Thursday, October 19, 2023

 To my friends who have been following me on the "Progressive Pulse" blog,

For a number of reasons, I have decided to permanently move my posts to a Substack account. For a time, I had tried to maintain this blog and the Substack by posting the same articles in both, but it became clear that, with much greater traffic on Substack, it made sense, because of my limited time, to focus on Substack.

Please check out my posts on Substack at  https://georgevlasits.substack.com/ and , if you like what you see, you can subscribe for free. Hopefully you will find it of greater value than the cost.

George Vlasits 

Saturday, July 22, 2023

Bits and Pieces – July 22, 2023 - "American Sniper"

After a short hiatus, I’m hoping to get back to posting on a regular basis. To start I’m going to put together short commentaries on what’s in the news, and, more importantly what’s not in the main stream media, while I work on longer analytic posts.

Today’s edition follows.

A while back I wrote a piece on gun control titled “It’s Not the Guns, It’s Us. The gist of the post was that the US is and has always been a violent society, from the original settlers’ genocide of native people, through slavery, and right down to our culture today. (I’ve reposted it below, for those who missed it the first time around.)

So I was not at all surprised to read about this in “War Made Invisible” by Norman Solomon. The top grossing movie in 2014 was American Sniper, which according to the NYT, was “one of the 10 most influential films of the decade”. “One of the key themes of American Sniper is the strong culture of machismo—the masculine-oriented aggressiveness, competitiveness, and glamorization of danger—found in the U.S. military”.

Reflect for a moment on how that film might have affected a teenage boy (note that we are always talking about male perpetrators when shootings take place) who, as an adult ten or twelve years later, has access to a weapon which could replicate the “heroic” actions of the movie character. Killing “bad guys” is, to paraphrase H. Rap Brown, as American as cherry pie. Who gets to determine who the “bad guys” are? Why not me?


January 27, 2023 – It’s Not the Guns, It’s Us

Like many of my fellow Americans, when I woke up Tuesday morning to the reports of another horrific mass murder in California, there was little emotional response, no feeling that “we’ve got to do something, anything, to stop this slaughter.” I, like too many others, have become desensitized, numbed by what has become an all-too-common event.

“We’re still trying to understand exactly what happened and why, but it’s just incredibly, incredibly tragic,” said state Sen. Josh Becker, who represents the area. Tragic yes; unexpected, no.

By the next day the political response was focusing, as it always does after these tragedies, on gun control. But wait a minute, doesn’t California, which has seen 3 mass shootings in the last week or so, have a mandatory waiting period for the purchase of firearms? Doesn’t the state ban assault rifles? Didn’t the legislature adopt a “red flag” law that allows guns to be seized from people believed to be a threat to themselves or others? And haven’t California voters overwhelmingly approved limiting the number of bullets allowed in a gun’s magazine? And yet …

Don’t get me wrong. I’m totally in favor of gun control. In my perfect world, we wouldn’t even allow guns for hunting. At least against a hunter with a bow and arrow, the deer would have a chance. But we don’t live in that perfect world. We live in the United States of America, where violence is accepted as the solution to all problems, in many cases the only solution. It’s a fact, as H Rap Brown quipped, that “violence is as American as cherry pie”.

Think about it. The country was settled by violence, as the English immigrants did all they could to exterminate the native peoples and expropriate their land, rounding up the few that weren’t killed and forcing them onto reservations (later making movies about how the savages were killed by the heroic cavalry coming to the rescue of peaceful white farmers).

The US grew into a powerful industrial society by forcefully enslaving millions of Africans and exploiting their labor. What is more violent than slavery? And, country expanded its borders by waging war against its neighbor to the south, referring to Manifest Destiny as its justification. It’s okay to kill when God’s on your side.

American society has glorified war during its entire history. Many of its early leaders where military heroes; its national anthem is about a war – “and the rockets red glare, the bombs bursting in air…” The statutes of its heroes, more often than not, are of generals (until recently even Confederate generals, who were traitors to the Union).

