To: Yosemitest
You left out the part of Cruz, Sr’s history when he fought against Batista on the side of Fidel Castro. Let me guess. He didn’t know that Castro was a communist. Or maybe somebody lied to him and told him that Castro was a capitalist.
Was he pals with Che Guevara, too? Maybe Sabo could do a graphic of Cruz in Che t shirt or tattoo or something.
87 posted on
01/10/2016 4:17:28 AM PST by
KGeorge
(I will miss you forever, Miss Mu. 7/1/2006- 11/16/2015)
To: KGeorge
You left out the part of Cruz, Srâs history when he fought against Batista on the side of Fidel Castro. So now the crazy Trumpbots are backing Batista, a ruthless right wing dictator? No surprise there. Rafael Cruz should be lauded and praised (not condemned) for fighting against the corrupt, fetid, murderous Batista regime.
To: KGeorge
TED CRUZ's father, 74-year-old Rafael Bienvenido Cruz."I came to this country legally," Cruz's father says.
"I came here with a legal visa, and ... every step of the way, I have been here legally."
In an interview near his home outside Dallas, the elder Cruz says that as a teenager, he fought alongside Fidel Castro's forces to overthrow Cuba's U.S.-backed dictator, Fulgencio Batista.
He was caught by Batista's forces, he says, and jailed and beaten before being released.
It was 1957, and Cruz decided to get out of Cuba by applying to the University of Texas.
Upon being admitted, he adds, he got a four-year student visa at the U.S. Consulate in Havana.
"Then the only other thing that I needed was an exit permit from the Batista government," Cruz recalls.
"A friend of the family, a lawyer friend of my father, basically bribed a Batista official to stamp my passport with an exit permit."
The Rafael Cruz that his son Ted portrays is a kind of Cuban Horatio Alger - - arriving in the U.S. with only $100, learning English on his own and washing dishes seven days a week for 50 cents an hour.
"Since he liked to eat seven days a week, he worked seven days a week, and he paid his way through the University of Texas," Ted Cruz says of his father,
"and then ended up getting a job and eventually going on to start a small business and to work towards the American dream."
Only he did that in Canada, where Ted was born.
His father went there AFTER having earlier obtained political asylum in the U.S. WHEN his student visa ran out.
He then got a green card, he says, and married Ted's mother, an American citizen.
The two of them moved to Canada to work in the oil industry.
"I worked in Canada for eight years," Rafael Cruz says.
"And while I was in Canada, I became a Canadian citizen."
The elder Cruz says he renounced his Canadian citizenship when he finally became a U.S. citizen ...
I can only guess as to the reason it took so long, but probably to keep Cuba from being able to recall him.
As to WHY Rafael Bienvenido Cruz fought alongside Fidel Castro's forces to overthrow Cuba's U.S.-backed dictator, Fulgencio Batista, I can only guess.
I guess he didn't have a choice, being a young teenager fresh out of hight school.
131 posted on
01/10/2016 5:07:22 PM PST by
Yosemitest
(It's SIMPLE ! ... Fight, ... or Die !)
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