, questioning kid who exists in every society and every time."

~ John Lee Anderson, Biographer





“It's like he is alive and with us, like a friend. He is kind of like a Virgin (Mary) for us. We say, `Che, help us with our work or with this planting,' and it always goes well.”

~ Manuel Cortez, a farmer who lives next door to the schoolhouse where Che was executed





“Che is politics answer to James Dean, a rebel with very specific cause.”

~ David Segal, Washington Post





“Che was just one of those guys who walked the walk and talked the talk. There’s just something cool about people like that. The more I get to know Che, the more I respect him.”

~ Benecio Del Toro, actor who plays Che in 2 upcoming films





“He’s a person that changed the world and really forces me to change the rules of what I am.”

~ Gael García Bernal, actor who plays Che in ‘Motorcycle Diaries’





“Long live our cry of freedom. Long Live Che !”

~ Jesse Jackson, 1984 at the University of Havana





“One thousand killed in 5 days of fierce fighting in Santa Clara, Commander Che Guevara turned the tide in this bloody battle and whipped a Batista force of 3,000 men.”

~ New York Times Headline, Jan 4 1959





“Che’s military leadership was permeated by an indomitable will that permitted extraordinary feats.”

~ Jorge Castaneda, Che Biographer





“Che waged a guerrilla campaign where he displayed outrageous bravery and skill. He is a hero and icon of the century.”

~ Ariel Dorfman, Head of the dept of Latin American Studies at Duke University





“There is no figure in the 20th century that has produced such a body of fascinating, varied, and compelling imagery as Che Guevara.”

~ David Kunzle, UCLA Professor





“Che Guevara has given rise to a cult of almost religious hero worship among radical intellectuals and students across much of the Western World. With his hippie hair and wispy revolutionary beard, Che is the perfect postmodern conduit to the nonconformist, seditious 60’s.”

~ Time Magazine, 1968





“1968 actually began in 1967 with the murder of Che. His death meant a lot to me and countless like me at the time. He was a role model.”

~ Christopher Hitchens, current day conservative columnist





"The CIA opened a file on Che in 1953 in Guatemala, months before the downfall of Jacob Arbenz, where the young doctor arrived looking for work. There he joined the local popular militias which were asking to be armed to repel the North American intervention. When he later went to Mexico and joined up with Fidel and Raul Castro the CIA' preoccupation multiplied."

~ Philip Agee, CIA Agent





“Che exemplifies the integrity and revolutionary ideals to which we aspire. He was an amazing example, a guy with humanitarian ideals and the will to act on them. Everywhere there was an injustice, Che showed up. That’s a pretty good resume.”

~ Tom Morello, Musician & Activist in Guitar World Interview





“A legend. A hero to radical youth to this day. All over Cuba pictures of Che remind the Cuban people of their debt to this extraordinary man.”

~ David Sandison, publicist for Rolling Stone





"I could write a thousands years and a million pages about Ernesto Che Guevara."

~ Gabriel Garcia Marquez, (Nobel Prize Winner)





“Nothing could be more vicariously gratifying than Che’s disdain for material comfort and everyday desires.”

~ Ariel Dorfman, Time Magazine





“The emblematic impact of Ernesto Guevara is inconceivable without its dimension of sacrifice. Che renounces comfort for an idea.”

~ Jorge Castaneda, Biographer





“Che was aided by a complete freedom from convention or material aspirations.”

~ Phillip Bennett, Boston Globe





“This secular saint was ready to die because he could not tolerate a world where the poor of the earth, the displaced and dislocated of history, would be relegated to its vast margins.”

~ Ariel Dorfman, Time Magazine





“The George Washington of Cuba.”

~ Ed Sullivan & Harry Truman





“Che has a good sense of humor. His conversation was free of propaganda and bombast. He spoke calmly, in a straight forward manner and with the appearance of detachment and objectivity.”

~ Richard Goodwin, special counsel to President John F. Kennedy





“Che presented a Christ-like image … with his mortuary gaze it is as if Guevara looks upon his killers and forgives them.”

~ Jorge Castaneda, Newsweek writer





“Che’s image derives from a visual language … it also references a classical Christ-like demeanor.”

~ Trisha Ziff, Guggenheim Museum creator





“It was out of love, like a perfect night, that Che had set out. In a sense he was like an early saint.”

~ I.F. Stone, Nation columnist, after meeting Guevara





“Wearing a smile of melancholy sweetness that many women find devastating; Che Guevara guides Cuba with icy calculation, vast competence, high intelligence, and a perceptive sense of humor.”

~ Time Magazine - August 8, 1960





“We gave each case due and fair consideration and we didn’t come to our decisions lightly. Che always had a clear idea about the need to exact justice on those found to be war criminals. Our paramount concerns were that no injustice was committed. In that Che was very careful.”

~ Duque de Estrada





“Che was interested in everything from sociology to philosophy to mathematics and engineering. There were 3,000 books in the Guevara home.”

~ John Gerassi, Newsweek editor





“The asthmatic boy spent long hours developing an intense love of books and literature. He devoured the children’s classics of the time, but also Robert Louis Stevenson, Jack London, Jules Verne. He also explored Cervantes, Anatole France, Pablo Neruda. He bought and read the books of all the noble prize winners in literature and held intensive discussions with his history and literature professors.”

~ Jorge Castaneda





“Che’s life demonstrates conclusively that he was not a hypocrite.”

~ Christopher Hitchens, New York Review of Books





“Ernesto Che Guevara is one of the most appealing figures of our century.”

~ David Krunzle, UCLA Professor





“Che’s luminous gaze of a prophet has become a symbol for all the poor in the world.”

~ Fidel Castro





“Che Guevara was a pop icon of mythic proportions.”

~ PBS forum, ‘the Legacy of Che’





“He was the first man I ever met who I thought not just handsome but beautiful. With his curly reddish beard, he looked like a cross between a faun and a Sunday-school print of Jesus.”

~ Christopher Hitchens





“Che taught us all that freedom, democracy, and socialism are inseparable.”

~ Maurice Zeitlin, UCLA Professor





“As utopian as Che’s dreams may have been, as utopian as a world of peace and plenty for all may seem, no social justice is possible without a vision like Che’s.”

~ Fabian Wigmister, Professor





“Few doubt Che’s sincerity.”

~ David Segal, Washington Post





“Che’s decency and nobility always led him to apologize.”

~ Jorge Castaneda





“Bravery, fearlessness, honesty, austerity, and absolute conviction … he lived it … Che really lived it.”

~ John Lee Anderson, Biographer





“Che Guevara’s Socialism and Man in Cuba is one of the great documents in the history of socialism.”

~ John Gerassi, Time editor





“I think there is not a country in the world including all the regions of Africa and any other country under colonial domination, where the economic colonization, the humiliation, the exploitation have been worse than those which ravaged Cuba. The result in part of the policy of my country.”

~ President John F. Kennedy, 1963





“Che died a martyr’s death in 1967.”

~ David Segal, Washington Post





“Che Guevara was young and charismatic and brutally murdered with the support of the CIA.”

~ Trisha Ziff, Guggenheim Museum Creator





“For some reason when I was finally face to face with one of my bitterest enemies, yet I felt no hate for Che Guevara at that moment. It’s hard to explain. I walked outside the little school house and heard the shots. I looked at my watch and it was 1:10 pm on October 9th, 1967.”

~ Felix Rodriguez, CIA operative who ordered Che's death





"They who sing victory over his death are mistaken. They are mistaken who believe that his death is the defeat of his ideas, the defeat of his tactics, the defeat of his guerrilla concepts ... If we want to know how we want our children to be we should say, with all our revolutionary mind and heart: We want them to be like Che."

~ Fidel Castro, Oct 18, 1967





“We predict that Guevara will be eulogized as the model revolutionary who met a heroic death."

~ October 1967, Bureau of Intelligence and Research report - for US Secretary of State Dean Rusk





“Che never wavered from his firm revolutionary stand, even as other Cuban leaders began to devote most of their attention to the internal problems of the revolution."

~ Brian Latell, CIA analyst in an October 18, 1965 intelligence memorandum





“From March to August of 1967, Che Guevara and his guerrilla band strike pretty much at will against the Bolivian Armed Forces, which totals about twenty thousand men. The guerrillas lose only one man compared to 30 of the Bolivians during these six months.”

~ New York Times, 9/16/67





“1:30 p.m.: Che’s final battle commences in Quebrada del Yuro. Simon Cuba (Willy) Sarabia, a Bolivian miner, leads the rebel group. Che is behind him and is shot in the leg several times. Sarabia picks up Che and tries to carry him away from the line of fire. The firing starts again and Che’s beret is knocked off. Sarabia sits Che on the ground so he can return the fire. Encircled at less than ten yards distance, the Rangers concentrate their fire on him, riddling him with bullets. Che attempts to keep firing, but cannot keep his gun up with only one arm. He is hit again on his right leg, his gun is knocked out of his hand and his right forearm is pierced.”

~ Daniel James, Che Biographer





“The situation is gruesome with Che lying in dirt, his arms tied behind his back and his feet bound together, next to the bodies of his friends. He looks like a piece of trash with matted hair, torn clothes, and wearing only pieces of leather on his feet for shoes.

~ Felix Rodriguez, CIA operative right before Che's execution





"Guevara’s death carries significant implications: It marks the passing of another of the aggressive, romantic revolutionaries ... in the Latin American context, it will have a strong impact in discouraging would be guerrillas.”

~ Memorandum to President Johnson by Walter Rostow





"There was no person more feared by the company than Che Guevara because he had the capacity and charisma necessary to direct the struggle against the political repression of the traditional hierarchies in power in the countries of Latin America."

~ Philip Agee, CIA Agent





“The CIA agents and then-Bolivian president Rene Barrientos' soldiers may have killed him in cold blood in La Higuera's mud-floored school 40 years ago, but they couldn't kill his spirit. He has lived on - in the dreams of visionaries, in the fight of the oppressed, in the hearts of the revolutionaries, in the struggles of man.”

~ Op Rana, senior editor for the China Daily





“Che dressed in disguise to visit his own children before a secret trip to Bolivia to foment revolution there. When the kids arrived, I introduced them to a Uruguayan old man, 'Ramon' [Che], a 'friend' of dad's. They never imagined this 60-year-old man could be their daddy. For both Che and me, it was an extremely painful moment. The kids played with 'Ramón' all day. Then, Aleidita [then 7] hit her head after running wild, and Che [a physician] took care of her. Soon afterwards, she came to me to tell me a secret he could overhear: 'Mommy, this man is in love with me!'”

~ Aleida March, Che’s wife





"Though communism may have lost its fire, Che remains the potent symbol of rebellion and the alluring zeal of revolution."

~ Time Magazine, while naming him one of the 100 most influential people of the 20th Century





“The powerful of the earth should take heed: deep inside that T shirt where we have tried to trap him, the eyes of Che Guevara are still burning with impatience.”

~ Ariel Dorfman





"The ideals and actions of Commander Ernesto Guevara are examples for those who defend equality and justice. We are humanists and followers of the example of Guevara."

~ Bolivian President Evo Morales, Oct 9 2007





“With the news of Che’s death, rallies were held from Mexico to Santiago, Algiers to Angola, and Cairo to Calcutta. The population of Budapest and Prague lit candles; the picture of a smiling Che appeared in London and Paris…when a few months later, riots broker out in Berlin, Paris, and Chicago, and from there the unrest spread to the American campuses, young men and women wore Che Guevara T-shirts and carried his pictures during their protest marches.”

~ Erik Durschmied, historian and journalist


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GREAT ARTICLE ABOUT HOW CHE IS NOW A "CHRIST LIKE SAINT" IN BOLIVIA ...

http://observer.guardian.co.uk/world/story/0,,2175016,00.html




"We have a faith, a confidence in Che. When I go to bed and when I wake up, I first pray to God and then I pray to Che - and then, everything is all right."

~ Freddy Vallejos

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The Luddite wrote:

I have read over 15 books on Che, Every book by Che, seen over 10 documentaries, and studied his life intently.

The Luddite wrote:

Jon Lee Anderson

(* Author of the definitive 814 page – Che: A Revolutionary Life)

The Che Guevara, that some try to present as righteous and of deep Christian spirit, wrote in a letter to his mother:

“I am not Christ or a philanthropist, old lady, I'm all the contrary of Christ…. I fight for the things I believe in, with all the weapons at my disposal and I try to leave the other man dead so I don’t get nailed to a cross or any other place..." [1]

[1] Jon Lee Anderson, Che Guevara: A Revolutionary Life (New York: Grove Press, 1997

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Gustavo Villoldo, 71, a Cuban exile who was a major player in Guevara's capture in the Bolivian jungle, plans to auction off a strand of Guevara's hair and other items.

Asked for proof of the hair's authenticity, Villoldo said he had no reason to lie.
"It is what it is, and I let people believe or not, and that's up to them," he said.
He added that DNA evidence could be extracted from the hair and compared with surviving members of the Guevara family.

The Cuban government says it recovered Guevara's remains from Bolivia a decade ago and laid them to rest at a monument in Santa Clara, Cuba.

Villoldo disputes that account, saying the makeshift grave the remains were pulled from held seven bodies while he buried only three.

He buried Guevara -- close to the grave later uncovered by the team of Cuban forensic experts -- because he wanted to deny Havana the chance of turning "Che's" remains into a monument to Cuban President Fidel Castro's 1959 revolution.[21]

[21] Tom Brown, “Man who buried "Che" hopes for killing at auction”, Reuters, September 4, 2007

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Gustavo Villoldo, 71, a Cuban exile who was a major player in Guevara's capture in the Bolivian jungle, plans to auction off a strand of Guevara's hair and other items.



Che's Hair sold for 119,500 $

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/26/world/americas/26che.html?_r=1&o ref=slogin


Earlier that year, three strands of Abraham Lincoln’s hair only sold for $21,510 $




CHE > LINCOLN

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Che was a sadistic madman living out fantasies under the veil of ideology that was romanticized by the idea and grandeur of violent uprising and revolution and didn't care about humane ethics or values. The communist movement around the world was simply a vehicle for him to carry out his morbid obsessions. He's not the great revolutionary depicted on posters, murals, and t-shirts, but rather a grand failure and pathetic excuse for a human being.

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[deleted]

The myth of Che Guevara is seductive and lush. It"s the story of an Argentinian rich-boy who was so shocked by poverty he became a Robin Hood fighting alongside the poor, until eventually he was murdered by the CIA. But the reality of Che Guevara is very different. The facts show that he was a totalitarian with a messiah streak, who openly wanted to impose Maoist tyranny on the world. He was so fanatical that at the hottest moment in the Cold War, he even begged the Soviet Union to nuke New York or Washington or Los Angeles and bring about the end of the world.[22]

[22] Johann Hari, 06 October 2007, Independent UK

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[deleted]

It is true that Che"s story begins with a motorcycle journey across South America. The young man was repulsed by the gap between the swanky transplanted European culture in which he lived and the starving misery of the indigenous peoples. He could see that this was caused largely by America"s habit of smashing local governments and replacing them with dictators prepared to slobber over US corporations. But he concluded from that journey - gradually, over a few short years - that there was only one solution: the imposition of authoritarian communism, by force, everywhere. He chose not to see that this system, wherever it is tried, makes people even poorer still, invariably spreading famine, starvation, and terror.[22]

[22] Johann Hari, 06 October 2007, Independent UK

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He bragged that there was "not a single discrepancy" between Mao"s world view and his own. As Che was happily fawning over Mao in the flesh in Beijing, in the surrounding countryside there was an epidemic of mothers cutting off the flesh from their inner thighs to feed it to their starving children. The programme that caused this biting hunger - the mass collectivisation of the farms - represented "true socialist morality", Che said. The dictator killed 70 million people in the end, cheered on by his guerrilla friend at every stage.[22]

[22] Johann Hari, 06 October 2007, Independent UK

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"I have yet to find a single credible source pointing to a case where Che executed an innocent."

~ Jon Lee Anderson,

Author of the 800 + page definitive biography - "Che Guevara: A Revolutionary Life"


http://www.pbs.org/newshour/forum/november97/che1.html

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His diaries show that he was constantly appalled to discover that almost everyone around him, including the revolutionaries fighting by his side, did not share his Maoist vision for the future. His first wife, Hilda Gadea, was a social democrat. She wanted to depose the US-backed tyrants - and then replace them with moderate, Swedish-style mixed economies. Che ridiculed and pilloried her as "bourgeois", before abandoning both her and their child. The ordinary Cubans he fought alongside on the Sierra Maestre also wanted to create a democracy with a mixed economy. Disgusted, Che noted in his diary: "I discovered the evident anti-communist inclinations of most of them." [22]

[22] Johann Hari, 06 October 2007, Independent UK

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[deleted]

When Che and Fidel Castro"s guerrilla army seized power in Cuba, he was immediately - and to his delight - put in charge of the firing squads. He instituted a system of "trials" that lasted just a few hours, with himself as sole judge. They invariably ended with the low-level functionaries of the Batista regime being lined up and shot. Che"s public declarations from that time are blunt. "All right, it is dictatorship," he shouted at one point. "It"s criminal to think of the needs of the individual." He even banned Santa Claus, saying he was an "American imperialist import."[22]

[22] Johann Hari, 06 October 2007, Independent UK

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[deleted]

[deleted]

The friend who had travelled with Che on the famous motorcycle journeys, David Mitrani, was shocked when they met up in Havana after the revolution. He could not understand how Che"s compassionate response to poverty all those years ago had led him to announce he now wanted to become an "effective, violent, selective, and cold killing machine".[22]

[22] Johann Hari, 06 October 2007, Independent UK

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For those who want a "fairer" assessment.



The Eternal Che Guevara
By Mohammad Badrul Ahsan
The Daily Star
October 17, 2008



Last week would have been more appropriate to write about Ernesto Che Guevara since October 9 was his death anniversary. I am late not because I forgot, but because I dithered. How should I remember a man who is larger than life? Death anniversaries only commemorate lives, which are over. But that isn't true for Che Guevara. His life has become more than before after he died.

Another twist of irony. Ernesto Che Guevara should have been laid in state after his death, thousands filing past his body for one last glimpse of the world's most indefatigable revolutionary figure. Instead, the state of his body lying in the laundry room of a hospital in Vallegrande, a Bolivian village, presented him as a trophy in a big game hunt.

The world's greatest revolutionary was lifeless, his body riddled with bullets, hands chopped off as evidence, and eyes left open in a vacuous stare. He was surrounded by people who had come not to mourn but celebrate his death.

Forty-one years after he was captured and killed, Che Guevara's memory endures, grows even stronger. In fact, he is more alive today than dead, more popular than before, more celebrated than ever. It's a negation of the pernicious scheme of his killers. They had hastily buried him in an unmarked grave to deny him any chance of martyrdom. As it happens, after all these years Che is the most adorable martyr in the world.

Jimi Hendrix is credited for saying: "Once you are dead, you are made for life." True to these words, Jimi died at 27, and he is still sorely missed by music lovers. Che lived longer than him, 39 when he died. In his fight for a better world, in his dream of erasing inequality, in his unflinching faith in the power of the peasantry, his life ended in mid-flight, an unfinished business, an aposiopesis. But he is made for life.

Perhaps there is a terrible fascination for life cut short at its prime. Perhaps it lingers like the afterglow of a bright burst. James Dean was a second-rate actor, who turned into an icon of youth after he died in a road accident at the age of 24. Buddy Holly was a gangly kid from the hick part of Texas. He became a music legend since his death in a plane crash at 22. Jim Morrison finished his earthly journey at 27, dead in a bathtub in his Paris apartment.

On the opposite side of the coin, what is the fate of heroes who live their full course of life? Marlon Brando died a bloated recluse, a pale shadow of his illustrious days. Bono was a figure of enormous sex appeal, but looks odd as an aging Irishman. What about Paul McCartney? He isn't in the news unless there is a divorce or court settlement.

What would have happened to Che Guevara? He would have been eighty years old, hairline receding, skin sagging, faltering in his walk, at best sitting in the power of a Latin American country, contemporaneous with Cuba's Fidel Castro, shuffling between life and death, between holding power and looking for succession. May be he would have moderated in his revolutionary zeal. May be he would have given up or made more mistakes.

But death has made him admirable and ageless. The image of the man, captured by photographer Alberto Korda, at a memorial service in Havana, embodies the glamour of a revolutionary at its photogenic best. No other image -- apart from the one of Marilyn Monroe standing at a subway grid -- has been reproduced as many times in history.

Che's famous likeness appears on posters, subway walls and countless consumer articles such as T-shirts, mugs, key chains, wallets and cigarette lighters all over the world, once even on a vodka bottle in Britain.

If alive, his life could have taken a different turn. He was obsessed with the peasantry, convinced that the struggle for socialism in the mainly rural countries of Latin America should be based upon their guerrilla struggles.

According to Daniel Waldron of Socialist Party in Ireland, that was the core weakness of Che's political mistakes. He was unable to see that the working class had the ability to effect social change. Che might have changed his mind, if he were around.

And he might have made more mistakes, as he had in the past. As Cuba's Minister of Economics, his policy made the Cuban peso practically worthless. During his days as Minister of Industries, a previously prosperous Cuba was rationing food, closing factories and losing productive citizens fleeing the country.

He even got appointed the governor of the central bank of Cuba by mistake. Che himself told Rene Burri, a photographer from Magnum Photos, that when asked if there was an economist in the room, he raised his hand because he thought the question was whether there was a communist in the room.

Che had already changed in his last days, increasingly hardened in his battle against imperialism and capitalism, lancing even with the Soviet Union. The asthmatic child from Argentina had become the most renegade revolutionary, despised by both superpowers. Jorge Castañeda, author of Compañero: The Life and Death of Che Guevara, once said to a reporter of the Guardian that Castro was ready to send a rescue team to save Che, but between them US President Johnson and Soviet leader Kosygin had agreed otherwise.

It was the ultimate twist of irony that Che had first come in contact with a revolutionary situation in Bolivia, and it was in the same country that the curtain fell on his revolutionary life. In Vallegrande that irony elevated him to a supernatural position.

The people still regret that Santo (Saint) Ernesto was so brutally murdered in their village. Then they will remind you of the curse. It haunts those who killed the Saint. Six of the politicians and military officers who shared responsibility have already died violent deaths. One by one, they were either murdered or died in accidents, including President Barrientos, the man who had ordered Che's execution. He died in a helicopter crash.

In the last analysis, Che Guevara lived for what he believed. He extolled the virtue of guerilla struggle as a way to deliver the high ideals of liberating humankind from exploitation and oppression. He continues to inspire activists with the idea of self-sacrificing struggle on behalf of the downtrodden, because he died to become its "living" legend. His slogan was “Hasta La Victoria Siempre" (Towards the Eternal Victory). He will remain eternal until that victory is achieved.


http://www.thedailystar.net/story.php?nid=58997

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Che"s fanaticism reached its peak in October 1963, when he seriously advocated a course of action that would immediately end life on earth. Che had implored the Soviet Union to place nuclear missiles on Cuba. He knew the US would interpret this as an act of aggression and probably retaliate with nuclear weapons - but he said that "the people [of Cuba] you see today tell you that even if they should disappear from the face if the earth because an atomic war is unleashed in their names... they will feel completely happy and fulfilled" knowing the revolution had inspired people for a while. Che did not say how he knew the Cuban people would be delighted to die of radiation sickness, their hair burning on their heads and their skin slopping from their faces.[22]

[22] Johann Hari, 06 October 2007, Independent UK

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Che urged Khrushchev to launch a nuclear strike, now, against US cities. For the rest of his life, he declared that if his finger had been on the button, he would have pushed it. When Khrushchev backed down and literally saved the world, Che was furious at the "betrayal". If Che"s recommendations had been followed, you would not be reading this newspaper now. [22]

[22] Johann Hari, 06 October 2007, Independent UK

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None of these facts are seriously disputed by historians; they are simply skidded over by Che"s defenders, who stick to romantic generalities about how he stood for "honesty" and "revolution". But Che Guevara is not a free-floating icon of rebellion. He was an actual person who supported an actual system of tyranny, one that murdered millions more actual people.

If the small lingering band of communo-nostalgists who still revere Che were honest about continuing his life"s work, they would have to form a group called "Left-Wingers for Creating a Universal North Korea, Prior to Universal Death in a Nuclear Winter." I don"t think they would find many recruits. [22]

[22] Johann Hari, 06 October 2007, Independent UK

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= Jon Lee Anderson, author of the 800 + page 'Che Guevara: A Revolutionary life', who spent 5 years researching the man.


"I have yet to find a single credible source pointing to a case where Che executed an innocent. Those persons executed by Guevara or on his orders were condemned for the usual crimes punishable by death at times of war or in its aftermath: desertion, treason or crimes such as rape, torture or murder."


@ The Legacy of Che Guevara” at PBS Online Newshour Forum (20 November 1997)


http://www.pbs.org/newshour/forum/november97/che1.html

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True as this may be, it just doesn't make cold blooded murder look any better.

"Everybody did it" is not really an excuse; otherwise one could justify anything, from genocide to serial sexual homicide to child molestation. "Everyone else does it" does not make it right, or acceptable.

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The 3 major Guevara biographies:

Che Guevara: A Revolutionary Life -by- Jon Lee Anderson

Companero: The Life and Death of Che Guevara -by- Jorge G. Castaneda

Guevara, Also Known as Che -by- Paco Ignacio Taibo II


= All are EXCELLENT

& will help correct Victorin's deliberate mis-information.

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Che Guevara: A Revolutionary Life -by- Jon Lee Anderson

& will help correct Victorin's deliberate mis-information.


These quotes are from Anderson very favorable biography:

Waiting for a ship that will take them to Easter Island Che wrote: "Easter Island… there to have a white boyfriend is an honor for the females. There, work, what hope, the women do it all, one eats, sleeps and keep them content… What would it matter to remain a year there, who cares about studies, salary, family, etc.” [p 75] His contempt for women and machismo is very clear.

Che,s racism becomes evident in these comments in his travel diary: “The blacks, those magnificent examples of the African race who have maintained their racial purity thanks to their lack of an affinity with bathing, have seen their territory invaded by a new kind of slave: the Portuguese. The contempt and poverty unites them in the daily struggle, but the different way of dealing with life separates them completely; the black is indolent and a dreamer; spending his meager wage on frivolity or drink; the European has a tradition of work and saving, which has pursued him as far as this corner of America and drives him to advance himself, even independently of his own individual aspirations.” [p 92]

From El Cuzco he wrote to his mother that in the eight days they were there, “El Chancho bathed once and by mutual agreement, for health purposes only.”
[p 108]. His young friends label him “el chancho” (the pig), since he seldom bathed.

“…and I know, because I see it printed in the night, that I, the eclectic dissector of doctrines and psychoanalyst of dogmas, howling like possessed, will assault the barricades or trenches, will stain in blood my weapon and, mad of fury, will slit the throats of any defeated who fall into my hands… And I feel my nostrils dilated, savoring the acrid smell of gunpowder and blood, of dead enemy; now I tense my body, ready for the fight, and I prepare my being as a sacred place so that it resurrects with new vibrations and new hopes the bestial howling of the triumphant proletariat. [p 124]

During most of his life Che depended on women to support him. “To help him in his quest to obtain a medical post, the well connected Hilda Gadea introduced him to some high-level government contacts of her…. The main contender for Ernesto’s attentions in February and March of 1954 was a nurse named Julia Mejia. She had arranged a house at Lake Amatitlan where Ernesto could go and spend the weekend. Soon, they were having a casual affair.…. In March, Ernesto’s situation changed very little. Hilda paid off part of his pension bill, and Julia Mejia got him a job interview in the eastern Petén jungle.…. With some jewelry Hilda gave him for the purpose, he paid off part of his pension bill.…. Right away, he found a night job unloading barrels of tar on a road construction crew. He worked a second night….It was the first sustained stint of physical labor he has ever done.” [p 128, 138, 139, 141, 146]

In a letter to his aunt Beatriz, he signed the letter "Stalin II." [p 167]

Both were imbued with Latin machismo; believers in the innate weakness of women, contemptuous of homosexuals, and admire of brave men of action. [p 178]

“I am not Christ or a philanthropist, old lady, I am all the contrary of Christ…. I fight for the things I believe in, with all the weapons at my disposal, and try to leave the other man dead so that I don’t get nailed to a cross or any other place.” [p 199]
So much for his sainthood.

