Posted on 09/17/2012 6:54:39 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
The stern photo of revolutionary Che Guevara taken by Alberto Korda in 1960 is one of the most reproduced images on the planet, appearing on posters, flags, postcards, T-shirts, and even bikinis. Sadly, the ubiquitous appearances of Che hailed today usually by his first name only demonstrate the near-total failure to educate people about the blood-soaked cruelty he really represented.
But there are, thankfully, some limits to the use of Ches famous image if people complain. A recent e-mail sent by the Environmental Protection Agency to mark Hispanic Heritage Month included Kordas image of Che along with the slogan Hasta la victoria siempre, or On to victory, always. After facing criticism, the EPA said the e-mail had been drafted and sent by an individual employee, and without official clearance.
Nonetheless, its unsettling to see Ches image appropriated by a government agency that has a notorious reputation for violating property rights and imposing arbitrary controls on growth. Just last March, the U.S. Supreme Court unanimously ruled that an Idaho couple seeking to build on their land had their rights violated when the EPA imposed fines of $75,000 a day without giving the couple the ability to challenge its rulings.
Also this year, the EPA regional administrator Al Armendariz was forced to resign after he described his enforcement philosophy in a public speech: Find people who are not complying with the law and you hit them as hard as you can and make examples of them. He compared the tactic to that used by ancient Roman soldiers: The Romans used to conquer little villages in the Mediterranean. Theyd go into a little Turkish town somewhere, theyd find the first five guys they saw, and they would crucify them. And then you know that town was really easy to manage for the next few years.
That sounds a lot like how Che operated. After Fidel Castro seized power in 1959, Che was instrumental in setting up forced-labor camps for dissidents, gays, and devout Catholics. He was put in charge of La Cabaña Fortress prison for five months. There are varying accounts of how many people were executed under his command during that time, and how many deaths are attributed directly to Che as opposed to the regime overall, but some sources say that more than 100 journalists, businessmen, and followers of the previous regime faced death by firing squad at La Cabaña, under Ches jurisdiction.
Violence was at the core of Ches philosophy. Shortly before his death at the hands of Bolivian troops in 1967, he wrote Message to the Tricontinental. In this essay he advocated the effective use of violent hatred:
Hatred as an element of the struggle; a relentless hatred of the enemy, impelling us over and beyond the natural limitations that man is heir to and transforming him into an effective, violent, selective, and cold killing machine. Our soldiers must be thus; a people without hatred cannot vanquish a brutal enemy.
A decade earlier, when he murdered Eutimio Guerra, he recorded in his diary: I ended the problem with a .32 caliber pistol, in the right side of his brain. . . . His belongings were now mine.
Nor was Ches violence directed only against Cubans. Author Humberto Fontova points to evidence that Guevara, the chief instigator of Castros revolutionary efforts overseas, was involved in a November 1962 terrorist plot to use 1,200 pounds of TNT to blow up Macys, Gimbels, Bloomingdales, and Grand Central Station on the day after Thanksgiving, the busiest shopping day of the year. Such an act could have rivaled 9/11 in its destruction. This is hardly a man who deserves to be honored as a hero on T-shirts.
The Obama administration deserves credit for distancing itself from the EPAs flirtation with Che. But Obama acolytes havent always been so sensible. During the 2008 campaign, a Houston TV station taped the inside of an Obama get-out-the-vote office that featured a large Cuban flag on the wall, with the image of Che stamped onto it.
The spokeswoman for the Obama office who sat down with the TV station for an interview repeatedly called questions about the Cuban flag a distraction and a waste of time and said, I dont have time to talk about the Cuban flag. Or Che, for that matter.
But its time we start to talk about Che. He may have died 45 years ago, but his pernicious philosophy is still very much under debate in Latin America. On the one hand, even liberals such as Rory Carroll, the Latin American correspondent for the Guardian in Britain, acknowledge that the Cuban model would have been a debacle if exported to other countries. To challenge the U.S. empire, Che dreamed of creating many Vietnams, not least in his Argentine homeland, Carroll wrote. Who today can seriously wish he had succeeded? . . . Who needs Che?
But while overt Communism isnt on the march in Latin America, Che-style thinking is ascendant in the anti-American authoritarians who today rule Venezuela, Ecuador, Bolivia, and Nicaragua. Che is much more than an image on a T-shirt to leaders in those countries: He is an inspiration on how to seize and maintain power. Its for that reason that we should push back whenever and wherever Ches image surfaces. If people wore T-shirts with images of Nazi butchers, most of us wouldnt let them pass by without comment. The same should be the case with Che, whether his image shows up on college campuses or in EPA e-mails.
The Romans used to conquer little villages in the Mediterranean. Theyd go into a little Turkish town somewhere, theyd find the first five guys they saw, and they would crucify them. And then you know that town was really easy to manage for the next few years.
Thanks so much for the post. I needed it!
New Muslim Brotherhood flag: The Freedom and Justice Party
Obama's Rising Sun logo
Joe McCarthy looks better and better these days. Communist sympathizers have not only infliltrated but appear poised to take over government agencies.
Huh?
***According to Chris “tingles”, Che was ‘kind of cute’.***
And Jane Fonda said she wished she could have had sex with him.
In 1966 the CIA declared Che dead. He popped up in Bolivia the next year.
Yes. Joe McCarthy. Imagine him watching all this.
That isn't the least bit surprising. We know what she is. But Chrissy saying Che shirts are 'cute', that his kids wear them... He's obviously a big Lib, but openly embracing a communist icon...
This is wrong. Should this be “pro-Che” and not “anti-Che”?
I am heartened to find out that this Al Armendariz guy was
“forced to resign”. I had read his statement before and was astonished that someone could express himself with such tyrannical bluntness. Uhhhh, let’s call it a “gaffe”.....maybe he “misspoke”-—wonder how he got his job......lemme think......
I'd like to buy one for Stephen Spielberg to wear on his next visit to Fidel.
BTTT!
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