Tuesday, 30 November 2021

NEVER ENDING

 The fight against racism is a fight against capitalist/imperialsm itself . Racism will not die until capitalism does.

Fight to end racism forever–Editorial

People protested during the trial of Amaud Arbery’s murderers, Brunswick, Ga., Nov. 18.

Some people have proclaimed “The system works!” about two recent court decisions against crimes by white supremacists. On Nov. 23 a Virginia jury lowered the boom with $23 million in fines on white-supremacist groups that organized the 2017 Charlottesville “Unite the Right” riot, which left one anti-racist protester, Heather Heyer, dead. In Brunswick, Georgia, on Nov. 24 a jury found three white racists guilty on almost every count in the murder of Amaud Arbery, who was Black.

These decisions are welcome and represent a moment of victory by progressive forces against racist violence. Undoubtedly the outpouring of millions in protest after the 2020 murder of George Floyd by cops resulted in heightened public understanding that racism continues to kill in the U.S.

But note that both of these decisions were levied against actions by white supremacists that were not state-authorized. Punished were vigilante actions by groups of white people steeped in racist ideology, acting as an armed group, without the explicit blessing of the capitalist state.

Conviction and punishments were won with the argument that these acts of white supremacy were “illegal” — that is, not directly authorized or approved by state power or law under the current U.S. system.

But racism is practiced unendingly, unrelentingly by U.S. state entities. The U.S. “legal system” — founded historically on the basis of white supremacy — continues every day with undeniably racist practice in disproportionate shootings, arrests, fines, convictions, unequal sentencing, denied paroles, mass incarceration and executions of people of color.

The U.S. capitalist system must cloak itself in a pretense of “fair” and “just” legality in order to maintain the fiction of “democracy.”

The acquittal of Kyle Rittenhouse exposes how state “legality” is used to maintain white supremacy. On Nov. 19 a Kenosha, Wisconsin, jury failed to convict Rittenhouse of his assault on a Black Lives Matter demonstration, where he killed two anti-racist white protesters and wounded a third. Before the attack, the Kenosha police welcomed this gun-toting white man, gave him water, thanked him and did not even arrest him after the killings. The cops clearly viewed him as “one of them” — giving their blessing to vigilantism in the service of a racist state bent on defeating protest against racism.

In the case of Ahmaud Arbery’s death, the local state structure at first implicitly endorsed his killers. Three consecutive county district attorneys either refused or delayed prosecuting the murder. (workers.org, May 12, 2020) Only a concerted campaign by Arbery’s family and supporters brought the case to trial, bolstered by the videotape of his murder. This must be seen in the context of hundreds of years of organizing by Black communities in the South against racist attacks by extralegal vigilante groups, both ad hoc or organized as the Klan.

Heroic progressive forces in the U.S. battle unendingly to try to save individual people from the death grip of a racist state. Those cases are sometimes won in fines, prison sentences, even death sentences against white supremacists — and sometimes won by the freeing of condemned people of color from prison or execution.

But none of these individual victories are enough to stop the unending racism that results in an act like that of Dylann Roof, who entered a church in Charleston, South Carolina, on June 17, 2015, and shot dead nine African-American people who were in Bible study.

It is not mere rhetoric to say that racism in the U.S. will only finally be ended by a struggle to overturn capitalism and institute a socialist system created by workers and oppressed peoples.

Capitalism is based on pitting all working and oppressed people against each other — from the workplace to the courtroom — so the owning class can continue a state system that guarantees control and profits for that class.

In the U.S. racism is a fundamental tool used by the owning class to set white workers against workers of color in bloody battles.

To “do the right thing” — to honor the power, wisdom, skill and glory in other workers under this present unjust system, we must fight racism tooth and nail.

To achieve the solidarity needed to effectively oppose the bosses under this present rotten system, we must fight racism every day — most especially white workers must fight!

But as long as capitalism rules in the U.S., racism will be employed by the ruling class to pit all workers and oppressed people against each other.

If we are to end racism forever in the U.S., we must fight racism — and fight to build socialism here.

