by Agustín Blázquez
with the collaboration of Jaums Sutton
Recently,
Lee Alcorn, president of the Dallas National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) was suspended from his position
and later had to resign for his political disagreement comments about
the positions of Al Gore’s Jewish vice presidential nominee, Senator
Joseph Lieberman’s.
John
Rocker, pitcher for the Atlanta Braves was fined $20,000 on January 31
and ordered to undergo "sensitivity training" for his
offensive remarks about foreigners, minorities and AIDS victims (The
Washington Post, Dave Sheinin, Sports, pg. D1). Jimmy "the
Greek" Snyder, CBS sport commentator, in 1988 had to publicly
apologize and was fired for his racist remarks. For some time,
sensitivity training has been going on in the U.S. government as well
as in the corporate world.
With
the imposition in the U.S. of Marxist-rooted "political
correctness," Americans have to employ a guarded form of freedom
of speech. But this course seems to be developing with a double
standard built in, which is being loosely applied at will by the
self-appointed guardians of this form of selective censorship. For
example, The Washington Post got away with Judy Mann’s January 4
insulting column "Cuban Exiles’ Obsession Is Catching" and
the satire of Hank Stuever’s "The Little Merman" on
January 29, poking fun at the Elián González story and the Cuban
American community, although it is a story of death and suffering. And
on April 4, "How Low Can Al Go" another column deriding
Cuban Americans by Washington Post’s Mary McGrory.
Post
cartoonist Herblock got away unblemished and with no apology for his
racist cartoon on April 19, page A26, suggesting that Cuban Americans
"dissatisfied with laws of the U.S." be given "free
one-way" tickets to Cuba. Would he and the Post say that to black
Americans or Jews, sending them back to Africa or Israel? I don’t
think so. The Post’s self-imposed double standard makes it
"OK."
Despite
telephone calls, letters, faxes and emails of protests, unrepentant,
on April 21, page A26, the Post’s Herblock portrayed Elián’s
Miami family (echoing Castro’s propaganda) as
"kidnappers". And April 28, page A30, derides Elián’s
Miami family and supporters showing the Cuban flag among the scattered
trash.
Even
in the nation’s capital, The Washington Post has been distinguished
by its malicious attacks toward Cuban Americans in many articles and
editorials. This is not a matter of the Cuban Americans vs. The
Washington Post’s or Herblock’s freedom of speech. It is a matter
of blatant bigotry offending the over one million Cuban Americans in
the U.S. Where does "political correctness" stand in
relation to Cuban Americans? Why does the Post have the privilege of
exercising a freedom of speech denied to Lee Alcorn, John Rocker and
Jimmy "the Greek" Snyder?
To
be fair, The Washington Post has not been the only U.S. media
institution engaging in the wave of insults against the Cuban American
minority in the U.S. The New York Times, a pillar of the liberal left,
has been among the most racist of American newspapers engaged in the
despicable practice of striking out against Cuban Americans. That is a
contradiction since the liberals and the left claim to be against all
forms of discrimination. What is their justification for disregarding
it when referring to Cuban Americans?
The
U.S. television media did not lag behind in their attacks against the
Cuban American community. From the most "sublime" and
untouchable anchorpersons like Dan Rather and Peter Jennings, to the
ridiculous like Geraldo Rivera, participated in the bashing of the
Cuban American minority, distorting and manipulating the news to
satisfy the aims of their bias.
Since
Cuban Americans in Miami are being effectively maligned and labeled by
the U.S. media as the "Miami Mafia," - echoing Castro’s
propaganda - I will not register their comments, because they would be
automatically disqualified and dismissed. However, this is what a
Cuban American in Huntington Park, California said, "The type of
bashing we are receiving in the media is astonishing. The manner in
which the media negatively broad-brushed Cuban Americans would be
inconceivable if we were any other ethnic, racial or national group.
It is ‘Open Season’ on Cuban Americans. This is ridiculous.