“Querida vieja: Here in the Cuban jungle, alive and bloodthirsty, I am writing these ardent lines inspired by Martí.” [229]

“I ended the problem giving him a shot with a .32 [caliber] pistol in the right side of the brain, with exit orifice in the right temporal [lobe]. He gasped for a little while and was dead. Upon proceeding to remove his belongings I couldn’t get off the watch tied by a chain to his belt, and then he told me in a steady voice farther away than fear: “Yank it off, boy, what does it matter… I did so and his possessions were now mine.” [p 237]

“The man, Filiberto, has been deceived, but the minute he saw Fidel he realized what was happening and start to apologize.”….“The chivato was executed; ten minutes after given him the shot in the head I declared him dead.” [p 252]

Che's trail through the Sierra Maestra was littered with the bodies of chivatos, deserters and delinquents, men whose deaths he had ordered and in some cases carried out himself [p 283]

Che also executed Aristidio, a farmer who during his absence sold the revolver that he had given him….[Che] explain to us that Aristidio was executed for misusing the funds and resources of the guerrillas. But later Che sounded almost apologetic about Aristidio’s fate….“Today we may ask ourselves he was really guilty enough to deserve death”
[p 284]

Guevara told Russell that “If the missiles had being under Cuban control, they would have fire them off”. [545] He forgot a minor detail, to get the consent of 6.6 millions Cubans to be annihilated in a nuclear war.

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Until Andy Garcia made The Lost City, not one film has depicted the mass killings of the Castro regime, let alone Hollywood darling Che Guevara coldly executing unarmed prisoners. Do you think we'll see Che's mass executions at La Cabana dramatized by a major studio anytime soon?

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Some people have spent much time on this thread rationalizing, justifying and excusing the mass executions carried out by their hero Che Guevara, whether it was calling into question the established fact that he personally shot people as a guerrilla fighter and at La Cabaña or demonizing his victims as nothing more than spies, deserters and basically criminals who deserved it.

It goes to show that Che is not the martyr that leftists and brainless kids who wear his shirts believe he is, as his hands are stained with the blood of hundreds of summarily executed victims.

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The exact number of Che's Cuban victims has not been independently verified. The number of deaths attributed to Che varies and includes executions he committed personally as well as death warrants he ordered and/or issued. In his book 'Yo Soy El Che!' journalist Luis Ortega, who knew Che, reports that he sent 1,897 men to the firing squad. Daniel James, in turn, writes in 'Che Guevara: A Biography' that Che acknowledged ordering 'several thousand' executions in the first few years of the Castro regime. Dr. Lago has documented over 4,000 deaths in Cuba, mostly firing squad executions, during the first three years after Fidel Castro's takeover (1959-1962), a period during which Che Guevara is known to have been one of the Castro government's chief executioners.

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In addition, combat deaths or killings perpetrated in other countries where Che led guerrilla operations – such as Bolivia and Congo – have not been tallied.

"Che was a Marxist soldier who aided the Cuban revolution," says Darrow. "He advocated the philosophy of communism, which is responsible for over 100 million murders, and he personally supervised the executions of scores of people himself."

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just as an experiment, why don't you, as the one most raging against Che, try putting a couple of lines about his virtues (however few you may feel they are) and why ya think he's looked up to
at the moment if you'll forgive me for saying so you come across a tad arrogant
people may honestly disagree with your assesment of Che, and it seems quite presumptive to be assuming that it's based on ignorance of his deeds rather than a balance of what he achieved against a multitude of sins
at least recognise that there's another side and that you don't have to be amoral or an idiot to be on it

also I think that Darrow quote overgeneralises communism, it was not imo the philosophy of communism that led to its brutality, more the extremist and totalitarian ways it was implemented, the actual philosophy shouldn't be held responsible for its gross misuse, just as islam can't be held responsible for the radicals that misuse it, or christianity for the crusades

just my two cents, as the yanks would say, so feel free to tell me to bugger off and stop being so damn apologist :p

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[deleted]

Thanks to J. Edgar Hoover's FBI the "walking of the walk" that Castro and Che had planned for those "hyenas" was uncovered in November of 1962. On Nov. 17 1962, J Edgar Hoovers' FBI cracked a terrorist plot (though the term "terrorist" was not used at the time) by Cuban agents that targeted Macy's Gimbel's, Bloomindales and Manhattan's Grand Central Terminal with a dozen incendiary devices and 500 kilos of TNT. The holocaust was set to go off the following week, the day after Thanksgiving. Che Guevara was the head of Cuba's "Foreign Liberation Department" at the time.

A little perspective: for their March 2004 Madrid subway blasts, all 10 of them, that killed and maimed almost 2000 people, al-Qaida used a grand total of 100 kilos of TNT. Castro and Che's agents planned to set off five times that explosive power in the three biggest department stores on earth, all packed to suffocation and pulsing with holiday cheer on the year's biggest shopping day. [23]

[23] Humberto Fontova, Che Guevara Planned Attacks Against the U.S.
NewsMax.com, November 21, 2007

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[deleted]

[deleted]

This message has been deleted by an administrator

Hahaha anytime some refutes Victorin's right-wing Nonsense ... some censor deletes it.

Orwell would be proud.

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Castro and Che planned their Manhattan holocaust short weeks after Nikita Khrushchev foiled their plans for an even bigger one. "Say hello to my little friends!" they dreamt of yelling at the Yankee hyenas in October of 1962, right before the mushroom clouds. But for the prudence of the Butcher of Budapest (Nikita Khrushchev) they might have pulled it off. "If the missiles had remained," Che Guevara confided to The London Daily Worker in November 1962 regarding the Cuban Missile Crisis, "We would have used them against the very heart of the U.S., including New York City." [23]

23] Humberto Fontova, Che Guevara Planned Attacks Against the U.S.
NewsMax.com, November 21, 2007

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This Cuban bomb plot was far from "irrational." Castro and Che weren't suicide bombers by any means. In blasting Manhattan and incinerating thousands of New Yorkers they sought to heat things up again, to rekindle all those thrills he'd experienced the previous weeks during the Missile Crisis.

Given the temper of the times, he knew his Soviet sugar daddies would be implicated too. Then the U.S. might retaliate. Then Castro and Che would have exactly what he'd dreamed about and tried to provoke a few weeks earlier: an intercontinental nuclear exchange.

Millions dead in the U.S. Millions dead in The Soviet Union. And almost certainly, millions dead in his own Cuba. But Castro and Che themselves would be nowhere near harms way. [23]

[23] Humberto Fontova, Che Guevara Planned Attacks Against the U.S.
NewsMax.com, November 21, 2007

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Soviet ambassador to Cuba during the Missile Crisis, Alexander Allusive, reports a fascinating — if unsurprising — datum about those days. While Castro was begging, threatening, even trying to trick Khrushchev into launching a nuclear strike against the U.S., while he was ranting and yelling and waving his arms about grabbing his Czech machine gun and "fighting the Yankee invaders to the last man!" while frantically involved in all this, a "fearful" (Allusive's term) Castro and Che were also making reservations with Allusive for a first-class seats in the Soviet embassy's bomb shelter. [23]

[23] Humberto Fontova, Che Guevara Planned Attacks Against the U.S.
NewsMax.com, November 21, 2007

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As the world's leftists keep celebrating the 40th anniversary of Ernesto "Che" Guevara's death and keep selling him as the ultimate champion of a people's revolution, I keep thinking about my friend Carlos Barberia.

When you talk to Barberia, you see the other side of Guevara, who has become a romanticized icon.

After all, when the guerrillas came down from the mountains, ironically, they stayed at the Hilton. For the first few months of 1959, Castro and his top men occupied three floors of the prestigious Havana hotel. And when the guerrillas and the musicians got hungry in the middle of the night, they all gathered at the hotel kitchen looking for leftovers.

That's where Barberia met Castro and Guevara. They hit it off right away. Barberia was an admirer of the rebels, and the rebels found him entertaining.

"We became very friendly, and we would talk about all kinds of things," Barberia said.

During those first few months of 1959, Castro had put Guevara in charge of the firing squads that executed hundreds of Batista government officials and other Cubans considered potential enemies. Guevara served as prosecutor, judge and jury. And at one point, Barberia felt it was getting out of hand.

"I simply suggested to Fidel that they should consider stopping the firing squads, and El Che was listening," Barberia said. "I told them they were killing too many people."

A few hours later, at the crack of dawn, a group of Guevara's men went knocking on Barberia's door in Havana. He was told that Guevara wanted to see him at La Cabana, the old Spanish fortress that had been turned from a tourist attraction to a prison, complete with firing squads.

Barberia said Guevara greeted him at the officers' club, a beautiful dining room that had a glass wall overlooking the castle's courtyard. He said he knew the room well because his Kubavana Orchestra had performed there many times back when La Cabana was still a place for tourists. But in the first few months of Castro's rule, that courtyard had become the stage for Guevara's bloody firing squads.

Barberia said Guevara invited him to breakfast, ordered two rare steaks and told him to sit facing the courtyard. Barberia had been invited to watch the executions.

"They brought four guys out, but when they shot the first one, I got up and I walked away," Barberia said.

Barberia felt that his rejection of Guevara's methods made him a marked man. In December 1959, upon learning that Guevara's men were investigating him, Barberia went into hiding in Havana and then out of Cuba. When Guevara's men went looking for him, Barberia said, "They took my father and had him shot." [24]

[24] Miguel Perez, A Cuban Movie Proposal, www.creators.com, November 6, 2007

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Barberia, now 72, has made strides in the United States, both as a bandleader and as an advertising salesman for New York Spanish-language radio stations. But when he is confronted with images of Guevara, Barberia is visibly affected. His face turns red. His eyes shed tears. When he sees young Americans who don't know Guevara's true history blindly following a murderer who has been turned into a pop-culture icon, Barberia makes a visible effort to restrain himself.

Not long ago, when Barberia waited for a bus on Bergenline Avenue, he spotted a Guevara T-shirt on a rack at a sidewalk sale. And he couldn't take it. They had brought the T-shirt out too close to the comfort zone. He grabbed the T-shirt, took it inside the store and paid for it. And then he took it back outside and set it on fire.

When police arrived, Barberia said he was honest in explaining his outburst. "Che Guevara killed my father," he told the officers. "He had my father shot by a firing squad in Cuba." [24]

[24] Miguel Perez, A Cuban Movie Proposal, www.creators.com, November 6, 2007

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I am not Christ

The Che Guevara, that some try to present as righteous and of deep Christian spirit, wrote a letter to his mother, July 15, 1956 from a Mexican prison: “I am not Christ or a philanthropist, old lady, I'm all the contrary of Christ…. I fight for the things I believe in, with all the weapons at my disposal and I try to leave the other man dead so I don’t get nailed to a cross or any other place..." [1]

[1] Jon Lee Anderson, Che Guevara: A Revolutionary Life (New York: Grove Press, 1997

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More than a mortal, more than a revolutionary, Che Guevara is pure mystique, a pop-culture phenom born of a cool graphic image.

Che, the brand, has been unparalleled in its reach across cultures and purposes, from the militant to the materialistic to the rampantly mundane, emblazoned on every imaginable surface: T-shirts, posters, belt buckles, lighters, lip gloss, curtains, shot glasses, skateboards, action figures, nesting dolls, tattoos, maracas, bikinis.

Che, the revolutionary, was far less successful. Despite his critical role in the rebel takeover of Cuba in 1959 and his firebrand writings, the medical student-turned-guerrilla failed at every other revolt he endeavored. His last mission led to his capture and death in Bolivia. [25]

[25] Liz Balmaseda, Who was Che Guevara?, Palm Beach Post, June 18, 2008

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For those who said that it was never proven that Che killed or attempted to kill anyone have their heads in the sand.

My grandfather had to leave Cuba because there were assination plots against him. All he did was speak of freedom and they wanted him dead. What a great leader Che was.. And for all those people that worship him, I don't know if i have disgust for you or if I feel bad...

if you know the true man then I have disgust..
if you are ignorant then I feel bad for you

Che is burning in hell for all eternity and that is still too good for him.

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But there was one guerrilla mission he excelled at, notoriously so. As warden at La Cabana fortress prison in the months following the Castro takeover, he became the revolution's chief executioner. How many "enemies of the revolution" faced his firing squad during the first six months of 1959 ranges between 160 and more than 500. That stint earned him the nickname of the "Butcher of Cabana."

In the early years of the Cuban revolution, Guevara served as jail warden, minister of industry and - ironically for a militant who once urged "the struggling masses" to rob banks - as president of the National Bank of Cuba, during which time he issued bank notes signed "Che." Guevara was one of the architects of Cuba's totalitarian police state. [25]

[25] Liz Balmaseda, Who was Che Guevara?, Palm Beach Post, June 18, 2008

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Wow, after reading some of these comments I felt Che is Satan himself ...!!! Okay , let me tell you a small thing : I am an Arab , Muslim ,Egyptian . To be specific , and living in any Arab country from the 1977 to 2009 will let you know who is the true Satan away from this all media polish . It is the US and it administration which has invaded our Arab coutry , stole and still stealing our oil , imposing the dictators they like on us to make us poorer , feeding us their trash and finally torturing us in Abu Ghareeb , Guantanamo and several other underground prisons outside te US soil . By the way I am not a fanatical or even pious Muslim , and I believe in " true democracy " not the US type .

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ok Foton let me ask you a few questions:

1st there have been two wars fought by the US in the middle east:

Gulf War: The reason was because Saddam went into Kuwait.. If saddam never attacked Kuwait we would not have gone in..

War on terror: If muslim terrorists never attacked the US then we would not have gone into Afghanstin.. also if saddam complied with the UN we would never had gone in there as well..

By the way iraq and afghan have both elected their own leaders...

the prisoners at Abu Ghareeb and Guantanamo are prisoners picked up fighting against the US in these wars...

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Wars ???!!! What wars are you talking about ????!!! these are not wars at all !!!

1- The one you call " The First Gulf War " Was nothing except a well made script to invade Kuwait & other Gulf countries , and I am talking about "American" invasion not an " Iraqii " one . The American ambassedor " Blessed " Saddam 's stupid & crazy idea to enter Kuwait . So that , it could invade it afterwards claiming that the US is liberating US ... !!!
Let me remind you Saddam was planted by the US & other allies in first place He is simply made in the U.S.A just like Bin Laden .

2- The WTC towers were another " movie" . Just let me ask you: How on earth could a light-weight aeroplane made of Allumanium destroy such a massive building made of concrete & steal ??????!!! Even its underground ?????!!!

3- Iraqii ppl in the " Green Zone " only could vote for those agreed by the US .
and ppl at Abu Ghareeb were freedom fighters( and that wasn't even certain enough ) against the invasion of their country exactly like the French one diuring the WWII . Funny enough does that give the "angelic" US the RIGHT to torture human beings & de-humanize them ???!! Americans didn't do anything to Iraq except Genocide crimes. The pictures of thousands of Iraqii women & children killed because of the embargo & invasion are enough evidence.

Montazer El Zaydii Shoes thrown in the face of the Bush was the bottom line for the the Arab & Muslims around this world .

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The rebel who wrote the ultimate guerrilla manual in his 1960 handbook, Guerrilla Warfare, embarked on several botched missions.

His secret operation to organize rebels in the Congo was so disastrous, the Castro government deep-sixed the details for years. Guevara left the Congo for his doomed - and final - mission, in Bolivia.

Guevara described his guerrilla self as "bloodthirsty" and "violent" and a "coldblooded killing machine." These were traits he put into action during the bloody rebel uprising of the late 1950s, with point-blank executions and other displays of brutality. [25]

[25] Liz Balmaseda, Who was Che Guevara?, Palm Beach Post, June 18, 2008

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The true impact that the regime Che co-founded had on race relations. Special attention would be given to the life of Eusebio Penalver who was the longest serving black political prisoner of the 20th century. He was incarcerated in Cuba longer than Nelson Mandela was incarcerated in South Africa. His jailers called him *beep* and "Monkey."[/b] They also warned him that they would pull him down from the trees and cut off his tail. Instead, they just put him in solitary confinement. No wonder only 8% of Cuba's communist rulers are black. And no wonder 85% of its prisoners are black. The term "apartheid" could be applied to Cuba if only American communist professors were honest.

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Please, just visit cuba, you'll understand a lot more...

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[deleted]

Please visit the multiple award winner blog of Yoani Sanchez, and you will find out what is happening now in Castos' Cuba.
Link: www.desdecuba.com/generationy/

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There is a picture of Che wearing his Rolex watch. It should be dedicated to all those communist professors who talk like revolutionaries, live like hypocrites, and fail to teach their students about inconvenient truths.

Photo of Che with the Rolex watch.

http://farm1.static.flickr.com/44/135299056_e47574043d.jpg?v=0

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According to Fidel Castro, he had given a Rolex to most of the Cuban high command. At the time of his capture, Guevara was wearing a Rolex watch he had received as a gift from Fidel Castro. After the execution, Rodríguez took one of Che's Rolex watch, often proudly showing it to reporters during the ensuing years." (The Death of Che Guevara: Declassified)

Rodriguez “had brought back some personal relics from his trip, among them one of several Rolex watches found in Che’s possession” ('Che Guevara: A Revolutionary Life', Jon Lee Anderson, 1997, p. 741).

The leading name in luxury wrist watches, Rolex has been the ultimate symbol of capitalism and bourgeoisie enterprise. How many working class people do you know with Rolex watches, indeed how many middle class people do you know with Rolex watches? Only a few, not exactly a model of class solidarity.

http://library.thinkquest.org/18355/media/bi02.jpg

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There is a saying in Argentina: “Tengo una remera del Che, y no sé por qué,” which roughly translates to “I have a Che T-shirt, and I don’t know why.”

The saying reflects a justified cynicism among Argentineans that one of their favorite sons, Marxist revolutionary-for-hire Ernesto ‘Che’ Guevara, has been misappropriated by capitalist-minded opportunists and trend-seeking college kids the world over. Che’s iconic image, with his disheveled rock star hair falling out from a starred black beret, has been used illicitly to sell hundreds of products to the rebellious-minded, with T-shirts and posters probably topping the list. [26]

[26] Ross Bonarde, 5 Things You Didn't Know: Che Guevara, AskMen.com, August 22, 2008

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A company that sponsors tours to Cuba touts La Cabaña Fortress prison as the place where “Che helped consolidate the victory of the revolution.” Historians estimate Che "consolidated" the lives of as many as 2,000 people.

Once in power, Che Guevara was appointed head of La Cabaña, where he ran one of the century’s more modest -- if no less shameful -- kangaroo courts. He did his part to purge Cuba of Batista loyalists by playing judge, jury and executioner in a manner reminiscent of Stalin’s Great Terror of the 1930s. It was here he earned the name The Butcher of La Cabaña. [26]

[26] Ross Bonarde, 5 Things You Didn't Know: Che Guevara, AskMen.com, August 22, 2008

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The same group that wanted California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger to stop the execution of multiple murderer Tookie Williams because of opposition to capital punishment have no problem walking around in Che T-shirts, despite the fact that on a routine basis Guevara carried out summary executions for Castro, assassinating hundreds of innocent people. [27]

[27] By IGS, FrontPage Magazine, IGS | Monday, July 30, 2007

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Che Guevara embodies the ideals of justice, equality, freedom, truth, and bravery.

He is a martyr to the cause of world liberation from the shackles of capital slavery. The slave plantations were replaced by the corporation and Guevara gave his life to wake up the huddled masses of humanity.

CHE will live on for all eternity and will reside in the hearts of billions until this world breathes its last breath. Hasta La Victoria Siempre!

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I'm slightly curious, but how do you go about justifying the rampant human rights violations that have flourished in Cuba for the past fifty years necause the following rights are curbed or lacking entirely: freedom of speech, freedom of the press, habeus corpus, trial by jury, freedom of assembly, the right to vote, the right to protest, the right to bear arms, not to mention rampant racism, corruption, prisoner abuse, and the large number of political prisoners being held in jail. Hell, even getting caught with beef (the food) will land you a lengthy prison sentance. Yet all these rights and priveleges are found in the capitalist US, which you repeatedly denounce.

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RIP Che, but Not in His Tomb in Cuba

Thousands came to Che Guevara's Cuban mausoleum in July to celebrate the 40th anniversary of the revolutionary’s death—but they were paying respects at the wrong resting place. A French journalist claims that Fidel Castro’s government never actually found the Argentine’s body—as was triumphantly announced 10 years ago—and instead buried an unknown body under Guevara’s name, the New Republic reports.

Several inconsistencies prove that the body relocated to Cuba on the 30th anniversary of Che’s death isn't his. Guevara was buried alone, naked and with amputated hands; the exhumed body was discovered in a mass grave, wearing a jacket and with hands intact. The journalist berated Castro over the fabrication, asserting his power is “built on the abolition of historical truth.” [28]

[28] World, Arts & Living, Oct 31, 2007

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Che hated the unchallenged and uncontrolled greed of capitalism and you all hate him for it.
Simple as that, if he had done all the same thing but instead made a "democracy" with Fidel that made Cuba U.S allies like China, Turkey or Saudi Arabia (all have horrible human rights) you guys and our Gov. would have no problem proclaiming how much of a hero the revolutionaries people like Che and Fedel are and how great the governments of that country are.

Happens all the time, the same people we supported in Afghanistan that fought the soviets are now our enemies even though their still doing the exact same thing, fighting foreign soldiers who are on their lands (no matter the reason)

The Kurds in Turkey, for decades fighting for more rights to their ethnic people against Turkeys political purification process (Turkey tried genocide against Armenians and didn't solve their problem so trying it this way now) by having people listed as Turks and not allowing other languages to be teach in schools and even trying to impose turkish only names on newborns to purify the country... ironic this is mostly because 1/4 of their country is lands that's not theirs, they convinced the British (western power) that they could do better with it instead of the Kurds who were going to get it in the original post WWI treaty.

Saudi Arabia has thousands of princes that just get 100s of millions of dollars (from oil we buy) to spent for whatever they want, reason why there are so many palaces there, all the while a monarchy still exists there and women are still subject to some of the most oppressive laws, more so then a lot of the other Middle-Eastern countries. But hey, if you want 3 wives, you know where to go.

I'll assume you guys now about the hundreds of millions in China that live in poverty, how rebelling farmers are brought down by soldiers and how they still occupy tidbit.

All this yet I don't see our government taking a fraction, if any, of the action against these countries that it does against Cuba. Don't see you guys making any comparisons about how Cuba along with _______ are such bad governments and need reform. Nope.

I know you're not going to but I'll say it anyway.

You're a bunch of hypocrite, accept it, move on.

All Twilight series fan reviews needed at Edwardcullin.com

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There is a saying in Argentina: “Tengo una remera del Che, y no sé por qué,” which roughly translates to “I have a Che T-shirt, and I don’t know why.”

The saying reflects a justified cynicism among Argentineans that one of their favorite sons, Marxist revolutionary-for-hire Ernesto ‘Che’ Guevara, has been misappropriated by capitalist-minded opportunists and trend-seeking college kids the world over. Che’s iconic image, with his disheveled rock star hair falling out from a starred black beret, has been used illicitly to sell hundreds of products to the rebellious-minded, with T-shirts and posters probably topping the list. [29]

[29] 5 Things You Didn't Know: Che Guevara, By Ross Bonander Entertainment Correspondent

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This is an interesting thread and I am glad there are people from both sides on this issue like Luddite and Victorin; a discussion on Che I am glad was started.

I am the proud son of Cuban immigrants. My father, son of a doctor and professor at University of Havana, lost property and lost his job at the university because he wasn't a socialist. My father was pick-pocketed on a bus once just after the revolution and reported it to policeman and the cop said that that sort of thing no longer happens in socialist state. His escape from Cuba made headlines in Ireland that compares his daring feat to something out a James Bond movie. My mother, who was once a supporter of Fidel, cried at the end of this movie because it brought back memories; her brothers fought in the revolution for Castro by the way. She has before told me about her experience of Castro's soldiers rummaging through the suitcases of those who wanted to leave the country, as depicted in the The Lost City; the regime wanted to take more possessions from the "gusanos", or worms as Fidel called the exiles, including rings from fingers and laughing while doing so. I've heard at one point Christmas trees were illegal to have on the island and I am sure you probably know about the ban of free speech, free enterprise, and free elections.

Yes, there were some good things that the revolution brought: a higher literacy rate, it got rid of the mafia's control and constructed a universal health care system. Batista was no saint either and Andy Garcia showed him as a conceited leader. I can see why many Blacks are enamored with Fidel and socialism because they have been mistreated here in the greatest capitalist country ever. They may feel that lives of the poor were improved with the revolution even though, presently to my knowledge, no Afro-Cuban has held a high-elected office. It's a shame though that people who have been poorly treated in the past feel they no choice but to look on the Castro brothers as saviors. However, I support a lift on the embargo, too, because it seems to only help the Castros rail against US and keep his people content with the Cuban dictators who appear ever ready in their military fatigues.

If you support Che Guevara and think he's a great hero, you, of course, are entitled and free to express your opinion. However, I hope you Che supporters can understand why some of us don't liken him to a saint, and that you don't overlook evidence to the contrary to keep your image of him pure.

Cuidense,

-John Alves

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A company that sponsors tours to Cuba touts La Cabaña Fortress prison as the place where “Che helped consolidate the victory of the revolution.” Historians estimate Che "consolidated" the lives of as many as 2,000 people. [29]

[29] 5 Things You Didn't Know: Che Guevara, By Ross Bonander Entertainment Correspondent

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Once in power, Che Guevara was appointed head of La Cabaña, where he ran one of the century’s more modest -- if no less shameful -- kangaroo courts. He did his part to purge Cuba of Batista loyalists by playing judge, jury and executioner in a manner reminiscent of Stalin’s Great Terror of the 1930s. It was here he earned the name The Butcher of La Cabaña.

[29] 5 Things You Didn't Know: Che Guevara, By Ross Bonander Entertainment Correspondent

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The anarchists and anarcho-syndicalists had their press closed down and many militants were thrown in prison. Che was directly implicated in this. This was followed in 1962 with the banning of the Trotskyists and the imprisonment of their militants. Che said: "You cannot be for the revolution and be against the Cuban Communist Party". He repeated the old lies against the Trotskyists that they were agents of imperialism and provocateurs. [30]

[30] Steven, Ernesto "Che" Guevara, 1928-1967, September 25th, 2006

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Che was the main link, indeed the architect, of the increasingly closer relation between Cuba and the Soviet Union. The nuclear missile deal which almost resulted in a nuclear war in 1962 was engineered at the Cuban end by Che. When the Russians backed down in the face of US threats, Che was furious and said that if he had been in charge of the missiles, he would have fired them off!

By 1963, Che had realised that Russian Stalinism was a shambles after a visit to Russia where he saw the conditions of the majority of the people, this after "Soviet-style planning" in the Cuban economy had been pushed through by him.

Instead of coming to some libertarian critique of Stalinism, he embraced Chinese Stalinism. He denounced the Soviet Union's policy of peaceful co-existence, which acknowledged that Latin America was the USA's backyard, and gave little or no support to any movement against American control. Fidel was now obsessed with saving the Cuban economy, himself arguing for appeasement. Against this Che talked about spreading armed struggle through Latin America, if necessary using nuclear war to help this come about! [30]

[30] Steven, Ernesto "Che" Guevara, 1928-1967, September 25th, 2006

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Che may look like the archetypal romantic revolutionary. In reality he was a tool of the Stalinist power blocs and a partisan of nuclear war. His attitudes and actions reveal him to be no friend of the working masses, whether they be workers or peasants. [30]

[30] Steven, Ernesto "Che" Guevara, 1928-1967, September 25th, 2006

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A ROMANTIC hero to legions of fans the world over, Ernesto “Che” Guevara, the poster boy of Marxist revolution, has come under assault as a cold-hearted monster four decades after his death in the Bolivian jungle.

A revisionist biography has highlighted Guevara’s involvement in countless executions of “traitors” and counter-revolutionary “worms”, offering a fresh glimpse of the dark side of the celebrated guerrilla fighter who helped Fidel Castro to seize power in Cuba. [31]


[31] Matthew Campbell, Behind Che Guevara’s mask, the cold executioner. The Sunday Times, September 16, 2007

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Yes I can understand why so many blacks love Che:

"The black is indolent and a dreamer; spending his meager wage on frivolity or drink; the European has a tradition of work and saving, which has pursued him as far as this corner of America and drives him to advance himself, even independently of his own individual aspirations."

From the Motorcycle Diaries Book
By Che.


Wow black people.. what a hero for your race.. nothing like your favorite dictator calling you indolent..

Try again Che lovers...

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Machover, a Cuban exiled in France since 1963, blames the hero worship on French intellectuals who flocked to Havana in the 1960s and fell under the charm of the only “comandante” who could speak their language.

