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The Impact Blinder of Black or White

November 29, 2016 by costaricaguy 2 Comments

The Impact Blinder of Black or White

This has been quite the month in the life of one David Scott Bowers (aka Costa Rica Guy)…

For starters, my most ardent supporter, and defender, for the last 55 years passed away at the beginning of it…my mom.

Right on the heels of that came the election of my “platonic” arch-nemesis, Donald Trump, as President of the U.S. Now I realize that’s not a good use of the adjective, but I use it only in the sense that, thankfully, we don’t have any actual relationship (never met the man). Otherwise, I’d surely be the subject of some seriously spiteful tweetings.

Finally, just in the last week, we’ve seen the passing of a larger than life figure who cast a shadow on all 55 years of my life on planet earth. I’m speaking of the passing of Fidel Castro.

I’ve long been inspired by the story of Fidel Castro, the revolutionary. You know the Cuban revolutionary misfit who, along with a ragtag group of around 80 men, set sail from Mexico to Cuba on the leaky yacht, the Granma. There was also a guy onboard named Ernest “Che” Guevara. I’ve written quite a lot about Che Guevara in this blog.

They were ambushed upon arrival to Cuban shores and out of the 80 some odd men that originally set sail, only around 18 made it up to the Sierra Maestra mountains in the interior of the island. From there they spent two years amassing a revolutionary force of peasant farmers who were successful in taking control of the island country and resting it from the hands of the U.S. backed and brutal dictator, Fulgencio Batista.

The revolutionary government of Fidel Castro started out pretty good, with laudable aims. Some of those were actually accomplished. For instance, did you know Cuba has one of the highest literacy rates in the world and that it produces more doctors than any other country of its size? It also is quick to come to the aid of other developing countries, as was witnessed recently with the Ebola epidemic in West Africa a few years ago.

But we also know that Castro gradually morphed from revolutionary hero to oppressive dictator. He suppressed the free speech of the Cuban people and jailed thousands as political prisoners.

What’s for sure is that Castro’s death is showcasing the tendency for us to think in black or white terms when it comes to anything politically tinged. I believe that’s not only true in the U.S., but throughout the world. If you’re a democrat, then all republicans and their ideas are bad…and vice versa. For people whose passions have been inflamed by Castro’s passing, he was either a monster or a saint.

However, the truth is that we don’t live our lives in those stark black or white terms. We rather tend to live them in the grey areas.

Thinking in this polarized way is at the root of many of the problems we face in American society and throughout our world. The election of Donald Trump certainly seems to have exacerbated this type of thinking.

I would call this mode of thought the impact blinder of black or white. It blinds us from the truth. The real truth is rarely found in the black or white of political propaganda, lately expressed in mean tweets and non-factual Facebook memes, but in the grey areas of actual facts.

So, a lesson we can and should learn from these momentous events of the month of November 2016 is this: always step back and ask, what are the facts? What is the truth?

The truth is that Castro did some good stuff and he did some bad stuff. He did stand up courageously against the imperial inclinations of the world’s greatest superpower. He also failed miserably in the human rights department, especially in terms of upholding the rights of his own people.

We will get along with one another and progress as a society when we stop thinking in terms of the black or white nature of political propaganda and instead embrace the actual truth. The truth that applies across the board.

You see, the truth is the truth and facts are facts. They bear no political or ideological affiliation. They are not democrat or republican, capitalist or socialist.

Why not remove the impact blinder of black or white thinking and instead wilfully embrace facts and truth?

Filed Under: Removing Impact Blinders Tagged With: Donald Trump, Fidel Castro, removing impact blinders

Cuba Unmasks the Ideology of the Right

December 18, 2014 by costaricaguy Leave a Comment

Fulgencio Batista

I’ve long been an advocate for a change in U.S. diplomatic posture towards Cuba…

and certainly for the ending of the asinine trade embargo of the last five decades.

Even though said embargo has had the unintended benefit of creating a country that is quite unlike any other on this planet.

I’ve not yet had the privilege of going there myself. I want to…desperately.

And I’ve heard things…good things.

So, finally we have a President who’s (sometimes) willing to step up and make change happen where it’s needed…

despite every attempt by Congress to keep him from doing it.

He gave us universal health care. Not perfect, mind you, but definitely an improvement over nothing.

