Read The Longest Romance Online

Authors: Humberto Fontova

The Longest Romance (14 page)

Imagine long-haired youths destroying images of Che Guevara! It's easy when you are, unlike Occupy demonstrators, actually forced to live under Che Guevara. The impulse then becomes irresistible.
USEFUL IDIOTS FROM WOODSTOCK NATION
Not that stupid old men like Jean-Paul Sartre, Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. and Bob Beckel are alone in hailing the youthful idealism of a Stalinist regime that jailed tens of thousands of Cuban youths for the crime of growing long hair and listening to “Yankee heepee” rock music.
In fact many of the very “Yankee heepees” whose music was criminalized by Fidel Castro themselves hail the KGB-mentored jailing of their fans. This hailing often takes the form of composing songs in honor of the regime that jailed young Cubans who were caught listening to their own music smuggled into Cuba.
When in 1979 Fidel Castro invited Stephen Stills to perform in Cuba, the famous Woodstocker could hardly contain his elation. The fervent champion of human rights, civil rights and free speech—indeed, CSNY's last tour in 2010 was entitled “The Free-Speech Tour”—not only took up the offer to perform at this
“Havana Jam” but also composed a song in Castro's honor, entitled “Cuba al Fin!”
Jazz-master Paquito D'Rivera, still living in Cuba at the time, recalled watching Stills on stage at Havana's Karl Marx theatre lovingly crooning the song to the families of Castro's Stalinist
nomenklatura
as if Havana Jam were a personal performance for the Soviet satrap himself.
9
Within blocks of this cheeky “jam”—which also included fervent human-rights activists Kris Kristofferson and Billy Joel—Cuban youths, black and white, languished in dungeons as they suffered prison sentences longer than Nelson Mandela's. Their crime was the commission of free speech.
“They invited me because they knew I was politically astute,”
10
gloated Stephen Stills about the acumen and good taste of his Cuban hosts, who to this day jail Cuban youths for the crime of saying “Down with Fidel!”
“There's a man with a gun over there, tellin'me I gotta beware,” wrote Stepen Stills in his 1967 hit, “For What it's Worth.” You know what, Stephen Stills? Cuban youths have something to tell you regarding that scenario. If only you'd deigned to part company from your Stalinist hosts in Havana and asked around.
“Paranoia strikes deep, into your life it will creep. It starts when you're always afraid, Step out of line, the men come and take you away.” Your lyrics, Mr. Stills—and they describe to a T your hosts in Havana, who took away Cubans at a higher rate than Stalin took away Russians or Hitler took away Germans.
“Young people speaking their minds, And getting so much resistance from behind ....” Quite so, Mr. Stills. Cuban youngsters were getting it from the people right behind your stage from the Stalinists who were sponsoring you, who were brown-nosing with you, while they were jailing and torturing young people for the crime of listening to your music.
“You have to give them due respect because they have a unique form of socialism that's very significant in the scheme of world history,” Stills declared in explaining his Cuba visit.
11
Oh, it's unique all right, Mr. Stills. Can you think of another 20
th
-century regime that jailed and tortured youths
en masse
for the crime of growing long hair and craving rock music?
Famous Woodstocker Carlos Santana also glorifies the regime that criminalized his music and imprisoned his fans. At the 2005 Oscars the famed guitarist, on hand to perform the theme song for
Motorcycle Diaries,
stopped for the photographers, smiled deliriously and flung his jacket open.
Ta-DA! There it was: Carlos's elegantly embroidered Che Guevara t-shirt. Carlos's face as the flashbulbs popped said it all. “I'm so cool!” he might have beamed. “I'm so hip! I'm so sharp! I'm so politically astute—like my buddy Stephen Stills!”
Indeed, as if hipness, sharpness and political astuteness meant proudly advertising the emblem of a regime that criminalized your music and lifestyle.
Judy Collins, though not physically present at Yasgur's farm on August 15, 1969, certainly merits mention here. The Spanish-sounding gibberish that closes out “Judy Blue Eyes” is Stills employing a