Monday, 29 November 2021

PROTECT THE KIDS

 Now that they've scared almost everyone into thinking they need the vaccine, they're going after the kids .
Read this brief statement below . And yes, it's written by physicians and scientists....

Do You Have ALL THE INFORMATION
You Need To Give Informed Consent?

  1. Healthy children are at minimal risk of severe outcomes like hospitalizations from COVID-19
  2. The risk of hospitalization from COVID-19 is less than that of influenza during the last 3 years
  3. Your child is 10 times more likely to die of a motor vehicle accident than COVID-19; and 2-3 times more likely to die from drowning than from COVID-19
  4. Once recovered from COVID-19, children have long lasting, robust immunity against future infection
  5. More than 50% of kids have already had COVID-19 and about 40% of those were asymptomatic
  6. Getting the vaccine after COVID-19 infection increases the risk of side effects, including severe and potentially life-threatening side-effects, from the vaccine
  7. Fully vaccinated children can transmit COVID-19 and infect others as well as unvaccinated children
  8. The mRNA technology in COVID-19 vaccines in Canada has never been used clinically in humans before
  9. The Moderna vaccine uses the same mRNA technology as Pfizer - and has been suspended for use in children and young people in the United Kingdom, Sweden, Finland, Norway, Iceland, Germany and France
  10. COVID-19 vaccine induced myocarditis is only one of many potential adverse effects. It is not a “mild” disease. In many children, it can cause long term disability and some children may die of vaccine-induced myocarditi

Signed by 14 Canadian Physicians - including 2 Pediatricians, other specialists and family doctors; and more than 100 nurses from across Canada, including pediatric nurses.

We will remain anonymous for now, since Medical and Nursing Licensing Bodies and Health Authorities have been persecuting physicians and nurses for speaking the truth. Our practices, livelihoods, and licenses have been threatened simply for giving information to parents and children. This is providing informed consent, and we are bound by oath to do this.
We will most certainly reveal our identities at the appropriate time, most likely before the courts, when public health authorities, regional/provincial health authorities and licensing bodies are brought to justice.
Our statement is also endorsed by several leading Canadian scientists, Immunologists and vaccine specialists including:
Dr. Bonnie Mallard Ph.D. – Professor of Immunology and Immunogenetics,
University of Guelph. Winner of Governor General’s award for Innovations in Immunogenetics in 2017 and the NSERC Synergy Prize in the area of Immunogenetics 2021.
Dr Byram Bridle Ph.D. - Associate Professor of Viral Immunology and Vaccine Specialist, University of Guelph
Dr. Neil Karrow Ph.D. - Professor of Immunogenetics and Immunotoxicity, University of Guelph
Dr. Steve Pelech Ph.D. - Professor, Dept of Medicine, University of British Columbia
President and Chief Scientific Officer Kinexus Bioinformatics Corporation
Vice-President and Chair, Scientific and Advisory Committee of the Canadian Covid Care Alliance
Dr. Paul Alexander Ph.D. - Expert in evidence-based medicine; Health Epidemiologist. Has worked for WHO, Health Canada and the USA COVID-19 Taskforce.Please see Dr. Alexander’s urgent article for parents:
https://brownstone.org/articles/dear-pfizer-leave-the-children-alone/


Sunday, 28 November 2021

OBEY OR STARVE

 By now it would seem that most of the world knows that it's the u.s.a. who dominate, right up to the point of who gets to live or die . People in the imperialist countries are a little more deluded, and want to blame North Korea or Iran, or whoever the amerikkkans deem to be the main enemy at any given moment.
Here's a different perspective.


The US has placed itself in charge over which nations get to eat

The imprisonment of diplomat Alex Saab is a further indication of the lengths to which US imperialism will go in imposing its starvation sanctions on Venezuela.

Trumped-up charges of ‘money laundering’ have been used to capture and extradite a Venezuelan diplomat, who was simply trying to secure international trade and buy food for his country in the face of US-imposed starvation sanctions.

Reproduced from Caitlin’s Newsletter with thanks.

