Showing posts with label Che G. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Che G. Show all posts

Sunday, January 4, 2009

"There have been no what-if laments over Che's failure to spark insurrection in Bolivia."

A good post on Che and Fidel, two famous totalitarians. From the Guardian:

"Rory Carroll

Much has been said about the 50th anniversary of Cuba's revolution but here is one sentiment which has not resounded across South America: if only Fidel Castro and Che Guevara had managed to export their experiment( TOTALITARIANISM ).

The absence of those two words – if only! – shows relief that the revolution stayed on its Caribbean island. There have been no what-if laments over Che's failure( NO ONE SUPPORTED HIM ) to spark insurrection in Bolivia. No wistful imaginings of what Argentina, Brazil, Chile and Peru would look like today had the dominos toppled. No counterfactual historical sighings.

The reason is simple: people assume it would have been a debacle. They look at the penury Cubans have endured over the past five decades, at the one-way traffic of migrants on rafts, at the political repression, and they conclude, thanks, but no thanks.

To challenge the US empire Che dreamed of creating "many Vietnams", not least in his Argentine homeland. Who today can seriously wish he had succeeded?

Say the continent did bathe in blood and suffering, and at the end of it bested Washington and its proxies, then what? There would have been an attempt to create a "new man"( A PRISONER ), an idealised, selfless, socialist being, and a bout of Che-conomics( GULAGS ). In Cuba the first was an embarrassing flop and the latter a catastrophe which ruined agriculture and industry.

No wonder the revolution's anniversary has left South America largely indifferent. Cuba is not a model. It is a curiosity, an anachronism of central planning and cobwebby ideology( A HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATION PETRI DISH ) .

There is genuine pride in the revolution's accomplishments. Many poor South Americans can only fantasise about Cuba-style education and healthcare, fraying but still impressive systems which deliver first-world rates of infant mortality and life expectancy. Havana's egalitarian rhetoric still reasonates in a region scarred by grotesque inequality.

A new generation of leftist leaders respect Fidel for facing down the gringo superpower which bullied and corrupted the region for over a century, not least by propping up murderous rightwing dictatorships( TRUE ).

There is loathing for the US embargo( A STUPID POLICY ), a longstanding, vindictive and demented policy which has pummelled Cuba's economy. For its defiance and ideals the revolution is respected( HOLD ON NOW ).

But Cuba's calamitous living standards and totalitarian controls curdle would-be nostalgia for exported Marxism. South America has thrown off dictatorship and is no longer beholden to IMF-style neoliberal prescriptions. It is growing more prosperous under democratic, centre-left governments which are accountable to voters and stand up to Washington. Who needs Che?"

Totalitarians need chic stars like Che to make their nostrums palatable.

Thursday, December 11, 2008

"Che hated artists, so how is it possible that artists still today support the image of Che Guevara?"

Here's some hero worship I've never understood. Nick Gillespie on Reason:

"
Killer Chic: Hollywood's Sick Love Affair with Che Guevara

Gisele Bundchen wears him on the runway, Johnny Depp wears him around his neck, and Benicio Del Toro becomes him in the new, highly acclaimed, two-part epic film from Steven Soderbergh, Che. Ernesto "Che" Guevara, the revolutionary who helped found communist Cuba, is the celebrity that celebrities adore. And be it Madonna, Rage Against the Machine, or Jay-Z, musicians really dig Che.


It's something that baffles Cuban jazz legend Paquito D'Rivera. "Che hated artists, so how is it possible that artists still today support the image of Che Guevara?" Turns out the rebellious icon that emblazons countless T-shirts actually enforced aesthetic and political conformity. D'Rivera explains that Che and other Cuban authorities sought to ban rock and roll and jazz.

"Che was an inspiration for me," D'Rivera tells reason.tv. "I thought I have to get out of this island as soon as I can, because I am in the wrong place at the wrong time!" D'Rivera did escape Cuba, and so far he's won nine Grammy awards playing the kind of music Che tried to silence. But D'Rivera says Che's crimes didn't end with censorship. "He ordered the execution of many people with no trial." Che served as Castro's chief executioner, presiding over the infamous La Cabana prison. D'Rivera says Che's policy of killing innocents earned him the nickname-the Butcher of La Cabana.

"We're rightly horrified by fascist murderers like Adolph Hitler," says reason.tv's Nick Gillespie. "Why aren't we also horrified by communist killers?" Certainly, Che's body count isn't anywhere near Hitler's. But what about someone Che idolized, someone whom he might have liked to wear on his chest?

"Che, Castro, all the communist regimes idolized only one thing that Mao personifes-violence." Kai Chen grew up in China under the reign of Mao Zedong. Although he won gold medals for China's national basketball team, Chen's was far from the celebrity life of an NBA star. Says Chen, "You have no right to talk, and you have no right to think."

The punishment for questioning Mao's authority was often death. The Black Book of Communism estimates that Mao is responsible for the deaths of 65 million people-a figure that dwarfs even Hitler's body count. "Mao is a murderer," says Chen. "The biggest mass murderer in human history."

And yet, like Che, Mao's image is becoming an increasingly popular way to move merchandise. You can buy Mao t-shirts, mugs, caps-you name it. Near Chen's Los Angeles home there's even a restaurant called Mao's Kitchen. "Can you imagine a restaurant called Hitler's Kitchen?" asks Gillespie.

Neither D'Rivera nor Chen understands why communist killers are considered Chic, but each finds his own way to have the last laugh on these anti-capitalist icons.

"Killer Chic" is written and produced by Ted Balaker. Director of Photography is Alex Manning.

Go here for embed code, related materials, and iPod and HD versions."

Here's my comment:

Don the libertarian Democrat | December 11, 2008, 9:37am | #

It's a mystery. He's hardly icon material. More like Chamber of Horrors. I could be wrong about this, but didn't the Bolivian peasants tell him to the get the hell out of here?