Although it managed to avoid having a large standing army until just after WW II (due in large part to very weak neighbors and two oceans), it relied on a growing internal force to “keep the peace” domestically by applying the violence of the state to protect the interests of the wealthy. And, since WW II, it has maintained the world’s largest military, with a budget greater than combined total of the next 11 largest military budgets in the world.

Today, the US government spends the American people’s hard-earned money to extend Its military reach to every corner of the world so that it can take out (the nice way to say kill) those forces (that is, human beings) it deems the enemy almost anywhere (along with an occasional wedding party), while at the same time condemning other countries that have used force just outside their borders claiming it is necessary to guarantee their national security.

Our “civilization” continues to glorify war and gratuitous violence. Its media is filled to the brim with violence, celebrating death and destruction in too many ways to even count. Go to the movies, watch TV, play video games, etc., it’s all the same. And it’s been that way all of my 80 years on this planet, although it seems to be even more pervasive today than it was when I was a kid.

Our society’s response to problems and conflicts, both home and abroad is violence. Even when dealing with social problems in a supposedly non-violent way, we use violent terms, an example being the War on Poverty. Is it any wonder that ordinary Americans, particularly in time of personal crises see violence, even random violence, as the normal response.

To “protect” our citizens at home we have a militarized police force, generously funded with resources, not to help people, but to kill them (or, in a gentler form of violence, to lock them in cages). And kill people they do. The year 2022 was the deadliest year on record in the United States for fatalities at the hands of law enforcement. According to the Washington Post’s police shootings database law enforcement officers shot and killed 1,096 people last year. As I write, the news is filled with reports of another murder by the people who are supposed to protect us.  These generously fund police departments are actually occupying armies, using their resources to keep people in line, especially poor people of color whose needs are not being funded.

Case and point. While there is no end to funding for more police and more weapons, universal healthcare can wait (forever?). The governor of California reported that, while visiting a man in the hospital, whose leg had been shattered by the gunfire during the latest mass shooting, he was informed that the victim was hoping to leave quickly to avoid high medical bills. The patient’s mother and son arrived later and told Gov. Newsom they were "worried he's going to lose his job at a warehouse the next day unless he can go back to work."

So there we have it. As our country and the world face the interrelated crises of global warming, runaway inequality, the COVID pandemic (and who knows how many more are waiting in the wings), a real threat of escalation to nuclear war, and the attacks from the extreme right on democracy, instead of devoting the resources needed to provide for the people of our country and our larger community, the world, we are pumping just under $1,000,000,000,000 (that’s one trillion) into the military and billions more into the police.

Until we can begin to deal with the violence that permeates our society, gun control will have only minor effects on the murder rates (both mass and individual) in the US. The glorification of violence and guns in the US has resulted firearms becoming the #1 cause of death among children 1-19 years of age. One more aspect of the policrisis we face.

 

Friday, July 7, 2023

Sanders on global warming and the climate crises

 

I've been beset by a number of personal issues lately and unable to work on blog articles. Hope to get back soon. In place of my rants, I've copied a stirring op/ed piece on the climate crisis by one of our heroes, Senator Bernie Sanders. This crisis is not something coming down the road, but one that is here for hundreds of millions of our fellow human beings. And it is intimately connected to other crises affecting us all, from a huge and growing crisis of migrants clamoring to escape its effects to feeding the extreme rightwing (or should I say fascist) movements in their attack on democratic values. Everything, as it turns out, is connected, so I think it's accurate to talk about the climate crises, or as one of my favorite writers, Adam Tooze, posits, the climate polycrisis.


This year is set to be the hottest in history. Congress must act now.
If there is not bold, immediate action to address the climate crisis, the quality of life that we are leaving our kids is very much in question

Bernie Sanders
Fri 7 July 2023

The last eight years have been the eight hottest on record. This year is on track to be the hottest year in recorded history, and this Fourth of July might have been the hottest day in the past 125,000 years.