They turned a blind eye to anything that did not fit in with their idealised image of Guevara. A prolific diarist, Guevara nevertheless wrote vividly of his role as an executioner. In one passage he described the execution of Eutimio Guerra, a peasant and army guide.

“I fired a .32calibre bullet into the right hemisphere of his brain which came out through his left temple,” was Guevara’s clinical description of the killing. “He moaned for a few moments, then died.”

This was the first of many “traitors” to be subjected to what Guevara called “acts of justice”. [31]

[31] Matthew Campbell, Behind Che Guevara’s mask, the cold executioner. The Sunday Times, September 16, 2007

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Blood soaked tyrants like Batista and his oligarchs don't give up power easily. True revolutionaries like Che recognize that sometimes flowers and loving thoughts do not defeat brutal henchmen who are systematically murdering your brothers and sisters. For a revolution to succeed the appropriate measures must be used. Che knew this full-well, and was willing to let the historical record speak for his actions.

Proof is in the pudding, as they say. Cuba has no death squads now, corporate or otherwise. Everyone gets a good world class education. Everyone has birth to death world class health care. Everyone has the responsibility to make it all happen. Cubans have taken up the task quite efficiently and very effectively. They honor Che's spirit, gains, and losses in doing so.

Viva Che!

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OK Jon lenin...

If Cuba is now a world paradise? Why are cubans not allowed to move out of the country?

Why does Cuba restrict freedoms?

Why can't cubans get on the internet to see how freedom works?

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He would climb on top of a wall . . . and lie on his back smoking a Havana cigar while watching the executions,” the author quotes Dariel Alarcon Ramirez, one of Guevara’s former comrades in arms, as saying.

It was intended as a gesture of moral support for the men in the firing squad, says Machover. “For these men who had never seen Che before, it was something really important. It gave them courage.”- [31] Matthew Campbell, Behind Che Guevara’s mask, the cold executioner. The Sunday Times, September 16, 2007

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[deleted]

In a six-month period, Guevara implemented Castro’s orders with zeal, putting 180 prisoners in front of the firing squad after summary trials, according to Machover. Jose Vilasuso, an exiled lawyer, recalled Guevara instructing his “court” in the prison: “Don’t drag out the process. This is a revolution. Don’t use bourgeois legal methods, the proof is secondary. We must act through conviction. We’re dealing with a bunch of criminals and assassins.” [31] Matthew Campbell, Behind Che Guevara’s mask, the cold executioner. The Sunday Times, September 16, 2007

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Che Guevara is one of the most heroic figures in world history who is a stoic example of what all those who speak of "revolution" should espouse to be.

This was a man who left a bourgeoisie comfortable life of the upper class, a potential well compensated career as a medical doctor, and a high regarded governmental position, each time to slog through the jungle and fight guerrilla wars against impenetrable odds = for a better and more equitable society.

Throughout his life Che tended to thousands of sick campesinos, helped construct dozens of schools throughout Cuba, worked in a Leper colony to helped those afflicted, and even when he was literally tied up in a small mud school house awaiting his own execution ! , still complained to the local teacher that in a nation where the leaders drove Mercedes, it was a travesty that the peasants were taught in a dilapidated place like he was in.

If the world had 100 Che's or hell even 10 ... we would be in much better shape.

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Jon-

Please tell me.. if Che is so great.. why did Cuba restrict freedoms...

You have to be able to answer that, if Che is so wonderful, and he and Castro made Cuba into such a pardise.. why on earth would they restrict the people from the freedoms they enjoyed before...

I have been asking you this many times.. you never seem to answer me...

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On Friday November 21st, while strolling through Central Park's Doris C. Freedman Plaza, Commentary Magazine's online editor Abe Greenwald noticed a statue and did a double take. "Is that...Che Guevara?"

Most New Yorkers seem unaware that but for the grace of God thousands of them would have been Che's victims too.

"If the missiles had remained (in Cuba),We would have used them against the very heart of the U.S., including New York City. The victory of Socialism is well worth millions of atomic victims."- Ernesto 'Che" Guevara, November 1962. [32] Humberto Fontova, New York Honors Che Guevara with a Statue, American Thinker, November 25, 2008

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On Friday November 21st, while strolling through Central Park's Doris C. Freedman Plaza, Commentary Magazine's online editor Abe Greenwald noticed a statue and did a double take. "Is that...Che Guevara?"

Most New Yorkers seem unaware that but for the grace of God thousands of them would have been Che's victims too.

"If the missiles had remained (in Cuba),We would have used them against the very heart of the U.S., including New York City. The victory of Socialism is well worth millions of atomic victims."- Ernesto 'Che" Guevara, November 1962. [32]Humberto Fontova, New York Honors Che Guevara with a Statue, American Thinker, November 25, 2008

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You are a notorious hater victorin. I feel sorry for you. Never have I seen such intense hatred. Get help. Che will always be a great man to people who actually know what he stood for. You or millions of exile Cubans can't change that! NEVER!



My theory on Feds is that they're like mushrooms: feed them *beep* keep them in the dark.

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Imagine a monument to Hideki Tojo at the Arizona memorial in Pearl Harbor. Imagine one to Luftwaffe Chief, Herman Goering in London's Hyde Park. Heck, imagine one to Osama bin Laden in New York.

"The U.S. is the great enemy of mankind!" raved Ernesto "Che" Guevara in 1961. "Against those hyenas there is no option but extermination. We will bring the war to the imperialist enemies' very home, to his places of work and recreation. The imperialist enemy must feel like a hunted animal wherever he moves. Thus we'll destroy him! We must keep our hatred against them [the U.S.] alive and fan it to paroxysms!" - [32] Humberto Fontova, New York Honors Che Guevara with a Statue, American Thinker, November 25, 2008

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Enough of those fake quotes. They have been twisted around to make him look like a maniac. Che was a doctor and a humanist. And Andy Garcia should be ASHAMED that he could depict him like he did, a barbarian who enjoys killing people and laughs satisfied.

Luckily there are people who have sense in their heads and know the real truth. They don't believe the anti-left propaganda that Garcia and his likes are feeding you yanks.

My theory on Feds is that they're like mushrooms: feed them *beep* keep them in the dark.

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On Nov. 17, 1962, J. Edgar Hoover's FBI discovered that Che Guevara's bombast had substance. They infiltrated and cracked a plot by Cuban agents that targeted Macy's, Gimbel's, Bloomingdale's and Manhattan's Grand Central Terminal with a dozen incendiary devices and 500 kilos of TNT. The holocaust was set to go off the following week, on the day after Thanksgiving. Che Guevara was the head of Cuba's "Foreign Liberation Department" at the time.

A little perspective: for their March 2004 Madrid subway blasts, all 10 of them, that killed and maimed almost 2000 people, AL-Qaida used a grand total of 100 kilos of TNT. Castro and Che's agents planned to set off five times that explosive power in the three biggest department stores on earth, all packed to suffocation and pulsing with holiday cheer on the year's biggest shopping day. Thousands of New Yorkers, including women and children, actually -- given the date and targets -- probably mostly women and children, were to be incinerated and entombed. - [32] Humberto Fontova, New York Honors Che Guevara with a Statue, American Thinker, November 25, 2008


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Castro and Che planned their Manhattan holocaust short weeks after Nikita Khrushchev had foiled their plans for an even bigger one. "Say hello to my little friends!" they dreamt of yelling at the Yankee "hyenas" in October of 1962, right before the mushroom clouds. But for the prudence of the Butcher of Budapest (Nikita Khrushchev) they might have pulled it off. Guevara's quote at the head of this article is ample proof. Che thought he was speaking off-the-record to Sam Russell of Britain's Daily Worker's at the time.

Despite the diligent work of Camelot court scribes and their ever-eager acolytes in the MSM, publishing and Hollywood, Nikita Khrushchev himself makes hash of their Camelot boosterism. The Butcher of Budapest admitted that Fidel and Che's genocidal fantasy was a much bigger factor in his decision to yank the missiles from Cuba than Kennedy's utterly bogus bluster, threats and "blockade," during those famous "Thirteen Days." - Humberto Fontova, New York Honors Che Guevara with a Statue, American Thinker, November 25, 2008.

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The regime Che Guevara co-founded stole the savings and property of 6.4 million citizens, made refugees of 20 percent of the population from a nation formerly deluged with immigrants and whose citizens had achieved a higher standard of living than those residing in half of Europe.

Under Che Guevara's rule "change," indeed came to Cuba. - Humberto Fontova, New York Honors Che Guevara with a Statue, American Thinker, November 25, 2008

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some reality, for those that are tired of the same lame copy and pasted snippets by "El Douche" Vitorin1 ...


Remembering Che Guevara
by Mohammad Shahidul Islam
The Daily Star
October 17, 2010


If he had been alive today, Che would have turned 82 this year. His life was cut short at the age of 39 on October 9, 1967. Yet, 43 years after his death in captivity, he is very much alive and ever remembered.

Che lives in his ideas and in the struggle being waged by the people the world over for a better future for mankind. Che was a man of amazing courage and astonishing combative spirit. Full of sanguinity, optimism and faith in humanity, he never wavered in his convictions. During the most difficult days of the guerrilla war he always volunteered to undertake the most dangerous operations.

"I wouldn't consider my death a frustration, but... I will take to my grave only the regret of an unfinished song", he wrote to his father from a prison in Mexico in 1956. Che was not only a heroic guerrilla. He was 'also a person of visionary intelligence and broad culture, a profound thinker', as Fidel told a memorial rally in Havana on October 18, 1967.

Che realised that the building of the new society, the revolutionary transformation required two pillars: the education of the new man and woman and the development of technology. The excellent results achieved by Cuba in its development at present in both these fields show the potency and validity of Che's thought.

"Foreign trade should not determine policy, but should, on the contrary, be subordinated to a fraternal policy toward the peoples", he told the Afro-Asian Conference in Algeria on February 24, 1965. This principle is today beginning to assert itself among member countries of the ALBA (Bolivarian Alternative for Latin America)- a group of progressive countries in Latin America.

Che was above all an internationalist. Born in Argentina, he led the Cuban Revolution and died in Bolivia in an attempt to liberate its peasants.

http://www.thedailystar.net/newDesign/print_news.php?nid=158676

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Most of the people who praise Che know little to nothing about him. He’s more of an idea to them than a fact. They think he’s this guy who fought imperialism instead of Fidel’s executioner. A butcher who was a humorless psychopath.

People like Che turn their country into a living hell, where people have no rights and are imprisoned for talking back. Maybe that’s why some leftists admire them. They wish they had that kind of power themselves.

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Che Guevara at the UN

On December 1964, during a debate in the United Nations General Assembly where Guevara represented de Cuban government, this was severely attacked because of the firing squad executions without any judicial process and evidence as required by the rule of law. Guevara, in his own voiced, responded:

"We must say here what is a known truth, which we have always expressed before the world: firing squad executions, yes, we have executed; we are executing and we will continue to execute as long as is necessary. Our struggle is a struggle to the death."

Video link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HqAvuiyzz5k

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Daniel Alarcón Ramírez, a Cuban guerrilla fighter who went to Bolivia with Argentine mercenary che Guevara to begin a guerrilla war, told the Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera that Cuban dictator Fidel Castro betrayed Guevara following orders from Moscow.

Alarcón Ramírez, who was known as "Benigno," told the newspaper in an interview published on Sunday, that Moscow considered Guevara "a very dangerous personality for its imperialist strategies."

According to Benigno, Castro followed the orders from Moscow to eliminate Guevara because Cuba needed the aid that it was receiving from the URSS in order to survive.

He told the newspaper that the plan was to "export the revolution" but that Castro abandoned them in the Bolivian jungle. "Che went to his death knowing that Castro had betrayed him," he said. - Corriere della Sera, January 24, 2009, “Fidel Castro betrayed Che Guevara following orders from the Soviet Union"

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Killer Chic: Hollywood's Sick Love Affair with Che Guevara

Giselle Bundchen wears him on her bikini. Johnny Depp wears him around his neck. And Benicio del Toro becomes him in Steven Soderbergh's by-all-accounts-fawning four-hour biopic, Che, now in limited release.

Del Toro, who took home best actor honors at Cannes earlier this year, is already earning Oscar whispers for his performance. But "Che" is only the latest sign of Hollywood's infatuation with Guevara, Castro, and other dictatorial goons (recently, Sean Penn had a cover story in The Nation lamenting unfair media coverage of the tyrannical Cuban and Venezuelan regimes).

"Killer Chic" tours the hellholes of totalitarianism through the eyes of Paquito D'Rivera, who left Cuba for artistic freedom and ended up becoming a Grammy Award-winning jazz player, and Kai Chen, a former member of the Chinese national basketball team whose relatives were hauled off under Mao Zedong's Cultural Revolution. "Killer Chic" is a fascinating and troubling foray into Hollywood's shallow--and callow--appropriation of murderous thugs.

Video link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iQcUkd1w_TY

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[deleted]

How the RIGHT-WING mind works ...

Nuking 250,000 Japanese civilians = Good
Che overseeing the execution of former Dictator Batista’s torturers = Bad

Slave Owners & Genocidal Presidents (millions of Natives) on US $ = Good
T-shirt with Cuba's/Argentina's National Hero’s face on it = Bad

US Jets Shock and Aweing Iraq and killing thousands of people = Freedom
Che traveling to Bolivia to fight for the landless peasants = Terrorism

Guerrilla & Slave Owner George Washington shooting the enemy = Hero
Guerrilla & non-slave owner Che Guevara shooting the enemy = Assassin

The US invading Vietnam and causing 2 million civilian deaths = Freedom
Che killing a total of around 50 Bolivian soldiers in an attempt to topple an oligarchy = Terrorism

Reagan aiding in the death of 1 million Iraqi/Iranians by selling weapons to both sides = BEST PRESIDENT EVAH !
Che having a few hundred rapists and murderers of the former dictator shot after found guilty in tribunals = He's a Butcher !

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"Killer Chic"

Gisele Bundchen wears him on the runway, Johnny Depp wears him around his neck, and Benicio Del Toro becomes him in the new, highly acclaimed, two-part epic film from Steven Soderbergh, Che. Ernesto "Che" Guevara, the revolutionary who helped found communist Cuba, is the celebrity that celebrities adore. And be it Madonna, Rage Against the Machine, or Jay-Z, musicians really dig Che.

It's something that baffles Cuban jazz legend Paquito D'Rivera. "he hated artists, so how is it possible that artists still today support the image of Che Guevara?" Turns out the rebellious icon that emblazons countless T-shirts actually enforced aesthetic and political conformity. D'Rivera explains that Che and other Cuban authorities sought to ban rock and roll and jazz.

"Che was an inspiration for me," D'Rivera tells reason.tv. "I thought I have to get out of this island as soon as I can, because I am in the wrong place at the wrong time!" D'Rivera did escape Cuba, and so far he's won nine Grammy awards playing the kind of music Che tried to silence. But D'Rivera says Che's crimes didn't end with censorship. "He ordered the execution of many people with no trial." Che served as Castro's chief executioner, presiding over the infamous La Cabana prison. D'Rivera says Che's policy of killing innocents earned him the nickname the Butcher of La Cabana.

“We're rightly horrified by fascist murderers like Adolph Hitler," says reason.tv's Nick Gillespie. “Why aren't we also horrified by communist killers?” Certainly, Che's body count isn't anywhere near Hitler's. But what about someone Che idolized, someone whom he might have liked to wear on his chest?

"Che, Castro, all the communist regimes idolized only one thing that Mao personifies violence." Kai Chen grew up in China under the reign of Mao Zedong. Although he won gold medals for China’s national basketball team, Chen's was far from the celebrity life of an NBA star. Says Chen, "You have no right to talk, and you have no right to think."

The punishment for questioning Mao’s authority was often death. The Black Book of Communism estimates that Mao is responsible for the deaths of 65 million people’s a figure that dwarfs even Hitler’s body count. "Mao is a murderer," says Chen. “The biggest mass murderer in human history."

And yet, like Che, Mao's image is becoming an increasingly popular way to move merchandise. You can buy Mao t-shirts, mugs, caps—you name it. Near Chen's Los Angeles home there's even a restaurant called Mao's Kitchen. "Can you imagine a restaurant called Hitler's Kitchen?" asks Gillespie.

Neither D'Rivera nor Chen understands why communist killers are considered Chic, but each finds his own way to have the last laugh on these anti-capitalist icons.

"Killer Chic" is written and produced by Ted Balaker. Director of Photography is Alex Manning.

Closing music, "Che Guevara T-Shirt Wearer," courtesy of The Clap

Video link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iQcUkd1w_TY

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The Victims of Che Guevara – YAF

The poster collage uses tiny photos of those killed by Che and Castro’s communist regime to compose the face of the Marxist guerrilla, who has become a popular T-shirt icon, revealing the truth of Che's cruel murderous hypocrisy and acknowledging his countless victims, known and unknown.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h5g24XFTbXc

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Che Guevara - Mass Murderer - Antifa

Great music video to the song by “The Clap” from Newcastle, Australia. Information about Che Guevara and his communist ideals.

Not so much about the man himself, but more of a critique to those who think it is cool to have a picture of Che Guevara on their t-shirt yet they have no idea of who he is or what he did.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J33-28DmCCY

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CHE GUEVARA:

- Worked in a Leper colony and treated lepers

- Was instrumental in teaching over 900,000 Cubans to read

- Tended to thousands of sick campesinos

- Helped construct dozens of schools throughout Cuba

- Removed the Mafia and dictatorship of Batista from Cuba which had killed 20,000 Cubans and tortured thousands more

- Desegregated the schools in Cuba before they were in the Southern US

- Called out South Africa’s Apartheid in 1964, 30 years before the West!

- Denounced the racism and KKK in America

- Warned of the dangers of the IMF, 3 decades before most of the developing world realized they had been scammed into debt slavery

- Left a bourgeoisie comfortable life of the upper class, a potential well compensated career as a medical doctor, and a high regarded governmental position, each time to slog through the jungle and fight guerrilla wars against impenetrable odds! ... In fact, near the end it took 1,800 rangers to bring down his 25 men.


CHE'S "CRIMES" WERE:

~ Stopping American companies from owning 70 % of the arable land in Cuba

~ Teaching peasants to read, by bringing the Cuban literacy rate from 60 to 97 %

~ Having the 200 or so War Criminals who killed 20,000 Cubans for Batista shot against a wall

~ Fighting white mercenaries in the African Congo with an all black army

~ Speaking out against US and eventually USSR Imperialism while demanding that the poor of the world be allowed to live a life of dignity



"Che’s life is an inspiration for every human being who loves freedom, we will always honor his memory." — Nelson Mandela

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This cuban american woman, with the Che image on the cuban flag in the background, is obviously a Castro simpaticer. She is doing the same thing that some cuban simpaticers are doing. See what they can find out and what they can organize against this Great Country.

Under Che Guevara's rule "Change" indeed came to Cuba. If I was running for President, I would make damn sure that I wasn't being misrepresented by ANY office, especially on TV, unless of course I endorsed it.

Video link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DCja99KpjWU

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“There was no person more feared by the company (CIA) than Che Guevara because he had the capacity and charisma necessary to direct the struggle against the political repression of the traditional hierarchies in power in the countries of Latin America.”
— Philip Agee, CIA Agent

Che was fighting against:
- American Oligarchy (United Fruit, Texaco, U.S. Sugar)
- The US based Mafia (1959 Havana)
- The Monroe Doctrine rationale for Latin American Imperialism (Bay of Pigs)
- The idea of Banana Republics (Arbenz 1953 coup)

Plus Che’s radicalism was spawned from living in Guatemala during the 1953 overthrow of Jacobo Arbenz by the CIA at the behest of the United Fruit Company (those lovely capitalists who liked to kill brown Central Americans so Americans could have cheap bananas).

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For the useful tools out there that repeats the same thing over and over like a trained Cacatua: The image of Che is a Communist propaganda tool used to lure you in. Just as drugs. Pointing other's mistakes doesn't make you better.

He was a freaking Arrogant Foreigner who went to other people's countries to meddle in their business and kill them.

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Che the revolutionary romantic, as depicted by Benecio del Toro in Soderbergh’s film, never existed. That hero of the left, with his hippie hair and beard, an image now iconic on t-shirts and coffee mugs around the world, is a myth concocted by Fidel Castro’s propagandists – something of a cross between Don Quixote and Robin Hood.

Like those tall tales, Fidel’s myth of Che bears a superficial resemblance to historical facts, but the real story is far darker. Some Robin Hood probably did brutalize the rich and, to cover his tracks, gave some of his loot to the poor. In medieval Spain, Quixote-like knights probably did roam the countryside, ridding it not of dragons but of the land’s few remaining Muslims.

What works for teenagers also seems to work with forever-young movie directors. In the 1960’s, the Che look, with beard and beret, was at least a glib political statement. Today, it is little more than a fashion accoutrement that inspires a big-budget Hollywood epic. Are Che theme parks next?

But once there was a real Che Guevara: he is less well known than the fictional puppet that has replaced reality. The true Che was a more significant figure than his fictional clone, for he was the incarnation of what revolution and Marxism really meant in the twentieth century. - Guy Sorman, Hollywood filmmakers blind to Che Guevara's brutality, The Australian, February 02, 2009.

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Che was no humanist. No communist leader, indeed, ever held humanist values. Karl Marx certainly was not one. True to their movement’s founding prophet, Stalin, Mao, Castro, and Che held no respect for life. Blood needed to be shed if a better world was to be baptized. When criticized by one of his early companions for the death of millions during the Chinese revolution, Mao observed that countless Chinese die everyday, so what did it matter?

Likewise, Che could kill with a shrug. Trained as a medical doctor in Argentina, he chose not to save lives but to suppress them. After he seized power, Che put to death five hundred “enemies” of the revolution without trial, or even much discrimination.

Indeed, without his ideology, Che would have been nothing more than another serial killer. Ideological sloganeering allowed him to kill in larger numbers than any serial killer could imagine, and all in the name of justice. Five centuries ago, Che probably would have been one of those priest/soldiers exterminating Latin America’s natives in the name of God. In the name of History, Che, too, saw murder as a necessary tool of a noble cause. - Guy Sorman, Hollywood filmmakers blind to Che Guevara's brutality, The Australian, February 02, 2009.

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Beyond Cuba, the Che myth has inspired thousands of students and activists across Latin America to lose their lives in foolhardy guerrilla struggles. The left, inspired by the siren call of Che, chose armed struggle instead of elections. By doing so, it opened the way to military dictatorship. Latin America is not yet cured of these unintended consequences of Guevarism.

Indeed, fifty years after Cuba’s revolution, Latin America remains divided. Those nations that rejected Che’s mythology and chose the path of democracy and the free market, such as Brazil, Peru, and Chile, are better off than they ever were: equality, freedom, and economic progress have advanced in unity. By contrast, those nations that remain nostalgic for the cause of Che, such as Venezuela, Ecuador, and Bolivia, are at this very moment poised on the brink of civil war. - Guy Sorman, Hollywood filmmakers blind to Che Guevara's brutality, The Australian, February 02, 2009

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Letter to Mayor Bloomberg of New York

Paquito D'Rivera, famous Cuban jazz musician, wrote this letter to Mayor Bloomberg with regard to Che Guevara Statue located in New York’s Central Park. He never received a response from the Mayor office. He ask us to feel free to make it public.

January 5-2009

Dearest Mayor Bloomberg:

In the mid fifties, still a young child, my father came home with a fabulous Benny Goodman LP, recorded live at Carnegie Hall in 1938. Ever since I’ve dreamed to be a working musician in the city of New York . What I never, ever dreamed, not even in my wildest nightmares, was that after having to join two million Cuban exiles in 1980, I was going to see a sad statue of Che Guevara, a couple of blocks away from the glorious sculpture of Cuban National hero Jose Martí at New York’s Central Park.

“The butcher of La Cabaña fortress”, as was the nickname of this lamentable Argentinean character, Guevara ––a self proclaimed enemy of the USA–– was responsible for countless murders and abuses in my homeland as well as in other countries, where he tried to impose totalitarian regimes by the law of his guns. So, although I heard that the ridiculous Spanish made sculpture is meant to be just temporarily at the spot on 60th street and 5th avenue, that doesn’t mean it9d be less offensive than having a Stalin monument in Orchard Beach, a Hitler portrait on the walls of Carnegie deli, or a representation of a man in KKK’s macabre rope next to the Duke Ellington’s memorial in Harlem.

So I really hope that you feel some respect and compassion for your many Cuban supporters and sympathizers, and remove ASAP such an anachronistic an insulting image from the surface of our beloved City.

Always with the same appreciation.

Sincerely:

Paquito D’Rivera

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How Che died

In real life this is what happened:

Che, at the time of being taken prisoner, who was slightly wounded by a bullet in the leg, with the rifle up high shouted to his captors in Bolivia, “Don’t shoot, I’m Che, I’m worth more to you alive than dead” His 9 millimeters pistol had all its bullets when yielding it. Why he allowed to be taken prisoner and didn’t fight to the last bullet? He thought that they were not going to kill him, that they would judge him as they did with Régis Debray and Ciro Bustos. He only was able to beg for his life, he didn’t know to die like a man. - Che Guevara: The Fish Die by the Mouse
Link: http://www.cubanet.org/CNews/y09/enero09/23_O_3.html

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Che Guevara capture

When they were a few feet away, a short, sturdy highland Indian named Sergeant Bernardino Huanca, broke through the brush and pointed his gun at them. He claimed later that Che told him: “Do not shoot! I am Che Guevara and worth more to you alive than dead.” - Jon Lee Anderson, Che Guevara a revolutionary Life,1997, p.733.

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No doubt the pasty-white former plantation owners and mafia pimps in Miami who ran Cuba before the revolution think everyone else share's their priorities ... but this is not the case. In fact, over the last twenty years, it's apparent that Latin America as a whole is fed up with the colonial arrogance of not just US imperialis­m, but the local vassals and stooges who earn their keep selling out their own people.

Listening to the cowardly gusanos like Victorin wail and cry ... it's like music. You lost. Fidel & Che whooped your fascist little asses and now you want sympathy? Get real. The Miami mafia and Batista lost. You will never get the land back. You will never again turn Cuba into your brothel.

Remember this: the USA still occupies one part of Cuba: Guantanamo Bay. The USA uses it as a torture camp. That's a fact. You can run all the "democracy­" BS you want. Those who support US domination of Cuba already have a crystal clear example of what that means.

History has already absolved Fidel and honored Che as an icon of freedom.

Deal with it.

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The M-1 rifle with which Che surrenders, is not his, but that of his partner,the Bolivian guerrilla Willy, with whom he changes his rifle to justify his surrender without a fight, since the one used by him, like that of the other leaders, was an M-2 in good condition. His 9 millimeters pistol had all its bullets when yielding it.

The wound in the leg was a slight scratch that it did not prevent him from walking. At the moment of surrender he said “Don’t shoot, I’m Che Guevara.” He didn’t fight until the last bullet, as he demanded from his subordinates, who fulfilled the order and gave their lives in pursuit of an impossible and foreign illusion. - Marcos Bravo*, “La otra cara del Che”

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Captain Gary Prado Salmon commanded the unit that captured Che Guevara in Bolivia in 1967. Prado says that Che simply dropped his gun and surrendered. Prado remembers him responding, “Don't shoot, I'm Che, I'm worth more to you alive than dead.” Che was slightly wounded in the lower calf, and walked helped by a soldier, soldier Montenegro.

Prado said that after Guevara surrendered, he asked me, as I wrote in my book (The Immolated Guerrilla), “what are you going to do with me?” to which I replied: “You will be tried in Santa Cruz.”

Prado has stated that Guevara said Castro failed him at a crucial time. Guevara had said that Fidel Castro not only failed him on the Bolivian campaign but also probably betrayed him. - The Defeat of Che Guevara, by Gary Prado Salmón, 7/24/1990

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In his "Necessary Introduction" to The Bolivian Diary of Ernesto Che Guevara, Castro explain Che’s capture by the Bolivian Army in this way: “It has been established that Che, although wounded, continued to fight until the barrel of his M-2 was destroyed by a bullet, making it totally useless. The pistol he was carrying did not have a magazine. It was only due to these incredible circumstances that they were able to catch him alive. The wounds in his legs, although not fatal, made it impossible for him to walk unaided.

He was taken to the village of Higueras and remained alive for another 24 hours, more or less. He refused to say a single word to his captors and slapped a drunken officer who tried to taunt him.” [1]

Fidel Castro insists Che Guevara could never have been taken prisoner 40 years ago if his gun hadn't malfunctioned, calling Guevara "not a man who could have been taken prisoner" with a working gun.

