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The wires made the announcement ahead of time. On January 6th
we learned of Bush’s trip to the Middle East, just as soon
as his very Christian Christmas holiday break was over. He
would be going to Muslim territory, lands having a different
religion and culture from that of the Europeans, who
converted to Christianity, declared war on the infidels, in
the 11th century A.D.
The Christians themselves killed each other, both for
religious reasons and national interests. It seemed that
everything had been overcome by history. Religious beliefs
remained that should be respected, the same as their legends
and traditions, whether Christian or otherwise. On this
side of the Atlantic, as in many parts of the world,
children anxiously awaited every 6th of January,
gathering enough hay for the camels bringing the Three Wise
Men. I also shared in these hopes during the early years of
my life, asking those three fortunate Wise Men for the
impossible, with the same wishful thinking that some
compatriots expect miracles from our determined and
dignified Revolution.
I
am not physically apt to speak directly to the citizens of
the municipality where I was nominated for our elections
next Sunday. I do what I can: I write. For me, this is a
new experience: writing is not the same as speaking. Today,
that I have more time to inform myself and to meditate about
what I see, I have barely enough time to write.
One always expects good tidings; bad tidings tend to
surprise and demoralize us. Being prepared for the worst is
the only way to be prepared for the best.
It
seems unreal to see Bush, the conqueror of other
peoples’ raw materials and energy resources, setting out
guidelines for the world careless about how many hundreds of
thousands or millions of people die or how many clandestine
prisons and torture centers must be created to attain his
objectives. “Sixty or more corners of the world” must
expect pre-emptive attacks. Let us not shut our eyes; Cuba
is one of those dark corners. The head of the empire said
that in just so many words and I have warned the
international community of this on more than one occasion.
In
Abu Dhabi, capital of the United Arab Emirates, a few miles
from Iran, AP says that “The President of the United States,
George W. Bush said Sunday that Iran is threatening the
security of the world, and that the United States and Arab
allies must join together to confront the danger before it’s
too late.
“Bush has accused the Teheran government of funding
terrorists, undermining stability in Lebanon, and sending
weapons to the Taliban, the Afghan religious militia. He
added that Iran is trying to intimidate its neighbors with
alarming rhetoric, defying the United Nations and
destabilizing the region as a whole by refusing to be open
about its nuclear program."
“'Iranian actions threaten the security of nations
everywhere’ Bush said. Therefore, the United States is
strengthening our long-range commitments to security with
our friends in the Persian Gulf and calling on our friends
to confront this danger.”
“Bush spoke at the Emirates Palace Hotel, built at a cost of
3 billion dollars, and where a suite costs 2,450 dollars a
night. It is one kilometer from end to end and has a 1.3
kilometer white sand beach. According to Steven Pike,
spokesman of the of the US Embassy in the United Arab
Emirates, every grain of sand on this beach was imported
from Algeria.”
The entire world knows that he wants war against Iran, it is
his war. Furthermore, he promises that U.S. troops will
remain in Iraq for at least 10 more years.
What is worse is that the main candidates of the two parties
in line to succeed him are incapable of remedying this. Not
one of them dares to even slightly contest this imperial
practice, which is based on the excuse of fighting
terrorism, an evil engendered by the system itself and its
colossal and unsustainable consumerism, while striving for
the impossible: sustained growth, full employment and no
inflation.
These were not the dreams of Martin Luther King, Malcolm X
and Abraham Lincoln; nor were they the dreams of those great
dreamers throughout humanity’s turbulent history.
Whoever has the time to read and analyze the news coming in
on the Internet, cable and in books, can ascertain the
contradictions to which the world has been driven.
In
an article run by El País, a widely read Spanish
newspaper, the subject of the prices of food and fuel are
dealt with. Signed by Paul Kennedy, professor of history
and director of International Security Studies at Yale
University and one of the country’s most influential
intellectuals, the article states that “oil is the greatest
element of dependency for the United States in terms of
external forces."
“By the mid-18th century, Great Britain had the
largest shipbuilding industry in the world. Yet, as its
yards were launching hundreds if not thousands of sailing
ships each year, certain English inventors were creating the
magic of the steam engine, which used vast amounts of energy
secured in the especially bituminous depots of South Wales.
The steam and coal engine carried the British Empire onward
for another 150 years.”
