<<Whatever Castro is, you are doing a bang up job of posting pro-Cuba nationalistic propaganda. >>
Thanks. I love Castro, I love Cuba and I love the Cuban people.
<<The only thing missing is you standing in front of a giant flag of Cuba.>>
I'd be honoured but I wouldn't deserve it. Castro and his companeros risked death and torture for the Revolution and too many of them paid the full price. They are the ones who deserve the honour.
<<Castro did not rescue Cuba from fascism. And considering the poverty that by many reports seems still rampant there today, I'm pretty sure he didn't rescue Cuba from poverty either. >>
I've been there twice. I've ridden horseback in the mountains and talked to peasants who lived in farmhouses with dirt floors. Met purely by chance, not Potemkin villages. Their kids are educated. Their health is looked after by mobile nursing teams riding on circuit by horse and mule. They own their land. The workers in my hotel owned their hotel. I don't know what is this "poverty" bullshit people are talking about. It's far from a rich country, the shower runs out of water, the hotel food was monotonous, the country stores have nothing on the shelves (or didn't when I was there) but I've seen how people live in St. Lucia and in Mexico, and my son's told me about Peru and Bolivia. The Cubans seem way better off than the people of Mexico or St. Lucia and way better off than what my son tells me about Peru and Bolivia.
<<And the bit about "the only people who lost their freedom of speech" is nonsense. If they don't all have it, particularly in the case of people being incarcerated for criticizing the Cuban government, then none them have it.>>
Get over it. They don't have it and they won't have it. The Revolution is under attack and its greatest strength is the unity of the people. It is NOT going to be undermined for the sake of a few lousy gusanos.
<<The really worrying thing in your rhetoric is how vehemently you place "the Revolution" ahead of people. Yes, I know, "the Revolution" is for "the People", but obviously "the People" is only some people. All others are "the Enemies of the People".>>
What part of that do you find so objectionable? The Revolution is for the People. You are either for the Revolution or you are against the People. To be against the People is to be an enemy of the People. What is your problem?