Climate change is ravaging the planet. We are now seeing floods, droughts, extreme weather disturbances and wild fires causing unprecedented damage. If there is not bold, immediate and united action by governments throughout the world, the quality of life that we are leaving our kids and future generations is very much in question.

In the short term, we will be looking at more melting of the Arctic ice caps, rising sea levels and increased flooding. We will experience more drought and a decrease in food production. We will see major damage caused by intense storms, tornadoes and other extreme weather disturbances. We will see a decline in economic activity and the migration of millions of people as a result of water shortages. We will see a major disruption in all forms of marine life as a result of warming sea water and the acidification of the oceans.

Over last few weeks we’ve gotten a glimpse of what this dystopian future could look like. The unprecedented forest fires in Quebec, preceded by massive fires in Nova Scotia, British Columbia and Alberta, have resulted in dangerously unhealthy air all across the United States. New York, Washington DC, Detroit, Chicago, Milwaukee and other cities have reported some of their worst air quality levels ever as people with chronic illness have been forced to remain indoors. Meanwhile, during this same period, Texas has experienced a record-breaking heat wave. In Corpus Christi the heat index, a measure of temperature combined with humidity, reached 125F – close to the level at which humans are able to survive.

As a result of long-standing drought six western states that rely on water from the Colorado River have recently agreed to dramatically cut their water use. That river, which provides water for 40 million people and a $5 trillion-a-year agricultural industry, is drying up. The state of Arizona recently restricted future home-building in the Phoenix area due to a lack of groundwater, based on projections showing that wells will run dry under existing conditions.

Needless to say, climate change is not just an American issue. Despite the frightening impact of climate change on the United States, highly populated Asian countries are facing even worse challenges. Sea levels on China’s coastline have hit their highest on record for the second year in a row, rising more quickly than the global average. China’s coastal areas are home to approximately 45% of the country’s population of about 1.4 billion people, and contribute to over half of the country’s economic output. Major cities like Shanghai, Tianjin and Shenzhen are all located along the Chinese coast and could face catastrophic flooding in years to come – creating havoc with the entire Chinese economy.

Last year, India experienced a searing heat wave, during which parts of the country reached more than 120F. In 2022, India experienced its hottest April in 122 years and its hottest March on record. It experienced extreme weather on 242 out of 273 days between January and October 2022. Long-term projections indicate that Indian heat waves could cross the survivability limit for a healthy human resting in the shade by 2050. The impact of these continued heat waves will not only result in more deaths and disease in India but will increase poverty as a result of reduced economic output.

From June to October 2022, heavy rainfall in Pakistan caused flooding and landslides at a rate nearly 10 times the national 30-year average. The floods affected nearly 33 million people, damaged 4.4 million acres of agricultural land and killed 800,000 livestock. In the aftermath, rising food prices exacerbated already stressed levels of hunger and malnutrition in the country. The number of people experiencing severe hunger has more than doubled since the floods hit in June: today, 14.6 million people are experiencing severe hunger in Pakistan and the malnutrition rates are dire.

Climate change is taking a major human, economic, and environmental toll in Europe, the fastest warming continent of the world. The year 2022 was marked by extreme heat, drought, and wildfires. Based on country data submitted so far, it is estimated that at least 15,000 people died in Western Europe alone specifically due to the heat in 2022. Among those, more than 4,600 deaths in Spain, more than 1,000 in Portugal, more than 3,200 in the United Kingdom, and around 4,500 people died in Germany as a result of extreme heat.

As devastating as climate change has been for the United States, Europe, China and other developed countries, its impact is even worse for the poorest countries on earth who lack the resources to protect their inhabitants from the growing hunger, disease and migrations that droughts and floods are causing. Here are a few examples as reported by the UN World Food Program:

South Sudan’s temperatures are increasing at two and half times the global average. This has resulted in extreme weather events including four consecutive years of flooding that have left half the country underwater. The unprecedented flooding has swallowed large swathes of the country while other parts are grappling with devastating drought. Today, some 64% of the country’s population (7.7 million people out of 12 million total) are experiencing severe hunger.