"It’s
not only racist terms like ‘Banana Republic,’ the unfairness also
comes in more subtle terms. During Saturday’s demonstrations [April
29, 2000] in Miami, all the networks purposely left the impression
that the number of counter-demonstrators was equal to or greater than
Cuban Americans. They placed their camera angles at an extremely low
position so as to betray the fact that there were only a small number
of counter-demonstrators. It is amazing to me that the U.S. ‘free’
press would stoop so low. I saw ‘Geraldo’ last night. He, Travis
Smiley and Arianna Huffington ambushed [Miami] Mayor Carollo and
degraded the Cuban American community."
From
Marina, California, a professor says, "It is terrible what is
happening. I cannot even look at the television news, it is so
distorted."
A
resident of Washington, D.C. says, "I do not understand why we
are so hated. I cannot believe it is only due to a lack of
international affairs education. We are peaceful, hard working and do
not abuse the system. We are not drug addicts or lords, we are
constructive, well adjusted, proud American citizens. We fought in
Vietnam, we rebuilt cities, we do not destroy properties like the WTO
protesters, the anti-American Vietnam groups, so what is it?"
From
Arlington, Virginia, a musician says, "Peter Jennings is a
disgrace and will some day be exposed as the terrible whatever one
could call him . . . certainly not a journalist by any means."
From
Astoria, New York, "When Cuba is free, we must have a special
room set aside for Peter Jennings. I suggest that we take La Cabaña
[Fortress] and turn it into our Holocaust Museum. In one wing, the
Peter Jennings Wing, there will be blown up pictures of Peter Jennings
obsequiously fawning before Castro and an on-going video will show
Jennings talking about Cuba’s advances, while at the same time
another screen will flash real statistics about Cuba’s dead, her
victims, the reality about Cuba’s indoctrination, brainwashing
schools, etc."
From
Kansas City, Missouri, "A perfectly painful example was evidenced
the night last summer when Coast Guard officials tried to drown four
Cuban rafters with water cannons and pepper spray. Because the episode
lasted so long, the local ABC affiliate captured and broadcast live a
good chunk of the atrocity. In Peter Jennings’ coverage of the
incident later that night, ‘the Cuban American Mafia – which had
loaded roadways leading to the beach in protest – was in an uproar
over nothing again.’ The Jennings video clip showed screaming,
frantic motorists and then cut away to two calm Coast Guard officials
gently leading the rafters on to vans for transport to Krome and
questioning. Funny, the calm that followed that storm only came on
high order after many respected, democratically-elected politicians
led the charge of civil unrest against injustice that day."
And
to add insult to injury, on August 15, in Glynco, Georgia, the Clinton
administration represented by Immigration and Naturalization
Commissioner Doris Meissner, honored 114 federal agents who violated
the home of Elian Gonzalez’s American relatives in Miami and
kidnapped the 6-year-old boy, handling him on a silver platter - at
U.S. taxpayer expense – to Castro’s regime. This is nothing short
of a reward for a crime and major violations of U.S. laws by an
administration characterized by its immorality and corruption.
Cuban
Americans of all ages throughout the U.S. have been offended and
disgusted by the attacks they have being receiving for decades from
the U.S. media but especially during and after the Elián González
case. They have taken note of this discriminatory and abusive behavior
of the U.S. media and the Clinton Administration. The Elián
experience has served to unite Cubans in their goal for a free and
democratic Cuba, and awaken a new young generation of Cuban Americans
born in the U.S., who now is taking an active part in braking up the
wall of censorship about the reality of Cuba.
The
prevalent misinformation and distortion by the media is one of the
main causes as to why the majority of the American people are clueless
about what Cuban Americans stand for and who the real enemy has been
and still is. America must wake up and demand to learn the real facts
of what has been happening in Cuba for the last 41 years. It is time
to clearly expose the roots of where "political correctness"
is coming from and how the media is using it as a convenient tool to
further their political goals. And why Americans are rapidly losing
their freedom of expression and becoming political prisoners.
If
"political correctness" is a fair movement, it should apply
to all. Not as the U.S. media is doing by censuring all forms of
freedom of speech that does not agree with their Marxist-rooted
beliefs. To be fair, these zealots, guardian of the faith, should,
like John Rocker, take sensitivity training, but this time in relation
to Cuban Americans and the victims of communism.