Washington vis Cuba After 
		Castro 
		By Stephen Lendman
		ccun.org, March 4, 2008
		
		 
		On February 18, at 5:30PM in Havana an era ended when Fidel Castro's 
		written statement announced it. It was read on early Tuesday morning 
		radio and television and reprinted in the Cuban newspaper Granma as 
		follows: 
		 
		"....I will neither aspire to nor accept, I repeat, I will neither 
		aspire to nor accept the positions of President of the State Council and 
		Commander in Chief....it would be a betrayal to my conscience to accept 
		a responsibility requiring more mobility and dedication than I am 
		physically able to offer....Fortunately, our Revolution can still count 
		on cadres from the old guard and others....who learned together with us 
		the basics of the complex and almost unattainable art of organizing and 
		leading a revolution.
		 
		The path will always be difficult....We should always be prepared for 
		the worst....The adversary to be defeated is extremely strong; however, 
		we have been able to keep it at bay for half a century....
		 
		I was able to recover the full command of my mind (and am able to do) 
		much reading and meditation. I had enough physical strength to write for 
		many hours....My wishes have always been to discharge my duties to my 
		last breath. That's all I can offer.
		 
		This is not my farewell to you. My only wish is to fight as a soldier in 
		the battle of ideas. I shall continue to write under the heading of 
		'Reflections by comrade Fidel.' It will be just another weapon you can 
		count on....
		 
		Thanks.
		 
		Fidel Castro Ruz"
		 
		The world press reacted, and here's a sampling:
		 
		The New York Times cautioned that "Castro May Not Be Exiting the Stage 
		Completely....but whether the surprise announcement represented a 
		historic change or a symbolic political maneuver remained unclear....It 
		was not clear what role, if any, Fidel Castro would play in a new 
		government (because) he signaled that he was not yet ready to completely 
		exit the stage....There was little evidence in the streets of the 
		capital and in other cities to suggest that a monumental change was 
		taking place in the Cuban hierarchy."
		 
		The Washington Post.com was almost passive in stating: "Fidel Castro 
		retires....he said on Tuesday that he will not return to lead the 
		communist country....Cuba's National Assembly, a rubber-stamp 
		legislature, is expected to nominate....Raul Castro as president (who's) 
		been running the country since emergency intestinal surgery forced his 
		brother to delegate power on July 31, 2006." The Bush administration 
		earlier announced it would not negotiate with any Cuban government 
		headed by either Castro brother. More on that below.
		 
		The Wall Street Journal was vintage Murdoch on its editorial page. It 
		called Castro's legacy "ruthless....but less widely appreciated is that 
		he was also an economic incompetent....the island is a malnourished 
		backwater....staples are rationed, severe shortages exist in the medical 
		system and electricity is a luxury....Cuba begs at the feet of 
		Venezuela....young Cubans routinely take their chances with the security 
		police and shark-infested waters rather than face life under the Castro 
		brothers." 
		 
		Phew, and the shame is that readers believe this stuff because the 
		Journal and rest of the major media  suppress the truth about Cuba, 
		Venezuela and other regimes that successfully challenge Washington. In 
		Cuba's case, it defeated a US invasion, a 49 year economic embargo, over 
		600 attempts to kill Castro, repeated US state terrorism to destabilize 
		the country, and relentless efforts to isolate the island politically 
		and economically. 
		 
		In spite of it, Castro survived. He's now 81, an icon and living legend 
		throughout Latin America, and most world nations have normal diplomatic 
		and trade relations with him. In addition, Cuba is a member of the Latin 
		American Economic System (SELA), the Organization of American States - 
		OAS (but excluded from active participation since 1962), the Association 
		of Caribbean States (ACS), the International Atomic Energy Agency 
		(IAEA), and in September 2006, it assumed leadership of the 118 member 
		nation Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) that states it's united to ensure "the 
		national independence, sovereignty, territorial integrity and security 
		(of its members) in their "struggle against imperialism, colonialism, 
		neocolonialism, racism, Zionism, and all forms of foreign aggression, 
		occupation, domination, interference or hegemony...." 
		 