*****

The globally influential propaganda multiplier news agencies AP 
and AFP have both informed their readers that a “fugitive” has 
been extradited to the United States.
“Fugitive businessman close to Venezuela’s Maduro extradited 
to US,” reads the AFP headline.
“Alex Saab, a top fugitive close to Venezuela’s socialist government, 
has been put on a plane to the US to face money laundering charges,” AP announced on Twitter.
You’d be forgiven for wondering what specifically makes this man 
a ‘fugitive’, and what that status has to do with his extradition 
to a foreign government whose laws should have no bearing on 
his life.
The Colombian-born Venezuelan citizen Alex Saab, as it happens, 
is a ‘fugitive’ from the US government’s self-appointed authority 
to decide which populations on our planet are permitted to have 
ready access to food. His crime is working to circumvent the 
crushing US sanctions which have been starving Venezuelan 
civilians to death by the tens of thousands.
Saab is being extradited from the African nation of Cabo Verde 
where he has been imprisoned since last year under 
pressure from the US government. In an article published this 
explains how the US uses its domination of the international 
financial system to crush nations that disobey it and outlines 
the real reasons for Saab’s imprisonment, which has included 
torture and draconian living conditions.
Harris writes: “Special envoy and ambassador to the African 
Union for Venezuela Alex Saab was on a humanitarian mission 
flying from Caracas to Iran to procure food and 
gasoline for the Venezuelan CLAP food assistance programme. 
Saab was detained on a refueling stop in the African nation 
of Cabo Verde and has been held in custody ever since 12 June 
2020.
“Saab’s ‘crime’ – according to the US government, which ordered 
the imprisonment – was money laundering. That is, Saab 
conducted perfectly legal international trade. Still, his 
circumventing of the US sanctions – which are designed to 
prevent relief to the Venezuelans – is considered by 
Washington to be money laundering.
“After a two-year investigation into Saab’s transactions with 
Swiss banks, the Swiss government concluded on 25 March 
that there was no money laundering. Saab is being prosecuted 
because he is serving his country’s interest rather than that of the US.”
News agencies like AP and AFP are well aware that Saab is being 
extradited not for breaking any actual law but for daring to transgress 
Washington’s unilateral sanctions. As FAIR’s Joe Emersberger 
“Reuters has casually reported that Saab ‘faces extradition 
to the United States, which accuses him of violating US 
sanctions’, and that he has been ‘repeatedly named by the US 
State Department as an operator who helps Maduro 
arrange trade deals that Washington is seeking to block 
through sanctions’. (15 March 2021 and 18 March 2021)
“A Reuters article about Saab’s case in 2020 mentioned in 
passing that ‘the United States this month seized four cargoes 
of Iranian fuel bound for Venezuela, where fuel shortages 
are once again worsening’.”

Critics of the US empire have had harsh words for the extradition.