The explanation of Che capture by the Bolivian Army given by Castro is pure propaganda, there is no proof this ever happened. Nothing in the actual record support Castro accounts of the facts. On the contrary everything points to Che surrendering without fighting to the last bullet. The firefighter was still raging after Che’s surrender. His men, unlike him, were fighting to the last bullet

His description does not match at all with that of Sergeant Bernardino Huanca, or Captain Gary Prado, or Captain Felix I. Rodriguez, a former CIA agent, or the research conducted at the scene by Marcos Bravo. Castro, at that time, was unaware of the presence on the scene of these eyewitnesses

[1] Fidel Castro: “Una introducción necesaria”, in Ernesto Che Guevara: Escritos y discursos (Tomo 3: Diario de Bolivia), op. cit., pp. 1-20.

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Until Andy Garcia made The Lost City, not one film has depicted the mass killings of the Castro regime, let alone Hollywood darling Che Guevara coldly executing unarmed prisoners. Do you think we'll see Che's mass executions at La Cabana dramatized by a major studio anytime soon?

No amount of Hollywood puffery will change the fact that commies aren’t cool.

Hollywood’s latest round of “Che-mania” kicked off last Friday in New York with a one week preview of Steven Soderbergh’s epic four hour biopic on the life and times of Ernesto Che Guevara. The film opens nationwide, edited into two halves, in January.

When asked why the movie needed to be so long, co-producer and star Benecio Del Toro replied, “That is a question for Che. Why such a fulfilled life? We believe that this is the shortest film about Che Guevara’s revolutionary life that could be made.”

Well, no.

The shortest film about Che’s revolutionary life has already been made. In it, a couple of scruffy, paramilitary-looking, motorcycle-riding cartoon cockroaches decide to “take over” a kitchen, running amok until a giant muscle-bound can of Raid appears and “kills them dead.” - By Mark Goldblatt, Revenge of Che, nationalreview on line.

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Guevara, in reality, belongs to that species of human vermin who attach themselves to a charismatic villain — in Che’s case, Fidel Castro; in Heinrich Himmler’s case, Adolf Hitler; in Khalid Sheikh Mohammed’s case, Osama bin Laden — and enact their murderous agendas until the countervailing forces of history end their pathetic existences. Granted, Che is more photogenic than either the thin-lipped Poindexter Himmler or the hairy-backed Super Mario Brother Sheikh. It’s hard to imagine either of them ever moving a gross of tee shirts the way Che does. But the fact that Che continues to sell is a testament to the historical ignorance of every consumer of his visage. - Mark Goldblatt, Revenge of Che, National Review on line.

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In most cases, if you want to know how heroic someone is, first gage how much the right-wing hates them. The greater the teabaggers hate him, the more heroic he/she must be. Che Guevara, (one of the most heroic individuals of the 20th century) invites a large amount of hatred, vitriol, and misinformation from the conservative wing-nuts for two reasons:

(1) He represents many of the noble attributes that their bankrupt philosophy abhors, namely self-sacrifice, helping the poor, restoring justice when it comes to great inequality, and overthrowing the oligarch puppets of plantation capitalism.

(2) Che represents everything that the right-wingers secretly wish they were – brave, determined, dashing, charismatic, intelligent, poetic, and unshakable against impenetrable odds – while they took deferments from Vietnam – Che battled armies on 2 continents usually outnumbered 20 or 50 to 1.

While right-wingers have a dream of becoming rich and owning a 4 car garage – Che had a dream of liberating the entire 3rd world from Imperialism and ultimately gave his life for his ideals.

The worst propagandists against Che are also the Miami mafia and ex gusano goons of the dictator Batista who Che overthrew. These hacks spread lies about Che from the daily comforts of Miami and against a man who’s been dead for 40 + years. They are also bitter because they want their parent’s hacienda mansions and the slave labor that came with it back – that they enjoyed before Che came and spoilt all their fun.

Of the lying hacks, the worst clown of all is Humberto Fontova, an exile with no shame, credibility, or appreciation for historical truth. His screeds become the gospel for the Little Havana South Florida squad of hucksters on the CIA payroll – and ultimately get picked up and copy and pasted all across the internet by half-literate right-wing trolls who wouldn’t know their a$S from the elbow.

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To me Che Guevara is one of the most heroic figures in world history who is a stoic example of what all those who speak of “revolution” should espouse to be.

This was a man who left a bourgeoisie comfortable life of the upper class, a potential well compensated career as a medical doctor, and a high regarded governmental position --- each time to slog through the jungle and fight guerrilla wars against impenetrable odds = for a better and more equitable society.

I endorse Jean Paul Sartre’s declaration that Guevara was the “most complete man of our time” … and find his life not only fascinating but deeply inspiring.

Guevara despite his crippling and acute asthma which would debilitate him almost daily to inches from death, directed “suicide squads” in the battle against the U.S. armed and backed Dictator Batista where with less than 300 men; he literally took on 10,000 Batista soldiers armed with tanks, jets, and U.S. weaponry, and came out victorious at and leading up to the victory at Santa Clara.

In Bolivia, Guevara spent almost over 1 hellish year in the festering jungle battling a disease which left his hands as mounds of swollen flesh, the fact that his allergic reaction to mosquito bites would leave walnut sized welts all over his body, kept fighting even when he was without food for nearly a month, went shoeless, without blankets, and STILL with less than 30 men took on a force of 1,800 Bolivian U.S. armed rangers with an air force, green beret advisors, and CIA technology. Despite these odds Guevara’s men killed 30 Bolivian troops before they even lost their first Guerrilla. Moreover, displaying his character, despite all these hardships, when Guevara could have simply taken the food of Bolivian campesinos to eat, he insisted on paying for everything.

Throughout his life Che tended to thousands of sick campesinos, helped construct dozens of schools throughout Cuba, worked in a Leper colony to helped those afflicted, and even when he was literally tied up in a small mud school house awaiting his own execution ! , still complained to the local teacher that in a nation where the leaders drove Mercedes … it was a travesty that the peasants were taught in a dilapidated place like he was in.

Although I don’t believe in religious dogma (neither did Che), and view myself as an atheist, I do find it telling that the person Che was so often compared to by those who knew him was Jesus Christ. Because of his implacable character, unbending morals, and innate desire to fight in favor of the afflicted, I think that those who knew him were left with no other figure to compare him to.

Was he perfect? Of course not. No human is. But in mind he was awfully close considering the circumstances and cards he was dealt. I also find it telling that the best “canard” his detractors and those propagandists of monopoly capitalism can come up with - was his short stint at La Cabana prison. Where Che simply reviewed the cases and convictions of war criminals convicted by revolutionary tribunal (modeled after Nuremburg). The same secret police and Batista backed torturers that killed 20,000 people and tortured tens of thousands more. At a time when Fidel and Che would release military captives in the Sierra after tending to them medically, Batista would gouge the eyes out of captives until they gave away rebel positions. The fact that Che saw to it that justice was delivered cold to the Cuban people to me only makes him more heroic. He knew that a “pedagogy of the wall” was the only thing that could cleanse a society from the thousands of goons who raped and terrorized it with impunity.

Yet I'm amazed how people apply some sort of “perfectionist” fallacy to Guevara or more foolishly overlook his heroism on the basis of the fact that Capitalists profit from his defiant image. This is exactly what the capitalist vampires want. They will take every hero of the toilers and the left and revise them into “terrorists” … they will take every noble guerrilla who fought against imperialism and craft them into “mad men” so as to make you think that heroism and socialism/Marxism etc are antithetical concepts. If this doesn’t work … the Capitalist/Imperialists will try to make real heroes into caricatures, or “de-fanged” banal symbols of popular culture – so as to “devalue” their serious and conceptual analysis on behalf of the working class. Thus Che dawns a bikini, Mao dawns a purse, and Lenin dawns your Zippo lighter.

I would implore those who give credence to the idea of a "revolution" … to give much deserved recognition to one of the few men in the past century who literally threw aside “the arm chair” and went out to (imperfectly) create it.


If the world had 100 Che’s … or hell even 10 … we would be in much better shape.


Hasta la Victoria Siempre !

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= An inspiration to all those who battle injustice

http://www.youtube.com/watch_popup?v=O_QXOG1rDLs

= One of the greatest men to ever live

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A Conservative Confronts Reality on Che ...


From the American Conservative magazine:

Lincoln, Wilson and FDR–each of them was responsible for far more deaths and far more destruction than Che Guevara or any of a number of Arab nationalist figures ever was, but two important things separate them in the eyes of the general public: they did not personally kill anyone, and the causes for which their armies killed and destroyed are widely considered to be the just and right ones. That is to say, the exact same moralizing, or rather anti-moralizing, that the ends justify the means that Che used in rationalizing revolutionary violence is employed to praise and sanctify approved figures who authorized much larger slaughters for the “right reasons.” Not only have sympathetic, shoulder-shrugging, anti-moralizing stories been told about these men, but we have built large physical monuments to them (or at least to two of the three mentioned above), which is rather more troubling in its way than silly people who wear T-shirts or directors who minimize the moral failings of their main characters.

http://www.amconmag.com/larison/2009/01/23/revolutionaries/

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"THE TRUE STORY OF CHE GUEVARA"


A Recently released Full Documentary From The History Channel .... (1 hr 30 min)

Watch it for free below ...
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=5762714709014580290





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"The United States hastens the delivery of arms to the puppet governments they see as being increasingly threatened; it makes them sign pacts of dependence to legally facilitate the shipment of instruments of repression and death and of troops to use them."
--- Che Guevara, April 9 1961




----> A NEW DEFINITION FOR "CHUTZPAH"

When someone who supports the same country that nuked 2 cities and turned 250,000 people to dust ... the same country that fire bombed Dresden and burned 150,000 women and child alive, the same country that killed 15 million Natives because they felt it was their manifest destiny ... the same country that enslaved millions of blacks … the same country whose CIA has killed 6 million people since 1950 (John Stockwell) ... the same country that invaded Iraq which has caused 950,000 deaths ...

The same country that since 1949 has led CIA coups in - Greece, Iran, British Guyana, Guatemala, South Vietnam, Haiti, Laos, South Korea, Ecuador, Dominican Republic, Honduras, Brazil, Bolivia, Zaire, Ghana, Cuba, Cambodia, El Salvador, Chile, Australia, Liberia, Chad, Grenada, Fiji, Venezuela ... and installed puppet governments.

Not to mention propped up the many brutal tyrants like Pinochet, Suharto, Marcos, and Somoza ... backed contra movements through the School of the Americas ... and sold arms to Iran and Saddam's Iraq at the same time as they fought each other and killed over a million people ...

HAS THE CHUTZPAH to pretend to be upset that Cuba under CHE had tribunals (just like the Nuremburg one after WWII the US had) and then as a result had a few hundred of the brutal dictator Batista’s convicted henchmen, rapists, & torturers (most who were the secret police of the BRAC and who had killed 20,000 people) executed at La Cabana.

WOW ... there are no words for the audacity of such insanity !

American Reich-Wing Propaganda would make Goebbels blush.

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THE TRUTH ABOUT THOSE - CHE HAD SHOT (Vol 1)

One of the first tasks of the triumphant Cuban revolutionaries in 1959 was to establish justice for the thousands of Cuban families whose sons and daughters, mothers, fathers, and neighbors had been tortured and slaughtered on the streets and in the dungeons of the Dictator Batista's regime. The martyred dead numbered at least 20,000 in a country then of 6 million. Justice had already begun with the end of the regime as spontaneous retributions took place against known torturers and murderers whose cover and protection had vanished.

Che was assigned the task of establishing a just and fair but also transparent justice and to bring the process under revolutionary control, ensuring due process, defense lawyers, and fair proceedings. Popular, public 'revolutionary tribunals' were organized in large stadiums and courthouses. Volumes of public testimony were given, with horrific testimony of the most vile tortures and bestial murder recorded and made public. Che was assigned the role as "Supreme Prosecutor" at La Cabaña fortress, and reviewed those cases and handled the appeals of those ... ALREADY sentenced to death for their deeds. Duque de Estrada, whose job it was to gather evidence, take testimonies, and prepare the trials, also sat with Che, the "supreme prosecutor", on the appellate bench, where Che made the final decision on the men's fate. Duque has stated that the two of them "were in agreement on almost 100 percent of the decisions which they did not come to lightly" and that they "got a lot of flak" for giving each case due and fair consideration.

Some 200 or so of the worst torturers and murderers of the US-backed Batista tyranny were shot by firing squads. No one has ever offered a shred of credible evidence that anyone innocent was executed.

It is also important to note that Jon Lee Anderson, author of the 814 page definitive biography - "Che: A Revolutionary Life", has stated that in his 5 years of research: "I have yet to find a single credible source pointing to a case where Che executed an innocent." Anderson also notes that "Those persons executed by Guevara or on his orders were condemned for the usual crimes punishable by death at times of war or in its aftermath: desertion, treason or crimes such as rape, torture or murder."


... THE END


__________________________________________________ ______

---> After WWII the US had the Nuremberg trials and hung the guilty Nazis.

---> After the ouster of the brutal dictator Batista ... Che was put in charge of their own tribunal and had the guilty torturers, goons, and henchmen shot.

= SAME THING

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THE TRUTH ABOUT THOSE - CHE HAD SHOT (Vol 2)


SUPPORTED BY SCHOLARLY PEER-REVIEWED ACADEMIC JOURNALS ...

The application of the death penalty in Cuba against war criminals and others followed the same procedure as that seen in the trials by the Allies in the Nuremberg trials. Had the Revolutionary Government not applied severe legislation against the few hundred torturers, terrorists, and other criminals long employed by the Batista regime, the people themselves would have taken justice into their own hands--as happened during the anti-Machado rebellion--and thrown the society into chaos. It was only the population's confidence in the government's effective and cautiously selective administration of revolutionary justice that kept the society in order. The death penalty was imposed on the enemies of the people--those who had killed, tortured, and committed crimes against humanity during the revolutionary war and continued to conspire against the revolution. These were the traitorous elements that supported and participated in the Batista regime and received shelter in the United States or Falangist Spain and those that feared fulfillment of the promise to the end of class privilege, exploitation, and all abuses of the Batista regime maintained by the overthrown Cuban bourgeoisie, American corporations, and the U.S. regime.[1]


1. Thirty Years of Cuban Revolutionary Penal Law, by Raul Gomez Treto, Latin American Perspectives, Vol. 18, No. 2, Cuban Views on the Revolution (Spring, 1991), pp. 114-125

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THE TRUTH ABOUT THOSE - CHE HAD SHOT (Vol 3)


Cuba's Revolutionary Tribunals — Separating Fact from Fiction
Nov 12, 2007
By Tony Saunois


The 40th anniversary of Che’s death also witnessed numerous charges that he was a “butcher,” owing to his role in overseeing the trials and executions of counter-revolutionaries following the Cuban revolution. Below we reprint an excerpt from Che Guevara: Symbol of Struggle by Tony Saunois replying to these attacks.

You can read the book on-line at
www.socialistalternative.org/publications/che

From La Cabaña, Che oversaw the Revolutionary Tribunals that were used as a means of purging the army of its most pro-Batista elements. The trials centered on those who conducted torture and murder under the Batista dictatorship…

The Tribunals provoked a massive attack by U.S. imperialism, which denounced such measures as criminal. However, the reprisals had the support of the mass of Cubans, especially the poor, who had suffered horrific crimes at the hands of Batista's thugs.

The Tribunals were not elected committees of workers, soldiers, and representatives of local communities as would have been advocated by Marxists during such revolutionary conditions.

However, the measures taken by the Tribunals were to defend the revolution and to try to exact some justice for the victims of Batista's sadistic torturers. Those accused were given defense lawyers and the right to disprove or justify their actions…

[In the main,] only in the cases of brutal torture or death, which involved hundreds of cases, were executions the verdict. Former prisoners and the families of the dead or “disappeared” were asked to give evidence and show the scars they were left to carry for life.

These elementary rights are in marked contrast to the "justice" given during the 1980s throughout Latin America as military regimes fell one after another across the continent. Unlike in Cuba after the fall of Batista, the new pro-capitalist governments have permitted a conspiracy of silence to take place to protect the military and police … Despite hundreds of thousands suffering torture and death, few prosecutions have been made against those responsible for such crimes in Argentina, Chile, Brazil, Peru, and other countries…

The friends and families of "los desaparecidos" (the disappeared) still get no reply to their simple question, carried on placards throughout the continent: "¿Donde Están?" (“Where are they?”). In Argentina, after more than a decade of weekly protests in front of the Presidential Palace, the mothers of the disappeared are still asking this same question and still get no reply.

The silence of U.S. imperialism about these crimes, in which it and its agencies such as the CIA are directly implicated, has been deafening. It has been in marked contrast to its reaction to the tribunals headed by Che in Cuba.

A gruesome picture was painted by U.S. imperialism of what was taking place in Havana. The “terror” of the new regime was hypocritically denounced and Che was presented as Public Enemy Number One…

Che was determined to carry through this policy … Che repeated endlessly to his Cuban comrades during this period that [left-wing President Jacobo] Arbenz had failed in Guatemala because he failed to purge the armed forces and allowed the CIA to penetrate and overthrow his government [in 1954 after he nationalized the lands of the United Fruit Company]. He was determined not to allow history to be repeated in Cuba.

On January 22, 1959, a mass rally was called in Havana to support the government's “war trials” policy. Estimates vary, but anywhere between half a million and one million participated in this mass demonstration…

Banners denounced U.S. imperialism for its double standards, compared the trials of Batista's assassins with the Nuremberg trials of convicted Nazis after the Second World War, and demanded “revolutionary justice.”

Castro asked all those who agreed with revolutionary justice to raise their hands. Up to one million hands were raised to a cry of “¡Sí!”

Castro commented: “Gentlemen of the diplomatic corps, gentlemen of the press of the whole continent, the jury of a million Cubans of all ideas and all social classes has voted.”


http://www.socialistalternative.org/news/article20.php?id=640

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[deleted]

Indeed, one of the ongoing mysteries of American popular culture is why Communism is merchandised more often and more effectively than Nazism or Islamism. Is it just a matter of public relations? Why does an obsessive Nazi-hunter like Simon Wiesenthal get positive press while an obssessive Communist-hunter like Joe McCarthy is vilified? Why is Marxist Theory, with its alternative view of individual versus collective rights, an accepted academic discipline — but Sharia Theory, with its alternative view of female empowerment, an insult to women?

The truth of the matter is that Nazism, Islamism, and Communism are all totalitarian movements. All three stand in direct opposition to Enlightenment values of religious tolerance and rational inquiry. All three seek to exterminate whoever stands in their way. Nazism justifies its genocide in the name of racial purity. Islamism, in the name of spiritual purity. Communism, in the name of socio-economic purity.

One way or another, the shallow graves get filled. - Mark Goldblatt, Revenge of Che, National Review on line.

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Indeed, one of the ongoing mysteries of American popular culture is why Communism is merchandised more often and more effectively than Nazism or Islamism. Is it just a matter of public relations? Why does an obsessive Nazi-hunter like Simon Wiesenthal get positive press while an obssessive Communist-hunter like Joe McCarthy is vilified? Why is Marxist Theory, with its alternative view of individual versus collective rights, an accepted academic discipline — but Sharia Theory, with its alternative view of female empowerment, an insult to women?

The truth of the matter is that Nazism, Islamism, and Communism are all totalitarian movements. All three stand in direct opposition to Enlightenment values of religious tolerance and rational inquiry. All three seek to exterminate whoever stands in their way. Nazism justifies its genocide in the name of racial purity. Islamism, in the name of spiritual purity. Communism, in the name of socio-economic purity.

One way or another, the shallow graves get filled. - Mark Goldblatt, Revenge of Che, National Review on line.

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Humberto Fontova

Fontova is a lying fraud. He has no credibility and nobody outside of right-wing quack sites take him seriously.

He doesn't have a real job - so he writes weekly lies about Cuba/Fidel/Che inbetween shooting deer and drinking beer.

A total doofus and a coward.

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So as you sit in the darkened theater, listening to Soderbergh’s Che murmur dreamily that the true revolutionary is guided by “love,” you might want to consider how that love was manifested in a man who used to lay on his side on top of a wall, chomping a cigar even as he urged on the firing squads he commanded. - Mark Goldblatt, Revenge of Che, National Review on line.

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[deleted]

Or you might consider Che in his own words.

Here is Che, for example, recounting the execution of Eutimio Guerra for betraying the Cuban revolution: “I fired a .32 caliber bullet into the right hemisphere of his brain which came out through his left temple. He moaned for a few moments, then died.” - Mark Goldblatt, Revenge of Che, National Review on line.

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And here’s Che philosophizing on the rule of law: “To send men to the firing squad, judicial proof is unnecessary. These procedures are an archaic bourgeois detail. This is a revolution! And a revolutionary must become a cold killing machine motivated by pure hate.”

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Oh, and here’s Che lamenting the outcome of the Cuban Missile Crisis: “If the missiles had remained, we would have used them against the very heart of America including New York. We must never establish peaceful coexistence. In this struggle to the death between two systems we must gain the ultimate victory. We must walk the path of liberation even if it costs millions of atomic victims.”

Finally, here’s Che on his commitment to his cause: “In fact, if Christ himself stood in my way, I, like Nietzsche, would not hesitate to squish him like a worm.”

Which raises an intriguing entomological question: Can a cockroach squish a worm? - Revenge of Che, by Mark Goldblatt, nationalreview on line.

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Hollywood hotshot Benicio Del Toro is not a stand-up comic, but he seemed to be playing one earlier this month when he said he found the role of Cuban Revolution hero Ernesto Guevara, in the new film "Che," like Jesus Christ. "Only Jesus would turn the other cheek. Che wouldn't," Mr. Del Toro explained. Right. And Bernie Madoff is Mother Teresa, only she wasn't into fraud.

With next month marking the 50th anniversary of the Castro dictatorship, it's no surprise that the film industry is trying to cash in by celebrating pop-culture icon Guevara. As one of Fidel Castro's lieutenants in the Sierra Maestra and a Castro enforcer in the years following the rebel victory, his name is synonymous with the Cuban Revolution.

Interesting films are hard to come by these days and "Che" is a good example of the problem. Rebel glamour sells T-shirts and coffee mugs so why not another airbrushed rerun of Guevara's life? Or, more precisely, some mythical version of it, sanitized for the mass market. Meanwhile the real marvel of the past 50 years in Cuba -- the steady stream of heroic nonconformists who have risked all in their aspiration to think, speak and act freely -- remains the untold epic of our time. - MARY ANASTASIA O'GRADY, Hollywood Celebrates Che Guevara, WSJ.com, December 29, 2008.

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If Mr. Del Toro's "Christ" comment is foolish, it's nothing compared to film director Steven Soderbergh's explanation of why we should care about Che. Bad things happen in society when "you make profit the point of everything," the movie director told Politico.com. Che's "dream of a classless society, a society that isn't built on the profit motive, is still relevant. The arguments still going on are about his methodology."

Putting aside for a moment the hilarity of Mr. Soderbergh's personal revulsion with profits, the "methodology" that he suggests is debatable is otherwise known as murder. Che had a "homicidal idea of justice," Alvaro Vargas Llosa explained in The New Republic in 2005, after researching his life. In his April 1967 "Message to the Tricontinental," Che spoke these words: "hatred as an element of struggle; unbending hatred for the enemy, which pushes a human being beyond his natural limitations, making him into an effective, violent, selective and cold-blooded killing machine." - MARY ANASTASIA O'GRADY, Hollywood Celebrates Che Guevara, WSJ.com, December 29, 2008.


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The results of Che's utopian agenda aren't much to admire either. As author Paul Berman explained in 2004 in Slate, "The cult of Ernesto Che Guevara is an episode in the moral callousness of our time. Che was a totalitarian. He achieved nothing but disaster."

The miserable Argentine was killed in 1967 in the Bolivian Andes while trying to spread revolution in South America. But his vision of how to govern lives on in the Cuba of today. It is a slave plantation, where a handful of wealthy white men impose their "morality" on the masses, most of whom are black and who suffer unspeakable privation with zero civil liberties. - MARY ANASTASIA O'GRADY, Hollywood Celebrates Che Guevara, WSJ.com, December 29, 2008.

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There is something rich about the supposedly hip, countercultural Hollywood elite making common cause with Cuba's privileged establishment in 2008. Its victims -- artists, musicians, human-rights activists, journalists, bloggers, writers, poets and others deprived of freedom of conscience -- would seem to deserve solidarity from their brethren living in freedom. Instead, the ever-so avant-garde Soderberghs side with the politburo.

The Cuban regime loves its apologists. They give cover and deflect international criticism while at home the regime brutalizes its people. Reports from the island are that since Raúl took over from Fidel in 2006, the repression has gotten worse.

Oswaldo Payá, leader of the Varela Project, which collected more than 11,000 signatures calling for free elections and civil liberties in 2002, says that in recent months there has been a crackdown, "with a fierce persecution against Varela Project activists, other members of the opposition, and the ongoing scandal of not freeing the prisoners of conscience. - MARY ANASTASIA O'GRADY, Hollywood Celebrates Che Guevara, WSJ.com, December 29, 2008.

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Among Castro's captives is Oscar Elias Biscet, an Afro-Cuban doctor who is renowned for his commitment to peaceful resistance and is serving a 25-year sentence. Fifty-eight journalists, writers and democracy advocates rounded up in March 2003 also languish in Fidel's deplorable jails. The total number of political prisoners is not known but is undoubtedly much higher.

State security and rapid-response brigades -- aka thugs paid to rough up dissidents -- have been fully employed this year. But, despite the terror and the threat of imprisonment, the Cuban spirit still struggles for freedom.

At least five resistance publications now circulate in eastern Cuba. Thirty-two-year-old blogger Yoani Sánchez has been warned to keep quiet, but she still chronicles the ridiculousness of Che economics, giving a voice to ordinary Cubans who live lives of desperation. The Ladies in White -- wives, sisters and mothers of prisoners of conscience -- still walk quietly in Havana on Sundays. Rock bands mock the old dictator.

This is the wonder of the revolution: Fifty years of state terror hasn't silenced the resistance. Maybe one day Hollywood will make a film about it. -
MARY ANASTASIA O'GRADY, Hollywood Celebrates Che Guevara, WSJ.com, December 29, 2008

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Paquito D'Rivera, famous Cuban jazz musician, wrote this letter to Mayor Bloomberg with regard to Che Guevara Statue located in New York’s Central Park. He never received a response from the Mayor office. He ask us to feel free to make it public.

January 5-2009

Dearest Mayor Bloomberg:

In the mid fifties, still a young child, my father came home with a fabulous Benny Goodman LP, recorded live at Carnegie Hall in 1938. Ever since I’ve dreamed to be a working musician in the city of New York. What I never, ever dreamed, not even in my wildest nightmares, was that after having to join two million Cuban exiles in 1980, I was going to see a sad statue of Che Guevara, a couple of blocks away from the glorious sculpture of Cuban National hero Jose Martí at New York’s Central Park.

“The butcher of La Cabaña fortress”, as was the nickname of this lamentable Argentinean character, Guevara ––a self proclaimed enemy of the USA–– was responsible for countless murders and abuses in my homeland as well as in other countries, where he tried to impose totalitarian regimes by the law of his guns. So, although I heard that the ridiculous Spanish made sculpture is meant to be just temporarily at the spot on 60th street and 5th avenue, that doesn’t mean it9d be less offensive than having a Stalin monument in Orchard Beach, a Hitler portrait on the walls of Carnegie deli, or a representation of a man in KKK’s macabre rope next to the Duke Ellington’s memorial in Harlem.

So I really hope that you feel some respect and compassion for your many Cuban supporters and sympathizers, and remove ASAP such an anachronistic an insulting image from the surface of our beloved City.

Always with the same appreciation.

Sincerely:

Paquito D’Rivera


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In a famous speech in 1961, Che Guevara denounced the very “spirit of rebellion” as “reprehensible.” “Youth must refrain from ungrateful questioning of governmental mandates,” commanded Guevara. “Instead, they must dedicate themselves to study, work and military service.” “Youth,” wrote Guevara, “should learn to think and act as a mass.”

“Those who choose their own path” (as in growing long hair and listening to “Yankee-Imperialist” Rock & Roll) were denounced as worthless “roqueros,” “lumpen” and “delinquents.” In his famous speech, Che Guevara even vowed “to make individualism disappear from Cuba! It is criminal to think of individuals!”