		Latin American expert James Petras explains Cuba's "great virtue" - that 
		"it survived (and maintains) many of its positive social achievements 
		(while other) reformist or revolutionary regimes were defeated or 
		overthrown or collapsed" - Iran under Mossadegh, Guatemala under Arbenz, 
		Chile under Allende, the Congo under Lumumba, Indonesia under Sukarno, 
		Nicaragua under the Sandinistas, Haiti under Aristide twice and many 
		others.
		 
		Still, 49 years of US hammering took its toll. Cubans, indeed, endure 
		hardships that wouldn't exist or would be less severe under more ideal 
		conditions. Incomes are low, housing shortages chronic, embargoed 
		products scarce or unavailable and many services, like public transport, 
		inadequate. Yet, Cuban advances under Castro have been impressive, and 
		his support remains strong after five decades in power. 
		 
		The country is a biotech industry leader and does state-of-the-art 
		research at the Cuban Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology Center. The 
		government also encourages small retail and light manufacturing 
		enterprises, fosters joint ventures in tobacco, citrus and other 
		homegrown products, invested in advanced computer science schools, and 
		developed a thriving tourism industry after it changed its constitution 
		in 1995 to encourage it through offshore private investment.
		 
		Then consider Cuba's social services, especially its education and 
		health care ones. These alone, institutionalized the revolution in the 
		hearts and minds of the people who never before had a government that 
		provided them and much more.
		 
		Take health care for example. It's world-class, and Article 50 of the 
		1976 Constitution mandates it for all Cubans. They get free medical, 
		hospital and dental care including prophylactic services with emphasis 
		on public health, preventive care, health education, programs for 
		periodic medical examinations, immunizations and other preventive 
		measures. The Constitution also guarantees worker health and safety, 
		help for the elderly and pregnant working women, and paid leave before 
		and after childbirth. In addition, Cuba's Public Health Law obligates 
		the state to assure, improve and protect the health of all citizens, 
		including providing rehabilitation services for physical and mental 
		disabilities.
		 
		Compare this to World Health Organization's (WHO) rankings for America - 
		37th in the world in "overall health performance," 54th in health care 
		fairness, worst of all western countries overall, and only developed 
		nation besides South Africa with no single-payer national health 
		insurance system. Except for seniors under Medicare, the indigent under 
		Medicaid, veterans through the Veterans Administration (VA), no national 
		program exists and benefits under existing ones are dramatically 
		eroding. 
		 
		The US spends more than twice as much on health care on average as other 
		industrialized states. Yet, it's performance is poor by comparison - on 
		life expectancy, infant mortality, immunization rates and more. In 
		addition, over 47 million Americans are uninsured and over 80 million 
		are without coverage during some portion of every year. 
		 
		Then consider education. In Cuba, it's first-rate because the 
		Constitution's Article 51 assures it free for everyone to the highest 
		level. It's Latin America's best, and it outdoes most parts of America's 
		public school system. It stresses math, reading, the sciences, arts, 
		humanities, social responsibility, civics, and participatory 
		citizenship. It virtually eliminated illiteracy and compare it to 
		America where US Department of Education figures show a 20% functional 
		illiteracy rate that, in fact, is much higher based on inner-city math 
		and english achievement test scores.
		 
		Consider Cuba's other achievements as well. Major US media won't report 
		them, but James Petras does - low rents and utility costs, worker 
		pensions at retirement, food subsidies for the needy combined with 
		rationing that's never desirable but needed to assure adequate 
		distribution to all, and an emphasis on "cultural, sports and 
		recreational activities (in spite of) sharp cutbacks in funding." 
		Impressively, "despite general scarcities and social deprivation, crimes 
		rates (are) far below Latin American and US levels."
		 