faux
Cuban accent, singing: “How beautiful it would be to bring me to Cuba, the queen of the Caribbean. I only want to visit you there, how sad that I can't go, Oh va, oh va, va!”
Well, exactly ten years later Stills fulfilled his wish, and as a personal guest of the beautiful island's owner and warden.
Upon Che Guevara's death, the bereaved “Sweet Judy Blue Eyes” herself sought solace in songwriting, composing a lovely ballad entitled “Che.” “You have it in your hands to own your life, to own your land” goes the chorus which represents Che himself consoling Bolivian
campesinos who
mourn their savior's death.
Attempting to own their own lives and land is precisely what got thousands of Cuban country-folk massacred by Che Guevara's firing squads. America's millionaire songstress might have mourned Che's death, but it was Bolivian
campesinos
who helped track him down and kill him.
“Only through the total eradication of private property will we create the new man,” instructed Che Guevara. “Youth must refrain from ungrateful questioning of governmental mandates. Instead they must dedicate themselves to study, work and military service. The very spirit of rebellion is reprehensible!” thundered this idol of the “do-your-own-thing” Bohemians.
Not to be outdone by Judy Collins, famous Rhodes Scholar Kris Kristofferson composed a song entitled “Mal Sacate,” wherein he laments: “You have stolen all the land that you can steal, and you killed so many heroes.”
A perfect tribute to his Havana Jam hosts, you might think?
Instead Kristofferson was lambasting Stalinism's enemies, the men who fought Che Guevara. The very next stanza mentions the “murdered heroes,” among whom we find none other than—Che Guevara!
Judy Collins and Kris Kristofferson obviously share the same “political astuteness” with their friend and soulmate Stephen Stills. So let's excuse them for confusing Fidel Castro with Country Joe McDonald and Che Guevara with Wavy Gravy.
Former “Pretenders” singer Chrissie Hynde's latest album is entitled
Fidelity!
in honor of Fidel Castro. She and her lover had recently visited Cuba and “saw pictures of Fidel Castro everywhere!” she explained.
Imagine that!
Champion of Cuban Stalinism (and segregation) Chrissie Hynde was a noisy opponent of South African segregation. You'll find the identical “incongruity” in Castro fans from Charles Rangel to Maxine Waters, from Danny Glover to Jack Nicholson, from Sidney Pollack to Steven Spielberg, from Francis Ford Coppola to Norman Jewison, from Ry Cooder to Bonnie Raitt.
Speaking of Bonnie Raitt, she composed a song in honor of Fidel Castro entitled “Cuba Is Way Too Cool!” and performed it in his very fiefdom in March 1999 during a star-studded musical extravaganza entitled “Music Bridges Over Troubled Waters.”
In brief, the only regime in recent history to criminalize rock music and jail its fans for the crime of being its fans has songs composed in its honor by rock musicians Bonnie Raitt, Stephen Stills, Judy Collins, Kris Kristofferson and Chrissie Hynde. Not to be outdone, native New Yorker and civil-rights activist Carole King sang a personal and heartfelt “You've Got a Friend” to the man who boasts of craving to nuke New York and who jailed the longest-suffering black political prisoners in modern history.
The testimony of a Cuban rocker-wannabe might clarify matters: “In Cuba freedom is nonexistent,” the rock guitarist told Mexico's Proceso magazine. “The regime demands submission. It persecutes all hippies, homosexuals, poets and free thinkers. It employs total repression against them.”
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The Cuban rocker quoted above divulged the truth only because he'd managed to escape the nation-prison that Bonnie Raitt, Chrissie Hynde, Jimmy Buffett, Andy Summers, etc. all herald. That escapee's name is Canek Sanchez Guevara—Ernesto “Che” Guevara's very grandson. The regime co-founded by his grandfather jailed and tortured Canek for the crime of trying to play rock music.
CHAPTER 10
Jon Stewart to Don Fidel: Thank You, Godfather
“I mean everybody who saw Godfather II knows what it was like when Castro took over!”
(Chris Matthews, “Hardball, The Place for Politics,” MSNBC, October 20, 2011)
 