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By the mid ’60s, the crime of a “rocker” lifestyle (blue jeans, long hair, fondness for the Beatles and Stones) or effeminate behavior got thousands of youths yanked out of Cuba’s streets and parks by secret police and dumped in prison camps with “Work Will Make Men Out of You” emblazoned in bold letters above the gate and with machine gunners posted on the watchtowers. The initials for these camps were UMAP, not GULAG, but the conditions were quite similar.- Murder & Myth The Truth Behind The T Shirt by Humberto Fontova

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By the mid ’60s, the crime of a “rocker” lifestyle (blue jeans, long hair, fondness for the Beatles and Stones) or effeminate behavior got thousands of youths yanked out of Cuba’s streets and parks by secret police and dumped in prison camps with “Work Will Make Men Out of You” emblazoned in bold letters above the gate and with machine gunners posted on the watchtowers. The initials for these camps were UMAP, not GULAG, but the conditions were quite similar.- Murder & Myth The Truth Behind The T Shirt by Humberto Fontova

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Ignorance, of course, accounts for much Che idolatry. But so does mendacity and wishful thinking, all of it boosted by reflexive anti-Americanism. The most popular version of the Che T-shirt, for instance, sports the slogan “fight oppression” under his famous countenance. This is the face of the second in command, chief executioner and chief KGB liaison for a regime that jailed political prisoners at a higher rate than Stalin’s and executed more people in its first three years in power than Hitler’s executed in its first three years in power than Hitler executed in his first six. - Murder & Myth The Truth Behind The T Shirt by Humberto Fontova

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If you're going to wear a T-shirt with someone's image on it, it seems like you should know more about the real person whose image you're sporting (and therefore sponsoring), like, say, Che Guevara.

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The truth about Che Guevara. Know anyone wearing one of those t-shirts? You might want to show this to them.

Clip taken from Glenn Beck's documentary "The Revolutionary Holocaust- Live Free.. or Die"
Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9rKH1hid4o8&feature=related

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The documentary "The Revolutionary Holocaust- Live Free.. or Die", is a good video with an excellent message. Che, Mao, Stalin, Hitler. What do they all have in common? They are all cold hearted, racist, killing machines. Che like any other communist leader, killed people who believed in simple freedom. Overthrowing one dictatorship to replace it with another is not heroic.
Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NHVMFnTRjEE&feature=related

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There is an entire anti-Che industry of lying hucksters who make their living by creating lies about the heroic guerrilla and then parroting each others lies as if it gives them any credibility. Luckily, when actual historians research the man, they realize just how many noble qualities he does have and see through the Miami propaganda.

It is actually hard to think of another historical figure who was as well rounded, intelligent, poetic, brave, sincere, audacious, and revolutionary as Che Guevara. This is why he has so much resonance over 40 years after his CIA-aided execution.

There is a Che in all of us who dream of a better World and his ghost haunts the U.$. Empire wherever they go and attempt to rape the resources of other nations. Anyone who has ever seen 3rd world poverty up close understands Che's fury and determination. Anyone who has ever seen how the top 1% live in luxury while most barely have enough to eat will sympathize with Che's struggle.

... America needs a Che Guevara of our own.

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To me Che Guevara is one of the most heroic figures in world history who is a stoic example of what all those who speak of “revolution” should espouse to be.


This was a man who left a bourgeoisie comfortable life of the upper class, a potential well compensated career as a medical doctor, and a high regarded governmental position --- each time to slog through the jungle and fight guerrilla wars against impenetrable odds = for a better and more equitable society.


I endorse Jean Paul Sartre’s declaration that Guevara was the “most complete man of our time” … and find his life not only fascinating but deeply inspiring.


Guevara despite his crippling and acute asthma which would debilitate him almost daily to inches from death, directed “suicide squads” in the battle against the U.S. armed and backed Dictator Batista where with less than 300 men; he literally took on 10,000 Batista soldiers armed with tanks, jets, and U.S. weaponry, and came out victorious at and leading up to the victory at Santa Clara.


In Bolivia, Guevara spent almost over 1 hellish year in the festering jungle battling a disease which left his hands as mounds of swollen flesh, the fact that his allergic reaction to mosquito bites would leave walnut sized welts all over his body, kept fighting even when he was without food for nearly a month, went shoeless, without blankets, and STILL with less than 30 men took on a force of 1,800 Bolivian U.S. armed rangers with an air force, green beret advisors, and CIA technology. Despite these odds Guevara’s men killed 30 Bolivian troops before they even lost their first Guerrilla. Moreover, displaying his character, despite all these hardships, when Guevara could have simply taken the food of Bolivian campesinos to eat, he insisted on paying for everything.


Throughout his life Che tended to thousands of sick campesinos, helped construct dozens of schools throughout Cuba, worked in a Leper colony to helped those afflicted, and even when he was literally tied up in a small mud school house awaiting his own execution ! , still complained to the local teacher that in a nation where the leaders drove Mercedes … it was a travesty that the peasants were taught in a dilapidated place like he was in.


Although I don’t believe in religious dogma (neither did Che), and view myself as an atheist, I do find it telling that the person Che was so often compared to by those who knew him was Jesus Christ. Because of his implacable character, unbending morals, and innate desire to fight in favor of the afflicted, I think that those who knew him were left with no other figure to compare him to.


Was he perfect? Of course not. No human is. But in mind he was awfully close considering the circumstances and cards he was dealt. I also find it telling that the best “canard” his detractors and those propagandists of monopoly capitalism can come up with - was his short stint at La Cabana prison. Where Che simply reviewed the cases and convictions of war criminals convicted by revolutionary tribunal (modeled after Nuremburg). The same secret police and Batista backed torturers that killed 20,000 people and tortured tens of thousands more. At a time when Fidel and Che would release military captives in the Sierra after tending to them medically, Batista would gouge the eyes out of captives until they gave away rebel positions. The fact that Che saw to it that justice was delivered cold to the Cuban people to me only makes him more heroic. He knew that a “pedagogy of the wall” was the only thing that could cleanse a society from the thousands of goons who raped and terrorized it with impunity.


Yet I'm amazed how people apply some sort of “perfectionist” fallacy to Guevara or more foolishly overlook his heroism on the basis of the fact that Capitalists profit from his defiant image. This is exactly what the capitalist vampires want. They will take every hero of the toilers and the left and revise them into “terrorists” … they will take every noble guerrilla who fought against imperialism and craft them into “mad men” so as to make you think that heroism and socialism/Marxism etc are antithetical concepts. If this doesn’t work … the Capitalist/Imperialists will try to make real heroes into caricatures, or “de-fanged” banal symbols of popular culture – so as to “devalue” their serious and conceptual analysis on behalf of the working class. Thus Che dawns a bikini, Mao dawns a purse, and Lenin dawns your Zippo lighter.


I would implore those who give credence to the idea of a "revolution" … to give much deserved recognition to one of the few men in the past century who literally threw aside “the arm chair” and went out to (imperfectly) create it.


If the world had 100 Che’s … or hell even 10 … we would be in much better shape.


Hasta la Victoria Siempre !


http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/34/CheinBolivia1.jpg

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It would take sixteen hours to even begin to inventory the problems of Steven Soderbergh’s “Che,” a bad movie about a bad guy, the Argentine Ernesto “Che” Guevara. The “Roadshow Edition” that I endured at the Nuart Theatre in Los Angeles, clocks in at 4 hrs, 23 minutes in length. The film is divided into two overlong parts, the first dealing with the Cuban Revolutionary War, the second dealing with Guevara’s Bolivian disaster.

An hour of this movie is tedious; four hours of it sends one into a coma deeper than that of Fidel himself. The guy sitting behind me at the Nuart who, judging from his intermission cell-phone conversation is an enthusiastic Che lover, snored during Che’s Bolivian martyrdom. So historical questions aside, does the movie succeed as entertainment? No. It bores.

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Let me say some nice things about the film. There is some lovely cinematography. There are nifty opening graphics of a map pointing out the various provinces of Cuba, although when the graphics re-appear after intermission and proceed to point out every single country in South America, it feels like a fourth grade geography lesson. Soderbergh seems to think that his audience is composed of idiots. I’m finished being nice, by the way.- “Che:” Bad Movie About A Bad Guy by Joe Lima, Big Hollywood, Jan. 01, 2009

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Benicio Del Toro, a talented actor, is miscast as Ernesto Guevara; he has none of the cocky swagger and sarcastic humor of the real Che. He looks chronically depressed throughout the film. No one would follow Del Toro’s Che, except to a pharmacy to make sure he refilled his Zoloft.

At times the other actors, who unlike Del Toro are portraying Cubans, don’t even seem remotely Cuban; at other times the attempts of these same actors to behave and sound Cubanazo, chico, are hokey and forced. - “Che:” Bad Movie About A Bad Guy by Joe Lima, Big Hollywood, Jan. 01, 2009

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But “Che” fails on a much deeper level. It attempts to depict actual historical events, the effects of which still play out today and affect millions of people. Does the movie tell the truth? It barely even tries. It is in this failure to connect with historic truth that the film sinks from being a mere failure to being an ugly lie. - “Che:” Bad Movie About A Bad Guy by Joe Lima, Big Hollywood, Jan. 01, 2009

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In an interview, Soderbergh quoted Che’s Castro-approved biographer Jon Lee Anderson as saying, “there are a million Ches. He means something different to everyone.” This is not only wrong, it is nonsense, and it perfectly sums up the kind of divorced-from-reality magical thinking that plagues Hollywood today and results in so many bad movies. There are a million STORIES about “el Che,” but there was only one living, breathing Ernesto Guevara. - “Che:” Bad Movie About A Bad Guy by Joe Lima, Big Hollywood, Jan. 01, 2009

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Pre-Revolutionary Cuba is predictably presented in this film as a screamingly poor, fifth-world country. It seems that every other character is illiterate. People who were there remember it differently, and United Nations statistics from the period tell a different story: Cuba was in fact the fourth most literate country in Latin America. “A people that don’t know how to read and write are an easy people to fool,” scolds Del Toro, index finger in the air. Ironic, that, considering how the Castros have always used the written word to fool people in Cuba and all over the world, via surrogates like Anderson, who blandly parrot the official version of Cuban history. - “Che:” Bad Movie About A Bad Guy by Joe Lima, Big Hollywood, Jan. 01, 2009

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At the end of the first half of the film, Che orders a rebel to return a red convertible the rebel has plundered. Che was not a plunderer, you see. Even if this incident is factually true, its inclusion in this film is a lie, because the film neglects to tell us that shortly after the war, Guevara moved into an extravagant beachfront mansion in Tarara, a few miles outside of Havana (after kicking out the previous owner). In March of 1959, Che lamely explained in a letter to future exile Carlos Franqui, then editor of the newspaper Revolucion, that “I am ill…due to my revolutionary work…Doctors advised a house at a distance (from Havana), so as to avoid too many visitors and I was lent this one by the Ministry of Property Recovery…” - “Che:” Bad Movie About A Bad Guy by Joe Lima, Big Hollywood, Jan. 01, 2009

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Soderbergh is a very talented movie director. But talk about overconfidence. He's become embarrassing in his self indulgence. I think some in Hollywood love the idea of a radical who can "fight the system". That's basically how they see it. Most of the people who praise Che know little to nothing about him. He's more of an idea to them than a fact.

They think he's this guy who fought imperialism instead of Fidel's executioner. A butcher who was a humorless psychopath. Fidel's crew are what happens when terrorists win. They turn their country into a living hell, where people have no rights and are killed or imprisoned for talking back. Maybe that's why some leftists admire them. They wish they had that kind of power themselves.

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I'm not sure I understand Hollywood disconnect about mass murderers anymore.

Hitler (socialist) = bad

Mao (communist) = ignored

Stalin (communist) = ignored

Castro (communist) = praised

Che (communist) = anointed

Was it that Hitler was just not left enough? Because on the order of numbers dead, he was only third.

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I've always thought lefty types love Che for the same reason teen "Satanists" love Charles Manson. Che did and said what they want to but can't. He hated Blacks, killed people he didn't like and took whatever e wanted. For the nihilistic left he's the ultimate fantasy figure.

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"Che is not only an intellectual, he was the most complete human being of our time."
— Jean Paul Sartre



In addition to being a Marxist revolutionary, Che was also a talented writer (authored dozens of books, diaries & essays), theorist of guerrilla warfare, internationalist statesman, self-taught economist, medical physician, and poetic intellectual who wrote some of the most impassioned pleas for battling against imperialism that you will ever read.

So, what are some of the things that Che did?

Che Guevara:

- Traveled the length of South America and worked in a Leper colony where he treated lepers (as seen in the excellent film/memoir ‘The Motorcycle Diaries’).

- Was radicalized from living in Guatemala during the 1953 overthrow of Jacobo Arbenz by the CIA (Operation PBSUCCESS) on behalf of Secretary of State Dulles and the United Fruit Company. He tried to no avail to organize a resistance in the streets as U.S. planes bombed and strafed the capital city.

- Was named "the best guerrilla of them all" by their instructor General Bayo, despite having crippling asthma, during their training for invading Cuba.

- Tended to numerous sick campesinos in the Sierra Maestra as both a doctor and even at times as a dentist.

- Set up factories to make grenades, built ovens to bake bread, taught new recruits about tactics, organized schools to teach illiterate campesinos to read and write, established health clinics, workshops to teach military tactics, a newspaper to disseminate information, and set up the Radio Rebelde station – All as a guerrilla fighter in the Sierra Maestra.

- Won the Battle of Santa Clara where his men were outnumbered 10:1.

- Played a pivotal role in the victorious two year guerrilla campaign that deposed the Batista regime, rising from medic to second in command behind only Fidel Castro.

- Helped remove the Mafia and U.S.-backed dictatorship of Batista from Cuba which had killed 20,000 Cubans and tortured thousands more. He also saw to it that a few hundred of the worst war criminals received revolutionary justice by firing squad.

- Stopped American companies from owning 70 % of the arable land in Cuba and 1% of the Cuban population from controlling 46 % of the wealth.

- Helped spearhead a nationwide literacy campaign in Cuba, which brought the national literacy rate from 60 to 97 % in 1 year.

- Instituted agrarian reform as minister of industries and broke up the large estates, served as both national bank president and instructional director for Cuba’s armed forces, and traversed the globe to 40 + countries as a diplomat on behalf of Cuban socialism.

- Trained the militia forces who repelled the Bay of Pigs Invasion and brought the Soviet nuclear-armedballistic missiles to Cuba which won the agreement from Kennedy that the U.S. would never invade the island again.

- Composed a seminal manual on guerrilla warfare, which is still studied by military academies and insurgents all around the world even today. He also created his own military theory of Focalism (Foco Theory), which describes how rural peasants can utilize guerrilla warfare and class consciousness to overthrow a urban based dictatorship.

- Desegregated the schools and universities in Cuba before they were in the Southern U.S.

- Called out South Africa’s Apartheid in 1964 to the U.N., 30 years before the West!

- Denounced the racism and KKK in America in the 1960’s and denounced Patrice Lumumba’s assassination by the Belgians/CIA on the World stage.

- Warned of the dangers of the IMF, 3 decades before most of the developing world realized they had been scammed into debt slavery.

- Fought white mercenaries in the African Congo with an all black army in 1964.

- Battled 3 U.S.-backed dictators on 3 separate continents (Batista/Cuba, Mobutu/Congo, & Barrientos/Bolivia).

- Spoke out against US and eventually USSR Imperialism while demanding that the poor of the world be allowed to live a life of dignity.

- Gave his life to help bring down capitalism, imperialism, and neocolonialism by leaving a bourgeoisie comfortable life of the upper class, a potential well compensated career as a medical doctor, and a high regarded governmental position, each time to slog through the jungle and fight guerrilla wars against impenetrable odds. In fact, near the end it took 1,800 Bolivian and CIA assisted rangers to bring down his 25 men.



"Above all, always be capable of feeling most deeply any injustice committed against anyone in the world. That is the most beautiful quality in a revolutionary."
— Che’s last words to his children in a farewell letter

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I am glad to discover not everybody in the US, ignores the truth about this Mass Murderer, who is revered as a hero. By the way he did not wear a red beret, he used a black one, when are this Hollywood researchers going to be detail oriented. Pity that talented people lend themselves to participate in this masquerade. Is it that they get very well paid, or is it that or is it that their hearts belong to Daddy Lenin.

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I am sick and tired of these millionaires who claim to be liberals. As such they should start by sharing their wealth. It is very easy to live like royalty, without food lines, being able to say and do what they desire. Why don’t they move somewhere else, where they can be happier, I am sure many people would like to trade places with them. When Ali Baba and his thieves came to power in 1959, all they have done is destroy what used to be a prosperous and advanced country. Mr. Lima I understand and admire your article, it is about time somebody faced this idiots with the truth.

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The film gives us no idea of what happened after the Cuban Revolutionary government took power. Quite a lot did happen. We all know about the Bay of Pigs invasion, which deserves its own four-hour movie, hopefully directed by someone other than Soderbergh. We also all know that hundreds of thousands of people left Cuba in the early 1960s. People have never stopped leaving. - Part II: “Che:” Bad Movie About A Bad Guy Gets Worse.

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What’s less known to outsiders is that under Castro’s command, the Cuban Revolution began, very early on, to eat its own. The highest rank in the Revolutionary army was then the rank of “Comandante.” Here’s what happened to a few Revolutionary Comandantes: In October 1959, Comandante Huber Matos, who is omitted from this film, criticizes the influence of Communists in the Revolutionary Government, and tenders his resignation. He is arrested, and serves twenty years in prison, during which time he endures severe torture. The dashing Comandante Camilo Cienfuegos is killed in an airplane crash within a week of the arrest of Huber Matos. The wreckage has never been found. Matos, who along with Camilo flanks Fidel in the famous photographs of Fidel’s entry into Havana, is among many who have never accepted the plane crash story. In March of 1961, Comandante William Morgan, of Cleveland, Ohio, also omitted from this film, is arrested and executed. - Part II: “Che:” Bad Movie About A Bad Guy Gets Worse.

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Revolutionaries were now being eliminated as well, not just Batistianos. In this dangerous atmosphere of Revolutionary cannibalism, Che recklessly blasted the Soviet Union in a speech in Algiers in 1965. Guevara was famously an admirer of Mao; Fidel in those days was firmly in the Soviet column, and with good reason: the Soviets were pumping massive amounts of capital into Cuba. In Cuba, when you disagree with Fidel, guess who wins? Che’s attack on the absolutely vital Soviet Sugar Daddy was nothing short of foolish.

Without knowledge of these important events, largely omitted from the film, one simply cannot observe Guevara’s Bolivian debacle from an informed perspective. - Part II: “Che:” Bad Movie About A Bad Guy Gets Worse.

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Che did preside over a gulag. He was the first Revolutionary Comandante in charge of La Cabaña fortress, the old Spanish fort that became ground zero in the Cuban gulag archipelago. Che had taken charge of La Cabaña on January 3rd. Again, hardly time for due process. Before long, the prison cells of La Cabaña began to fill not with Batistianos, but with former comrades of Fidel and Che. My cousin, Oscar Plá began his odyssey through the Cuban gulag at the age of 15, in October of 1961, and finally emerged for good at the age of 33; his initial incarceration was in La Cabaña.

In prison Oscar got to know several people who had direct contact with el Che. Two, Bernardo Paradela, and Raul Venta del Mazo, both veterans of the struggle against Batista who later turned against the Revolution, were hung upside down for over a month and interrogated. Guevara came to taunt them every single day of their ordeal.- Part II: “Che:” Bad Movie About A Bad Guy Gets Worse.
Dr. Armando Lago PhD, who received a doctorate in economics from Harvard University, has documented over 4,000 deaths in Cuba, mostly firing squad executions, during the first three years after Fidel Castro's takeover (1959-1962), a period during which Che Guevara is known to have been one of the Castro government's chief executioners in La Cabaña.

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Cinematically speaking, the problem with the Bolivian portion of the film is that there is simply not two hours of movie to be squeezed from this disaster. If the first two hours of the film are boring, the second two are stuporific.
One can only imagine what the Indigenous Bolivians thought of the loud, smelly, bearded foreigners who suddenly appeared in their midst: “Saludos, comrades, we’re here to liberate you. Do you have anything to eat? Listen, don’t tell anyone you saw us, or we’ll kill you. By the way, I am not Che Guevara. What’s that? Oh, you don’t speak Spanish?”
In his diaries Che also referred to Bolivian villagers as "animalitos" (little animals.) Wonder if Evo Morales has read them? He's too busy ribbon-cutting Che monuments in Bolivian villages.

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No less than the now-exiled Daniel Alarcon, code named “Benigno” in Bolivia, and one of only three survivors of the expedition, today believes that Fidel set Che and the rest of his guerrillas up for failure, and death. He also has interesting things to say about the death of Camilo Cienfuegos.

Whatever “the Cuban experience” as Guevara referred to the guerrilla war of 1956-1959 was, it was nothing like Bolivia, and Guevara’s experiences in Cuba in no way prepared him for what he encountered in South America. - Part II: “Che:” Bad Movie About A Bad Guy Gets Worse
Benigno told the newspaper Corriere della Sera that Cuban dictator Fidel Castro betrayed Guevara following orders from Moscow, that the plan was to "export the revolution" but that Castro abandoned them in the Bolivian jungle. "Che went to his death knowing that Castro had betrayed him," he said

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At the end of the film, a Bolivian soldier asks Guevara if there was religion in Cuba. Guevara answers that yes, there are many religions in Cuba. In fact, religious persecution in Cuba at the time was a terrifying reality. From training fire hoses on a group of twelve to fourteen year old girls on their way into the Church of La Caridad del Cobre, a place sacred to Cubans since the 1600s, to teach Catechism class (this happened to my cousin Oscar’s wife, Miriam) to the internment of thousands in the UMAP camps of 1965 – 1968, where Jehova’s Witnesses in particular had it very rough, tortured with fire ants until they renounced their faith, religion was under fire in Cuba. A more honest answer from Che would have been, “yes, there is religion in Cuba, but we’re doing everything we can to get rid of it.”
Pre-criminal danger to society is a legal charge under Cuban regime law which allows the authorities to detain people whom they think they are likely to commit crimes in the future. The implementation of this controversial law replaced the first labor camp established by Che Guevara in the Guanahacabibes region in western Cuba in 1960, to confine people who had committed no crime punishable by law. This camp was the precursor of the concentration camps established in Camagüey province from 1965 to 1968 called Military Units to Aid Production (UMAP), to confined dissidents, homosexuals, Catholics, Jehovah's Witnesses, Afro-Cuban priests, and other such “scum.”

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I wish that Mr. Soderbergh and Mr. Del Toro could live in Cuba, not as the pampered VIPs that they are when they visit today, but as Cubans do, with no United States Constitutional rights, with ration cards entitling them to tiny portions of provisions that the stores don’t even stock anyway, with chivatos surveilling them constantly. How long would it be before Mr. Soderbergh started sizing up inner tubes, speculating on the durability and buoyancy of them, asking himself, could I make the crossing on that? How long before Mr. Del Toro started gazing soulfully at divorced or widowed tourist women, hoping to seduce and marry one of them and get out? Only then could they see why this insipid, frivolous and pretentious movie they have made is nothing less than an insult to millions of people, who really do live like that, and who’ve lived like that their entire lives. - Part II: “Che:” Bad Movie About A Bad Guy Gets Worse
They will do it very fast after hearing from the horse mouth this: "Hatred as an element of struggle; unbending hatred for the enemy, which pushes a human being beyond his natural limitations, making him into an effective, violent, selective, and cold-blooded killing machine." (Message to the Tricontinental, 1967.)

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How individuals from the left can worship Che? When cornered, he surrendered and shouted "I'm Che', I'm worth more to you alive than dead" He planned to blow up buildings in NY at the same time he was visiting the "intellectuals" at their lavish parties they threw for him. The movie didn’t include how the regime butcher sold the blood of political prisoners. Some people just can't handle all the freedom we have in the US and must find something wrong with it so they can feel guilty.

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Che was an extreme left winger whose whole life was dedicated to an ideology which has led to the death and misery of many people.

He was, after all, the one who wrote: “Hatred is an element of struggle; relentless hatred of the enemy that impels us over and beyond the natural limitations of man and transforms us into effective, violent, selective, and cold killing machines.”

He was just another narcissist using the same century’s old doctrine to justify mass murder and torture. What a pity the so tolerant lefties in Hollywood don't share this view.

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“Che” film gets thumbs up in Cuba,” ran the headline from CNN’s Havana Bureau last December 8. Benicio Del Toro, who stars as Che, was being feted as the Castro regime’s guest of honor during the Havana Film Festival while presenting the movie he co-produced. “The lengthy biopic of the Argentinean revolutionary won acclaim from among those who know his story best,” continued the CNN story.
Indeed, but the acclaim came because those “who knew his story best” (Castro and his Stalinist henchmen, the film’s mentors/co-producers) saw that their directives had been followed slavishly, that Che’s (genuine) story was completely absent from the movie. - By Humberto Fontova, Fidel Castro: Hollywood Screenwriter, Dec 28th 2009

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The screenplay for the Soderbergh/del Toro biopic was based on Che Guevara’s diaries which were published by Cuba’s propaganda ministry with the forward written by Fidel Castro himself. The film includes several Communist Cuban actors and the other Latin American actors spent months in Cuba being prepped for their roles by members of Cuba’s “Che Guevara Institute.” - By Humberto Fontova, Fidel Castro: Hollywood Screenwriter, Dec 28th 2009

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A proclamation from Castro’s own press ministry dated 12/7/08 actually boasted of their role: “Actor Benicio del Toro presented the film (at Havana’s Karl Marx Theater) as he thanked the Cuban Film Institute (ICAIC) for its assistance during the shooting of the film, which was the result of a seven-year research work in Cuba.” The Cuban Film Institute (ICAIC) is an arm of Stalinist Cuba’s propaganda ministry. - By Humberto Fontova, Fidel Castro: Hollywood Screenwriter, Dec 28th 2009
Benicio del Toro quote: “We tell stories about Batman, and he was a type of Batman. No one can deny that he was trying to stop man exploiting man. Whether he was successful or not...Two people who I met learned how to read and write because of him.”
Che Batman quote: “Don't Shoot!”, at the same time that he dropped his fully loaded weapons, “I'm Batman! I'm worth to you more alive than dead”.

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The Stalinist regime that co-produced this film and now feted its director and star — employing the midnight knock and the dawn raid among other devices by its KGB-mentored secret police- rounded up and jailed more political prisoners as a percentage of population than Stalin’s and executed more people (out of a population of 6.4 million) in its first three years in power than Hitler’s executed (out of a population of 68 million) in it’s first six. Ernesto “Che” Guevara initiated this bloodbath and mass-jailing under the direction of Soviet GRU agent Angel Ciutah, who was Che’s chief mentor and houseguest (in the most luxurious mansion in Cuba, by the way) only weeks after Che entered Havana and stole it from it’s owner, threatening him with a firing squad. - By Humberto Fontova, Fidel Castro: Hollywood Screenwriter, Dec 28th 2009

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“I’m here in Cuba’s hills thirsting for blood,” Che wrote his abandoned wife in 1957. “Dear Papa, today I discovered I really like killing,” he wrote shortly afterwards. Alas, this killing very rarely involved combat; it come from the close-range murder of bound and blindfolded men and boys.

“When you saw the beaming look on Che’s face as the victims were tied to the stake and blasted apart,” said a former political prisoner to this writer, “you knew there was something seriously, seriously wrong with Che Guevara.” In fact the one genuine accomplishment in Che Guevara’s life was the mass-murder of defenseless men and boys. Under his own gun dozens died. Under his orders thousands crumpled. At everything else Che Guevara failed abysmally, even comically. Yet Soderbergh and Del Toro skip over these fascinating quotes and Che’s one genuine accomplishment as a revolutionary. - By Humberto Fontova, Fidel Castro: Hollywood Screenwriter, Dec 28th 2009
Can you imagine if people glorified Bin Laden like they do Che? It would seem to be the case in Western popular culture that a man can prove himself to be a murderous psychopath time and again and still come off as a hero... So long as he happens to be a Left Wing murderous psychopath.

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When will sanity prevail and these people will be taken to task for telling blatant lies about a psycho like Che. Next they will make a movie about Stalin or Hitler and it will be told from a side that will show the "humanity and true struggle that these poor men would have endured. They killed people out of sheer insane hatred for the world.

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Why have so many Cubans risked their lives and that of their families to get out of paradise? Answer that all you apologists for Che and Castro. Why does Castro have to fence in the people of his county as did the East Germany and all other communist countries? Why are these countries turned into prisons?