		Petras observes that: "Even more noteworthy" is Cuba's transition to a 
		mixed economy that aids its growth and provides jobs for its people. 
		Unlike Eastern Europe, including Russia, however, "Cuba did not suffer 
		the massive outward transfer of profits, rents and illegal earnings from 
		large-scale networks of prostitution, narcotics and arms sales." Nor 
		have there been crime syndicates that corrupted the economies of 
		Bulgaria, Poland, Romania, Albania, NATO-occupied Kosovo, and other 
		emergent "capitalist democracies." And most impressively, Cuba is 
		growing its economy, if modestly, while remaining a vibrant social state 
		that delivers essential services and remains committed to its 
		revolutionary principles. That won't change under a new cadre of leaders 
		after Castro.
		 
		So far, Petras explains that Cuba's survival, economic gains and 
		"formidable national defense" are largely the result of "popular 
		perseverance, loyalty to revolutionary leaders (and their dedication to) 
		common values of egalitarianism, solidarity, national dignity and 
		independence." Some dictatorship, but at the same time Cuba's no 
		paradise. Its problems are huge, and as Petras puts it, it faces new 
		"challenges and contradictions:"
		 
		-- less skilled tourism-related jobs pay better than ones for doctors, 
		scientists and many others in the country;
		 
		-- new tourist enterprises created inequality and an unrevolutionary 
		"nouveau riche bourgeoisie;"
		 
		-- "hustlers," prostitutes, drugs trafficking and other 
		enterprise-related fallout; and
		 
		-- tourist infrastructure investments divert funds from essentials like 
		agriculture; output thus declined, and Cuba now depends on imports.
		 
		On the plus side is the hard currency Cuba needs for everything it 
		imports outside its ALBA-related trade. Cuba and Venezuela founded the 
		system in 2004, Bolivia and Nicaragua joined it, and it stands for the 
		Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas. It's an integrative, 
		cooperative system of goods and services exchanges outside the 
		exploitive WTO-international banking one. So it lets Cuba get Venezuelan 
		oil, for example, by providing doctor services and literacy programs to 
		teach Venezuelans to read and write.
		 
		Looking Ahead
		 
		In spite of five decades of achievements, Cuba's problems are huge, and 
		its new leaders must address them. They include growing inequality, 
		corruption and public theft, a flourishing black market, 
		productivity-sapping inefficiencies, an imbalance between an educated 
		population and enough skilled jobs, its agriculture in decline, and 
		more.
		 
		In addition, Cuba is no democracy, but it's no dictatorship either the 
		way Washington and Murdoch describe it. Castro came to power as Prime 
		Minister in February 1959. He kept the title of premier until 1976, and 
		then became President of the Council of State and Council of Ministers 
		as Head of State and its ruling Communist Party of Cuba (PCC). 
		 
		The PCC has governed Cuba since it was formed in 1965 and is the 
		country's only legally recognized party. Others exist as well as 
		opposition groups, but their activities are minimal and the state calls 
		them illegal. Cuba is a socialist state. It recognizes no other economic 
		or political system. 
		 
		Its Constitution allows free speech, but Article 62 states: "None of the 
		freedoms which are recognized for citizens can be exercised contrary 
		to....the existence and objectives of the socialist state, or contrary 
		to the decision of the Cuban people to build socialism and communism. 
		Violations of this principle can be punished by law." 
		 
		Cuba now begins a new era, its challenges are huge, and consider the 
		biggest of all - Washington's relentless pressure the way Deputy 
		Secretary of State (and veteran state terrorist) John Negroponte put it: 
		Castro stepping down means nothing, US policy won't change, "I can't 
		imagine that happening any time soon."
		 
		George Bush was even more hostile by calling for international efforts 
		to isolate Cuba and force it to accept democracy US-style. And he added: 
		"The United States will help the people of Cuba realize the blessings of 
		liberty." Of course, Cubans fought a revolution against that type 
		"liberty" and won't tolerate returning to it. Remaining free, however, 
		will be daunting, and the section below explains why.
		 
		US Commission for Assistance to a Free Cuba
		 
		Washington-style freedom is Orwell's kind from his classic novel "1984." 
		In it, he described a totalitarian state where "war is peace, freedom is 
		slavery, and ignorance is strength." Iraqis know it. So do Afghans. It's 
		rooted in America, and the Bush administration wants to export it 
		everywhere, including to Cuba under and after Castro.
		 
