Nick Gillespie | February 20, 2008
As Fidel
Castro turns power over to his younger brother Raul (the Ozzie Canseco of
totalitarianism), questions abound: Did Castro resign to have more
time with his
families? So he could travel outside his open-air island prison
a bit more easily? So he could have more time to catch up on his
reading?
The Competitive Enterprise Institute's Ivan Osorio presents this picture and asks: "For nearly all of the Castro era, analyzing Cuban politics has involved Kremlinology-style reading of tea leaves. So I wonder what seasoned Cuba watchers will make of this photo?"
If his Greenspan jones keeps going, who knows, maybe next on his nightstand is Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal?
reason on Castro and Cuba here.
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Whoever gave the book to him didn't even peel off the "30% off" sticker. I thought that when Castro stamped out class in Cuba, he was only talking about economic class.
The interesting thing to me was reading that Fidel was an avid
reader of the Miami Herald during the period when I was the
Chairman of the Dade County LP. In that era, I wrote an article for
the Miami Herald which was mainly about US ballot access laws, but
which mentioned Cuba.
In the article, I publicly suggested to Fidel that he split Cuba's
communist party in halves. A "tax & spend welfare-state" half
and a "borrow & spend warfare-state" half could effectively
fill all roles currently filled in Cuba by the Communist Party.
Then Fidel could enact an exact Spanish translation of Florida's
ballot laws and say "trade with us!" while claiming to have enacted
"democracy" when all he'd have done is trade a monopoly he
controlled for a duopoly he controlled. Needless to say, the
Democrat and Republican friends I caricatured weren't pleased with
my words, but aside from their displeasure I saw few
arguments...And sadly, Fidel wasn't enough of a humorist to enact
my idea and REALLY skewer the hypocrites.
JMR
What is so startling about Castro reading Greenspan? They were both old men with unlimited power.
The question is "what's he saying about the book."?
That he knows all about free market/"disaster capitalism" and will
never allow it in Cuba?
Someone should send him the Road to Serfdom, but I guess it's a little too late.
Someone should send him the Road to Serfdom, but I guess
it's a little too late.
In some ways, Castro wrote the book on "the road to serfdom."
That looks like a pretty heavy, big hardcover book.
Maybe he was just going to use it to squash some dissident's
balls.
Gahan beat me to it.
He found that book on one of his staff members who's out of frame
but being shot by firing squad.
Greenspan's career had a lot more in common with Cuba-style central planning than the laissez-faire capitalism he used to praise before selling his soul for tickets to Washington DC cocktail parties.
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