[NYTr] Anti-Cuban Cliches Date: Wed, 5 Sep 2007 01:00:13 -0500 (CDT) Via NY Transfer News Collective * All the News that Doesn't Fit La Jornada, Mezico via Juventud Rebelde - Sep 1, 2007 http://www.juventudrebelde.co.cu/columnists/2007-09-01/anti-cuban-cliches/ (Escerpted from "La Jornada," Mexico) Anti-Cuban ClichC)s By Gilberto Lopez y Rivas I recently engaged in a debate on [Mexican] national television over the topic of Cuba. During the prickly debate, old and well-known myths and prejudices came to light, fed during decades of permanent attacks against the Cuban revolution, their leaders and the socialist regime established by the Cuban people in the exercise of their right to self-determination and sovereignty. My opponent outlined an impoverished Cuban reality, governed by a B+police stateB; that imposes an ideological dictatorship in the education, training and informing of the inert masses of children and citizens who, under the rigorous control of the Communist Party, make breakfast, lunch and diner their main daily concern. How does this perspective baccording to this tarnished visionb of a country, where malnutrition, survival, repression and fear rule, fit in with the achievements made by Cuba in the areas of culture, education, sports, healthcare and other social indicators? Is it possible that under the terror of an omnipresent state, literature, art, music, dance, modern science, biotechnology, computer science and anthropology all flourish? How is it possible to correlate this gloomy description of Jose Martibs country with that of the giant of international solidarity, the country that helped defeat the racist South African army in Angola, creating conditions for the downfall of apartheid? The same country that sends doctors, teachers and support personnel to the most remote and needy places on the planet, even offering its archenemy the United States immediate medical aid during the 2005 tragedy in New Orleans? The island where the percentage of women professionals and technical experts exceed their male counterparts. How can one explain the Cuban achievements in education, where 100 percent of their citizens possess primary and secondary education levels and school performances in mathematics surpassing those in the United States, Canada, Great Britain, Ireland, Portugal and Norway? Or where the average class size of 20 for primary schools is less than all the above-mentioned countries along with Spain, France and Japan? In children under the age of five, Cuba boasts an infant mortality rate of 8 for every 1,000 live births, while this rate is 37 in Latin America and 81 per 1,000 live births worldwide. Added to this achievement is the fact that 100 percent of Cuban children are vaccinated. Life expectancy at birth is 74 in Cuba and 66 worldwide. There are 590 doctors in Cuba for every 100,000 inhabitants compared to 160 for every 100,000 in Latin America. The revolution has made Cuba a world power in biomedicine and science which it has used to help provide poor countries with vaccines, and innovative treatments and medicine. My opponent in the program emphasized the limited offerings in newspapers and magazines even when there are 577 periodicals, 128 publishing companies, dozens of internet publications, 382 public libraries, 57 theaters, 135 art galleries, 302 cultural centers, 265 museums, 406 movie theaters and 364 bookstores. "According to UNESCO figures, between 1989 and 1994, public libraries in Cuba had 48 books for every 100 inhabitants, equaling Italy and surpassing Mexico (36), Peru (25), Costa Rica (10) and Chile (5)." (Alfonso Sastre, et al. Cuba 2005. Editorial Hiru.) I have been able to personally observe and confirm the sociopolitical level of students in all levels of schooling, and that of television audiences by way of daily news programs, courses and special programs such as The Round Table. Cuba, a police state? Cuba is a country where there are no extrajudicial executions; where, since the triumph of the 1959 revolution, the armed forces have never been used to suppress or massacre defenseless protestors; where the murder and violent crime rates are the lowest in the world; where there are no kidnappings or organized crime; where the police and military authorities have not been infiltrated by drug traffickers; that is, a country where the state of law rules and where justice is not for sale; where the rich, powerful and politicians are not offered impunity. The greatest victory of the Cuban Revolution is visible to all: a noble and educated people who have been able to successfully resist the most ferocious blockade and the United Statesb longest military and covert war, while building a socialism that, not devoid of shortages, errors and deficiencies, fosters an alternative for a dignified life for human beings surrounded by the sea of death and destruction of the capitalist world. * ================================================================= .NY Transfer News Collective * A Service of Blythe Systems . Since 1985 - Information for the Rest of Us . .339 Lafayette St., New York, NY 10012 http://www.blythe.org . List Archives: https://blythe-systems.com/pipermail/nytr/ . Subscribe: https://blythe-systems.com/mailman/listinfo/nytr =================================================================