		So it set up the Commission for Assistance to a Free Cuba to plot how. 
		In July 2006, it delivered its 93 page report to the president that 
		calls for regime change. Not surprisingly, Bush embraced it, it got an 
		initial $80 million budget, and an open-ended one for as much more as 
		needed.
		 
		The report is public but has a classified attachment with a secret plan 
		to topple Cuba's government or co-opt its new leaders post-Castro. It 
		also targets Venezuela and mentions the country nine times with comments 
		like: "Cuba can only meet its budget needs with the considerable support 
		of foreign donors, primarily Venezuela." It uses Chavez "money....to 
		reactivate its networks in the hemisphere to subvert democratic 
		governments," meaning, of course, any that opt out of Washington's 
		orbit.
		 
		The report's aim is clear. Cuba and Venezuela threaten US interests so 
		"friendlier" regimes must replace them and soon. How is left out, but 
		what's said is ugly, and here's a sample. It calls for "Hastening the 
		End of the Castro Dictatorship: Transition not Succession." America 
		"stand(s) with the Cuban people against (Castro's) tyranny (and will) 
		identify (any) means by which the United States can help the Cuban 
		people" free themselves.
		 
		Regional "friends of Cuba" are also targeted and will be dealt with by 
		unspecified political, economic, legal and military means. The message, 
		however, is clear, and America's record leaves no doubt what it is. 
		 
		It recommends new "more proactive, integrated, and disciplined 
		(policies) to undermine (Castro's) survival strategies" and outlines a 
		six part strategy to do it:
		 
		-- "Empower Cuban Civil Society:" It calls it "weak...divided (and) 
		impeded by pervasive and continuous repression." But that's changing, 
		"public opinion has turned, Cubans are....losing their fear (so by) 
		supporting the democratic opposition....the US can help the Cuban 
		people....effect positive political and social change....;"
		 
		-- "Break the Cuban Dictatorship's Information Blockade:" It claims 
		Castro "controls all formal means of mass media and 
		communication....through the regime's pervasive apparatus of 
		repression." It also "impede(s) pro-democracy groups and the larger 
		civil society....to effectively communicate their message to the Cuban 
		people." So, Washington will step up efforts to export propaganda to 
		Cuba and suppress whatever information Cubans now get;
		 
		-- "Deny Resources to the Cuban Dictatorship:" The report claims Castro 
		ignores his peoples' needs to keep his grip on power. It sounds like 
		Murdoch as it denounces Castro for "exploit(ing) humanitarian aspects of 
		US policy (and) siphon(ing) off hundreds of millions of dollars for 
		(himself)." This refers to funds and other donations Cubans outside the 
		country send relatives back home. The report says Castro steals them to 
		help "keep the regime afloat;"
		 
		-- "Illuminate the Reality of Castro's Cuba:" Stated here is that Cuba 
		depends on "project(ing)....a benign international image" and hides its 
		true nature as a "sponsor of terrorism (under the) erratic behavior of 
		its leadership;"
		 
		-- "Encourage International Diplomatic Efforts to Support Cuban Civil 
		Society and Challenge the Castro Regime:" Claimed here is a "growing 
		international consensus" that "fundamental political and economic change 
		on the island" is needed. Thus, "multilateral diplomatic efforts" must 
		be encouraged to support "pro-democracy groups in Cuba....to hasten an 
		end to the Castro regime;" and
		 
		-- "Undermine the Regime's 'Succession Strategy:" - It refers to Raul 
		Castro replacing his brother as an "unelected and undemocratic" leader, 
		calls the "ruling elite....an impediment to a democratic and free Cuba,"  
		and recommends unspecified pressures to remove it.
		 