“Biden, picking up Trump’s baton, has kidnapped Venezuelan 
diplomat Alex Saab for the crime of trying to feed Venezuelans 
in defiance of US sanctions designed to prevent that,” tweeted 
journalist Aaron Maté. “Venezuelans aren’t allowed to eat so 
long as the DC mafia has marked their government for regime 
change.”
Yes indeed. The US government has appointed itself the 
authority to unilaterally decide which of the world’s populations 
get to eat and which do not, and to imprison anyone who 
tries to facilitate unauthorised eating in a US-sanctioned nation.
“The extradition of Venezuelan diplomat Alex Saab 
is a clear signal the Biden administration has made no break 
with Trump’s all out assault on international law,” tweeted 
journalist Anya Parampil. “Also a worrying sign for the 
case of Julian Assange – another foreign citizen the US 
has essentially kidnapped and held hostage.”
This is true. It would seem that the primary difference 
between Assange’s case and Saab’s is that the US empire 
is working to extradite Assange because he transgressed its 
self-appointed authority over the world’s access to 
information, whereas Saab transgressed its self-appointed 
authority over the world’s access to food.
“The US rogue state just ripped up every international law, 
after imprisoning and now extraditing Venezuelan diplomat 
Alex Saab. Diplomatic immunity is dead; the US empire 
killed it. Now all foreign diplomats are fair game to be 
kidnapped and imprisoned, if Washington wants to,” 
tweeted journalist Ben Norton, adding: “The US 
accusations of ‘money laundering’ are absurd and 
politically motivated. The US claims anyone who 
violates its illegal sanctions is a ‘criminal’.”
Indeed, ‘money laundering’ is a vague charge which 
basically just means trying to conceal the source or 
destination of money that is deemed to have been obtained 
illegally, and since the US government considers itself the 
arbiter of which financial transactions are lawful in the 
nations it is sanctioning, it can apply that claim to anyone who 
tries to get around US sanctions financially.
The US government does not deny that its sanctions hurt 
Venezuelans by attacking the economy they rely on to feed 
themselves. In fact, it has openly admitted that “sanctions, 
particularly on the state oil company in 2019, likely contributed to 
the steeper decline of the Venezuelan economy”.
The US government also does not deny that the starvation 
sanctions it has inflicted upon Iran are directed at its civilian 
population, with then-secretary of state Mike Pompeo 
openly admitting in 2019 that Washington’s economic 
warfare against that nation is designed to pressure 
Iranian civilians to “change the government” – ie, to 
make them so miserable that they launch a domestic 
uprising to topple Tehran.
The US government also does not deny that the starvation 
sanctions it has inflicted upon Syria are designed to hurt its 
civilian population, with current secretary of state Tony 
Blinken reaffirming just this past Wednesday that it is 
the Biden administration’s policy to “oppose the 
reconstruction of Syria” as long as Assad remains in power.
In other words, the US will not allow Syria the funds to help 
rebuild itself from the devastating regime-change proxy war 
that the US and its allies waged against it, even as the UN reports 
that 60 percent of the nation’s population is close to starvation.
And of course there’s the US power alliance’s 
horrific blockade on Yemen which is murdering people 
by the hundreds of thousands via starvation and disease, 
with the UN reporting that a further 16 million people 
are “marching towards starvation”.
Starvation is the only kind of warfare where, because of 
the continual reframing of mass media propaganda
it is considered perfectly normal and acceptable to 
deliberately target a civilian population with deadly force.
The US empire is entirely open about the fact that it sees
itself as the gatekeeper of the world’s food supply. 
If a population disobeys the empire its people will starve, 
and anyone who tries to obtain food for them will be 
arrested by US proxies and extradited to a US jail cell.
This is the imperialists’ vision of heaven on earth: 
a world where the US’s stranglehold over global financial 
systems allows it to choke off entire populations if their 
governments disobey imperial decrees, without even firing 
a shot. A world where the PR nightmares of bombed 
civilians and destroyed nations are a thing of the past, 
where disobedient nations can simply be squeezed to 
death by modern siege warfare tactics while imperial 
propaganda firms like AP and AFP blame their starvation 
on their nations’ leaders.
That’s ultimate power right there. That’s total control. 
Having the world so bent to the will of the almighty 
dollar and the massive military force with which it is 
inextricably intertwined to such an extent that 
disobedience becomes impossible. That’s what’s being 
fought for in the slow motion third world war that 
the empire is waging against 
unabsorbed governments like VenezuelaSyriaIranRussia 
and China. And that’s why those unabsorbed governments 
are fast at work moving away from the dollar in response.
It should really go without saying, but a power structure 
that would openly starve civilians to death to ensure global 
domination is not the sort of power structure that humanity 
should want dominating the globe.
The willingness to do such monstrous things exposes a 
depravity and a lack of wisdom which has no business 
determining what direction our world should take into 
the future.

Saturday, 27 November 2021

A DIFFERENT VIEWPOINT

 It's always a good idea to get an opposing side to certain issues rather than accepting everything the mainstream media likes to tell us about everything.
Here's one now......

Fifty Truths about Fidel Castro

 144
 4 3
 
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Five Years Ago, the Passing of Fidel Castro

The historic leader of the Cuban Revolution has forever marked the history of Cuba and Latin America, making his country a symbol of dignity and resistance.

1. Fidel Castro was born into a family of seven children on August 13, 1926, at Birán in the current province of Holguín, from a union between Angel Castro Argiz, a wealthy Spanish landowner from Galicia and Cuban born Lina Ruz González.

