Marxism
mailing list archive
[ Other Periods
| Other mailing lists
| Search
]
Date:
[ Previous
| Next
]
Thread:
[ Previous
| Next
]
Index:
[ Author
| Date
| Thread
]
[Marxism] A Cuban view of Barack Obama
From Newsday:
http://www.newsday.com/news/opinion/ny-oppay23i5738992jun23,0,4978655,print.column
A Cuban view of Barack Obama
Les Payne
June 23, 2008
HAVANA
The Cuban at the bar of the old Hotel Nacional didn't know golf, but like all
Havana he was rooting for Tiger Woods. Woods' winning putt at the U.S. Open
moved the young comrade to high-five his newfound American friends sipping
"Hemingways" at the landmark Mafia club.
Back when the PGA was barring nonwhites from the tour, the stately Nacional
wouldn't book a room to the likes of Josephine Baker and Nat King Cole. A bust
of the black Cole adorns the lobby, and the museum walls are alive with
portraits of white celebrity guests such as Frank Sinatra, mobster Meyer Lansky
and even Barbara Walters, whose father owned the Latin Quarter nightclubs.
Cubans here boast their '59 revolution swept away the Mafia and reversed the
pernicious race policies of the era of American dominance. In toppling the
regime of President Fulgencio Batista, Fidel Castro noisily ushered in the
Marxist new Cuba under the vengeful, Cold War eye of the United States. Gone is
the heavy American influence, save for the quaint pre-1960s Chevrolets,
Studebakers, Buicks and Cadillacs. These gas guzzlers plying the bustling
streets attest to the resilient Cuban ingenuity. And, ironically, they
symbolize
nearly 50 years of the U.S. embargo against this island nation of 11.2 million
residents.
Just as the bilingual CNN stations kept Cubans abreast of the U.S. Open, the
media have fueled a frenzied tracking of the 2008 U.S. presidential campaign.
"To us it's a matter of life and death," said Arnaldo Coro Antich, commentator
for Radio Havana. "We follow the elections every four years; the midterms also.
The people here have formed their opinions about the candidates. I think it is
very, very easy to have an opinion about John McCain," the journalist said,
suggesting a dry hole of support. "I do think Obama is a challenge. He's sort
of
a question mark."
Opinions varied among the dozen local journalists at the Havana Press
Association. Running back decades, Juan Jacomino, of ESTI Prensa, said the high
hopes Cubans held out for John F. Kennedy were dashed dramatically when the
president staged the Bay of Pigs invasion. President Bill Clinton also raised
expectations, he said, but, yielding to pressure from anti-Castro Cubans in
Miami, did nothing to relieve sanctions. The newspaperman expressed no hope
U.S.-Cuban relations would be eased by Obama, or any other U.S. president.
The youth on the streets on this shabby yet splendid capital city voice a more
gleeful optimism. "If Obama is elected," said Humberto Balon, 29, "things will
change for Cuba. Trade [with the U.S.] will open up; relations will improve."
Other than intuition about Obama's "historic" run, however, the young, black
Cuban offered no reason for his "high expectation," which he said all of his
friends share.
Government movers and the intelligentsia take a more measured view of the U.S.
campaign. Josephina Vidal of the Cuban Foreign Ministry bristles at current
U.S.
policy that sets as condition for the normalization of relations, that Cuba
"fundamentally change its political and economic systems. ... That's a
non-starter."
Obama, of course, has wiggled on the hook baited by his alleged willingness to
talk with U.S.-declared pariah states without preconditions. Ambassador Vidal
speaks kindly of Obama's "historic run," but puts none of her "normalization"
eggs in his basket. "We have to watch and see." Meanwhile, she cites a double
standard in the strong U.S. relations with nondemocratic states with poor human
rights records such as Saudi Arabia, "where women have no rights."
Retired President Castro recently offered a guarded assessment of Obama so as
not to damage his chances. Accordingly, government officials here shy away from
voicing overt optimism about the African-American candidate other than to say
his campaign is "historic." Black Cubans, however, openly embrace the first
African-American nominee but are concerned that racism will lead white
Americans
to reject Obama in November - or worse.
Obama's candidacy suggests that the "U.S. paradigm of racism has started to
weaken," said Digna Castaneda, the first black professor appointed, in 1965, to
the University of Havana. "We have concerns about the possibility of
assassination," said the historian, "because we have seen examples of this in
America. The [campaign] will be very tough; some people will spare no effort in
seeking to assassinate Obama. That is a problem to be solved by the American
people."
Copyright © 2008, Newsday Inc.
_________________________________________________________________
The other season of giving begins 6/24/08. Check out the i’m Talkathon.
http://www.imtalkathon.com?source=TXT_EML_WLH_SeasonOfGiving
________________________________________________
YOU MUST clip all extraneous text when replying to a message.
Send list submissions to: Marxism@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Set your options at:
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/options/marxism/archive%40archives.econ.utah.edu
- Thread context:
- Re: [Marxism] Marxism Digest, Vol 56, Issue 69, (continued)
- [Marxism] FWD: Two lost battles this week: Spertus Museum and Pluto Press from Tracking efforts to stifle open debate about US-Israeli foreign policy.,
dbachmozart Mon 23 Jun 2008, 18:05 GMT
- Re: [Marxism] Walter's charge of violence-baiting,
Derrick O'Keefe Mon 23 Jun 2008, 16:54 GMT
- [Marxism] New at Climate and Capitalism, June 15-23,
Ian Angus Mon 23 Jun 2008, 15:39 GMT
- [Marxism] A Cuban view of Barack Obama,
Eli Stephens Mon 23 Jun 2008, 15:31 GMT
- [Marxism] New issue of Variant,
Louis Proyect Mon 23 Jun 2008, 14:57 GMT
- [Marxism] George Carlin giving 'em hell (some clips)....,
Barney D. Mon 23 Jun 2008, 14:00 GMT
- [Marxism] Bolivia's vice-president on the course of revolution,
Andrew Pollack Mon 23 Jun 2008, 13:48 GMT
[ Other Periods
| Other mailing lists
| Search
]