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View Full Version : Think he will ever figure out he was a propaganda tool . . .



Jacie
12/10/2013, 05:28 PM
. . . or that the average Cuban would not describe their life there as "magnificent"?

Elian Gonzalez slams U.S. embargo

By Andres Lopez and Cindy Y. Rodriguez, CNN
updated 4:44 PM EST, Tue December 10, 2013

Quito, Ecuador (CNN) -- One name stands out on the guest list of thousands of youth at a conference in Ecuador this week: Elian Gonzalez.

Fourteen years after he made global headlines as the subject of a custody battle between Cuba and the United States, Gonzalez spoke to CNN on Tuesday during his first trip outside Cuba since 2000.

Gonzalez, who turned 20 last week, was just 6 years old when he was found clinging to an inner tube after the tiny boat he was traveling in from Cuba sank on the way to the United States. Gonzalez's mother and nine other people in the boat drowned.

He had harsh words for the United States on Tuesday as he recalled his mother's deadly journey.

"Just like her, many others have died attempting to go to the United States. But it's the U.S. government's fault. Their unjust embargo provokes an internal and critical economic situation in Cuba," Gonzalez said.

"But, despite that, Cuba, even with all its problems has progressed over the years. The progress we've made is all thanks to Cuba's courage, our dignity, our continued fight for a more just model."

Gonzalez is in Quito, Ecuador, for the World Festival of Youth and Students, a left-wing conference attracting more than 10,000 people from all over the world to discuss global struggles against imperialism.

He told CNN en Espaņol that he has been asked to speak at the conference, but isn't quite sure what his topic will be.

"My topic could range anywhere from the lifting of the unjust blockade on Cuba to the freedom of the 'Cuban Five.' The main reason we're here is because we want a revolutionary progressive movement that leads to socialism," he said.

The five Cubans imprisoned in the United States are convicted on charges of espionage, but are considered heroes in Cuba because many believe they prevented acts of terrorism on the island.

After his rescue in 1999, Gonzalez was placed with relatives in Miami, who wanted to keep him in the United States.

But Gonzalez's father, Juan Miguel, fought to bring him back to Cuba. Then-Cuban leader Fidel Castro led massive protests in Cuba demanding Gonzalez's return. The case of the telegenic boy became a flashpoint between supporters and opponents of Castro's revolution.

As the two sides fought the high-profile case in court, U.S. immigration officials decided to put Gonzalez in the custody of his father, who had come to the United States to argue for Elian's return. His relatives in Miami refused to go along, and armed U.S. federal agents then raided the home of Gonzalez's uncle and seized the boy.

Some experts at the time worried Gonzalez would suffer a lifetime of trauma as a result of the dispute, or become a political pawn for the Cuban government.

After Gonzalez's return to Cuba, the government there celebrated a political victory but largely kept Gonzalez out of public view and surrounded by government bodyguards.

When asked by CNN en Espaņol to describe what his life has been like since he left Miami, Gonzalez said "magnificent." In Cuba, he said, everywhere he goes he feels the love and support of his fellow Cubans.

"I haven't suffered any consequences because of what happened. It has not affected me psychologically, but it has been hard for my family," Gonzalez said. "Those were tough times."

badger
12/10/2013, 05:34 PM
In retrospect, there would be no reason other than "it's Cuba" to keep a son away from his father in a situation like this. I'm sure he had a better life than many Cubans because of his public profile, but there's a reason people escape Cuba to the U.S. and not the other way around.

olevetonahill
12/10/2013, 06:36 PM
I said all along the Boy needed to be with his Father, He had no say in the matter of his mother trying to run away with him and come to America

But yes He has been brainwashed .Oh well

KantoSooner
12/11/2013, 09:54 AM
He's a bit young to blame.
I'll side with Tony Blair on this one. He was asked once whether he thought the US was still the beacon that it had once been (following gulf wars, etc) and he said there was an easy way to find out: imagine dropping all immigration hurdles and giving everyone on earth a free ticket to whereever.
We'd be pretty crowded.

Wishboned
12/11/2013, 10:20 AM
I said all along the Boy needed to be with his Father, He had no say in the matter of his mother trying to run away with him and come to America

But yes He has been brainwashed .Oh well

I agree on both points.

badger
12/11/2013, 12:03 PM
It's funny that this story comes out as the bigger Cuba-related news is Obama shaking hands with Cuba dictator in chief Raul Castro.

I have no idea what is going on in Cuba, but from accounts of those who escaped to be in the U.S. (mostly Florida), it sounds like they took living in what should be an island paradise and ****ing up

KantoSooner
12/11/2013, 12:47 PM
It's important to look at Cuba in a clear eyed way.

1. They are a decaying totalitarian dictatorship run by a family dynasty who very likely are involved up to their blood drenched elbows in facilitating the drug trade. The official state ideology is a dumbed down pastiche of quasi-Marxist BS that never had a prayer (pun intended) of working due to fundamental flaws in assumptions of human nature; which Marxist BS was itself a product of a fundamental misunderstanding of Hegelian thought.

2. At the same time, the current government took over from a gaggle of career criminals who were looting the country blind and had left the entire population grubbing along in desperate poverty with a foreign comprador class milking them for all they were worth and selling their children as sex toys to arrogant tourists.

Since that time, they've been given a modicum of life's necessities and a bit of self respect (partially due to isolation from the overwhelming behemoth 90 miles to their North - folks, we're scary when viewed through foreign eyes). This has come at the cost of liberty and most of one's independent personhood, but it's arguably better than life under Batista.

I have no trouble understanding why Cubans are proud of their country...even as a large percentage would obviously like to leave and/or to change what they've got now. We don't need to coddle their government, but some sympathy for their peoples' failure to overthrow it would not be misplaced.

Oh, and their healthcare system is a model to be suggested to any developing country.

stoopified
12/13/2013, 11:27 AM
Stick Mike Moore's fat a$$ on a boat and haul it to Cuba to join this kid.

badger
12/13/2013, 12:17 PM
Stick Mike Moore's fat a$$ on a boat and haul it to Cuba to join this kid.

Didn't he actually do that once, to show how those without health care couldn't go to Guantanamo Bay but could go to Cuba for free health care?

BigJerm7
12/15/2013, 03:22 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vt9y89jfJJU