2. At the age of seven, he was sent to the city of Santiago de Cuba where he lived with the teacher who was to be responsible for his education. She nonetheless abandoned him to his fate. “She deceived my family”, and “I have known hunger”, Fidel Castro recalled. A year later, in January 1935, he entered the religious school, Hermanos de La Salle, as an intern. In January 1938, after rebelling against the authoritarianism of a teacher, he left the institution at the age of eleven for Dolores College. From 1942 to 1945 he continued his schooling in Havana with the Jesuits at Belen College. After receiving high marks in his studies, his teacher, Father Armando Llorente, wrote in the institution’s directory, “He has distinguished himself in all literary subjects. He has also been a true athlete, an excellent and team-oriented player. Always courageously and proudly defending the college flag, he earned the admiration and affection of all. He intends to continue his studies in law and we have no doubt that he will fill brilliantly the pages of his book of life”.

3. Despite having gone into exile in Miami in 1961, following the tensions between the revolutionary government and the Cuban Catholic church, Father Llorente always retained fond memories of his former student: “I am often blamed for speaking well of Fidel. But I cannot speak ill of the Fidel that I knew. Moreover, one day, he saved my life. These are things that you can never forget”. Fidel Castro had jumped into a river to save his teacher who was being carried away by the current.

4. In 1945, Fidel Castro entered the University of Havana, where he began a law career. Elected as Faculty of Law delegate, he actively participated in demonstrations against corruption in the government of President Ramón Grau San Martín. He did not hesitate to publicly denounce the armed gangs of BAGA, a group with links to government authorities. Max Lesnik, then Secretary General of the Orthodox Youth group and a comrade of Fidel Castro, recalls an episode: “The committee ’30 September’ [created to fight against the armed gangs] had decided to denounce the government and the gangsters during the plenary session of the Students’ Federation. More than 300 students from various faculties thronged the hall to listen to Fidel when someone shouted […]: ‘He, who speaks too long, will speak for the last time’. It was clear to whom the threat was addressed. Fidel got up from his chair and, with a firm and poised step, walked to the center of the hall. After requesting a moment of silence in memory of the martyrs […], he began reading an official list of the names of all gang members and the leaders of the Federation of University Students who had received stipends from the government”.

5. In 1947, at the age of 22, Fidel Castro participated with Juan Bosch, the future President of the Dominican Republic, in an attempted landing at Cayo Confite intended to overthrow the dictator Rafael Trujillo, then supported by the United States.

6. A year later, in 1948, he participated in the Bogotazo popular uprising triggered by the assassination of Jorge Eliecer Gaitan, a progressive political leader and presidential candidate in Colombia.

7. After finishing his graduate studies in law in 1950, Fidel Castro worked as a lawyer until 1952, defending the poor, before entering politics.

8. Fidel Castro never militated for the Popular Socialist Party (PSP), the communist party of pre-revolutionary Cuba. Rather, he joined the Cuban People’s Party, also called the Orthodox Party, which had been founded in 1947 by Eduardo Chibás. Chibás’ progressive Orthodox Party program was based on several key elements: national sovereignty, economic independence achieved through the diversification of agricultural production, banning the latifundios (large estates), the development of industry, the nationalization of utilities, the fight against corruption, the struggle for social justice and the defense of workers. Fidel Castro has expressed his belief in the thinking of José Martí, of Chibás and in anti-imperialism. A talented orator, he ran in the parliamentary elections of 1952 as a candidate of the Cuban People’s Party.

9. On March 10, 1952, three months before the presidential elections, General Fulgencio Batista shattered the constitutional order by overthrowing the government of Carlos Prio Socarrás. He won the immediate support of the United States, which officially recognized the new military dictatorship.

10. Fidel Castro the lawyer filed a complaint against Batista for breach of the constitutional order: “If courts exist, Batista should be punished, and if Batista is not punished […], how then can the court judge a citizen for sedition or rebellion against a regime that is both illegal and the product of unpunished betrayal?” The Supreme Court, subservient to the new regime, found his complaint to be inadmissible.