“All I know about pre-Castro Cuba I learned from Godfather II!”
(Jon Stewart, July 23, 2008)
T
he media love to dwell on how a few U.S. mobsters once bribed a few Cuban politicians to allow a few casinos in Havana. To hear them tell it: in an economy that was overwhelmingly Cuban-owned, export- and manufacturing-oriented, and provided Cubans per capita with an income higher than most Europeans, the 13
th
-lowest infant mortality on earth, and attracted a flood of (primarily first-world) immigrants, this tiny sideline—the casino business—made Cuba a hopelessly wretched place screaming for a communist revolution. So don't bother us with any boring statistics, you Cuban-exile revanchists!
For almost forty years the primary—and perhaps
exclu
sive
—educational text on Cuba for liberals was a screenplay by fiction-writer Mario Puzo and winemaker Francis Ford Coppola.
Bestselling author T.J. English, in collaboration with Castro-regime apparatchiks, then expanded on this educational franchise.
Havana Nocturne: How the Mob Owned Cuba, and Lost it to the Revolution,
he entitled the “New York Times Bestseller” that enchanted and enlightened Comedy Central's Jon Stewart, also known as the primary news and educational source for Americans under 40.
“Well-researched ... knowledgeable ... Briskly paced and well-sourced,
Havana Nocturne
has the air of a thriller with the bonus of being true,” rhapsodized Tom Miller of
The Washington,
Post about the book.
“Thoroughly and impressively researched,” attested
The Miami Herald.
“Bringing together long-buried historical information with English's own research in Havana ...
Havana Nocturne
takes readers back to Cuba in the years when it was a veritable devil's playground for mob leaders,” glows the PR notice from publisher William Morrow.
“The roots of this epic antipathy [between the U.S. and Castro] can be traced in part to the influx of mobsters and the plundering of Havana that took place in the late 1940's and 50's ... This book is nothing less than The Rosetta Stone, the key to understanding the Cuban Revolution,” the author modestly claims.
During this interview the legendarily edgy and iconoclastic Jon Stewart royally blew his chance to revel in a nonstop snark-fest against the (genuine) establishment. Instead:
“I
love
this book!” Stewart gushed upon greeting the author on his “Daily Show.” “This is the true story of Cuba—a fascinating book!” continued the Peabody Award-winner, barely containing himself.
As a service to “The Daily Show's” producers I prepared a script—based on fully-documented information—for Stewart's interview with T.J. English that seemed ideal for enhancing the
Peabody Award-winner's acclaim for deflating blowhards and smashing pious platitudes with snarky truth. Here it goes.
Welcome to the show, Mr. English, and thanks for coming. First off, it appears that the primary source for your book, cited no fewer than 72 times in quotes and footnotes, is an official of Castro's totalitarian regime named Enrique Cirules.
In fact,
Senor
Cirules is an official of Cuba's La Casa de las Americas, which publishes and promotes the Castro regime's propaganda in books and articles under the guise of art. In 1983 a high-ranking Cuban Intelligence officer named Jesus Perez Mendez defected to the U.S. and spilled his guts to the FBI. Among his gut-spillings we encounter the following: “The Cuban DGI (Castro's KGB-trained spy agency) controls Casa de las Americas.” We were hoping to have Mr. Perez-Mendes on tonight to contribute his views on the veracity of your book's claims, Mr. English, but were thwarted upon discovering that he lives under FBI protection for fear of being assassinated by the folks who hosted you in Cuba and collaborated with you in writing the book.
1
Mr. English, in your book's acknowledgements you describe this Castroite apparatchik Enrique Cirules as a “Cuban author.” Wouldn't this be like describing Julius Streicher as a “German author”?
Instead, minutes into the interview and in response to another
Godfather-ite
cliché by the smug T.J. English, Stewart—this winner of the Television Critics Association award for “Outstanding Achievement in News and Information”—gushes: “Wow! So the mob actually
built
Cuba's economy! So it was actually
worse
than shown in
Godfather II
!

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