This is where you misunderstand. It's not a political bias when someone is forced out of their home, separated from their family, and has everything they own stolen on their way out. It's a very practical issue.Nothing wrote:Or perhaps you should have questioned the political biases of your friend.
It's a political bias when people try to discredit criticism of Che because "Class struggle transcends national borders." See? You brought up 'class struggle.' The Cubans that fled aren't concerned with progressive tax versus flat tax or Chomsky quotables, they want to see their families again. You're the one being ideologically blinded, not them.
This.Mr_sausage wrote:There's this weird mentality that, if you're using heavy terms like "authoritarian" and "murderer," you must be thinking emotionally, and therefore unreasonably, and therefore you have a limited perspective. Nonsense. One can very rationally, clearly, and widely come to a decision that someone is authoritarian in their leadership style, and is a muderer, in the immoral manner in which they took life or had life taken. Taking a complex or intelligent view of a situation is not predicated on using weak terms, or having weak opinions, or coming to no definite conclusions about things one way or the other.
Thank you. I'm not saying that Che is only an authoritarian murderer. Calling him that doesn't mean that is his totality. He was also a husband, an intellectual, a wonderful speaker, and he thought he was doing the right and good thing. He has these traits and numerous other warm-and-fuzzyisms that he shares with other despots around the globe. Doesn't make his politics any less authoritarian or his actions any less murderous.
Bringing up the fact that American presidents enacted policies that resulted in more deaths is a non sequitur. The inevitable reaction to any criticism by an American given to any other group. I mean, why else bring up Pinochet? The truth is that--surprise--BOTH can be authoritarian and militaristic and result in death.
Left and right wing. If you have a government, it's probably going to lead to "legitimized" force. But we should sure call them on it. As sure as I'll call Bush (and really the people pulling his strings) an authoritarian whose policies resulted in mass murder, I will call Che the same. If you want me to agree that the US Military and CIA have killed and enacted policies that have killed innocents, I'm with you.
adlh, for you to say about the Cubans in Miami that "These are not for the most part happy innocent people that just had to flee a regime." You are not defining "innocent." Maybe they were not "innocent" to Che or Fidel, but what is innocent? If they disagreed with the Revolution, they were not innocent. If these were poets, authors, homosexuals, or *gasp* capitalists, they were not innocent.
You can say, "Well, one group must suffer, so why not the rich folk?" You can say that. "Them or us" worked to stir up the Bolsheviks and it's been used to fight Iraqis on their own ground. If someone's gotta die, might as well be them on their own soil. Personally, I'd prefer to just say that all politicians are corrupt, yes. And there will be winners and losers in politics, yes. That's what politics is. But those like Che that end dissent by killing the dissenters deserve a special place on the list of authoritarian murders.