11. On July 26, 1953, Fidel Castro became head of an expedition of 131 men committed to launching attacks against the Moncada barracks in Santiago de Cuba, the second most important military fortress in the country, and the Carlos Manuel de Cespedes barracks in the city of Bayamo. The goal was to take control of Santiago –the historical cradle of all revolutions– and launch a call to rebellion throughout the country to overthrow the dictator Batista.

12. The operation was a bloody failure and many fighters –55 in total– were murdered after being brutally tortured by Batista’s military, while only six had been killed in combat. Some managed to escape thanks to the support of the local population.

13. Fidel Castro, captured a few days later, owes his life to Sergeant Pedro Sarría, who refused to follow the orders of his superiors and execute the Moncada leader. “Do not shoot! Do not shoot! You cannot kill ideas”, he exclaimed to his soldiers.

14. During his historic defense entitled “History Will Absolve Me”, Fidel Castro, defending himself, denounced Batista’s crimes and the misery in which the Cuban people lived. He presented his program for a free Cuba, based on national sovereignty, economic independence and social justice.

15. Sentenced to 15 years in prison, Castro was released two years later in 1955, following an amnesty granted by the Batista regime. He then founded the July 26 Movement (M 26-7) and announced his plan to continue the fight against the military dictatorship before going into exile in Mexico.

16. With a young doctor named Ernesto Guevara, Fidel Castro organized the Granma expedition. Castro had no trouble convincing the young Argentine who later recalled: “I met him during a cool night in Mexico City, and I remember that our first discussion revolved around international politics. A few hours later –in the early morning– I had decided to become a member of the future expedition”.

17. In August of 1955, Fidel Castro published the first manifesto of the 26th of July Movement, a document that included the main points he had made in his “History Will Absolve Me” defense. There is the question of land reform, banning latifundios, social and economic reforms that favor the underprivileged, national industrialization, housing construction, lowering rents, nationalization of telephone, gas and electrical services, education and culture for all, tax reform and the reorganization of government services to fight against corruption.

18. In October 1955, in order to raise funds for the expedition, Fidel Castro made a tour of the United States where he met with Cuban exiles. The FBI put the patriotic clubs that were founded in different cities by 26-7 M under close surveillance.

19. On November 25, 1956, Fidel Castro left from the port of Tuxpan, Mexico, aboard the Granma, a boat designed to hold 25 people. There were in total 82 revolutionaries aboard when it set sail for Cuba with the aim to triggering a guerrilla war in the mountains of the Sierra Maestra.

20. Due to climatic conditions, the crossing was a nightmare. One member of the expedition fell overboard. Juan Almeida, a member of the group and future Commander of the Revolution, recalls the episode. “Fidel told us the following: ‘As long as we have not saved him, we will not move from here’. Everyone was touched by his words and it aroused our fighting spirit. We felt that with this man, nobody would be abandoned. Yet, it was jeopardizing the expedition. Still he was finally saved”.

21. After a voyage that lasted seven days, instead of the five that had been forecast, the troupe landed on December 2, 1956 in what was, according to Raúl Castro, “the worst swamp anyone had ever seen”. The revolutionaries were dispersed by gunfire from Cuban aviation, and pursued by some 2,000 of Batista’s soldiers who had been waiting for them.

22. A few days later, in Cinco Palmas, Fidel Castro rejoined his brother Raúl and ten other members of the expedition. “Now we’re going to win the war”, the M 26-7 leader said to his men. The guerrilla war had begun. It would last for 25 months.

23. In February 1957, the Herbert Matthews interview with Fidel Castro appeared in the New York Times, thereby permitting US and world public opinion to discover the existence of a guerrilla force in Cuba. Batista later admitted in his memoirs that through this media coup “Castro was becoming a legendary figure”. Matthews, however, nuanced the importance of his interview: “No advertising, as sensational as it might have been, would have made any difference, if Fidel Castro had not been exactly the man I described”.

24. Despite official declarations of neutrality in the Cuban conflict, the US provided political, economic and military support to Batista, and opposed Fidel Castro up to the final moments. On December 23, 1958, one week before the triumph of the Revolution, while Fulgencio Batista’s army was in disarray despite its superiority in men and weapons, the 392nd meeting of the National Security Council, with President Eisenhower in attendance, took place. Allen Dulles, the CIA director, made the US position quite clear: “We must prevent Castro’s victory”.