He took action to help cure the “state of limbo” that 11 million folks suffer under, who’ve lived, worked, raised families and basically acted like U.S. citizens for a long time, with one problem…

they aren’t and never can hope to be…U.S. citizens…

until now.

He’s taken action against Global Warming, when the last President only hemmed and hawed, along with the majority of his right-wing constituents, about whether he “believed in it.”

And now this…

He’s reversed 5 decades of really stupid policy towards Cuba, an island nation of 13 million about 90 miles off the Florida coast.

A place where, up until now, Americans could only visit under threat of incarceration.

And why is that?

Because of the utterly awful regime of one Fidel Castro.

However, let me offer you the enhanced perspective of a ride in my time capsule…

in which we turn the dial back to around 1952, when a dude named Fulgencio Batista took over Cuba in a military coup.

Batista was loved by corporate America and even by a small minority of wealthy Cubans, but not so much by the rest.

For an idea of why U.S. politicians and corporations loved Batista, consider the words of John F. Kennedy…

At the beginning of 1959 United States companies owned about 40 percent of the Cuban sugar lands, almost all the cattle ranches, 90 percent of the mines and mineral concessions, 80 percent of the utilities, practically all the oil industry, and supplied two-thirds of Cuba’s imports.

Another group loved Batista as well, and the dictator definitely returned that affection…

the mafia.

You see, they loved Batista because of the gambling and prostitution that the dictator allowed into Havana and took for himself a big corrupt chunk of the action.

But the poor peasants working the U.S. corporate controlled sugar cane fields harbored little love for the dictator.

So, a band of leftists, led by a lawyer rabble-rouser named Fidel Castro, unsuccessfully tried to mount an attack against the Batista regime on July 26, 1953.

Batista made the mistake of allowing Castro to live to try again…

and try he did.

Castro, along with Che Guevara, ultimately led a revolution that took over from the hills of the Sierra Maestra all the way to Havana. Batista fled and the Castro regime was borne.

One of the first things Castro did was to take back some of the stuff mentioned by Kennedy above and give it back to the folks who had worked the land.

It was called agrarian reform and it was all the rage amongst many “communist” Latin American leaders.

Of course, those sweeping changes didn’t sit well with many wealthy Cubans, who fled the island in exile to Miami, Florida…

and there they live to this day.

In fact, the parents of Senator Marco Rubio were, arguably, part of that exile.

And that I guess explains why Rubio is so up in arms about Obama’s action.

Castro was faced with leading a tiny island nation with one huge and powerful enemy just 90 miles away…

So what’d he do?

He ran directly into the arms of Russia at the height of the Cold War.

Cuba quickly earned the reputation of America’s arch backyard nemesis. The Cuban Missile Crisis only heightened that perception.

But now the Cold War is over. Castro’s Cuba has been anything but perfect, especially from a human rights perspective, but they’ve been cleaning up their act very nicely lately.

Obama’s action was welcomed by virtually all Cubans on the island, even Raul Castro himself…

but not so much by the Little Havana contingent in Miami, Florida. They still have quite the bone to pick with Castro.

Nevertheless, this action is good for the people of Cuba. It might turn their nation into another playground for the U.S. rich and famous, but apart from that, it should work out fairly well for them.

It will also be a boon for many in the U.S. with their eyes on Cuba from a business opportunity perspective. I, for one, am eyeing the tourist potential and have already registered the domain, www.cubatravelunlimited.com.

So, why all the ruffling on the right about action that was long overdue from a common sense perspective?

Well, because, for one, an Obama legacy is beginning to take shape despite their dire efforts not to allow that to happen…

and because it offends their ideological sensibilities for this once Cold War backyard foe to now be greeted into the community of civilized nations…

and because many are still fuming about Castro once taking away their stuff.

I wrote a post recently about the right’s tendency towards ideological isolation and this is another not-so-shinning example of that.

You see, sometimes ideological idiosyncrasies can get in the way of just plain old common sense.

Recent news reports about some of the things that went on in the former administration, like “rectal-feedings” and the like, clearly demonstrate that.

Thankfully, we finally have a President who doesn’t suffer so much from those.

Filed Under: Removing Impact Blinders Tagged With: Cuba, Fidel Castro, Fulgencio Batista, John F. Kennedy

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