		It then lists "Selected Recommendations" with the main ones kept 
		classified. It mentions budgets, enlisting third-country allies, 
		"democracy-building" efforts, training and funding opposition, beaming 
		in propaganda, and various other measures to make Cuba scream and topple 
		the regime. These efforts and others have failed for 49 years. Nineteen 
		months after this report was issued, they've still failed, but remain in 
		place nonetheless and may be toughened under Cuba's new leadership.
		 
		America's three leading presidential candidates provide hints of it from 
		their February 19 comments. John McCain said now is a "great opportunity 
		for Cuba to make a transition to a democracy, to empty their political 
		prisons, to invite human rights organizations into their country and 
		begin the transition to a free and open society....anything short of 
		that....might....prop up a new regime...." He also hoped Castro would 
		die and have "the opportunity to meet Karl Marx very soon," and added 
		that Raul will be a worse leader.
		 
		Hillary Clinton said Cuba's "new leadership....will face a stark choice 
		- continue with the failed policies of the past....or take a historic 
		step to bring Cuba into the community of democratic nations. The people 
		of Cuba want to seize this opportunity for real change and so must 
		we....The United States must pursue an active policy that does 
		everything possible to advance the cause of freedom, democracy and 
		opportunity in Cuba."
		 
		Barack Obama's statement was equally unfriendly: "Today should mark the 
		end of a dark era in Cuba's history. Fidel Castro's stepping down is an 
		essential first step, but it is sadly insufficient in bringing freedom 
		to Cuba."
		 
		We know the type "freedom" he means. So do Cubans who want none of it. 
		So does Raul Castro in his late 2007 comments when he said: "The 
		challenges we have ahead are enormous, but may no one doubt our people's 
		firm conviction that only through socialism can we overcome the 
		difficulties and preserve the social gains of half a century of 
		revolution."
		 
		Fidel also commented in response to presidential candidates demanding 
		change on the island: "One by one....they....proclaim(ed) their 
		immediate demands to Cuba so as not to alienate a single voter....Half a 
		century of economic embargo seemed like not much to these favorites. 
		Change, change, change! they shouted in unison. I agree. Change! But in 
		the United States. The end of one era is not the same as the beginning 
		of an unsustainable system. Cuba changed a while ago and will continue 
		on its dialectical course."
		 
		Castro aimed at George Bush as well and stated: "Annexation, annexation, 
		annexation! the adversary responds. That's what he thinks, deep inside, 
		when he talks about change."
		 
		Cuban and American Elections 
		 
		Cuban and US elections have marked similarities and differences. Cuba is 
		a one party state. So is America the way Gore Vidal describes it: the 
		Property or Monied Party with two wings. There's not a dimes worth of 
		difference between them that matters so Americans have no choice. That's 
		not how things are in Cuba, and here's the difference.
		 
		Cubans overwhelmingly support their government. They remember or learned 
		what went on before Castro and won't tolerate going back to how people 
		once were treated so the rich could profit. Under Fulgencio Bastista, 
		conditions were nightmarish as a de facto US colony - a combination 
		police state and casino/brothel linked to US crime syndicates. There was 
		systemic corruption, indifference to social needs, disdain for the 
		common good, brutal exploitation, subservience to corporate interests, 
		and a regime keeping power through brute force. When Cubans vote, they 
		remember, and how it works would puzzle Americans. On the 
		local/municipal level:
		 
		-- it's through municipal electoral commissions;
		 
		-- only ordinary citizen loyalists may nominate candidates;
		 
		-- the Communist Party has no role in the process;
		 
		-- the commissions select nominees for municipal elections and for half 
		the provincial legislative seats;
		 
		-- a secret ballot process then elects 12,000 municipal representatives 
		and half the members of provincial legislatures; Cuba has 169 
		municipalities and about 15,000 electoral constituencies within them;
		 
		The system works because participation is high, and ordinary Cubans 
		alone choose their candidates - not politicians, corporations, the 
		privileged or other monied  or influential interests.
		 