25. Despite the support of the United States, his 20,000 soldiers and material superiority, Batista could not defeat a guerrilla force comprised 300 armed men during the final offensive in the summer of 1958 that had gone on to mobilize more than 10,000 soldiers. This “strategic victory” demonstrated the military genius of Fidel Castro who had anticipated and defeated the “End of Fidel” operation launched by Batista.

26. On January 1, 1959, five years, five months and five days after the July 26, 1953 attack on the Moncada garrison, the Cuban Revolution emerged triumphant.

27. During the formation of the revolutionary government in January 1959, Fidel Castro was appointed Minister of the Armed Forces. He did not occupy the presidency, which devolved on Judge Manuel Urrutia, nor the post of Prime Minister, which went to the lawyer José Miró Cardona.

28. In February 1959, Prime Minister Cardona, opposed to economic and social reforms he considered too radical (the land reform project, for example), resigned. Manuel Urrutia then appointed Fidel Castro to the position.

29. In July 1959, faced with the opposition of President Urrutia, who refused further reforms, Fidel Castro resigned as Prime Minister. Huge popular demonstrations broke out across Cuba, calling for the departure of Urrutia and the return of Fidel Castro. The new President of the Republic, Osvaldo Dorticós, then reappointed Fidel Castro Prime Minister.

30. The US immediately showed itself hostile to Fidel Castro by welcoming the dignitaries of the former regime, among whom were several war criminals who had looted the national treasury and fled with some 424 million dollars.

31. Yet from the start, Fidel Castro demonstrated his willingness to maintain good relations with Washington. Nevertheless, during his first visit to the United States in April 1959, President Eisenhower refused to receive him and preferred to go golfing instead. John F. Kennedy expressed his regret about the incident: “Fidel Castro is part of the legacy of Bolivar. We should have given a warmer welcome to the fiery young rebel at the moment of his triumph”.

32. In October 1959, pilots from the US bombed Cuba and returned to Florida where they were unmolested by authorities. On October 21, 1959, a bomb dropped on Havana left two dead and 45 wounded. The person responsible for the crime, Pedro Luis Díaz Lanz, returned to Miami. He was not questioned and Washington refused to extradite him to Cuba.

33. In February 1960, Fidel Castro drew closer to Moscow, acquiring Soviet weapons only after the United States refused to provide the arsenal necessary for the island’s defense. Washington also pressured Canada and the European nations that had been approached by Cuba in order to force Cuba to turn to the socialist bloc, thereby justifying its own hostile policy toward Havana.

34. In March 1960, the Eisenhower administration made a formal decision to overthrow Fidel Castro. In total, the leader of the Cuban Revolution escaped no fewer than 637 assassination attempts on his life.

35. In March 1960, the French ship La Coubre, carrying weapons, was sabotaged by the CIA in the port of Havana. More than one hundred persons were left dead. In his address in tribute to the victims, Fidel Castro launched the slogan “Patria o Muerte” (Homeland or Death) inspired by that of the French Revolution of 1793, “Liberty, Equality, Fraternity or Death.”

36. On April 16, 1961, following the bombing of the main airports in the country by the CIA, a prelude to the invasion of the Bay of Pigs, Fidel Castro proclaimed the “socialist” character of the Revolution.

37. During the Bay of Pigs invasion, conducted by some 1400 exiles supported by the CIA, Fidel Castro was to be found on the front lines of the battle. He inflicted a severe defeat on the US by crushing the invaders in 66 hours. His popularity then skyrocketed worldwide.

38. During the October 1962 missile crisis, Soviet General Alexei Dementiev was at the side of Fidel Castro. He recounted in his memories: “I spent the most impressive moments of my life with Fidel. I was with him most of the time. There was a moment when we considered that a military attack by the United States was close at hand. Fidel made the decision to sound the alarm. Within hours, his people were in combat position. Fidel’s faith in his people was impressive, as was the faith of his people and of ourselves, Soviets, in him. Fidel is, without any question, one of the political and military geniuses of the century”.