In February of 2022, Madagascar was hit with four tropical cyclones. These storms destroyed infrastructure, decimated rice crops and left over 270,000 people in urgent need of food. Today, nearly 2 million people in Madagascar are experiencing hunger and are in need of humanitarian assistance

In Somalia, there is no end in sight to the drought in that extremely poor country. Somalia has experienced five failed rainy seasons, drying up crops and killing livestock. This has resulted in 6.5 million people facing crisis levels of hunger.

It is no great secret that human beings are not particularly anxious to address painful realities – especially when it requires taking on powerful special interests like the fossil fuel industry. This time we must.

Our Earth is warming rapidly. We see this every day in every part of the world.

Drought, floods, forest fires and extreme weather disturbances are increasing. We see this every day in every part of the world.

Hunger, disease and human migrations are increasing. We see this every day in every part of the world.

Instead of denying this obvious reality, instead of doing the bidding of oil and coal companies, instead of fomenting a new cold war with China, members of Congress must develop an unprecedented sense of urgency about this global crisis. We must bring the world together NOW to address this existential threat. Failure to act will doom future generations to a very uncertain future. For the sake of our common humanity we cannot allow that to happen.

Monday, June 26, 2023

What the "Tale of Two Disasters" reveals about Western "Civilization"

The two maritime tragedies in recent days could barely be more different. Likewise the response of governments in the Global North and the coverage in the main stream media.

In the first case, it was poor migrants from the Global South…

“Last Wednesday, a fishing trawler carrying more than 700 migrants primarily from Egypt, Syria and Pakistan went down off the coast of Greece, in one of the worst such disasters in more than a decade. Though the death toll is officially at 81, Greek authorities have only counted 104 survivors. Their testimony suggests all the women and children aboard perished. By some estimates, more than 300 Pakistani nationals on the boat died, with one account alleging many were forced to stay below deck in the hold as the ship capsized and sank.

……

“Pakistan is in the middle of a devastating economic crisis, with the rate of inflation at a 50-year high, food shortages, energy blackouts and mounting unemployment. The conditions have compelled numerous people, especially among the poor, to seek a better life abroad.

“The desperate situation has led to the mushrooming growth of people smugglers in Pakistan,” wrote Zahid Shahab Ahmed, a senior research fellow at the Alfred Deakin Institute for Citizenship and Globalization in Australia. “In exchange for large sums of money, they offer people transportation, fake documentation and other resources for a swift departure from the country.”

“Shocking as it is, this disaster in the Mediterranean is all too familiar to a global public largely numb to the plight of those making the perilous crossing. The migrants fell victim to a familiar chain of misfortunes: They were exploited by people-smuggling networks that stretched from their countries of origin to the coast of Libya. With the threat of violence, they were forced onto an overcrowded, unseaworthy, ill-equipped boat. The ship that took them to their deaths was stranded for days on its intended journey to Italy without help, despite apparent distress calls made by the migrants. And they endured this all in a desperate attempt to find asylum on a continent whose governments have failed to come up with a collective plan on migration and where many locals would rather push them back into the sea.”

On the other end of the economic spectrum…

“Far away in the North Atlantic, a cinematic ordeal is playing out that has news media and the global public riveted. Somewhere near the famous wreck of the Titanic, a deep-sea submersible is missing. At the time of writing, the search for the 21-foot craft, known as the Titan, was entering its fourth day after it lost contact with Canadian research vessel Polar Prince on Sunday morning. The U.S. Coast Guard and Royal Canadian Air Force had scrambled to locate the submersible over a vast 10,000-square mile search zone in the ocean, which reaches 13,000 feet deep in some areas.

The Titan was carrying out a dive organized by OceanGate Expeditions, a private research and tourism company that has conducted trips to the Titanic wreck site. Its passengers reportedly pay $250,000 a head to go on the journey. Though the names of those on board had not been released by authorities, reporting confirmed that British businessman and explorer Hamish Harding, French diver Paul-Henri Nargeolet and OceanGate CEO Stockton Rush were inside the Titan. So too were Shahzada Dawood, heir to one of Pakistan’s biggest private fortunes, and his teenage son Suleman.

