Washington Post: Say, This Castro Guy Was Pretty Darned Brutal And Bad For Cubans

One can usually rely on the Editorial Board of the Washington Post to be very much in sync with the pulse of the Progressive (nice fascist) left, which makes this editorial piece notable. While so many Progressives are extolling the virtue of Fidel Castro, such as Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Green Party candidate Jill Stein, UN General Secretary Ban Ki-moon, US Secretary of State John Kerry, among others, Donald Trump slammed the guy as the brutal dictator he was, as did Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz, among others, and want you to remember the victims of Castro, which is a similar stance from the WPEB

Fidel Castro’s terrible legacy

IN CONTRAST to his long life of violence, both verbal and physical,Fidel Castro’s demise at 90 was, apparently, peaceful. Cuba’s communist dictator from 1959 until illness obliged him to hand control to his brother Raúl in 2006, Mr. Castro did not so much die as fade away. It was an unlikely conclusion to a turbulent career that Mr. Castro’s many enemies, including successive U.S. administrations, might gladly have ended more abruptly many years ago.

Mr. Castro’s legacy is a 57-year-old “revolution” that once punched above its weight in world affairs, especially in Latin America, but in more recent years became a decrepit museum piece of Soviet-style totalitarianism. Over Fidel’s objections, Raúl Castro has tried to adapt and preserve the regime, including through an opening to the United States. Too eagerly reciprocated by President Obama, that initiative has brought in more U.S. dollars and tourists but no relief from stifling and frequently violent repression of speech, assembly and other basic human rights.

The WPEB isn’t too impressed by the Left glamming on Castro’s literacy and health care initiatives

For those “achievements,” however, the Cuban people paid a terrible price — far higher than they could have expected when Mr. Castro roared into Havana, promising to restore political freedoms lost under the U.S.-backed dictatorship that he ousted. Though counterproductive to his ostensibly humane social policies, Mr. Castro’s political repression reached an extreme that would have made his predecessor, Fulgencio Batista, blush.

Remember, this is a guy so many Progressives revere, along with Che, Stalin, and Mao.

It began with mass summary executions of Batista officials and soon progressed to internment of thousands of gay men and lesbians; systematic, block-by-block surveillance of the entire citizenry; repeated purges, complete with show trials and executions, of the ruling party; and punishment for dissident artists, writers and journalists. Mr. Castro’s regime learned from the totalitarian patron he chose to offset the U.S. adversary — the Soviet Union, whose offensive nuclear missiles he welcomed, bringing the world to the brink of armageddon. Mr. Castro sponsored violent subversive movements in half a dozen Latin American countries and even in his dotage helped steer Venezuela to economic and political catastrophe through his patronage of Hugo Chávez.

This is the real person the political left dotes on. Good for the WPEB in correctly identifying Castro, and what the extreme version of Progressivism brings to the table.

(Picture from Freaking News)

Crossed at Right Wing News.

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6 Responses to “Washington Post: Say, This Castro Guy Was Pretty Darned Brutal And Bad For Cubans”

  1. Jeffery says:

    Good riddance. Another brutal dictator bites the dust. Castro nearly destroyed a nation, a culture, a people – a brought the world to the brink of nuclear Armageddon.

    Castro was much worse than the US backed, US corporation-backed and US mob backed dictator, Batista, who fled Cuba in 1958 after the US withdrew support, paving the way for Castro. Batista took $300,000,000 of drug, gambling and prostitution money with him.

  2. Rev.Hoagie® says:

    Seems the fascist Batista was a piker compared to the commie Fidel. Forbes guesstimated Castro’s net worth at 900,000,000 but many sources laugh and claim it’s more like 2-3 billion. Raul supposed to be 1-200,000,000. In Cuba the 1% is only three people.

    A member of my Club is from the UK and his family does business in Cuba. He tells me not to believe the romantic bullshit the American press spouts about how everybody can read and get great healthcare. Both healthcare and education are given by the state to those chosen and no others. The state also decides what your job and station in life will be, no exceptions, no “upward mobility”, no changing careers and no retirement. Everybody has the same retirement plan: work until you die. If any member of your family fled Cuba you will be denied medicine, health services and you will be rationed food, electricity and live in state housing which you will work to pay for.

  3. drowningpuppies says:

    Yep. “Worker’s Paradise” indeed.

    Healthcare second to none except maybe North Korea.

  4. Jeffery says:

    The only good dictator is a dead dictator.

  5. The only good dictator is a dead dictator.

    On that we can agree.

    I have to ask, though, Jeff, why do so many on the Left support so many dictators, such as Castro, Chavez, Stalin, Mao, and they even took the side of Saddam.

  6. Dana says:

    I’m not sure how anyone can calculate the wealth of an absolute dictator; whatever he wants, he gets, and it isn’t by spending money. Fidel Castro’s real wealth was the entire value of the island of Cuba; now Raúl Castro has that wealth.

    It won’t be too much longer before the 85½ year old Raúl goes to his eternal reward. It’s possible that, once the revolutionary generation passes, the island will become more politically free, but that’s a wait-and-see thing. Stronger economic ties between the US and Cuba might — not necessarily will — move the nation more toward capitalism, and capitalism means freedom.

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