By Rich Lowry
Tuesday, July
13, 2021
It’s not easy to run a hideous
dictatorship and still have fans and defenders in fashionable quarters, but the
Castro regime has managed it for decades.
The mass, spontaneous protests that broke
out all over Cuba last weekend are yet another sign that the country’s
government lacks legitimacy. In Cuba, it is the government versus the people,
and lo, all these years, Castro’s apologists have been with the government.
They have romanticized Fidel Castro, the
founding father of Cuba’s junta. They have swallowed its propaganda. They have
made excuses for it. They have looked away from its crimes. And they have
blamed America for its manifest failures.
If the protests continue in Cuba, there
will be an existential struggle between people in the streets displaying
American flags and chanting for freedom and an organized-crime syndicate that
rules by force and has long held the affection of American Left.
During his presidential-primary campaign
last year, Bernie Sanders wouldn’t back off from his supportive statements
about the Castro regime over the years — yes, the government should be less
authoritarian, but it has done so much good, he said. Filmmaker Michael Moore
made a popular movie extolling the Cuban health-care system.
Upon Fidel’s death in 2016, Canadian prime
minister Justin Trudeau expressed his “deep sorrow” at the death of “Cuba’s
longest-serving president” (when a president jails his opponents, he can indeed
stay in office a long time).
Cuba’s regime has long benefited from the
romantic image of violent Latin American revolutionaries (Che Guevara is a
ubiquitous progressive mascot), the fact that it is a left-wing, rather than
right-wing, dictatorship, and that it has always fed off anti-American
sentiments.
The rationalizations offered for the
regime are tinny and misleading.
We are supposed to believe that Cuba was
sunk in medieval illiteracy until enlightened Communists came to power who
cared above all about social progress and just happened to jail, torture, and
kill lots of people in the course of teaching kids to read.
It’s not true, though, that Cuba was
markedly illiterate prior to the advent of the Castro dictatorship. In 1960,
the literacy rate was about 80 percent, high by the standards of the time. Nor
is it correct that Castro had benevolent intentions with his literacy campaign;
the point was to make it easier to stuff the Cuban people with Communist
propaganda. It has proven entirely possible, by the way, for Latin American
countries to achieve steep increases in literacy without running gulags.
What about advances in health care and on
other metrics? The economic historian Brad DeLong has noted that, in 1957, Cuba
had lower infant mortality than many European countries, more doctors and
nurses per capita than Britain or Finland, and as many vehicles per capita as
Italy or Portugal. After decades of misrule, its per capita GDP ranks with
Mongolia’s and Bhutan’s, according to CIA figures.
This suggests, correctly, that Castro took
over a country in pretty good shape and wrecked it, rather than the other way
around.
The government’s failures are always
blamed on the U.S. embargo, without which, supposedly, Cuba would be the one
Marxist economy in the history of the world able to deliver plenty to its
people. Actually, shortages are endemic because of the inefficiencies inherent
to command-and-control economies. The U.S. embargo is unilateral, and the Cuban
government has long been expert at evading it. There is little keeping Cuba
from trading with other advanced Western countries and buying their goods, if
the artificially impoverished country could afford them (its characteristic way
of doing business is to buy on credit and then never pay up).
All of this has always been plain enough,
but now even more so. There is a revolutionary movement afoot in Cuba, one that
is courageous, inspiring, and — one hopes — truly democratic. It is the
ordinary people of Cuba attempting to vindicate their rights against the Left’s
favorite dictatorship.
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