Over 27,000 migrants have gone missing and are presumed dead in the Mediterranean since 2014. In general, no US or NATO aircraft or naval vessels scramble to locate and rescue the migrants before their ships go down and even after the tragedy unfolds, “search and rescue” efforts don’t begin to match the efforts made for the 5 who we now know died on the Titan. The mainstream media doesn’t follow the tragedies which take the lives of the poor, again and again. They are expendable, or worse, undesirable.

Both events are terrible tragedies but of very different magnitudes, The response says a lot about our society and those of our allies and friends in Europe. And this is not alone in laying bare the underlying racism and class bias of Western nations and media.

For another excellent analysis of this "Tale of Two Disasters” from the American Prospect, check out  https://prospect.org/blogs-and-newsletters/tap/2023-06-23-tale-of-two-disasters/

 

 

Saturday, June 24, 2023

A better world is possible, but only If we keep our eyes on the prize

 As many of my readers know, I am an activist member of the Democratic Socialist of America here in Wilmington, NC. I was unable to attend the recent "How We Win" conference sponsored by the DSA, The Nation, and Jacobin, but was particularly impressed by the following summation by Michael Kazin, which I am posting in its entirety. 

The article (and the underlying position of most of the DSA as far as I can see) follows the same conceptual framework as the modern abolitionist movement; what we, as socialists, are doing is building a movement towards a socialist horizon. We have, and must always maintain, a vision of what a better world will look like, and insist that what we support in our struggle today must be consistent with building toward that vision. 

Having recently returned from a delegation to Cuba, it is clear to me that the leadership of their revolutionary government has that vision; I could see it in everything we learned about while we were there. That is why we, who live in the "belly of the beast", must support the Cuban people and work to end the US blockade.

This vision is what Marx and Engels talked about in the Communist Manifesto 175 years ago, when they wrote that our task is to "represent the movement of the future in the movement of the present". We must understand that while we fight for ourselves and our class today, we are laying the ground work for the struggles of our children and our children's children for a better world. In the words of the FRELIMO, the Mozambique Liberation Movement, A luta continua, vitória é certa.


The Socialist Emergence Inside the Democratic Tradition by Michael Kazin, from the American Prospect, June 21, 2023

“Labels get in the way sometime,” remarked Dylan Wegela, a first-term state representative from Michigan. The teacher and former labor organizer was responding to a question about whether his belief in democratic socialism prevents him from reaching voters in his largely white, working-class district in the suburbs west of Detroit. “I never deny I’m a socialist,” he continued, “but my community doesn’t know what it means. They do like things socialists want, though, like Medicare for All and affordable housing.”

The occasion for these reflections was “How We Win”—a conference sponsored by the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) Fund, The Nation, and Jacobin—held last weekend at Gallaudet University in Washington, D.C. The 50 or so politicians in attendance occupy elective offices in mostly blue cities and districts all over the nation. They include state senators from Brooklyn and Philadelphia, council members from Knoxville and Pittsburgh, an alderman from Chicago, the mayor of Burbank, California, and a theater director who sits on the board of education in the Riverhead School District on the east end of Long Island. It was a decidedly young crowd. I saw not a single pol with even a trace of gray or white hair, unless one includes Bernie Sanders, who briefly addressed the group via Zoom.

At times, the working conference rocked like a celebration. “This is the largest gathering of socialist elected officials in decades,” exulted Maria Svart, executive director of the DSA Fund. Happy shouts and a stamping of feet followed her statement and other speakers who echoed it. Since Sanders ran for president seven years ago, DSA has boomed to close to 100,000 members; voters have chosen more than 150 socialists to govern them at levels from the House of Representatives to that school board in Long Island. Indeed, not since the heyday of the old Socialist Party of America, more than a century ago, have there been so many victorious politicians who sport the “S-word” on their bios.