		The rest of the process works this way to elect members of the National 
		Assembly and remaining provincial seats:
		 
		-- it's also through municipal and provincial electoral commissions; 
		Cuba has 14 provinces;
		 
		-- only ordinary citizen members again may nominate candidates, but 
		included for this process are all sectors of society - labor, students, 
		youths, women, farmers, scientists, artists, community organizers, 
		educators, health workers and so on as well as members of the Committees 
		for the Defense of the Revolution.
		 
		-- the final candidate list exactly equals the number of seats to be 
		filled; it's drawn up by the National Candidature Commission (comprised 
		of student and grassroots organizations) that chooses candidates based 
		on their patriotism, overall merit, and support for the revolution;
		 
		-- even with no opposition, those selected must get over 50% of the vote 
		to win;
		 
		-- voting isn't mandatory but participation is high; voters, 
		nonetheless, have choices - to vote, not vote or destroy their ballots.
		 
		On January 20, Cubans elected National Assembly and half of the 
		provincial legislative members. Turnout was high at around 95% because 
		Cubans support the revolution and want officials who represent it. Look 
		at the results and compare them to American elections discussed below.
		
		 
		Cuba's National Electoral Commission released the data:
		 
		-- only 36.78% of newly elected National Assembly members (224 seats) 
		previously served in Cuba's parliament;
		 
		-- 63.22% of the winners (391 seats) are first time representatives;
		 
		-- racially, 118 parliamentarians are black and another 101 are of mixed 
		race (35.67% in total);
		 
		-- women comprise 42.16% (265 seats) of the legislature;
		 
		-- educationally, 78.34% (481 seats) are university graduates and 20.68% 
		(127 seats) completed high school or technical education training; and
		 
		-- skill areas represented include engineers, economists, doctors, 
		nurses, lawyers, sociologists, the military, scientists, physical 
		culture teachers, meteorologists, historians and theologians. Note that 
		most new parliamentary members aren't politicians.
		 
		The rest of the electoral process works this way:
		 
		-- the Communist Party of Cuba (PCC) has governed the nation since its 
		formation in 1965 and is the country's only legally recognized party;
		
		 
		-- all legislative power is vested in the country's 614 member National 
		Assembly of People's Power;
		 
		-- a 31 member Council of State (that includes ministers) sits at the 
		executive level;
		 
		-- 45 days after being elected, National Assembly members elect a 
		President, Vice-President and National Assembly Secretary; 
		 
		-- they also elect the 31 member Council of State that includes the 
		President, first Vice-President, five Vice-Presidents, a Secretary and 
		23 other members; this process took place on February 24 on the same day 
		National Assembly members took office and, as expected, elected Raul 
		Castro as Cuba's new President; others elected included:
		 
		-- Ricardo Alarcon de Quesada (reelected) President of the National 
		Assembly;
		 
		-- Jose Ramon Machado Ventura first Vice-President of the councils of 
		State and Ministers;
		 
		-- Juan Almeida Bosque, Abelardo Colome Ibarra, Carlos Lage Davila, 
		Esteban Lazo Hernandez and Julio Casas Regueiro Vice-Presidents;
		 
		-- Jose Millar Barruecos Secretary of the Council of State plus 23 other 
		Council of State members;
		 
		-- the President of the Council of State is Head of State and government 
		and its ruling PCC.
		 
		Overall, Cuba has what Hugo Chavez calls a "revolutionary democracy." 
		It's not perfect, but compare it to America.
		 
		Voting in Cuba is participatory. People do it out of choice, not 
		coercion. In America, in contrast, half or more of the electorate 
		abstains. In national elections since 1970, turnout ranged from 36.4% in 
		1986 and 1998 to 55.3% in 2004 when angry voters failed to oust George 
		Bush, but not for lack of trying.
		 
		US elections have never been free, open and fair. Democracy is an 
		illusion, and more people know it and opt out. Others eligible aren't 
		allowed to vote because of how the process works. Overall, monied 
		interests control things, those with most of it have the most say, 
		Americans get the best democracy money can buy, and things really got 
		ugly in 2000 when the candidate who lost became president. 
		 