The United States has to try to keep people out, because we can’t afford that many to live here. The communists have to keep people from leaving, because so many don’t want to live under them.

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I find it absolutely stunning that this psychopath still has fans. But then, there are still useful idiots who think Fidel's Cuba is a paradise. The useful idiots of Hollywood are licking Castro's blood-drenched boots; they don't have to live there.

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Che fighting in Africa with an all black army against white South African mercenaries in 1965
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/60/CheinCongo2.gif


One of the favorite LIES of the right-wing LOSERS is that Che was racist against blacks. They always attack where they think heroes are strongest. Their "evidence" for this LIE is his diary passage about "blacks being indolent and lazy". However, the "black is indolent" line is always taken out of context ... what is the truth?

That quote was written by Che when he was 24 and encountered blacks for the first time in a Venezuelan slum during his Motorcycle trip around South America. *** The full context of this statement is addressed by biographer Jon Lee Anderson on page 92 of "Che Guevara: A Revolutionary Life." However, months later he announced himself a transformed man and even denounced the racism he encountered while living in Miami for a month. The quote was from 1952, before he was Che.


Years later in Cuba he showed he was not racist through his actions:


- Che pushed for racially integrating the schools in Cuba, years before they were racially integrated in the Southern United States.


- Che's friend and personal bodyguard was Harry "Pombo" Villegas, who was Afro-Cuban (black). Pombo accompanied Che to the Congo and to Bolivia, where he survived and now lives in Cuba. Of note, Pombo speaks glowingly of Guevara to this day


- When Che spoke before the U.N. in 1964 he spoke out in favor of black musician Paul Robeson, in support of slain black leader Patrice Lumumba (who he heralded as one of his heroes), against white segregation in the Southern U.S. (which still unfortunately existed), and against the white South African apartheid regime (long before it became the Western 'cause de jour').


- Che was also heralded by Malcolm X during this trip to NY and in contact with his associates to whom he sent a letter, and later on behalf of his actions in Africa - praised by Nelson Mandela and the Black Panther's Stokely Carmichael.


- When Guevara ventured to the Congo, he fought with a Cuban force of 100 Afro-Cubans (blacks) including those black Congolese fighters who he fought alongside against a force comprised partly of White South African mercenaries . This resembled the fight in Cuba, where Che's units were also made up of mostly mulattos and blacks.


- Later Guevara offered assistance to fight alongside the (black) FRELIMO in Mozambique, for their independence from the Portuguese.


- Lastly, in August 1961 (9 years after his "indolent" remark), Guevara attacked the U.S. for "discrimination against blacks, and outrages by the Ku Klux Klan", which matched his declarations in 1964 before the United Nations (12 years after his "indolent" remark), where Guevara denounced the United States policy towards their black population, stating:

"Those who kill their own children and discriminate daily against them because of the color of their skin; those who let the murderers of blacks remain free, protecting them, and furthermore punishing the black population because they demand their legitimate rights as free men — how can those who do this consider themselves guardians of freedom?"
--- CHE GUEVARA


IMAGES:

Che's bodyguard Pombo then
http://www.nydailynews.com/img/2007/10/01/gal_cheguevara_4.jpg

Pombo now
http://cache.daylife.com/imageserve/07pQed51Cq67X/610x.jpg

Che in Africa with his all black army
http://farm1.static.flickr.com/90/254180447_c767decf1f.jpg


Only to someone completely uninformed, could Che ---(a man who fought in Africa with an all black army against white South African mercenaries of Apartheid)--- be seen as "racist" for a diary passage he wrote as a youth 15 years earlier.

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[ANTI-RACIST CHE]


ON EDUCATION ...

"The days where University education is a privilege of the white middle class are over. The University must paint itself black, mulatto, worker, and peasant." — Che Guevara to the University of Las Villas, 1959


ON U.S. RACISM ...

"Those who kill their own children and discriminate daily against them because of the color of their skin; those who let the murderers of blacks remain free, protecting them, and furthermore punishing the black population because they demand their legitimate rights as free men -- how can those who do this consider themselves guardians of freedom?" — Che Guevara to the U.N., December 11, 1964


ON SOUTH AFRICAN APARTHEID ...

"We speak out to put the world on guard against what is happening in South Africa. The brutal policy of apartheid is applied before the eyes of the nations of the world. The peoples of Africa are compelled to endure the fact that on the African continent the superiority of one race over another remains official policy, and that in the name of this racial superiority murder is committed with impunity. Can the United Nations do nothing to stop this?" — Che Guevara to the U.N., December 11, 1964

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The left loves the psychopaths because they dream of the day when they will have that kind of power. It's sick and twisted, but then so is their ideology, they truly are the enemy of humanity and civilization, a bunch of barbarians in waiting.

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A May Day march without Che Guevara posters and Mexican flags is like a fish with a bicycle. We observed the bemusing spectacle two weeks ago. Now it’s time to reflect. Some marchers, apparently wracked with guilt between the primacy of the two symbols, devised a handy modus vivendi for their tortured consciences’

It seemed that few groups of Mexican demonstrators forget to glorify the man on record (June, 1956) as dismissing Mexicans en masse as, “a rabble of illiterate Indians.” In 1956, while residing in Mexico and training with the Castro brothers for their "invasion" of Cuba, Che Guevara sneered at his hosts and the “rabble” of Mexican citizens surrounding the training camp in those exact words. So recalls one of Che’s military trainers of the time, the Cuban (but non-commie) Miguel Sanchez. - Humberto Fontova, Che on May Day, , May 14, 2010
The justification that Che was young and immature doesn’t cut it anymore. As we can see from his behavior, he was a racist person trough and through all his life.

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Labor groups were also prominent on May Day with their Che Guevara regalia. “The workers movement has no borders,” proclaimed their abundant posters.
In a TV speech June 26, 1961, when Che Guevara was Cuba’s “Minister of Industries” he proclaimed: “The Cuban workers have to start being used to live in a collectivist regimen and by no means can they go on strike.”

This “no strike” provision was unacceptable to Cuban laborers—many of whom took up arms in protest. One of these was a 20-year-old boy named Tony Chao Flores, who was promptly captured by Che’s goons. Within weeks Che Guevara saw to it that Tony be bound to the execution stake. - Humberto Fontova, Che on May Day, May 14, 2010

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The Left admire Che, a man who murdered thousands, a racist, and a women basher and homophobic, who is responsible for the oppression of millions. May God bless Tony and many others like him.

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Just read all the nonsense that bitter pathetic liars like Victorin say about Che, how much they hate him even after 45 years, and you'll know how great he was and still is. Losers fear Che's example, because while they live only for themselves, he gave his life for HUMANITY. None of them are even worthy to speak his name, much less lie about him on the internet.

CHE LIVES and ALWAYS WILL in the hearts of millions.

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Communist regimes have imprisoned and killed more people than any other political system during the 20th century. How is possible that our universities and colleges embrace this sadistic ideology? It is very difficult to sway their opinions even with the use of unambiguous facts, since they behave like religious fanatics.

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Che Guevara, the killing machine, is promoted as a hero by liberal professors in our universities and colleges. Is this the kind of people that the left wants to impose on us? Is there anything that we can do to stop these “useful idiots” from spreading their venom? Yes, keep fighting back by exposing the truth, until they begin to see the light at the end of the tunnel.

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[SOME QUOTES]

"Che was an inspiration for every human being who loves freedom." — Nelson Mandela

"Che was the most complete human being of his age. He lived his words, spoke his own actions and his story and the story of the world ran parallel." — Jean Paul Sartre

"There was no person more feared by the company than Che Guevara because he had the capacity and charisma necessary to direct the struggle against the political repression of the traditional hierarchies in power in the countries of Latin America." — Philip Agee, CIA Agent

"That he was shot after capture demonstrates the fear that the Bolivian authorities felt even of an imprisoned Che. They were afraid to bring to him to trial: afraid of the echoes his voice would have aroused from the courtroom: afraid to prove that the man they hated was loved by the world outside. This fear will help to perpetuate his legend, and a legend is impervious to bullets." — Graham Greene

"Che was not only a heroic fighter, but a revolutionary thinker, with a political and moral project and a system of ideas and values for which he fought and gave his life. The philosophy which gave his political and ideological choices their coherence, color, and taste was a deep revolutionary humanism. For Che, the true Communist, the true revolutionary was one who felt that the great problems of all humanity were his or her personal problems, one who was capable of "feeling anguish whenever someone was assassinated, no matter where it was in the world, and of feeling exultation whenever a new banner of liberty was raised somewhere else." — Michael Löwy

"'Revolutionaries are not normal people': an understatement in relation to Ernesto Che Guevara. Physician, brilliant intellect, competent soldier, charismatic leader, developed—and eventually creative--Marxist economist, always a man able to capture the spirit of an experience in his own being, Che remains one of the four or five greatest revolutionaries in modern history." — Alfredo López

"Che ate babies, he stole my mansion which had 45 bedrooms in it, life was heaven in Cuba before Che. He personally shot 3,500,000,000 people and then drank their blood one by one. My Grandmas sisters aunts brothers neighbor who was blind, one time saw Che bite the head off of a young kitten." — Every bitter lying Gusano in Miami

"You may cut the flowers, but it will not stop the spring."
"Podran cortar las flores, pero no detendran la primavera."
— (A saying about Che's legacy written on many walls throughout Latin America)

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History will not absolve the killers. In a free Cuba Tony and all the other assassinated by the Castro brothers, Che and company will be honor and remembered with love.

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The Façade

Four decades after his death, the visage of Che Guevara survives him as a symbol of passion, idealism, and restless discontent with the status quo. In fact, as time passes, his celebrity grows. In 2004, Robert Redford produced The Motorcycle Diaries, a film chronicling Che’s eight-month-long motorbike odyssey across South America at age twenty-three. The New York Times said the film “humanizes” Che, portraying him as a “restless, passionate bohemian with dancing eyes and a deepening core of empathy for the poor.” In 2007, a lock of hair cut from his corpse, along with photos of his dead body, sold for over $100,000, and Che-Lives.com was billed as the largest leftist site on the internet.

Hollywood is especially smitten. In 2008, Steven Soderbergh directed a two-part, four-hour biopic titled, simply, Che, with Benicio del Toro playing the lead. “Groovy name, groovy man, groovy politics!” del Toro said of his character. Johnny Depp wears a Che pendant around his neck, and Angelina Jolie reportedly sports a Che tattoo somewhere on her body, though she won’t say where. Che’s face has become an emblem of chic on everything from sarongs to coffee mugs to mouse pads. You can even say chic on your feet with a pair of Che chucks. - Terrell Clemmons, “The Making of a Marxist Martyr”, Salvo Magazine, summer 2010.
What’s more ineffectual than the guy who wears a Che T-shirt and doesn’t know anything about him?

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The Facts

Born in 1928 to bohemian Argentine aristocrats, Ernesto Guevara de la Serna completed medical school in Buenos Aires in 1953, then wandered about through Latin America for the next two years. It was during this time that he adopted the nickname “Che,” an Argentine slang speech filler meaning something like “Hey you” or even “Dude.” The name fit. Up until that time, his life was just about that aimless and ill-defined.

That all changed in the summer of 1955, after a chance meeting in Mexico City with Fidel Castro, who was planning his overthrow of Cuban president Fulgencio Batista. Che, having seen poverty and lived in squalor, had by this time become convinced that only a Marxist revolution could remedy the world’s ills. In Castro and in Cuba, he found his leader to follow and his people group to liberate. A year later, Castro and Che set out on a junker yacht for Cuba.

By 1959, after two years of guerilla insurgency, a coup was achieved. Che was made comandante of La Cabana, the colonial fortress turned military prison overlooking Havana harbor, and he set about governing with ruthless intensity. He knew that for the revolution to succeed, resistance would have to be swiftly dealt with, so he put his firing squads to work on triple shifts. For the next three years, the comandante imprisoned dissidents at a higher rate than Stalin did and oversaw more executions than Hitler did during his first six years in power.

Che also took up the task of remaking Cuba according to the Marxist vision, which included assuming command of Cuba’s national bank and taking charge of industry. Within a year, the value of Cuba’s peso plummeted to almost nothing; her sugar, cattle, tobacco, and nickel industries were in shambles; and her people carried food ration cards.

Many sought to leave. Since the Cuban revolution, an estimated two million Cubans have fled the country, another eighty thousand have died trying, and suicide has become one of the highest causes of death among the adults who remained. Cuba’s abortion rate is 60 percent.

The perplexing question, especially for Cuban survivors is: Exactly what about all of this is chic? - Terrell Clemmons, “The Making of a Marxist Martyr”, Salvo Magazine, summer 2010.

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The Fabrication

The recasting of Che the executioner into Che the revolutionary and cause célèbre began in 1967, on the day Che died, and it illustrates the public relations finesse of Fidel Castro, a pragmatic power-seeker who knew a useful idiot when he saw one, dead or alive. Although Che had left Cuba under a cloud two years earlier, Castro responded to the news of Che’s death by declaring a three-day period of national mourning. “If you wish to express what we want our children to be,” he told a crowd in Havana’s Revolution Square, “we must say from our hearts as ardent revolutionaries, ‘We want them to be like Che!’” From then on, Cuban schoolchildren began their day saying, “Pioneers of Communism, we will be like Che!”

It makes perfect sense that Castro would want everyone to be like Che, for Che served Castro to his dying breath. It also makes sense that Cuban schoolchildren would be forced to pay tribute to this would-be role model. They have no choice. What doesn’t make sense is why anyone in the free world would follow suit.

Yet they do. A 2008 University of Arizona student paid homage to Che in the student newspaper, the Daily Wildcat: “To be a revolutionary . . . you have to cause change from the norm. It doesn’t even have to be good or be positive; it just has to be a change.” Actress Susan Sarandon expressed the allure, saying that people who dedicate themselves to a cause at the expense of everything else “are really fascinating people.” Here we have the morally vacuous idealism that venerates a mass murderer: It doesn’t matter what you believe as long as you really believe it and give it your all.


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The Fallacy

The charisma ascribed to Che seems to be connected to his raw passion and drive. While Castro merely sought power and used whatever means necessary (including Che) to attain it, Che, a pure Marxist, actually believed. “You’ll see,” the would-be liberator predicted at the outset, “when Castro’s running things, everybody will read and have food on the table.” Confident that the rotors of revolution would churn out a purified social order, Che radically destroyed the old to make way for the new. “We are the future,” he wrote to his father in 1959.

Che sycophants utterly fail to discern the disconnection between revolutionary rhetoric and revolutionary reality. Here are five aspects of Che they either don’t know or overlook:

Blood. For all his talk about liberation, what Che apparently liked most was killing people. “I’d like to confess,” he wrote to his father after his first kill, “I really like killing.” He liked it so much that he had a section of wall cut out of his La Cabana office, to give him a better view of the execution yard. In 1961, he began the appalling practice of draining the blood from condemned prisoners before shooting them. The blood was then sold for $50 a pint, most of it to North Vietnam. An average prisoner brought in about $250.

Theft. According to the myth, Che selflessly identified with the poor, but in reality he had no problem helping himself to the accoutrements of wealth, often other people’s. When he took up residency in Havana, for example, he appropriated for himself a lovely seaside estate with seven bathrooms, a projection TV, a chauffeur-driven Mercedes Benz, and a large swimming pool.

Disregard for human rights and justice. To Che, individuals didn’t matter except to the extent that they served the revolution. He executed prisoners out of “revolutionary conviction,” without concern for “archaic bourgeois details” like due process or judicial evidence. In other words, he killed people when it suited his purposes to do so.

He particularly had his sights on America. When the Soviet Union withdrew its nuclear missiles from Cuba, Che was furious. “If the nuclear missiles had remained we would have used them against the very heart of America,” he told the London Daily Worker in 1962.

Neglect of and indifference to actual people. Despite Che’s professed goal of food and education for all, he felt no obligation to provide for his own family. When he left Cuba in 1965, this father of five children wrote, “I am not sorry that I leave nothing material to my wife and children; I am happy it is that way. I ask nothing for them, as the state will provide them with enough to live on and receive an education.” This was consistent with his political philosophy. “The revolution is what is important. Each one of us, on our own, is worthless.”

Finally, delusion—the root problem with Marxism. According to Marxist ideology, societal problems are caused by the unequal distribution of wealth. To remedy the ill, the “have-nots” are summoned to armed struggle against the “haves.” It’s a classic divide-and-conquer strategy. Carlos Eire, the son of a pre-Castro government official, records a telling scene from his childhood in his memoir, Waiting for Snow in Havana. Carlos, eight years old when Castro took over, recalls the family maid, an angry woman named Caridad who loved Castro, taunting him when his parents weren’t around: “Pretty soon, you’re going to lose all this.” “Pretty soon you’ll be sweeping my floor.” “Pretty soon I’ll be seeing you at your fancy beach club, and you’ll be cleaning out the trash cans while I swim.”

But it didn’t work out that way. It never does.

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The Fallout

Castro followed the Marxist script because it advanced his cause. But Che, like Caridad, actually believed it. Ironically, Che’s faith became his undoing. By 1964, he had outlived his usefulness to Castro, and Castro cut him loose. Che left Cuba “voluntarily,” still bent on revolution, but with no support, no leader to follow, and no people group to “liberate.” He died three years later on the receiving end of a bullet in a Bolivian mountain village. Some suspect that Castro had betrayed him. But—the revolution was what mattered. The individual was worthless.

The Arizona student was right about one thing. Che caused change. But he’s wrong about everything else. It does matter whether the change is positive or negative, and it does matter what you believe. Because Marxism is founded on falsehood, it will forever be nihilistic at its core, and it will always end badly. It holds great power to destroy, but none to create or build. This is why the utopia Che envisioned for Cuba never materialized but morphed into a nightmare. In reality, Cuba got plundered and decimated, and Che got betrayed and shot.

And all that remains of Che is the myth and the merchandise.

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Ernesto "Che" Guevara got a major dose of his own medicine. Without trial he was declared a murderer, stood against a wall and shot. Historically speaking, justice has rarely been better served. If the saying "What goes around comes around" ever fit, it's here.

"When you saw the beaming look on Che's face as the victims were tied to the stake and blasted apart by the firing squad," said a former Cuban political prisoner Roberto Martin-Perez, to your humble servant here, "you saw there was something seriously, seriously wrong with Che Guevara." As commander of the La Cabana execution yard, Che often shattered the skull of the condemned man (or boy) by firing the coup de grace himself. When other duties tore him away from his beloved execution yard, he consoled himself by viewing the slaughter. Che's second-story office in Havana’s La Cabana prison had a section of wall torn out so he could watch his darling firing-squads at work. - Humberto Fontova, Guerrilla Doofus and Murdering Coward, Townhall.com, October 9, 2010.

How is possible that this murderous monster became a pop cult icon. From any angle that you look at it, he is not a hero figure. Selling T-shirt with his image to clueless youth under the veil of being a "social rebel", when there are real heroes to emulate and honor. What an irony that Che is now used to sell T-shirts to make money for the capitalist shirt makers.

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"The life of a single human being is worth a million times more than all the property of the richest man on earth." ― Che Guevara

SOURCE: 'On Revolutionary Medicine' (1960)
http://www.marxists.org/archive/guevara/1960/08/19.htm

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[NELSON MANDELA, at a rally honoring the CUBAN REVOLUTION & CHE in 1991] ―

"From its earliest days the Cuban revolution has itself been a source of inspiration to all freedom-loving people. We admire the sacrifices of the Cuban people in maintaining their independence and sovereignty in the face of a vicious imperialist-orchestrated campaign to destroy the impressive gains made in the Cuban revolution... We admire the achievements of the Cuban revolution in the sphere of social welfare. We note the transformation from a country of imposed backwardness to universal literacy. We acknowledge your advances in the fields of health, education, and science... We also honour the great Che Guevara, whose revolutionary exploits, including on our own continent, were too powerful for any prison censors to hide from us. The life of Che is an inspiration to all human beings who cherish freedom. We will always honour his memory... Long live the Cuban revolution! Long live Comrade Fidel Castro!"


Text of Full Speech
http://db.nelsonmandela.org/speeches/pub_view.asp?pg=item&ItemID=N MS1526

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Even as a youth, Ernesto Guevara's writings revealed a serious mental illness. "My nostrils dilate while savoring the acrid odor of gunpowder and blood. Crazy with fury I will stain my rifle red while slaughtering any vencido that falls in my hands!” This passage is from Ernesto Guevara's famous Motorcycle Diaries, though Robert Redford somehow overlooked it while directing his heart-warming movie.

The Spanish word vencido, by the way, translates into "defeated" or "surrendered."And indeed, "the "acrid odor of gunpowder and blood" very, very rarely reached Guevara's nostrils from anything properly describable as combat. It mostly came from the close-range murders of defenseless men (and boys.) Carlos Machado was 15 years old in 1963 when the bullets from the firing squad shattered his body. His twin brother and father collapsed beside Carlos from the same volley. All had resisted Castro and Che's theft of their humble family farm, all refused blindfolds and all died sneering at their Communist murderers, as did thousands of their valiant countrymen. "Viva Cuba Libre! Viva Cristo Rey! Abajo Comunismo!" "The defiant yells would make the walls of La Cabana prison tremble," wrote eyewitness to the slaughter, Armando Valladares.Humberto Fontova, Guerrilla Doofus and Murdering Coward, Townhall.com, October 9, 2010.
Traditionally the progressives have hail despots as folk heroes, . - without having to live under their rule. In reality very few that have lived under Che’s influence in Cuba would have any doubt of his evil character. The evil of thousands of killings by fire squads during the reign of terror under Che Guevara cannot be justify by comparing it to the evils of the previous administration. Che was a cool killing machine whose history speaks for itself.

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The one genuine accomplishment in Che Guevara's life was the mass-murder of defenseless men and boys. Under his own gun dozens died. Under his orders thousands crumpled. At everything else Che Guevara failed abysmally, even comically.

During his Bolivian "guerrilla" campaign, Che split his forces whereupon they got hopelessly lost and bumbled around, half-starved, half-clothed and half-shod, without any contact with each other for 6 months before being wiped out. They didn't even have WWII vintage walkie-talkies to communicate and seemed incapable of applying a compass reading to a map. They spent much of the time walking in circles and were usually within a mile of each other. During this blundering they often engaged in ferocious firefights against each other. - Humberto Fontova, Guerrilla Doofus and Murdering Coward, Townhall.com, October 9, 2010.
It is not that difficult to explain why the progressives make heroes out of murderous monsters like Che. It is a mean to replace the traditional Judeo-Christian moral code of Western culture for most of the last 2000 years. They hate this code because it requires self-control, and they prefer self-indulgence. They disregard traditional morality, which is about pursuit of things such as the good and the true.

Murdering Commies such as Che are "good guys" because they claim to be on the side of the peasant, the worker, the black. For the progressives Che qualifies as "good," no matter how many innocents he murdered. To them, to be "good" is to be a victim, which is why they constantly claim to be victims or to be in "solidarity" with them.

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Che's genocidal fantasies included a continental reign of Stalinism. And to achieve this ideal he craved, "millions of atomic victims" - most of them Americans. "The U.S. is the great enemy of mankind!" raved Ernesto Che Guevara in 1961. "Against those hyenas there is no option but extermination. We will bring the war to the imperialist enemies' very home, to his places of work and recreation. The imperialist enemy must feel like a hunted animal wherever he moves. Thus we'll destroy him! We must keep our hatred against them [the U.S.] alive and fan it to paroxysms!"

This was Che's prescription for America almost half a century before Osama bin Laden, and Al-Zarqawi and Faisal Shahzad appeared on our radar screens. Compared to Che Guevara, Ahmadinejad sounds like the Dalai Lama. - Humberto Fontova, Guerrilla Doofus and Murdering Coward, Townhall.com, October 9, 2010.
For progressives the end justifies the means. They will lie, stuff ballot boxes, steal, turn the truth into lies, permit all that is wrong in society to grow while condemning all that is right; all to further their own agenda, a new world order with their elitists in charge

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[Debunking the "CHE GUEVARA WAS RACIST!" Lie]
• Issue #1 in a series of articles correcting misinformation on El Che

"The life of Che is an inspiration to all human beings who cherish freedom. We will always honour his memory."
— Nelson Mandela, while visiting Cuba in 1991 {1}


One of the favorite libelous smears by right-wing hacks is that Argentine Marxist revolutionary Ernesto 'Che' Guevara (1928-1967) was RACIST against blacks. Being shameless, they usually attack where they think left-wing icons or heroes are strongest. However, when you understand the full depth to which the forces of reaction LIE, then you realize why they can't be trusted for information generally and especially on leftist figures! Hopefully, this article will operate as a mini case study displaying that reality.

Their "evidence" for this often-parroted internet falsehood is Che's youthful diary passage where he visits a Venezuelan slum and offensively opines that the blacks he encounters there are "indolent and lazy", waste their money on booze, and don't save money like Europeans. He also compares the "racial purity" of the blacks in Caracas to the Portuguese. However, these lines are always deceptively and disingenuously culled from the larger historical context of his later life ... so what is the truth?

That quote was written by Guevara in 1952 when he was 24 and encountered blacks for basically the first time in his life, during his Motorcycle trip around South America (as told in his memoir 'The Motorcycle Diaries'). ** The full context of this statement is addressed by biographer Jon Lee Anderson on page 92 of 'Che Guevara: A Revolutionary Life', and Anderson notes they were "stereotypical of white Argentine arrogance and condescension." ** However, months later at the end of his continental trip, Guevara announced himself a transformed man and even denounced the racism he encountered while living in Miami, USA for a month, while awaiting his return to Argentina. Essentially, the quote was before he was "Che", in both literal nickname and political beliefs.


From then on and throughout his life, Che showed he was ANTI-RACIST through his ACTIONS:

- The following year in 1953, while travelling through Bolivia with his friend Carlos "Calica" Ferrer, Guevara became indignant when he observed that all the dark-skinned indigenous Indians had to be sprayed with DDT (ostensibly to kill lice) before being allowed to enter the Ministry of Peasant Affairs.

- Che's very first student in 1957 as a guerrilla fighter was a 45-year-old illiterate black guajiro named Julio Zenon Acosta, whom he was teaching the alphabet. After Acosta was killed in an ambush by Batista's forces, Che exalted him as "my first pupil" and the kind of "noble peasant" that made up the heart of the Cuban Revolution.

- During the Cuban guerrilla campaign, Che's girlfriend (for all intents and purposes) for the first half of 1958 was Zoila Rodríguez García, a black/mulatto woman. Moreover, his first wife Hilda Gadea whom he married in 1955 was a dark-skinned indigenous Peruvian.

- In 1959, Che pushed for racially integrating the schools and universities in Cuba, years before they were racially integrated in the southern United States. For context, the Alabama National Guard was needed to force Governor George Wallace aside at the University of Alabama in 1963 and forced school busing wasn't enacted in the U.S. until 1971.

- In 1959, Fidel & Che pushed through "Law 270", which declared all beaches and other public facilities open to all races. For the first time in Cuban history, clubs, businesses, and other establishments that refused equal access and service to blacks were shut down.

- In August 1961, (9 years after his "indolent" remark), Guevara attacked the U.S. for discrimination against blacks and the actions of the KKK, which matched his declarations in 1964 before the United Nations (12 years after his "indolent" remark), where Guevara denounced the U.S. policy towards their black population. It was around this same time, that the black anti-colonial philosopher Frantz Fanon proclaimed Che to be "the world symbol of the possibilities of one man."

- Che's friend and personal bodyguard from 1959 till his death in 1967 was Harry "Pombo" Villegas, who was Afro-Cuban (black). Pombo accompanied Che everywhere in Cuba, then to the Congo and to Bolivia, where he survived and escaped the final battle where Che was wounded and captured. He resides in Cuba and wrote his own diary about his time in Bolivia entitled 'Pombo: A Man of Che's Guerrilla, With Che Guevara in Bolivia 1966-68' and speaks positively of Guevara to this day.

- In 1964, when Che addressed the U.N., he spoke out in favor of black musician Paul Robeson, in support of slain Congolese independence leader Patrice Lumumba (who he heralded as one of his heroes), against white segregation in the Southern U.S. (which still unfortunately existed), and against the white South African apartheid regime (long before it became the Western 'cause de jour'). Nelson Mandela later remarked that while he was imprisoned Che's "revolutionary exploits, including on our own continent, were too powerful for any prison censors to hide from us." {1}

- Che was heralded by Malcolm X during this trip to NYC and in contact with his associates to whom he sent a letter. On behalf of his actions in Africa, Che would also later be praised by the Black Panther's Stokely Carmichael. The Black Panther's even adopted their black berets in honor of Guevara iconic headwear.