Yet, Wegela and his fellow officials devote most of their time to advocating for winnable reforms in the only system we have, not planning how to hurl the rotten machinery of capitalism into the recycling bin of history. Svart claims they all share the goal of learning “how to shift power from the owning class to the working class.” But every panel I attended discussed such practical goals as how to build and support labor unions, reduce the fear of crime, persuade Latinos to spurn right-wing candidates, and stop cities from financing lavish sports arenas. Every official who attended, I believe, had run as either a Democrat or in a nonpartisan contest. I heard no one mention launching a radical third party or backing any of the marginal ones that exist and are running self-described democratic socialist candidates for president next year. During the conference, “socialist” got mentioned almost exclusively as a term of self-identification rather than as the goal toward which all were striving.

The current surge of elected DSA members, while modest, would not have occurred unless socialists ran as Democrats.

The ideological ancestors to this new generation of socialist elected officials defined themselves and their work rather differently. The nearly 1,000 American socialists who got elected to office in the early 20th century ran as the nominees of a party of that name, which proudly belonged to an international socialist movement that was much larger in Western and Central Europe and was growing all over the industrial world. Like their 21st-century comrades, they tried to deliver on the promise of a government that would curb the powers of corporations and the rich and serve the interests of ordinary people. The so-called “sewer socialists” who ran cities like Milwaukee, Berkeley, and Schenectady, New York, instituted factory inspections, built new hospitals and schools and parks in working-class neighborhoods, and prevented the police from aiding employers during strikes.

But they were quite forthright about the limits of what they believed those reforms could accomplish. When Eugene Debs, a former Democratic state assemblyman and union leader, accepted his party’s nomination for president in 1912, he declared, “The Socialist Party is organized and financed by the workers themselves as a means of wresting control of government and of industry from the capitalists and making the working class the ruling class of the nation and the world. Since the socialist revolution cannot be achieved in a day, never for a moment mistake reform for revolution and never lose sight of the ultimate goal.” That year, 19 Socialists held office in the state of Michigan alone.

The current surge of elected DSA members, while modest, would not have occurred unless socialists ran as Democrats, a process Sanders began when he nearly beat Hillary Clinton for the presidential nomination in 2016. But that affiliation does raise a question: How does a progressive Democrat who identifies as a socialist differ from a progressive Democrat, like so many in the current party, who does not, when their stances on the key economic and cultural issues are identical or nearly so?

Participants in “How We Win,” a conference sponsored by the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) Fund, The Nation, and Jacobin, gathered last weekend in Washington.

At the end of the “How We Win” conference, a few panelists did suggest an answer. I had to leave early, but David Duhalde, chair of the Fund, a veteran DSA activist, and organizer of the meeting, summed up their arguments in an email: “We are building for a world where democratic socialism is possible, and that democratic socialism is impossible absent political power.” He adds, “The socialist identity is key to show our long-term vision and … counter-intuitively attenuate the effects of some types of red baiting. You can’t accuse someone of being a socialist when they are open about it!”

In the past, American socialists made their most valuable contributions as dedicated, shrewd, and uncorruptible organizers of mass insurgencies, not by dreaming out loud about a revolution to come. Their work was indispensable to the growth of and the gains achieved by the movements for Black and immigrant rights, feminism, organized labor, and more. Most of the socialists at the D.C. conference entered politics through contemporary movements, too. While in office, they continue to employ the kind of methods that succeed outside the electoral realm. “You have to knock on people’s doors not just before elections but all through the year,” advised Phara Forrest, a member of the New York State Assembly who is also a registered nurse. “You have to teach people how to organize themselves.” As two young socialists named Karl and Friedrich put it in a manifesto 175 years ago: The task is to “represent the movement of the future in the movement of the present.”

To expand their influence, the comrades now serving in office and those who follow them may have to be content to regard their ultimate aim the way many a Christian thinks about the Second Coming. As Irving Howe and Lewis Coser wrote 70 years ago in one of the first issues of Dissent: “Socialism is the name of our desire … the desire arises from a conflict with, and an extension from, the world that is; nor could the desire survive in any meaningful way were it not for this complex relationship to the world that is.”