39. In October 1965, the Cuban Communist Party (PCC) replaced the United Party of the Socialist Revolution (PURE) which had been created in 1962 (it, in turn, had replaced the Integrated Revolutionary Organizations –ORI– created in 1961). Fidel Castro was appointed First Secretary.

40. In 1975, following the adoption of the new Constitution, Fidel Castro was elected President of the Republic for the first time. He would be re-elected to this post up until 2006.

41. In 1988, from more than 20,000 kilometers away, Fidel Castro, in Havana, led the battle of Cuito Cuanavale in Angola. It was in this battle that the Cuban and Angolan troops inflicted a crushing defeat on the South African armed forces that had invaded Angola and occupied Namibia. The historian Piero Gleijeses, a professor at Johns Hopkins University in Washington, wrote: “Despite Washington’s efforts [allied with the apartheid regime], Cuba changed the course of history in Southern Africa […]. The Cubans’ prowess on the battlefield and their virtuosity at the negotiating table proved decisive in compelling South Africa to accept Namibia’s independence. The victorious defense of Cuito Cuanavale was the prelude to a campaign that compelled the South African Defense Force (SADF) to leave Angola. This victory had repercussions far beyond the borders of Namibia”.

42. A lucid observer of perestroika, Fidel Castro, in a prescient speech given on July 26, 1989, declared to the nation that should the Soviet Union disappear, Cuba would resist and continue along the path of socialism: “If tomorrow or some other day we wake up to the news that a great civil war has broken out in the USSR, or even if we wake up with the news that the USSR has disintegrated […] Cuba and the Cuban Revolution will continue to fight and resist”.

43. In 1994, at the height of the Special Period, he met Hugo Chavez for the first time. They formed a strong friendship that lasted until the latter’s death in 2013. According to Fidel Castro, the Venezuelan president was “the best friend the Cuban people ever had”. They set up a strategic partnership with the creation in 2005 of the Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our America, which now includes eight countries in Latin America and the Caribbean.

44. In 1998, Fidel Castro received the visit to Havana of Pope John Paul II. The latter demanded that “the world open up to Cuba and Cuba open up to the world”.

45. In 2002, former President of the United States Jimmy Carter made a historic visit to Cuba. He spoke directly on live television: “I did not come here to interfere in Cuba’s internal affairs, but rather to extend a hand of friendship to the Cuban people and to offer a vision of the future for both countries and for the Americas […]. I want us to be friends and to respect each other […]. Since the US is the most powerful of the two nations, it is for us to make the first move”.

46. In July 2006, following a serious intestinal illness, Fidel Castro was forced to retire from power. In accordance with the Constitution, Vice-President Raúl Castro succeeded him.

47. In February 2008, Fidel Castro permanently renounced any executive office. He has since devoted himself to writing his memoirs and regularly publishing articles under the caption “Reflections”.

48. After a trip to Cuba in 2001, Arthur Schlesinger Jr., a historian and special advisor to President Kennedy, raised the question of the cult of personality: “Fidel Castro does not encourage the cult of personality. In Havana it is difficult to find a poster or even a post card with a photo of Castro on it. The icon of Fidel’s revolution, visible everywhere, is Che Guevara”.

49. Gabriel García Márquez, Colombian writer and Nobel Prize in Literature, was a close friend of Fidel Castro. He drew up a brief profile that underscores “the absolute trust he places in direct contact. His power is seduction. He looks for problems where they are to be found. […] His patience is invincible. His discipline is ironclad. The force of his imagination expands the limits of the unexpected”.

50. The triumph of the Cuban Revolution on January 1, 1959, led by Fidel Castro, is the most significant event in the history of twentieth century Latin America. While Fidel Castro may remain one of the most controversial figures of that century, even his fiercest critics acknowledge that he has made Cuba a sovereign nation whose independence is respected internationally. His country has made undeniable social achievements in the fields of education, health, culture, sport and international solidarity. He will forever be the symbol of national dignity, someone who is always aligned with the oppressed and all those who fight for their emancipation