- In 1965, Che toured and met anti-colonial leaders from the African nations of Algeria, Egypt, Ghana, Tanzania, Congo Brazzaville and Benin. This led to Che assisting and befriending Algerian President Ahmed Ben Bella, Egyptian leader Abdel Nasser, Angolan independence leader Agostinho Neto of the MPLA, Ghanaian leader Kwame Nkrumah, and Tanzanian President Julius Nyerere. Che also established Cuban collaboration through supplies and military support for Amilcar Cabral's PAIGC in Guinea Bissau, Alphonse Massamba-Débat in Congo Brazzaville, and Laurent-Désiré Kabila in Congo Leopoldville. Later Guevara offered assistance to fight alongside the (black) FRELIMO in Mozambique, for their independence from the white Portuguese.

- When Guevara ventured to the African Congo in 1965, he fought with a Cuban force of 130 Afro-Cubans (blacks) alongside all-black Congolese fighters — they then battled against a force comprised partly of white South African mercenaries and white Cuban exiles backed by the CIA. This resembled the fight in Cuba, where Che’s units were made up of many poor rural mulattos and blacks, against a Cuban army staffed at the top by whites with connections to the upper class. Of note, nearly all Cuban exiles who fled Che’s economic reforms to Miami throughout the early 1960′s were white, despite the island being 1/3 mulatto & black.

- Che's Congolese teenage Swahili interpreter for his African expedition named Freddy Ilanga lived until 2006 in Cuba, and his dying wish was to erect a lighthouse memorial to Guevara in Africa. In 2005 he told the BBC that Che "showed the same respect to black people as he did to whites." {2}


[CHE QUOTES REGARDING RACIAL JUSTICE]

On EDUCATION ...
"The university should color itself black and color itself mulatto—not just as regards students but also professors... Today the people stand at the door of the university, and it is the university that must be flexible. It must color itself black, mulatto, worker, peasant, or else be left without doors. And then the people will tear it apart and paint it with the colors they see fit."
— Che Guevara, to the University of Las Villas on December 28, 1959 {3}


On U.S. RACISM ...
"Democracy is not compatible with financial oligarchy, with discrimination against Blacks and outrages by the Ku Klux Klan."
— Che Guevara, to the OAS on August 8, 1961 {4}


On U.S. HYPOCRISY ...
"Those who kill their own children and discriminate daily against them because of the color of their skin; those who let the murderers of blacks remain free, protecting them, and furthermore punishing the black population because they demand their legitimate rights as free men -- how can those who do this consider themselves guardians of freedom?"
— Che Guevara, to the U.N. on December 11, 1964 {5}


On SOUTH AFRICAN APARTHEID ...
"We speak out to put the world on guard against what is happening in South Africa. The brutal policy of apartheid is applied before the eyes of the nations of the world. The peoples of Africa are compelled to endure the fact that on the African continent the superiority of one race over another remains official policy, and that in the name of this racial superiority murder is committed with impunity. Can the United Nations do nothing to stop this?"
— Che Guevara to the U.N. on December 11, 1964 {5}


On PATRICE LUMUMBA ...
"We must move forward, striking out tirelessly against imperialism. From all over the world we have to learn lessons which events afford. Lumumba's murder should be a lesson for all of us."
— Che Guevara, in 1964
* U.S. imperialism would similarly help murder Che 3 years later.



[RELEVANT IMAGES]

Che with his bodyguard Pombo, after Guevara’s wedding in 1959
http://www.nydailynews.com/img/2007/10/01/gal_cheguevara_4.jpg

Che beside Pombo in Bolivia in 1966
http://www.wumingfoundation.com/giap/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/pombo2 .jpg

Pombo in 2008
http://argentina.indymedia.org/uploads/2008/05/pombo.jpg

Che meeting with Kwame Nkrumah and Kojo Botsio in Ghana in 1965
http://25.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_lv6pxacLB31qgfbgio1_500.jpg

Che visiting Agostinho Neto of the MPLA in Angola in 1965
http://www.mpla.ao/imagem/Che%20visita%20escritorio%20do%20MPLA146.jpe g

Che in disguise on his way to Tanzania in 1965
http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/2156/3358/1600/123.jpg

Che aiding Congolese national liberation fighters in 1965
http://farm1.static.flickr.com/90/254180447_c767decf1f.jpg

Che in the African Congo, where he led an all-black force of Cuban and Congolese soldiers against white South African mercenaries of apartheid, 1965
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/f8/CheInCongo1965.jpg

Che in Mozambique offering to assist the FRELIMO against the Portuguese
http://31.media.tumblr.com/d3a5c0b8a8606c47148176da51ebe18b/tumblr_mg0 m47VAjO1r84pkto1_500.jpg

Che's Congolese Swahili translator Freddy Ilanga, he went on to be a paediatric neurosurgeon in Cuba
http://cdn.24.co.za/files/Cms/General/d/190/a51e1a06098e436e82abbf26b9 ceed95.jpg

Che in Bolivia with indigenous Indian children in 1967, shortly before his capture & execution
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/34/CheinBolivia1.jpg

Children "Pioneers" of the Revolution in Burkina Faso donned starred berets honoring Guevara in 1987
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/3c/Pionniers_de_la_r%C 3%A9volution.jpg


[TO CONCLUDE]

Only to someone completely uninformed, could Che --(a man who fought shoulder to shoulder with African national liberationists against white supremacist South African mercenaries of Apartheid, and later died while attempting to galvanize dark-skinned Bolivian Indians to revolution against a U.S.-backed dictatorship)-- be seen as "racist" for a single diary paragraph he wrote in his youth 15 years earlier.

"Che Guevara taught us we could dare to have confidence in ourselves, confidence in our abilities. He instilled in us the conviction that struggle is our only recourse. He, was a citizen of the free world that together we are in the process of building. That is why we say that Che Guevara is also African and Burkinabe."
— Thomas Sankara, commonly referred to as 'Africa's Che Guevara'

"The death of Che Guevara places a responsibility on all revolutionaries of the World to redouble their decision to fight on to the final defeat of Imperialism. That is why in essence Che Guevara is not dead, his ideas are with us."
— Stokely Carmichael (aka Kwame Ture), 'Black Power' leader, 1967


P.S. If you want a dose of rich irony, nearly all of the people who criticize Che for his supposed imaginary racism, also then support his arch-nemesis the CIA, i.e. the same group who made the racist remark in their February 13, 1958 declassified 'biographical and personality report' that Guevara was "quite well read", while adding in apparent amazement that "Che is fairly intellectual for a Latino."


LINKS to primary web sources for selected quotes (others are books)

{1} http://db.nelsonmandela.org/speeches/pub_view.asp?pg=item&ItemID=N MS1526
{2} http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/4522526.stm
{3} http://www.themilitant.com/2000/6401/640158.html
{4} http://www.marxists.org/archive/guevara/1961/08/08.htm
{5} http://www.marxists.org/archive/guevara/1964/12/11.htm

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The myth of Che Guevara is seductive and lush. It's the story of an Argentinian rich-boy who was so shocked by poverty he became a Robin Hood fighting alongside the poor, until eventually he was murdered by the CIA. But the reality of Che Guevara is very different. The facts show that he was a totalitarian with a messiah streak, who openly wanted to impose Maoist tyranny on the world. He was so fanatical that at the hottest moment in the Cold War, he even begged the Soviet Union to nuke New York or Washington or Los Angeles and bring about the end of the world. - Johann Hari, “Should Che be an icon? No”
During the Cuban missile crisis on October 1962, Che demanded that nuclear war be unleashed on the United States. He told British reporter Sam Russell that “if the nuclear missiles had been under Cuban control (during the Cuban missile crisis), they would have fired them off.” Reportedly, he was disappointed when Khrushchev decided to draw back his weapons in the missile crisis. "If the rockets had remained, we would have used them all and directed them against the very heart of the United States, including New York, in our defense against aggression." And a couple of years later, at the United Nations, he was true to form: “As Marxists we have maintained that peaceful coexistence among nations does not include coexistence between exploiters and the exploited.” Only die hard progressives would consider him an icon, and venerate his inhumane actions.

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It is true that Che's story begins with a motorcycle journey across South America. The young man was repulsed by the gap between the swanky transplanted European culture in which he lived and the starving misery of the indigenous peoples. He could see that this was caused largely by America's habit of smashing local governments and replacing them with dictators prepared to slobber over US corporations. But he concluded from that journey – gradually, over a few short years – that there was only one solution: the imposition of authoritarian communism, by force, everywhere. He chose not to see that this system, wherever it is tried, makes people even poorer still, invariably spreading famine, starvation, and terror. - Johann Hari, “Should Che be an icon? No”
A number of years after his dead, the real truth about Che has become crystal clear. He was a cold blooded killer machine.

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Watching the coverage of protests and uprisings in the Middle East, I have yet to see anyone in the crowds waving an image of Che Guevara. I did say Guevara, instead of invoking more geographically-correct regional revolutionaries such as Abu Nidal or Yasser Arafat, both Palestinian heroes.

While many may not recognize the other two, most people recognize the iconic picture of Guevara, even though he has been dead for nearly 45 years. He was the charismatic Argentine revolutionary and famed sidekick to Fidel Castro. Following their 1959 Cuban victory, Guevara set out to export (surplus) revolution to other impoverished countries. After failing in Africa, he died trying to duplicate the Cuban experience in Bolivia. An image of him soon became an icon for revolution all over the world, even displayed by demonstrators during the 1979 Iranian Revolution. - Marco Navarro, “Che T-shirts a sign of strong property rights”, The Calgary Herald March 19, 2011
Guevara’s elevation as symbol of goodness, due to the self-indulgence and frivolity of pampered Western pseudo revolutionaries, speaks clearly of their lack of critical objective analysis.

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In time, Guevara became a pop culture icon. He is the patron saint of social dropouts who wear his picture or try hard to affect his style. Among suburban youth, he became a symbol of countercultural rebellion against globalizing capitalism. But few remember the ruthlessness with which he condemned many bourgeois enemies and some of his own rebel friends to death.

But in an ironic twist of history, Guevara owes his posthumous pop culture success to old-fashioned property rights and their accompanying pursuit of profit. In death, Guevara has proven to be the unwitting, specialized, global capitalist commodity that would have made Adam Smith and Friedrich Hayek notice - Marco Navarro, “Che T-shirts a sign of strong property rights”, The Calgary Herald March 19, 2011.
Those who buy a Che shirt what are you endorsing? Capitalism one of the many things Che was fighting against. By plastering his face on every piece of merchandise imaginable you have completely gone against his socialist beliefs.

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By the 2004 release of The Motorcycle Diaries, a movie about the pre-revolutionary Guevara, the Korda image was ubiquitous. You could find it on hats, shorts, T-shirts and sweatshirts, bags, lighters and ashtrays, stationary, and even on women's undergarments.

Irony of ironies, almost every silkscreened garment in North America with Guevara's image was manufactured in Honduran sweat shops while imported and distributed by an American company aptly named Fashion Victim, owned by David McWilliams. - Marco Navarro, “Che T-shirts a sign of strong property rights”, The Calgary Herald March 19, 2011.
When you buy Che products, you are partaking in a capitalist system that Che did not support. Furthermore, you are helping someone get rich by selling socialism. Now that is ironic. Wearing Che T-shirts is a tacit acknowledgement of capitalism's triumph over socialism.

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Rise of the Apes

http://apeshallnotkillape.com/images2/che_ape.jpg

Here’s Rupert Wyatt, director of the blockbuster ere’s Rupert Wyatt, director of the blockbuster movie Rise of the Planet of the Apes in a recent interview:
“(The script) had become very different and much more exciting to me. It became less a story of domesticization of a pet and more about an uprising and a Che Guevara story.”

Here’s the Associated Press review of “Rise of the Planet of the Apes”: “Raised much like a human child by a researcher, with help from a veterinarian, Caesar becomes a Che Guevara-style revolutionary, leading a rebellion of apes against their human oppressors.”

Ground control to Director Wyatt: In fact the only genuinely popular rebellion in Cuba in the 20th Century was against Che Guevara’s regime, among the most oppressive in modern history which mandates ( under penalty of prison or firing squad) what its subjects, read, say, earn, eat (both substance and amount) , where they live, travel or work. Wyatt’s inspiration for a freedom-fighter co-founded a regime that jailed more of its subjects than did Stalin’s during the Great Terror and murdered more its subjects in its first three years in power than did Hitler’s in its first six. - ‘Rise of the Apes’ Director: Film’s Hero Inspired by Che Guevara, by Humberto Fontova
Hollywood infatuation with the cold killing machine Che Guevara is addictive. This is another example of jumping the bandwagon on what’s currently popular, a money maker. It is incredible how little these people care or know about Ch

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In 1959, with the help of Soviet KGB and GRU agents, Rupert Wyatt’s hero against “oppression” helped found, train and indoctrinate Cuba’s secret police. “Always interrogate your prisoners at night,” Che Guevara ordered his goons. “A man’s resistance is always lower at night.” In 1957 this worldwide symbol of “’anti-imperialism” (who often signed his letters as “Stalin II”) cheered the Soviet invasion of Hungary with its wholesale slaughter of Hungarian freedom-fighting guerrillas. All through the horrifying Soviet massacre, Che dutifully parroted the Soviet script that the workers, peasants and college kids battling Russian tanks in Budapest with small arms and Molotov cocktails were all: “Fascists and CIA agents!” who all deserved prompt execution.

“Caesar is shown to be compassionate, forbidding his followers from killing innocent humans. “ (Wikipedia on Rise of the Planet of the Apes)

Ground control to Director Wyatt: “When in doubt—execute! “raved your inspiration for compassion. “Judicial evidence is an archaic bourgeois detail. I don’t need proof to execute a man. I only need proof that it’s necessary to execute him. We execute from revolutionary conviction! To establish Socialism rivers of blood must flow!”

Now here’s Andy Serkis, with the leading role in Rise of the Planet of the Apes: “I play the character from a child through to a Che Guevara type–How cool is that!” - ‘Rise of the Apes’ Director: Film’s Hero Inspired by Che Guevara, by Humberto Fontova
Obviously none of them have ever had actually to live in socialist state, let alone one that imposes iron and arbitrary discipline on its subjects. Were they will find deprived of even the least of their many privileges and rights under such a regime, they would collapse into piles of angst.

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Mass murder was the order in Cuba’s countryside. It was the only way to decimate so many rebels. These country folk went after the Castroites with a ferocity that saw Fidel and Che running to their Soviet sugar daddies and tugging their pants in panic. Carlos Machado was 15 years old in 1963 when the bullets from the Communist firing squad shattered his body. His twin brother and father collapsed beside Carlos from the same volley. All had resisted Castro and Che’s theft of their humble family farm, all refused blindfolds and all died sneering at their Communist murderers, as did thousands of their valiant countrymen.

“Here’s one other thing that sets Rise apart: it’s smart. This isn’t just an angry ape who wants more bananas, but a brave and canny hero who, having been given super intelligence by his scientist guardian, resolves to use it for the advancement of his species. He’s a rebel, a fighter, a simian Che Guevara.” - ‘Rise of the Apes’ Director: Film’s Hero Inspired by Che Guevara, by Humberto Fontova
They are very fortunate to be able to withstand reality and live in a comfortable bubble where consequences seem almost non-existent. Their work often is proof of their near total detachment from the real world. And don't forget their hero Che killed people for the crime of being gay.
The Progressives seem to forget that.

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Ground control to Director Wyatt: the men who captured your “canny” hero with “super intelligence” in Bolivia seem convinced he was unable to apply a compass reading to a map. Under Che’s own gun dozens of defenseless men and boys died. Under his orders thousands crumpled, mostly bound and gagged. At everything else Che Guevara failed abysmally, even comically. During his Bolivian “guerrilla” campaign, Che split his forces whereupon they got hopelessly lost and bumbled around, half-starved, half-clothed and half-shod, without any contact with each other for 6 months before being wiped out. They spent much of the time walking in circles and were usually within a mile of each other. During this blundering they often engaged in ferocious firefights against each other. “You hate to laugh at anything associated with Che, who murdered so many defenseless men and boys,” says Felix Rodriguez, the Cuban-American CIA officer who played a key role in tracking him down in Bolivia. “But when it comes to Che as “guerrilla” you simply can’t help but guffaw.”

Here’s Rupert Wyatt from a recent interview: “I think the (film directors) Christopher Nolans of the world have really allowed filmmakers to explore things in a more…thoughtful way. If I have the opportunity to make further films, the hope that I have is to really explore wonderful themes.”

Ground Control to Director Wyatt: Thank your lucky stars you were born in England in 1972 instead of in Cuba around 1940. Your symbol of freedom jailed and exiled most of Cuba’s best writers, poets and filmmakers while converting Cuba’s press and cinema–at Soviet-gunpoint–into propaganda agencies for a Stalinist regime.. - ‘Rise of the Apes’ Director: Film’s Hero Inspired by Che Guevara, by Humberto Fontova
Most Che lovers don't read, and if they did read this, they would reject it because they have closed minds. In their way of thinking if the ape behaved like a real Che Guevara, they would identify him with Charlton Heston. So the most necessary quality for apes to take over is for most of the people to be as ignorant as Progressives. At least in the film, unlike Che, Caesar the ape shows some moral restraint.

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The character of Caesar is as described by the film-makers: intelligent, compassionate, and sympathetic. But it is their own ignorance about history that causes them to link this character in any way with Che Guevara. If anything, this whole talking point betrays their lack of an in depth research about who really was Che Guevara, a “fanatical, dogmatic, spiteful, envious, arrogant, proud, a liar, racist, devoid of morals, mercenary and homophobic, a bloodthirsty murderer, ‘a cold killing machine’, that the fanaticism of the left has turned into a hero.”

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Celebrating The Anniversary Of Che Guevera’s Execution

Forty-four years ago this week, Ernesto “Che” Guevara got a major dose of his own medicine. Without trial he was declared a murderer, stood against a wall and shot. If the saying “What goes around comes around” ever fit, it’s here.

http://i106.photobucket.com/albums/m248/Thunder-Pig/efcbfb80-1.jpg

If the Occupy Wall Street crowd thinks the NYPD is brutal, they’ve seen nothing. Che Guevara would clear the “occupation” in a New York nanosecond. His colleagues of the time recall him cheering the Soviet tanks slaughtering Hungarian freedom fighters on the streets of Budapest. The youths they machine-gunned and ground under their tank treads were all “Fascists and CIA agents,” he raved. – Humberto Fontova, Celebrating The Anniversary Of Che Guevera’s Execution, Oct 7th, 2011.
Progressives’ idolization of Che is a reflection of what they would do to those that don’t conform to their point of view. The worship of Che by the radical left speaks volumes of their true agenda. Che is dead, R.I.P (rest in pain).

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“I’m a Stalinist,” Che Guevara boasted to Cuban colleague Carlos Franqui in 1957. To, him, Nikita Khrushchev’s denunciations of Stalin’s violent purges were nothing but “imperialist lies!” However, when Khrushchev’s sent tanks and Siberian troops to massacre Hungarian protesters, Che later conceded it certainly helped ameliorate his judgment of the premier’s earlier doctrinal errors.– Humberto Fontova, Celebrating The Anniversary Of Che Guevera’s Execution, Oct 7th, 2011
When Guevara visited the USSR in his capacity as one of the leaders of the Cuban revolution in November 1960, insisted on placing a floral tribute in the tomb of Stalin. This occurred more than four years after Khrushchev’s revelations of Stalin’s crimes.

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Two years ago, the U.K. Guardian interviewed Oscar-winning actor Benicio del Toro regarding his Cannes-winning role as Guevara in Stephen Soderbergh’s movie Che. “Dammit This Guy Is Cool!” was the interview title. “I hear of this guy, and he’s got a cool name, Che Guevara!” said del Toro. “Groovy name, groovy man, groovy politics! So I came across a picture of Che, smiling, in fatigues, and I thought, ‘Dammit, this guy is cool-looking!’”

In effect, Benicio del Toro probably revealed the inspiration (and daunting intellectual exertion) of millions of Che fans, including hundreds on Wall Street last week.– Humberto Fontova, Celebrating The Anniversary Of Che Guevera’s Execution, Oct 7th, 2011.
Che Guevara, the one and only, the butcher of la Cabaña. Benicio thinks Che is this guy who fought imperialism instead of Fidel's executioner, a butcher who was a humorless psychopath.

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In a famous speech in 1961, Che denounced the very “spirit of rebellion” as “reprehensible.” “Youth must refrain from ungrateful questioning of governmental mandates,” commanded Guevara. “Instead, they must dedicate themselves to study, work and military service, should learn to think and act as a mass.”

Those who “choose their own path” (as in growing long hair and listening to “Yankee-Imperialist” rock & roll) were denounced as worthless “roqueros,” “lumpen,” and “delinquents.” In his famous speech, Che Guevara even vowed “to make individualism disappear from Cuba! It is criminal to think of individuals!”

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Tens of thousands of Cuban youths learned that Che Guevara’s admonitions were more than idle bombast. In Guevara, the hundreds of Soviet KGB and East German STASI “consultants” who flooded Cuba in the early 1960s found an extremely eager acolyte. By the mid-’60s, the crime of a “rocker” lifestyle (blue jeans, long hair, fondness for the Beatles and Stones) or effeminate behavior got thousands of youths yanked out of Cuba’s streets and parks by secret police and dumped in prison camps with “Work Will Make Men Out of You” emblazoned in bold letters above the gate and with machine gunners posted on the watchtowers. The initials for these camps were UMAP, not GULAG, but the conditions were quite similar.

Today, the world’s largest image of the man whom so many hipsters sport on their shirts adorns Cuba’s headquarters and torture chambers for its KGB-trained secret police. Nothing could be more fitting. – Humberto Fontova, Celebrating The Anniversary Of Che Guevera’s Execution, Oct 7th, 2011.
In death, Che is a capitalist icon. He is to t-shirts what that kitten hanging from a clothes line was to motivational posters.

I always ask a person wearing a Che T shirt, if they are a embarrassed, since he was really a Murdering Sociopath. You should see the blank stares I get. Yep noting like the three S's treatment, Shoot, Shovel, and shut up.

(the 3-S treatment, refers to a method for dealing with unwanted or unwelcome animals in rural areas. The phrase has also been used in reference to mad cow disease)


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One day before his death in Bolivia, Che Guevara — for the first time in his life — finally faced something properly describable as combat. He ordered his guerrilla charges to give no quarter, to fight to their last breaths and to their last bullet. With his men doing exactly what he ordered (fighting and dying to the last bullet), a slightly wounded Che sneaked away from the firefight and surrendered with fully loaded weapons while whimpering to his captors, “Don’t shoot! I’m Che. I’m worth more to you alive than dead!” His Bolivian captors viewed the matter differently. In fact, the following day they adopted a policy that has since become a favorite among many Americans who encounter (so-called) endangered species threatening their families or livestock on their property: “Shoot, shovel, and shut up.”

Justice has never been better served. – Humberto Fontova, Celebrating The Anniversary Of Che Guevera’s Execution, Oct 7th, 2011.
Che failed miserable in the Congo and Bolivia, after being marginalized by Fidel Castro. Before, during and after the Castroit regime grab power in Cuba, he customarily violated the doctors Hippocratic Oath torturing and executing prisoners. An Argentinean, son of a well to do family and a favorite of his mother, start out a revolution in the Bolivia countryside without knowing that the Bolivian Indians spoke Quechua instead of Spanish. He and his men got lost, suffer starvation and at the end were track down by the Bolivian army, made prisoner and executed. For a guy that practically failed at everything, it is hard to understand how this loser became an icon of freedom.

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Che Guevara—Hollywood Keeps Lying
http://townhall.com/columnists/humbertofontova/2012/10/12/che_guevarahollywood_keeps_lying

Humberto Fontova

Steven Soderbergh made certain his movie, “Che," about the life of revolutionary Ernesto “Che" Guevara, couldn't be attacked -- at least on a factual level,” stressed CNN Entertainment, upon the movie’s release in 2009.

“I didn't want was for somebody to be able to look at a scene and say, 'That never happened.' "(Steven Soderbergh CNN Entertainment, January 1, 2009)
Well, Mr Steven Soderbergh (and CNN,) pull up a chair.

Soderbergh’s movie shows Che Guevara steely-eyed and snarling with defiance during his capture (45 years ago this week.) Why, according to Soderbergh, only seconds before his capture, Che’s very M-2 carbine had been blasted from his hands and rendered useless by a CIA-Fascist machine gun burst!

Then the bravely grimacing Guevara jerks out his pistol and blasts his very last bullets at the approaching hordes of CIA-Fascist soldiers!

The (typical) viewer gapes at the spectacle. His very eyes mist and lips tremble at Soderbergh and Benicio Del Toro’s impeccable depiction of such undaunted pluck and valor.

OK, but just where did Soderbergh and Benicio Del Toro (who starred as Che and co-produced the movie) obtain this version of Che’s capture? Remember they were both utterly obsessed with “historical accuracy.”

Well, the notoriously skeptical towards U.S. businessmen (see Erin Brockovich) director Steven Soderbergh transcribed this sterling account of Che’s capture exactly as penned by Fidel Castro, who apparently cannot tell a lie, according to Hollywood.

The man who mentored Soderbergh’s film for impeccable historical honesty is also on record for the following testaments:

“Again I stress I am not a communist. And Communists have absolutely no influence in my nation!” (Fidel Castro, April 1959)

“Political power does interest me in the least! And I will never assume such power!” (Fidel Castro, April 1959)

As evidenced by Steven Soderbergh’s film, the author of these proclamations merits his version of Che’s capture transcribed on the silver screen as gospel. Fidel Castro, you see, wrote the forward to Che‘s Diaries wherein this Davy Crocket-esque-at-the-Alamo version of events appears. These diaries were published in Castro’s fiefdom by the Stalinist dictator’s very own propaganda ministry. So to guarantee their film’s historical accuracy, Soderbergh and co-producer Benicio Del Toro were scrupulous in repeatedly visiting a Stalinist regime’s propaganda ministers for the unvarnished truth!

Actually they’ follow a fine Hollywood tradition. Robert Redford privately screen Motorcyvle Diaries for Fidel Castro and Che’s widow. Only after the approval of these two Stalinists was the movie released by this adamant proponent of artistic freedom.
On the other hand, a mental defect diagnosed by my physician as “not believing Communist dictators, especially after living under them” led your humble servant here while researching his books, to dig-up and study the actual records of the men actually on the scene of Che Guevara’s capture, and to interview those who today live in places where they need not fear Castro’s firing squads and torture chambers for the crime of telling the truth.

As might be expected, this mental defect led to the discovery of major “discrepancies” between Soderbergh and Del Toro’s Fidel Castro-mentored film and the historical truth.
In fact: on his second to last day alive, Che Guevara ordered his guerrilla charges to give no quarter, to fight to the last breath and to the last bullet. “Che drummed it into us,” recalls Cuban guerrilla Dariel Alarcon, who indeed fought to his last bullet in Bolivia, escaped back to Cuba, defected, and today lives in Paris. “Never surrender,” Che always stressed. “Never, never!” He drilled it into us almost every day of the guerrilla campaign. “A Cuban revolutionary cannot surrender!” Che thundered. “Save your last bullet for yourself!”

With his men doing exactly that, Che, with a trifling flesh leg-wound (though Soderbergh’s movie depicts Che’s leg wound as ghastlier than Burt Reynolds’ in Deliverance,) snuck away from the firefight, crawled towards the Bolivian soldiers doing the firing—then as soon as his he spotted two of them at a distance, stood and yelled: "Don't Shoot! I'm Che! I'm worth more to you alive than dead!"

Learning of Che’s whimpering capture with fully loaded weapons after his sissified escape from the firefight started Alarcon’s long road to total disillusionment with Castroism.

His captor’s official Bolivian army records that they took from Ernesto “Che” Guevara: a fully-loaded PPK 9mm pistol. And the damaged carbine was an M-1—NOT the M-2 Che records in his own diaries as carrying. The damaged M-1 carbine probably belonged to the hapless guerrilla charge, Willi, who Che dragged along—also to his doom.

But it was only after his (obviously voluntary) capture that Che segued into full Eddie-Hasquell-Greeting-June-Cleaver-Mode. "What's your name, young man?!" Che quickly asked one of his captors. "Why what a lovely name for a Bolivian soldier!"

"So what will they do with me?" Che, obviously desperate to ingratiate himself, asked Bolivian Captain Gary Prado. "I don't suppose you will kill me. I'm surely more valuable alive....And you Captain Prado!" Che commended his captor. "You are a very special person! ...I have been talking to some of your men. They think very highly of you, captain!..Now, could you please find out what they plan to do with me?"

