February 28, 2007
In the cover story from Reason's March issue, Glenn Garvin reviews a biography of the man who made Fidel Castro. Read it before it's adapted into a quasi-sequel of The Last King of Scotland!
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After reading this in the magazine, I started researching Matthews. I was flabbergasted at the respect that he still garners in some quarters.
This in tangential, but I don't think the hit on Anderson Cooper
was warranted at all.
The implication of the author's phrasing makes it appear that he
was reporting the false rumors about the Superdome et al, and he
was not. Cooper tried to get too much play out of his spitting
nails act, but his reporting was respectably factual and
accurate.
The problem is that passion, as the mother of any teenaged
girl will tell you, can lead to big trouble.
wait what
The problem is that passion, as the mother of any teenaged girl will tell you, can lead to big trouble.
wait what
Pregnancy, my dear man, pregnancy.
from the article:
he hypes Castro as Batistas "most dangerous enemy" and declares
that "hundreds of highly respected citizens are helping Señor
Castro, who is offering "a new deal for Cuba, radical, democratic
and therefore anti-Communist." We are assured that "thousands of
men and women are heart and soul with Fidel Castro and the new deal
for which they think he stands." Castro, while admittedly a
"fanatic," is a "man of ideals, of courage and of remarkable
qualities of leadership," with an "overpowering"
personality."
Outside of the anti-communist statement, what exactly is untrue
here? He was Batista's most dangerous enemy, he has an overwhelming
personality by all accounts and obviously has some leadership
skills if he has been in power this long; and I don't like the guy
but you obviously got to have some courage and conviction about
your ideas to do what Fidel did in the early days, just ideas I
disagree with.
Outside of the anti-communist statement, what exactly is
untrue here?
Well, he didn't have "thousands of men and women" with him, indeed,
peasants were turning him in quicker than his brother could shoot
them.
When you're a dictator, no one can really tell if you've got
leadership skills, because you don't know who's following
voluntarily and who's just trying to stay out of trouble.
Staying in power when you're a dictator doesn't require leadership
skills, because you don't have to convince people that you're
right. You just tell them that they can either agree with you or be
sent to prison and/or executed.
Having courage and conviction about your ideas is easy when you
force them on people at gunpoint.
I will admit, however, that Castro does haven and "overpowering
personality." It has overpowered the good sense of liberals all
over the world.
Les,
There weren't thousands of people fighting on Fidel's side? His
followers were never more than a few hundred during the revolution?
You sure about that?
And did you even notice that the article was written before Castro
came to power?
"When you're a dictator, no one can really tell if you've got
leadership skills," Yes, but Castro wasn't a dictator when that was
written; he was a rebel living the countryside, and got people to
risk their lives to follow him.
"Staying in power when you're a dictator doesn't require leadership
skills, because you don't have to convince people that you're
right." Yes, but coming to power when you're the leader of a
guerilla group requires very effective leadership skills.
"Having courage and conviction about your ideas is easy when you
force them on people at gunpoint." And it's very hard when the
government and army will put you up against a wall for them.
I'm going to go out on a limb here and say that, yes, Fidel Castro
actually was brave and charismatic.
I think one of the reasons Castro comes off as credible to some
people is the absolute inability of his most vocal opponents to be
remotely objective about him.
joe,
At the time the article was written, Castro had a handful of
soldiers, 18 I think it was.
I see your points about leadership abilities, though. And okay,
"brave" counts, too!
I think one of the reasons Castro comes off as credible to some
people is the absolute inability of his most vocal opponents to be
remotely objective about him.
I see what you're saying, but I think it's not that hard to be
objective about Castro, and by "objective," I'm assuming you mean
pointing out the good and the bad.
Good: Healthcare. Literacy. (Brave and leadership skills, too!
Happy!?)
Let me know what I missed.
Bad: Dictator, executed lots of political prisoners, imprisons
reporters who are critical of his government, sent homosexuals to
camps.
Once you get to "dictator," what else does one need to say? Once
you're locking up dissidents and homosexuals, does it matter in the
least that you showed leadership skills and bravery almost half a
century ago?
Of course, Les. I'm certainly not trying to paint a pretty
picture of him.
I just don't think it's wise to turn real life enemies into
cardboard cutouts in our political discourse. It's a bad habit, and
it makes us look stupid when we get called on it.
I just don't think it's wise to turn real life enemies into
cardboard cutouts in our political discourse. It's a bad habit, and
it makes us look stupid when we get called on it.
Point taken. But I honestly feel like the inclination for someone
like me to reflexively dismiss the good qualities of a dictator
like Castro is certainly more understandable than the tendency of
too many intelligent liberals' to visit and be politely entertained
by a tyrant. Maybe they think that because so many conservatives
hate him, he can't be that bad. I honestly don't know.
Good: Healthcare. Literacy.
Hmmmm! Oh, except for the fact that Cuba already had the best
healthcare and the highest level of literacy (close to 100% urban,
while lower in the country) in Latin America under Battista. And
the fact that many other countries in the region which were much
more repressive in those days have moved into the democratic camp
and seen much more dramatic improvements in both Public Health and
literacy .
Yeah, that Fidel, such a genius!
Wow, you mean, better than Guatemala? The country went from
third-world levels in those measurements to first world, with only
a third-world economy to draw on. That ain't peanuts, and it
happened decades earlier than other countries in the region.
Of course, it would have been better if the Cuban revolution had
been a democratic one. I wonder how many Latin American democratic
revolutions we quashed.
I think joe makes some good points here. First, Castro must have
some sort of skills, or else he wouldn't have been able to
do what he did. It's not like you just get to say "I'm a dictator"
and then somebody obligingly shoots whoever disagrees with you. You
kind of have to build a movement, trick a bunch of people,
out-maneuver whoever is currently in power, and then make sure that
no charismatic dissident, guerrilla commander, or ambitious
henchman offs you. And while you can keep a lot of people loyal
with the spoils of your kleptocratic regime, it helps if you do at
least one or two things sort of right (or at least "right" for
enough people), so that you can avoid mass unrest. Or at least talk
some other kleptocrat into funding you, so that everybody in your
fiefdom gets a TV set with which to watch your 8 hour
speeches.
Also, it does seem like some of the Castro critics make themselves
easy to dismiss by pretending that he's, like, the worst dictator
around. Sorry, but in a world that includes North Korea and
Turkmenistan, and where many living people remember Hitler, Stalin,
Pol Pot, and Mao's "Great Leap Forward", that's just not a credible
claim.
The fact that Castro is a second-rate dictator should give us a
clue about what a fucked up world we live in.
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