Meanwhile, there is a good deal of vital work to get done, and many elections to win.

 

Friday, June 16, 2023

Solidarity with the Cuban People - End the Blockade!

Below I have reprinted a reflection from another solidarity delegation to Cuba (sponsored by CodePink) earlier this year. It focuses on the economic consequences of the US blockade for the Cuban people, in particular the shortages of fuel.

The delegation that I was on experienced fewer issues with power (only one short outage in the 9 days we were there) despite being housed in a working-class community a good distance from the tourist hotels. But we did see long lines at the gas stations and heard about the effects that lack of fertilizer had on agricultural production. By the way, the Cubans are working towards sustainable food production by focusing on small scale organic farming (we visited one of the farms), an economic plus (they don’t need to pay for importing fertilizers) and an environment plus at the same time. The Cubans are planning for the future and working to get there, poco a poco.

I have edited the article for brevity and included a few comments of my own (in Italics).

 

The fuel shortages in Cuba

Cubans on the island are charting their own course outside U.S. hegemony and it is clear that the U.S.’s policy is to try and deny them that right. 

By Kaitlin Blanchard and Eli Smith, June 15, 2023, Nation of Change

One hundred and fifty young people from the United States and Canada arrived in Cuba in late April 2023, just days before International Workers Day. As members of CODEPINK’s youth cohort, our goal was to understand the Cuban political system, the U.S. blockade and its impacts on everyday life. We sat in a room upon our arrival, listening to our trip hosts explain the issue of fuel shortages on the island. Before they were done talking, the microphones went silent. The power had gone out.

In 1960, following the Cuban Revolution that propelled Fidel Castro to power, a memorandum from the Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs to the Assistant Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs was written and later declassified. It stated that a majority of Cubans supported Fidel, and if the U.S. wanted to counter the rise of communism in its backyard, it would have to deny “money and supplies to Cuba, decrease monetary and real wages, to bring about hunger, desperation, and an overthrow of the government.” 

The U.S. imposed a blockade (over 60 years ago) which still restricts necessary items from entering Cuba and prevents other countries from selling them to the island. On top of the embargo, the Biden Administration keeps Cuba on a state-sponsor of terrorism list, further restricting economic development. The goal of these policies is explicit in the 1960 memorandum: the US is trying to starve socialism out of Cuba.

And we certainly saw misery with our own eyes. Usually for May Day, millions of Cubans rally in Havana, celebrating socialism and workers. May Day was scaled down this year due to fuel shortages (which restricted transportation Havana from around the country) – Cuba has to conserve the fuel it has for farming and other necessities. (When I was there in 1972, we attended the May Day rally of over 700,000 Cubans, many bussed in from rural areas around the country, to hear Fidel speak about the progress of the revolution and the plans for the future.)

Leading up to May Day, a massive storm swept through the island, causing emergencies that the Cuban government couldn’t effectively deal with because of the lack of fuel. We sat through multiple power outages, even in a hotel that had decent fuel access. We toured neighborhoods in transformation, learning how Cubans were developing their own communities to have better access to medical care, food and other life affirming services. Even those tours, full of hope and self-determination, were plagued by outages. Tourism is a huge industry that helps sustain the Cuban economy, so tourists like us are usually shielded from occurrences like this.

Even though the people we met in Cuba had a thorough understanding of what our country was doing to theirs, they welcomed us with open arms. Not only were they kind to us, they were also hopeful for the kind of future we would build together—one where our two countries can base foreign policy on the person-to-person relationships we build rather than deferring to the dinosaurs in Washington who value the victory of their ideologies over millions of Cuban lives.

Our cohort visited the Blas Roca Contingent where we were warmly welcomed with fresh coconuts, t-shirts, and hats. We joined delegations from all over the world: Switzerland, Australia, Uruguay, Panama, just to name a few. It was amazing to see union leaders and organizers from all over the world come to Cuba to show support for the Cuban project. It was also transformative to see how well Cuban workers are taken care of. The entire facility we were in was a place for the workers and their entire families to come for food, community, and fun.