From that stage on, Che Guevara’s fully-documented Eddie Haskell-isms only get more uproarious (or nauseating.) But somehow none of these found their way into Soderbergh’s film.
From the Soderberg school of historical filmmaking: "When the facts show communists to be murderous evil cowards, film a whitewash and call it 'historical accuracy'". You can't let facts get in the way of the truth.

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Here is what Jon Lee Anderson wrote about Che Guevara capture in his very favourable biography: “When they were a few feet away, a short, sturdy highland Indian named Sergeant Bernardino Huanca, broke through the brush and pointed his gun at them. He claimed later that Che told him: ‘Do not shoot! I am Che Guevara and worth more to you alive than dead’.” - Jon Lee Anderson, Che Guevara a revolutionary Life,1997, p.733.

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Captain Gary Prado* says that Che simply dropped his gun and surrendered. Prado remembers him responding, “Don't shoot, I'm Che, I'm worth more to you alive than dead.” Che was slightly wounded in the lower calf, and walked helped by a soldier, soldier Montenegro.

Prado said that after Guevara surrendered, he asked me, as I wrote in my book (The Immolated Guerrilla), “what are you going to do with me?” to which I replied: “You will be tried in Santa Cruz.”

Prado has stated that Guevara said Castro failed him at a crucial time. Guevara had said that Fidel Castro not only failed him on the Bolivian campaign but also probably betrayed him. - Gary Prado Salmón, The Defeat of Che Guevara, July 24, 1990.

*Captain Gary Prado Salmon commanded the unit that captured Che Guevara in Bolivia in 1967.

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Marcos Bravo, prominent leader of the July 26 Movement, fought against the regime of Batista during the decade of the 50 and was jailed under this regime. Later on he opposed the communist regime and was jailed again by Fidel Castro. Bravo's work is the result of several years of research, scrutiny and reflections. The book is title “La otra cara del Che. Ernesto Guevara, un sepulcro blanqueado” (The other face of Che. Ernesto Guevara, a whiten sepulcher)

Bravo wrote: “The M-1 rifle with which Che surrenders, is not his, but that of his partner, the Bolivian guerrilla Willy, with whom he changes his rifle to justify his surrender without a fight, since the one used by him, like that of the other leaders, was an M-2 in good condition. His 9 millimeters pistol had all its bullets when yielding it."

The wound in the leg was a slight scratch that it did not prevent him from walking. At the moment of surrender he said ‘Don’t shoot, I’m Che Guevara.’ He didn’t fight until the last bullet, as he demanded from his subordinates, who fulfilled the order and gave their lives in pursuit of an impossible and foreign illusion.”

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‘Che’ statue on Salthill Prom sparks outcry
http://www.galwaynews.ie/24569-%E2%80%98che%E2%80%99-statue-salthill-prom-sparks-outcry

Project is slammed for having potential to damage Galway around the world
By Dermot Keys

Ernesto ‘Che’ Guevara has become a 20th century icon but plans for his Galway heritage to be celebrated with a five-metre high monument on the Salthill Promenade is already sparking an outcry.

The project is still in the planning stage but the decision to honour Guevara’s Galway connections with a monument has previously received the unanimous approval of Galway City Council. The Argentine revolutionary’s Irish ancestry can be traced back to Galway through his maternal grandmother, Ana Isabel Lynch.

This week, however, businessman Declan Ganley described the plan as having the potential to “damage the reputation of Galway around the world”. And US House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Chairperson, Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, also called for the proposed monument to be rejected.

The commemorative sculpture will be entirely funded by the Cuban and Argentine Embassies and a design by Simon McGuiness will now go before the Galway City Council’s Working Group for approval.

Simon McGuinness told the Galway City Tribune that the image is a “total homage” to Irish artist Jim Fitzpatrick’s iconic 1968 Che poster, which was based upon a photograph by Alberto Korda.

“It has three plate glass panels of varying heights which represent man, image and ideal,” Mr McGuinness explained.

The monument will feature a number of interactivity features and people visiting it will be able to use their phones to have a photograph taken at the statue and uploaded onto Facebook.

A planned WiFi feature at the monument will allow visitors to access videos and surf the Che Guevara website. They will also be able to post messages on the website.
Businessman Declan Ganley criticised the decision to honour a man he describes as a “mass murderer” and said that it could “damage the reputation of Galway around the world.”

US House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Chairperson, Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, also called for the proposed monument to be rejected.

“Che Guevara was a ruthless killer who should not be idealised. Instead of honouring a killer, the City Council of Galway should honour the victims of Che and the Castro dictatorship by rejecting this proposal," she said.

Che Guevara was born in Argentina in 1928 and qualified as a doctor before joining Fidel Castro’s guerrilla army in their war against the Batista regime in Cuba. After success in Cuba, he subsequently took part in failed revolutions in the Congo and later in Bolivia, where he was captured and executed in 1967. Guevara’s daughter, Dr Aleida Guevara, visited Galway City in 2002 to trace her family tree.
The people in the Galway City Council who think highly of Che may not realize it, but they have a lot in common with the deniers of the Holocaust.

In the article “The Fish Die by the Mouth” there are many reasons why not to built a Che statue on the Salthill Promenade.
Link: http://www.cubanet.org/CNews/y09/enero09/23_O_3.html

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Those who celebrate Che, overlook the overwhelm evidence with regard to his crimes. Why people in the Left does that eagerly? Because they see history as class struggle and need a role model to venerate, someone who they think embodies the cause of the oppressed.

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Che: A revolution in pop culture misrepresentation
http://thedailycougar.com/2013/04/12/che-a-revolution-in-pop-culture-misrepresentation/

By Sarah Backer
Published on Friday, April 12, 2013

Next time you see someone sporting a shirt or anything with the visage of Marxist freedom fighter, Ernesto “Che” Guevara, stop and ask them what they know about this romanticized symbol of revolution.

http://thedailycougar.com/wp-content/blogs.dir/1/files/2013/04/McCanns_Army_and_Navy_Stores_Belfast_January_2011_03-300x200.jpg
Clothing stores, like this one in Belfast, Northern Ireland, feature T-shirts with the image of Marxist freedom fighter Ernesto “Che” Guevara. Hollywood and counterculture young adults romanticize the life of a man who executed thousands and said, “the victory of Socialism is worth millions of atomic deaths.” | Wikimedia Commons

Chances are it’s not too much.

Among our generation, there exists a “cult of Che” completely ignorant in their adoration and glorification. Psychology freshman major Kiana Wall said he’s a symbol with a false or misunderstood value.

“As a symbol, Guevara had meaning in the past,” Wall said, “but it seems like those who wear those shirts now are just trying to exaggerate their political radicalism without knowing much about him at all.”

The problem is that many people, particularly the Millennials, are highly influenced by Hollywood more than ever. Steven Soderbergh directed the 2008 movie “Che” in which Benicio del Toro depicted Guevara as a gentle, contemplative hero. The New York Times writer Manohla Darges gives a good description of Soderbergh’s intended portrayal.

“Throughout the movie Mr. Soderbergh mixes the wild beauty of his landscapes with images of Che heroically engaged in battle, thoughtfully scribbling and reading and tending to ailing peasants and soldiers,” Darges said.

Furthermore, Del Toro said Guevara only executed people after they were tried.
“They did not do it blindly; they had trials,” he said. “They found them guilty, and they executed them — that’s capital punishment.”

A brief look at history shows a darker, more accurate side of Guevara.
In 1928, Guevara was born to a middle class family in Rosario, Argentina. He completed his medical studies in 1953, and after traveling around Latin America, decided that the only way to liberate the poor from their degraded existence was through violent warfare. An expert on guerrilla warfare, he was an important figure in the Cuban Revolution and tried to lead Marxist revolts in the Congo and Bolivia, where he was executed in 1967.

Since his death, Guevara has been touted by some on the left as the pop culture hero of anti-imperialism and rebellion. It was in the 1960s when Guevara truly rose to prominence as a symbol of revolution.

Guevara supporters claim he stands for freedom, justice and free-thinking; however, Guevara acted in the Cuban Revolution’s first firing squads and founded Cuba’s “labor camp” system which acted much like concentration camps.
Ironically, Guevara opposed freedom of speech, he campaigned to have homosexuals jailed in labor camps, he opposed free elections, he was a profligate adulterer and he hoped the Cuban missile crisis would lead to atomic war. Guevara’s political beliefs of mass-slaughter and absolute government fly in the face of freedom, social justice or free thought. For instance, take this quote from this 1966 speech by Guevara:

“Hatred is the central element of our struggle! Hatred that is intransigent … hatred so violent that it propels a human being beyond his natural limitations, making him violent and cold-blooded killing machine … We reject any peaceful approach. Violence is inevitable. To establish Socialism rivers of blood must flow! The imperialist enemy must feel like a hunted animal wherever he moves. Thus we’ll destroy him! These hyenas are fit only for extermination. We must keep our hatred alive and fan it to paroxysm! The victory of Socialism is well worth millions of atomic victims!”

Actions speak louder than words. As a Communist totalitarian murderer, Guevara participated in execution of thousands people, not all of which were former members of former Cuban President Fulgencio Batista’s administration.

What we need is for people to break from the confines of popular culture and think for themselves. Just because some actor likes Guevara and I like that actor doesn’t mean I should then like Guevara. The truth is wearing a Guevara shirt is much like sporting a shirt with Hitler’s or Stalin’s face on it. The only difference is that the Guevara shirt is socially acceptable, thanks to the obtuseness of Hollywood.

Sarah Backer is a business sophomore and may be reached at [email protected].
Sarah Baker is a business major at the University of Houston and has written several Op-Eds for the school's paper, The Daily Cougar. In this opinion piece she takes on the obsession a number of people have with Che Guevara, wearing t-shirts with his image while being totally oblivious to the fact Guevara was a psychotic, sadistic mass murderer

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If you buy a Che shirt what are you endorsing? Capitalism, one of the many things Che was fighting against. By plastering his face on every piece of merchandise imaginable you have completely gone against his socialist beliefs.

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Guevara’s elevation as symbol of goodness, due to the self-indulgence and frivolity of pampered Western pseudo revolutionaries, speaks clearly of their lack of critical objective analysis.

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Ms. Baker took the time to learn the facts, and provides us with that glimmer of hope that perhaps not all of America's college youth is completely ignorant of Cuban history. She paints a very different picture of the “revolutionary” poster icon.

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Che, the radical left symbol, was a homophobe. He played a principal role in setting up Cuba's first labor camp in the Guanahacabibes region in western Cuba in 1960-1961. This camp was the precursor to the eventual systematic confinement, starting in 1965 in the province of Camagüey, of dissidents, homosexuals, Catholics, Jehovah's Witnesses, Afro-Cuban priests, and other such scum, under the banner of UMAP, Military Units to Help Production.

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Che defended that initiative in his own words: “We only send those doubtful cases where we are not sure people should go to jail.” These people would be transported at gunpoint into concentration camps. Some would never return; others would be raped, beaten, or mutilated; and most would be traumatized for life. This type of forced confinement without due process was also applied to AIDS victims during the decade of the 80s and 90s.

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"Ernesto was many things before becoming the man who headed down the road of the “guerrilla,” a path he was persuaded to follow by the ambition and insensitivity of the world’s powerful and their refusal to distribute the planet’s wealth in a more equitable, fraternal and even democratic fashion.

He was a great dreamer and romantic, a lone-wolf, a tireless traveler, an intellectual, a connoisseur of high French, Spanish and Latin American poetry, a refined writer, a doctor who, despite never having practiced officially, healed more people in the jungles, leper colonies and places in Cuba’s Sierra Maestra he spent time in than most professional doctors throughout their lives."


— Martín Guevara, (Che's nephew)


http://www.havanatimes.org/?p=109997

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How the American RIGHT-WING  mind works ...

Nuking 250,000 Japanese civilians = Good
Che overseeing the execution of former Dictator Batista’s torturers = Bad

Slave Owners & Genocidal Presidents (millions of Natives) on US $ = Good
T-shirt with Cuba's/Argentina's National Hero’s face on it = Bad

US Jets Shock and Aweing Iraq and killing thousands of people = Freedom
Che traveling to Bolivia to fight for the landless peasants = Terrorism

Guerrilla & Slave Owner George Washington shooting the enemy = Hero
Guerrilla & non-slave owner Che Guevara shooting the enemy = Assassin

The US invading Vietnam and causing 2 million civilian deaths = Freedom
Che killing a total of around 50 Bolivian soldiers in an attempt to topple an oligarchy = Terrorism

Reagan aiding in the death of 1 million Iraqi/Iranians by selling weapons to both sides = BEST PRESIDENT EVAH !
Che having a few hundred rapists and murderers of the former dictator shot after found guilty in tribunals = He's a Butcher !

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Happy Birthday Che Guevara
http://townhall.com/columnists/humbertofontova/2013/06/21/happy-birthday-che-guevara-n1624504/page/full

Humberto Fontova

June 14th marked Ernesto Che Guevara’s 85th birthday. Yet amazingly, no celebrations were reported by the Obama campaign precinct-captain who in 2008 decorated her Houston office with his famous visage.

And this precinct-captain was not your usual bubble-headed Che Groupie who seemed to recall the awesome dude opening for the Foo Fighters at Lollapalooza. No, this Che fan was middle-aged woman born in Cuba where she lived during a period when Che Guevara was Cuba's chief executioner and second in command. At the time, Cuba had the highest political incarceration and execution rate on earth, far surpassing that of their Soviet mentors and suitors. Chile’s much-reviled Pinochet regime never even approached it.

Pictures subsequently surfaced of Obama campaign worker Maria Isabel at several Obama campaign functions; arm in arm with Barack, in a bear hug with Michelle Obama, and apparently, very heavily involved in the Obama campaign. Some background on her hero:
Had Ernesto Guevara De La Serna y Lynch not linked up with Raul and Fidel Castro in Mexico City that fateful summer of 1955 everything points to Ernesto continuing his life of a traveling hobo, mooching off women, staying in flophouses and scribbling unreadable poetry.

Che was a Revolutionary Ringo Starr. By pure chance, he fell in with the right bunch at just the right time and rode their coattails to fame. His very name "Che" was imparted by the Cubans who hob-knobbed with him in Mexico. Argentines use the term "Che" much like Michael Moore fans use "dude." The Cubans noticed Ernesto Guevara using it so they pasted it to him. And it stuck.
This Cuban American woman, with the Che image on the Cuban flag in the background, is obviously a Castro sympathizer. She is doing the same thing that some Cuban sympathizers are doing. See what they can find out and what they can organize against this Great Country.

Under Che Guevara's rule "Change" indeed came to Cuba. If I was running for President, I would make damn sure that I wasn't being misrepresented by ANY office, especially on TV, unless of course I endorsed it.
Video link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DCja99KpjWU

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During the Cuban missile crisis on October 1962, Che demanded that nuclear war be unleashed on the United States. He told British reporter Sam Russell that “if the nuclear missiles had been under Cuban control (during the Cuban missile crisis), they would have fired them off.” Reportedly, he was disappointed when Khrushchev decided to draw back his weapons in the missile crisis. "If the rockets had remained, we would have used them all and directed them against the very heart of the United States, including New York, in our defense against aggression." And a couple of years later, at the United Nations, he was true to form: “As Marxists we have maintained that peaceful coexistence among nations does not include coexistence between exploiters and the exploited.”

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Che failed miserable in the Congo and Bolivia, after being marginalized by Fidel Castro. Before, during and after the Castroit regime grab power in Cuba, he customarily violated the doctors Hippocratic Oath torturing and executing prisoners. An Argentinean, son of a well to do family and a favorite of his mother, start out a revolution in the Bolivia countryside without knowing that the Bolivian Indians spoke Quechua instead of Spanish. He and his men got lost, suffer starvation and at the end were track down by the Bolivian army, made prisoner and executed. For a guy that practically failed at everything, it is hard to understand how this loser became an icon of freedom.

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It happens that June 14 is U.S. “Flag Day”, which commemorates the adoption of the flag of the United States, which happened on that day in 1777 by resolution of the Second Continental Congress. The bastard that was borne that same day hoisted the red flag of the death's head and cross under it, the butcher of La Cabaña.

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Che only was able to beg for his life, he didn’t know to die like a man, like the 14 years old boy he killed at La Cabaña that said to him: “If you're going to kill me you're going to have to do it the way you kill a man, standing, not like a coward, kneeling.”

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When The FBI Tracked-Terror-Suspects—Literally!
http://townhall.com/columnists/humbertofontova/2013/05/10/when-the-fbi-tracked-terrorsuspectsliterally-n1592705

Humberto Fontova | May 10, 2013

Now that the media and political dust has settled regarding the Boston bombing investigation, a failure by our intelligence agencies to properly “track” the Tsarnaev brothers seems like an inescapable factor. So a reminder of how the FBI once handled these matters might be good for the soul:

"I’ve got Suero and Garcia in sight," reported Special Agent John Malone to Assistant FBI director Alan Belmont. "Can arrest them easily."

"Anything on Santiesteban?" asked Belmont, who sat just down the hall from J. Edgar Hoover.

"We have the area around the U.N. staked out but haven’t spotted him yet," answered Malone who ran the FBI’s New York field office.

"Then hold off," ordered a tense Belmont.

The date was November 17, 1962 and the FBI wanted a clean sweep of the three top plotters, all Cuban agents. The night before--relying on their bedrock tool of human intelligence: moles, snitches--they’d pieced together the plot puzzle. The resulting picture must have staggered the FBI men. These men had served at their posts during WWII and the height of the Cold War and seen plenty. But this?!

The Castro brothers’ and Che Guevara’s agents had targeted Macy’s, Gimbels, Bloomingdales, and Manhattan’s Grand Central Station with a dozen incendiary devices and 500 kilos of TNT. The Holocaust was set for detonation the following week, on the day after Thanksgiving.

Some perspective: for their March 2004 Madrid subway blasts, all 10 of them, that killed and maimed almost 2,000 people, al-Qaeda used a grand total of 100 kilos of TNT. Castro and Che’s agents planned to set off five times that explosive power in the three biggest department stores on earth, all packed to suffocation and pulsing with holiday cheer on the year’s biggest shopping day. Macy’s gets 50,000 shoppers that one day.

Thousands of New Yorkers, including women and children—actually, given the date and targets, probably mostly women and children—were to be incinerated and entombed.

The FBI agents and officers were haggard and red-eyed –but seriously wired. Like hawks on a perch they’d been watching the plot unfold, sweating bullets the whole time. It was nearing time to swoop down on Fidel Castro and Che Guevara’s agents, busy with a terror plot that would have made Bin Laden drool decades later.

Alan Belmont was second to J. Edgar Hoover at the time. Raymond Wannall headed the Bureau’s Intelligence Division. That nerve-jangling dawn both were in Belmont’s office just down the hall from Hoover’s communicating with John Malone and his New York field agents. These were busily "tracking" the plotters in Manhattan, keeping a touch-and-go, but more or less constant, surveillance on the ringleaders of the Castroite terror plot.

"Suero and Garcia getting skittish," reported a worried Malone to FBI headquarters after two more hours of his "tracking."

"Hold off" said Belmont. "We want Santiesteban too."

"We were sure happy we weren’t ones forced to make those decisions," recalled Raymond Wannall, who headed the FBI’s Intelligence divison and was in on the calls with Malone. "If we botched it, Mr. Hoover would not have been happy. We knew Al could feel Mr Hoover’s unseen pressure right over his shoulder that entire night and early morning."
"We’ve got Mr. Three (Santiesteban) in sight," blurted Malone an hour later. "He’s walking down Riverside drive, heading for a car with a diplomatic license plate."
"Grab ‘em all," ordered Belmont. "Round them up."

As the agents closed in, Santiesteban looked over, and –took off, jamming paper in his mouth and chewing furiously as he ran. But six FBI agents were after him, all fleet of foot themselves. Finally they closed the ring and "triangulated" the suspect. Santiesteban fell, raging and cursing, flailing his arms and jabbing his elbows like a maniac. They grabbed his arm and bent it behind his back just as he was reaching for his pistol.

While this group got their man (and a vigorous workout), another FBI squad had the much easier task of arresting a couple named Jose and Elsa Gomez-Abad as they left their apartment on West 71st Street. These two gave in without a struggle. The FBI speculated that as many as 30 others might have been in on the plot, but these were the head honchos. Had those detonators gone off, 9/11 might be remembered as the second deadliest terrorist attack on U.S. soil.

Santiesteban and the Gomezes belonged to the Castro-Cuban Mission to the U.N., and plead "diplomatic immunity." Other plotters belonged to the New York Chapter of the Fair Play for Cuba Committee, an outfit that became MUCH better known a year later on that very week, when member Lee Harvey Oswald made some headlines.

"We greeted each other as old friends!" (Jimmy Carter describing his visit with Fidel two years ago.)

While offering ultra-juicy plot lines and fully-developed heroes and villains, these latter consist--gulp! -- of the Left’s premier pin-up boys. So needless to add, Hollywood and the MSM haven’t touched this terror plot with a ten-foot pole. Glenn Beck TV, on the other hand, recently produced a dynamite special on this plot to murder thousands of American shoppers.
Frightening what the Castro-Che regime had in storage for the American people. Thanks to the FBI under the leadership of J. Edgar Hoover, the agents were able to stopped this bomb plot protecting the New Yorkers from a holocaust bigger that 9/11.

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During the Clinton Administration, the CIA ability to recruit & protect agents & informants within terrorist organizations, were severely limited. This made the US intelligence services more dependent on electronic snooping, and less able to protect the American people.

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Che hatred against the United States was so deep, that he did not give a damn that such action sealed the annihilation of many innocent New Yorkers, including children and women.

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Castro I and the butcher of La Cabaña in action, a cold-blooded killing machine reminiscent of Lavrenti Beria.

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Che Guevara was no hero, he was a racist

Joseph Hammond

“The black is indolent and a dreamer; spending his meager wage on frivolity or drink" - Do these sound like the words of a left-wing hero?

http://www.thecommentator.com/system/articles/inner_pictures/000/003/657/commentary_thumb/NY-AS310_LIVE1_G_20110110183327.jpg?1369899053

When Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., chastised celebrity couple Jay-Z and Beyonce in a TV interview for their recent trip to Cuba, he especially criticized Jay-Z for his adoration of Che Guevara.

“I think Jay-Z needs to get informed,” Rubio said. “One of his heroes is Che Guevara. Che Guevara was a racist. Che Guevara was a racist that wrote extensively about the superiority of white Europeans over people of African descent, so he should inform himself [about] the guy that he’s propping up.”

Jay-Z, Carlos Santana, and Johnny Depp — who have all been spotted in Guevara t-shirts in the last decade — have, as Rubio correctly noted, largely ignored the issue. Yet, some leftist defenders of Guevara do occasionally deal with Guevara's views on race. A blogger named Faraji Toure at “Afro-Punk” notes a troubling passage from Guevara’s 1952 diary:

“The blacks, those magnificent examples of the African race who have maintained their racial purity thanks to their lack of an affinity with bathing, have seen their territory invaded by a new kind of slave: the Portuguese.”

“The black is indolent and a dreamer; spending his meager wage on frivolity or drink; the European has a tradition of work and saving, which has pursued him as far as this corner of America and drives him to advance himself, even independently of his own individual aspirations.”

Toure is quick to defend Guevara, noting that he was then only 24 and that this was his first experience with the African diaspora. But this is an unlikely excuse. Jon Lee Anderson, who recounts the incident in his oft-cited biography, Che Guevara: A Revolutionary Life, notes that Che had already visited Trinidad and Brazil prior to making this statement. Indeed it is quite likely that Che in his travels had already encountered scores of Latin Americans of African heritage in Colombia and Bolivia.
The other argument often made in defense of Che is that he wrote such racist language before his participation in the Cuban Revolution and that he subsequently condemned racism. Guevara did just that in a number of post-revolutionary speeches after overthrowing Cuban leader Fulgencio Batista.

Jeanette Alcon, whose grandfather was a member of the unit that eventually captured Che Guevara in Bolivia, offered this rather balanced view of Guevara’s racial history:

“Che Guevara was a doctor that helped villages cope with leprosy before the revolution,” Alcon explained. “A lot of the villages had indigenous people living in them. I don’t think he was racist per se, but then again I don’t think he cared much for the Bolivian people. Communism needed to spread and Bolivia was seen as ripe for communist revolution.”

Che’s views on racism smack of similar political opportunism. When it was useful to abandon his previous racial views to fight in the Cuban revolution, he readily did so. When it was convenient to use racial stereotypes to cover-up the deficiencies of his fellow Cubans he didn't hesitate.

In fact, an increasing number of modern leftists and anarchists are waking up to the fact that Che was not a 'revolutionary hero', but just one of a long line of communist murderers of the 20th century.

Che should be remembered for the political terror he was involved in and publicly defended on a number of occasions. This was a man who was a defender of the North Korean regime and who deeply mourned the death of Joseph Stalin.

Even sympathetic biographers, such as John Anderson, concede that Che oversaw many executions at Cuba’s notorious La Cabaña prison following the 1959 revolution. Though the exact number of killed is unclear, thousands were killed in Cuba’s post-revolutionary purge and forced labor camps. There is even some evidence that Guevara personally carried out some of the murders associated with the revolutionary period.
And, as the Huffington Post points out, Guevara hoped the Soviets would launch nuclear attacks on American cities, for some reason confident that the communists would win a nuclear war that would have killed millions.

Perhaps the best reason for condemnation of Guevara then isn’t the racist statements buried away in his diaries but in fact the very visible blood on his hands.

Joseph Hammond is a former Cairo correspondent with Radio Free Europe and former editor for a publication focused on the energy sector.
Che frequently delighted in belittling blacks. "The black is indolent and a dreamer; spending his meager wage on frivolity or drink; the European has a tradition of work and saving," that's Che himself in his celebrated Motorcycle Diaries. Can't imagine how Robert Redford left that out of his charming movie.

From Che’s diaries during his stay in Costa Rica in 1953: “I stayed outside with a young black woman that I picked up, Socorro, more whore that the hens, with 16 years on her back.” Here he shows his racial bias towards black women and his latent social resentment is made evident once more time.

Che didn't think much of Mexicans either, look at what he said about them according to “el Coreano”, Che’s comrade in Mexico: “Miguel Sanchez, el "Coreano", responsible of the military instruction of Castro’s Granma expeditionary force in Mexico in 1956. El Coreano affirmed that “Che always had problems with the blacks and despised them just like the Indians of Mexico", to which he referred as “the illiterate Indians of Mexico.” Che shows his racist face again.

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This is an excerpt from an interview of radio host Luis Pons by Fontova: “During a 1959 press conference Luis Pons, a prominent Cuban black, asked Che Guevara, what the revolution planed on doing to help blacks. Che answered: “We’re going to do for blacks exactly what blacks did for the revolution. By which I mean: nothing.”

This is from 1965 during the war in the Congo from Bert Corzo article “Che Guevara: The Fish Die by the Mouth”:“Again and again he pointed to a lack of leadership amongst the Africans, the incompetence of the Congolese fighters and a terrible disorganization. Che’s assessments make him look like a racist.”

In reference to the Bolivian peasants, Che wrote in his Diary in Bolivia on June 19, 1967 “the inhabitants one must hunt them to be able to speak with them because they are like little animals.” Wonder if Evo Morales has read them? He's too busy ribbon-cutting Che monuments in Bolivian villages.

The justification that Che was young and immature doesn’t cut it anymore. As we can see from his behavior, he was a racist person through and through all his life.

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The rapper Jay-Z really dig Che. In his Black Album the track "Public Service Announcement" contains the line "I'm like Che Guevara with bling on”. He could care less about the real Che Guevara, the killing machine. All he care about is his celebrity and making tons of money. What can you expect from a guy for whom Che becomes a hero whose image is pasted on his t-shirt without recognition of his monstrous deeds, a racist. The Cuban rapper Remon Yunier nickname “El Critico (The Critic)” was throng in jailed in March 2013 for his rap lyrics of protest against the Castroit regime, the same thing that Jay-Z does in his rap lyrics.

In May 2013 when Jav-Z vacation in Cuba with Beyonse celebrating their wedding anniversary, he did no inquired or say anything about El Critico, which at this moment is hospitalized in intensive care due to a hunger strike he started in protest of his unjust incarceration. Do you think that Jay-Z, and outspoken guy, would ask the Castroit regime to free a fellow rapper dying in prison for doing what he does in the U.S.? The die is cast.

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