		It led to the 2002 Help America Vote Act (HAVA) with federal funding for 
		these stated goals:
		 
		-- replace punch card voting systems;
		 
		-- create the Election Assistance Commission to help administer federal 
		elections; and
		 
		-- establish minimum election administration standards.
		 
		That's what it said. Here's what it did. It created a stampede to 
		electronic voting that privatized the process and gave corporate giants 
		unregulated control of it.
		 
		In the 2004 election, more than 80% of votes were cast and counted on 
		machines that are owned, programmed and operated by three large 
		corporations with close ties to the administration. The process is 
		secretive, most machines have no verifiable receipts, so recounts are 
		impossible because they'll only tally the same count.
		 
		And that's just part of the problem. In 2000 and 2004, the whole process 
		was tainted. Millions of votes cast weren't counted. They included 
		"spoiled ballots," rejected absentee ones and others lost or 
		deliberately ignored in tabulating. In addition, there was massive voter 
		roll purging and other restraints to prevent voters from making "bad 
		choices" like ones less receptive to monied interests or Democrats over 
		Republicans in key states or districts.
		 
		In Cuba, every citizen age 16 or over can vote and nearly all of them 
		do. In America, all sorts of restraints and exclusions exist, starting 
		off with a flawed Constitution. It established no universal rules, 
		doesn't explicitly ensure the right to vote, and left most voter 
		eligibility qualifications to the states. So unfair laws are in force, 
		and citizens are denied their most fundamental democratic right - to 
		vote for candidates of their choice in free, open and fair elections. 
		Democracy in America is a sham. In Cuba, the process is flawed, but 
		there's more of it there than here. In addition, Cubans know what 
		they're getting and vote for it. Americans, on the other hand, know the 
		futility of elections so half or more of them opt out of the process.
		 
		It shows in polling data with the latest record-setting February 
		18-published American Research Group numbers for George Bush:
		 
		-- he scored an all-time low for a US president at 19%; that compares to 
		other presidential lows as follows: Clinton - 36%; GHW Bush - 29%; 
		Reagan - 35%; Carter - 28%; Nixon - 23% during Watergate; and Harry 
		Truman - 22% during the depths of the Korean War. On the economy, 79% 
		disapprove how Bush handles it. 
		 
		If Castro's poll numbers were available, they'd tell an opposite story. 
		Most Cubans support him, many love him, but now his era is passing. He's 
		still first PCC secretary, but he'll assume a new role as Cuba's elder 
		statesman, to write, comment and always make his presence felt. So let 
		Fidel have the last word from his commentary called "The Moment Has 
		Come" and a few memorable quotes.
		 
		It's (time) to "nominate and elect" new leaders, he says. "For many 
		years (he's) occupied the honorable position of President." But his 
		"critical health position (forced his) provisional resignation on July 
		31, 2006." His brother and "other comrades....were unwilling to consider 
		(him) out of public life" in spite of it. "It was an uncomfortable 
		situation for (him) vis-a-vis an adversary which had done everything 
		possible to get rid of (him), and (he) felt reluctant to comply."
		 
		Now, he's "recover(ed) the full command of (his) mind (and) enough 
		physical strength" to go on.
		 
		This is not (a) farewell." His voice will continue to be heard, and 
		here's a sampling:
		 
		"A revolution is a struggle to the death between the future and the 
		past."
		 
		"I find capitalism repugnant. It is filthy. It is gross, it is 
		alienating....because it causes war, hypocrisy and competition."
		 
		"North Americans don't understand....that our country is not just Cuba; 
		our country is also humanity."
		 
		"The revenues of Cuban-run companies are used exclusively for the 
		benefit of the people, to whom they belong."
		 
		"The revolution is a dictatorship of the exploited against the 
		exploiters."
		 
		"They talk about the failure of socialism but where is the success of 
		capitalism in Africa, Asia and Latin America?
		 
		Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at 
		lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
		 
		Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to The 
		Global Research News Hour on RepublicBroadcasting.org Mondays from 11AM 
		to 1PM US Central time for cutting-edge discussions of major world and 
		national topics with distinguished guests.
		 
		
		http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=8065