Later on he indicates the point of view that is most
interesting for us: the ever-greater interconnection
between oil and foods. The reasons are well-known: the
enormous energy demands of the large Asian economies and the
inability of the wealthiest countries –the United States,
Japan and Europe– to reduce their consumption.
“But global soy bean demand is also spiraling upward, again,
chiefly due to the rising consumption in Asia; China’s tens
of millions of pigs devour an awful amount of soy bean meal
in a year. The soy bean futures prices are 80 percent higher
this year (December 2007) than last (2006).”
“No one can be certain of that, but the continued increases
in overall world population, and the surge in real incomes
for more than two billion people over the recent past, will
surely translate into ever-greater demand for the world’s
protein: for more beef, more pork, more chicken, more fish,
and thus for more grains to feed them.”
The Yale professor might as well have added: more eggs and
more milk, since their production requires considerable
amounts of fodder. But a little later, he alludes to an
article published in The Economist, the main
newspaper of European finance, describing it as “highly
detailed, impressive and very scary”; it is entitled “The
End of Cheap Food”. “That magazine began its food-price
index way back in 1845. The price index is higher today than
in anytime in its entire 162 years.”
Brazil, which is now self-reliant in fuel and has abundant
reserves, will doubtlessly escape this dilemma. Stretching
on a plateau at 300 to 900 meters altitude, it is 77 times
bigger than Cuba. This sister republic enjoys 3 different
climates. Almost every food can be grown there. It is no
hit by tropical hurricanes. Together with Argentina, they
could save the peoples of Latin America and the Caribbean,
including Mexico, although they could never guarantee
security for them because they are at the mercy of an empire
which will not allow that union.
Writing, as many people know, is an instrument of expression
that lacks speed, tone and the intonation of spoken
language, and it doesn’t use gestures. It also takes
several times our scarce available time. Writing has the
advantage that it can been done at any time, day or night,
but one doesn’t know who will read it; very few can resist
the temptation to improve it, to include what was not said
or to cross out what was said; sometimes one has the urge to
throw it all in the waste basket since you don’t have the
interlocutor there in front of you. All my life I have
transmitted ideas about events as I was seeing them, from
the darkest ignorance until today when I have more time
available and I have the possibility of observing the crimes
being committed against our planet and our species.
To
the youngest of our revolutionaries, in particular, I
recommend to be extremely demanding with themselves and to
observe an iron-clad discipline. They should avoid being
ambitious for power, presumptuous or boasters. They should
be watchful about bureaucratic methods and mechanisms and
avoid succumbing to simple slogans. They should recognize
bureaucratic procedure for the worst obstacle they are and
use science and computation without falling prey to the
excessively technical and unintelligible jargon of the
elitist specialists. They should always be hunger for
knowledge; and perseverance, and both physical and mental
exercises should be part of their lives.
In
this new era in which we live, capitalism is not even a
useful instrument. It is like a tree with rotten roots, from
whence only the worst forms of individualism, corruption and
inequality sprout. Nor should we give away anything to
those who could be producing and who don’t produce, or who
produce very little. Reward the merits of those who work
with their hands or their minds.
Just as we have universalized higher education, we must also
universalize simple physical labor; it helps us to at least
carry out a part of the infinite investments demanded by
everyone, as if there was an enormous reserve of money and
labor force. Be especially wary of those inventing State
enterprises with just any excuse and then managing the easy
profits as if they had been capitalists all their lives,
sowing egoism and privileges.
Until we become aware of such realities, no effort can be
made, as Martí would have said, to “timely prevent” that the
empire which he saw surging up, living as he did in its
entrails, may destroy the future of humanity.
We
must be dialectic and creative. There is no other possible
alternative.
We
are grateful for Bush playing his part as one of the Wise
Men, visiting the place where the son on the carpenter
Joseph was born, if truly someone knows where the exact spot
of that humble crib is, where the Nazarene was born. The
leader of the empire bears the gift, this time, of tens of
billions of dollars to the Arab countries to buy weapons
that come from the industrial-military complex; and at the
same time, two dollars for every one supplied to them to arm
the state of Israel, where the United Nations agency which
tackles the subject assures us that 3.5 million Palestinians
have been deprived of their rights or expelled from their
territory.
His obsessive instrument is to threaten the world with
nuclear war. Only he is capable of bearing this Epiphany
Gift.
Fidel
Castro Ruz
January
14, 2008.
7:12
pm. |