These observations directly parallel what I had seen in its infancy in 1972 in a farmers’ co-op in Alamar, where our Venceremos Brigade worked building some of the first homes for the campesinos in the region. These sturdy prefab concrete homes were replacing the thatched roof, dirt floor “huts” that were destroyed every time a hurricane hit the area. Alamar now has upwards of 100,000 residents.

Later, a smaller group of us took a tour with a worker at the facility. He told us how his father had grown up very poor before the revolution and how much his family’s life changed for the better after the revolution. He spoke of the hardships of the blockade, especially not having access to fertilizers for farming which could easily double their yields. He also mentioned how he has had family emigrate to the U.S. and while he doesn’t fault them for leaving, he himself could never leave the Cuban revolutionary project behind. He is a revolutionary through and through. His story is the kind that the policy makers in the U.S. choose to ignore. Cubans on the island are charting their own course outside U.S. hegemony and it is clear that the U.S.’s policy is to try and deny them that right. 

All of us, like the delegations that have gone before us and the countless ones who will go after, returned to the U.S. with a deeply held commitment to end our country’s blockade on the Cuban people.

 

Friday, June 9, 2023

Why is Cuba on the the list of "state sponsors of terrorism"?

 

The US government maintains a list of countries that it accuses of sponsoring terrorism. Cuba, a small island country (population around 11 million) which has no weapons industry, no navy or air force to speak of, and NO nuclear weapons, is on that list. 

Cuba is on that list even though it does not have military bases abroad. Even though it hasn’t invaded another country recently (actually, now that I think about it, it hasn’t ever invaded another country). It does send some of its citizens abroad, but they are doctors and other medical professionals, who are assisting mostly poor nations in dealing with health crises. The “weapons” they carry don’t wipe out wedding parties, but disease. 

It has a large University dedicated to training family doctors from countries around the world. And it has sent teachers to other poor countries, bringing weapons like books and knowledge, both of which are considered subversive by many in the US.

But still, according to the last two presidential administrations, Cuba is a state sponsor of terrorism. What is it about the revolutionary government of Cuba that spreads terror in the highest circles of the US government and the wealthy power that dominates our politics? 

Is it the example of a country that has resisted every attempt of the US to reassert control for over 60 years? Is it the example of how under socialism, a government can focus resources (resources that are extremely limited because of a 500 history of exploitation by other countries and by a 60+ year embargo by the US) and respond to crisis after crisis and still continue its work towards that better world that the generation of revolutionaries fought and died for. 

But enough about Cuba. What about the country that accuses Cuba if being a state sponsor of terrorism. A country that has sponsored an invasion of Cuba; that has planned and attempted hundreds of assassinations against Cuba’s revolutionary leader, Fidel Castro; a country that supported direct terrorist attacks against both Cuban and US citizens who support the revolution including the downing of passenger planes and sabotaging vessels in Cuban ports. 

A country that invades other countries based on made up “evidence” of weapons of mass destruction, a country that has military bases in some 80 different countries and claims the “right” to intervene anywhere in the world to protect its interests ($$$), which it calls “a rules-based international order.”

Cuba has a museum that I visited called the Museum of the Denouncement. In two floors and a dozen or more exhibits it documents the terrorist attacks against Cuba, planned, executed and supported by the United States government during the last 63 years. The United States does not have a similar museum for the support of terrorism by Cuba, because its halls would be empty, its exhibits nonexistent.

We, who live in the belly of the beast, need to demand that the US remove Cuba from the list of state sponsors of terrorism. Maybe in its place on the list, we could put the name of the real supporter of terrorism and build a Museum of Denouncement of our own. I have the ideal building for such a museum, which would have to be very, very large. It’s a five-sided building just across the Potomac from the nation’s capital. It probably already houses most of the documents we would need.