Why Did Congressional Black Caucus Overlook Racism in Cuba?

Several members of U.S. Congressional Black Caucus smitten with Castro...

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  • 03/02/2023

Last week, the Stalinist regime that jailed and tortured the longest suffering black political prisoner in modern history (Eusebio Penalver) rolled out the red carpet for six gullible  members of the U.S. Congressional Black Caucus. All of these U.S. legislators met with “President” Raul Castro while a lucky three secured back-stage passes to meet Fidel himself.

Not since Ann Margaret's reaction to Conrad Birdie's kiss has anything been recorded to match these U.S. legislators' reaction to these meetings.

“He looked directly into my eyes!” gasped Rep. Laura Richardson (D-Calif.) “and then he asked: how can we help President Obama? Fidel Castro really wants President Obama to succeed."

"It was quite a moment to behold!" hyperventilated Rep. Barbara Lee. (D-Calif.) “Fidel Castro was very engaging and very energetic."

“He’s one of the most amazing human beings I’ve ever met!” gushed Emanuel Cleaver (D-Mo.)

“Raul Castro was a very engaging, down-to-earth and kind man,” according to Bobby Rush (D-Ill.) “someone who I would favor as a neighbor. It was almost like visiting an old friend," (A Freudian slip, perhaps? Bobby Rush, after all, was a card-carrying Black Panther who did prison time.)

Lest we forget: these black U.S. legislators were raving about a regime that jailed political prisoners at a higher rate than Stalin's and executed more people (out of a population of 6.4 million) in its first three years in power than Hitler's executed (out of a population of 70 million) in its first six.

Racism is one of the cornerstones of the Castro regime.  As Fidel’s close friend and ally, the murderous Ernesto “Che” Guevara, once said, "The Negro is indolent and spends his money on frivolities, whereas the European is forward-looking, organized and intelligent... We're going to do for blacks exactly what blacks did for the Cuban revolution. By which I mean: nothing!”

Che was much too modest. “Nothing” is not at all an accurate description of Castroite treatment of Cuba's blacks. In fact, these lily-white European soldiers sons (Fidel and Raul) forcibly overthrew a Cuban government where Cuban blacks served as President of the Senate, Minister of Agriculture, Chief of Army, and Head of State (Fulgencio Batista, a grandson of slaves who was born in a palm-roofed shack). Not that you'll learn any of this from the liberals' exclusive educational source on pre-Castro Cuba: the Godfather II movie.

Today the prison population in Stalinist/Apartheid Cuba is 90% black while only 9% of the ruling Stalinist party is black. As these black legislators cavorted in Cuba, a black Cuban anti-communist named Antunez, who suffered 17 years in Castro's dungeons (essentially for quoting Martin Luther King and the U.N. Declaration of Human Rights in a public square), was on a hunger strike against Castroism. I will quote his sister from a samizdat smuggled out of Cuba last year while he was still in prison:

"The Cuban government tries to fool the world with siren songs depicting racial equality in our country. But it is all a farce, as I and my family can attest, having suffered from the systematic racism directed at us by Castro's regime. My brother suffers the scourge of racial hatred every day. The beatings are always accompanied by racial epithets. They set dogs on him. They deny him medical attention. They kept him from attending his mother's funeral."

"The racist mentality is so ingrained among Cuba's agents of repression that when mixed race groups are stopped on the street, only the blacks are asked for their identification papers. The only thing I have to thank the Cuban revolution for," she quoted her brother, "is for restoring the yoke of slavery that my ancestors lived under."

Needless to say, Antunez and his family were “overlooked” during the CBC visit to Cuba, as was the black Cuban doctor, who Amnesty International highlights as a Prisoner of Conscience, who President Bush honored (in absentia) with the U.S. Congressional Medal of Freedom last year, and who presently suffers a sentence of 25 years in Castro's torture chambers, Dr Elias Biscet. This man's crimes consist essentially of saying things in Cuban public about Castro similar to what Nancy Pelosi, John Stewart and Bill Maher say on major networks about former President Bush.

Dr. Biscet also denounced the Castro regime's policy of forced abortions. This latter "crime" goes a long way towards explaining why you've never heard of him (and wont) in the MSM.

"I'm convinced Raul Castro wants a normal relationship with the United States," said Lee after finally catching her breath this week. Lee assures us that her Stalinist Cuban hosts “do want dialogue. They do want talks. They do want normal relations."

Fine, and so did South African president Pik Botha in 1986. So I will now quote Rep. Lee's Congressional Black Caucus regarding “normal relations” between the U.S. and segregationist South Africa.

“The U.S. has held ideals of freedom for more than 200 years and we should not tolerate their abrogation by any other country!" thundered CBC founder Charles Rangel in 1986.

“In any business dealings with (South Africa) we become tainted by association. We urge a policy of comprehensive sanctions. Of total disinvestment, a complete ban on imports and exports,” implored CBC co-founder Ron Dellums"...in other words I urge adoption of a policy that demonstrates our total abhorrence of apartheid!”

But, given the Congressional Black Caucus' recent pronouncements, no abhorrence of Stalinism (total or even partial) seems to figure in their program.

Granted, major differences abound between Stalinist Cuba and the late segregationist South Africa. The segregationists, for instance, jailed at most 5000 political prisoners (the Castroites 300,000.)  The segregationists also never tortured and murdered U.S. citizens, never stole $2 billion from U.S. stockholders at Soviet gunpoint, never trained and financed some of the world's most murderous terrorist groups.

Indeed apartheid South Africa tried to hold the line against Soviet imperialism in southern Africa.

Interestingly, last week Castro's Congressional Black Caucus guests did meet with the families of some prisoners. But these prisoners were serving time in U.S. prisons, after conviction by free and independent judiciaries - quite unlike Castro's prisoners who to this day are convicted based on Che Guevara's famous legal dictum: “[J]udicial evidence is an archaic bourgeois detail. We prosecute and execute from revolutionary conviction!”

Some background: On September 14, 1998, the FBI uncovered a Castro spy ring in Miami and arrested ten of them. Four others managed to scoot back to Cuba. These became known as the "Wasp Network," or “The Cuban Five” in Castroite parlance.

According to the FBI's affidavit, these Castro agents were engaged in, among other acts:

  • Gathering intelligence against the Boca Chica Air Naval Station in Key West, the McDill Air Force Base in Tampa and the headquarters of the U.S. Southern Command in Homestead, Fla.
  • Compiling the names, home addresses and medical files of the U.S. Southern Command's top officers, along with those of hundreds of officers stationed at Boca Chica.
  • Infiltrating the headquarters of the U.S. Southern Command.
  • Sending letter bombs to Cuban-Americans.
  • Spying on McDill Air Force Base, the U.S. armed forces' worldwide headquarters for fighting "low-intensity" conflicts.
  • Locating entry points into Florida for smuggling explosive material.

These Castro agents also infiltrated the Cuban-exile group Brothers to the Rescue, who flew unarmed planes to rescue Cuban rafters in the Florida straits. From these spies, Castro got the flight plan for one of their flights and sent up MIGS to shoot down their planes and murder four of them.

Three of these men were U.S. citizens, the other a legal U.S. resident.

“I will ask President Obama, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and First Lady Michelle Obama for the judicial process against the five Cuban men (the above-mentioned Castroite spies) to be reconsidered,” promised Richardson to her beaming hosts and these spies families' while in Havana last week.

Apparently it was too much to ask Rep. Richardson to ask her Stalinist hosts if the “judicial process” responsible for the highest political incarceration rate of the century might also “be reconsidered.”

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