May 23, 2013, 6:51 AM : Please sign in or register for a free account. Get information about membership.
Who's chatting now:
News: World




World
Che the Butcher (karma: 4)  en>fr fr>en
By martsy Comments: 3549, member since Mon May 19, 2003
On Tue Sep 18, 2012 07:19 AM
Commie propaganda success story.

September 17, 2012 4:00 A.M.

Re-branding Guevara: Che the Butcher


Violent hatred is not something to emulate — or wear on a T-shirt.


By John Fund




The stern photo of revolutionary Che Guevara taken by Alberto Korda in 1960 is one of the most reproduced images on the planet, appearing on posters, flags, postcards, T-shirts, and even bikinis. Sadly, the ubiquitous appearances of Che — hailed today usually by his first name only — demonstrate the near-total failure to educate people about the blood-soaked cruelty he really represented.

But there are, thankfully, some limits to the use of Che’s famous image — if people complain. A recent e-mail sent by the Environmental Protection Agency to mark Hispanic Heritage Month included Korda’s image of Che along with the slogan “Hasta la victoria siempre,” or “On to victory, always.” After facing criticism, the EPA said the e-mail had been “drafted and sent by an individual employee, and without official clearance.”

Nonetheless, it’s unsettling to see Che’s image appropriated by a government agency that has a notorious reputation for violating property rights and imposing arbitrary controls on growth. Just last March, the U.S. Supreme Court unanimously ruled that an Idaho couple seeking to build on their land had their rights violated when the EPA imposed fines of $75,000 a day without giving the couple the ability to challenge its rulings.

Also this year, the EPA regional administrator Al Armendariz was forced to resign after he described his enforcement philosophy in a public speech: “Find people who are not complying with the law and you hit them as hard as you can and make examples of them.” He compared the tactic to that used by ancient Roman soldiers: “The Romans used to conquer little villages in the Mediterranean. They’d go into a little Turkish town somewhere, they’d find the first five guys they saw, and they would crucify them. And then you know that town was really easy to manage for the next few years.”

That sounds a lot like how Che operated. After Fidel Castro seized power in 1959, Che was instrumental in setting up forced-labor camps for dissidents, gays, and devout Catholics. He was put in charge of La Cabaña Fortress prison for five months. There are varying accounts of how many people were executed under his command during that time, and how many deaths are attributed directly to Che as opposed to the regime overall, but some sources say that more than 100 journalists, businessmen, and followers of the previous regime faced death by firing squad at La Cabaña, under Che’s jurisdiction.

Violence was at the core of Che’s philosophy. Shortly before his death at the hands of Bolivian troops in 1967, he wrote “Message to the Tricontinental.” In this essay he advocated the effective use of violent hatred:

Hatred as an element of the struggle; a relentless hatred of the enemy, impelling us over and beyond the natural limitations that man is heir to and transforming him into an effective, violent, selective, and cold killing machine. Our soldiers must be thus; a people without hatred cannot vanquish a brutal enemy.

A decade earlier, when he murdered Eutimio Guerra, he recorded in his diary: “I ended the problem with a .32 caliber pistol, in the right side of his brain. . . . His belongings were now mine.”

Nor was Che’s violence directed only against Cubans. Author Humberto Fontova points to evidence that Guevara, the chief instigator of Castro’s revolutionary efforts overseas, was involved in a November 1962 terrorist plot to use 1,200 pounds of TNT to blow up Macy’s, Gimbels, Bloomingdale’s, and Grand Central Station on the day after Thanksgiving, the busiest shopping day of the year. Such an act could have rivaled 9/11 in its destruction. This is hardly a man who deserves to be honored as a hero on T-shirts.

The Obama administration deserves credit for distancing itself from the EPA’s flirtation with Che. But Obama acolytes haven’t always been so sensible. During the 2008 campaign, a Houston TV station taped the inside of an Obama get-out-the-vote office that featured a large Cuban flag on the wall, with the image of Che stamped onto it.

The spokeswoman for the Obama office who sat down with the TV station for an interview repeatedly called questions about the Cuban flag “a distraction” and a “waste of time” and said, “I don’t have time to talk about the Cuban flag.” Or Che, for that matter.

But it’s time we start to talk about Che. He may have died 45 years ago, but his pernicious philosophy is still very much under debate in Latin America. On the one hand, even liberals such as Rory Carroll, the Latin American correspondent for the Guardian in Britain, acknowledge that the Cuban model would have been a “debacle” if exported to other countries. “To challenge the U.S. empire, Che dreamed of creating ‘many Vietnams,’ not least in his Argentine homeland,” Carroll wrote. “Who today can seriously wish he had succeeded? . . . Who needs Che?”

But while overt Communism isn’t on the march in Latin America, Che-style thinking is ascendant in the anti-American authoritarians who today rule Venezuela, Ecuador, Bolivia, and Nicaragua. Che is much more than an image on a T-shirt to leaders in those countries: He is an inspiration on how to seize and maintain power. It’s for that reason that we should push back whenever and wherever Che’s image surfaces. If people wore T-shirts with images of Nazi butchers, most of us wouldn’t let them pass by without comment. The same should be the case with Che, whether his image shows up on college campuses or in EPA e-mails.

— John Fund is national-affairs columnist for NRO.

14 Replies to Che the Butcher

re: Che the Butcher (karma: 5)  en>fr fr>en
By TexanForever Comments: 21015, member since Thu Jun 10, 2004
On Tue Sep 18, 2012 08:57 AM
.


... I recall news reports that Fidel and Che were executing about 700 people a week the first two weeks after the revolution. Executions without trial (murders) continued long after that, gradually tapering down as Fidel's paranoia subsided.

Che was a psychopathic killer who enjoyed killing for it's own sake, a homicidal maniac on the loose. The death of Che was a gift to society.




.
re: Che the Butcher (karma: 1)  en>fr fr>en
By jeanv Comments: 21344, member since Sun Sep 11, 2005
On Tue Sep 18, 2012 09:24 AM
.

A bit of pointless trivia:

Q: what trait (beyond killing opponents) did Che Guevara and Mao Zedong share?

A: they never brushed their teeth.

Mao would only wipe them with his finger while gargling green tea.

Che Guevara, nothing, nada, niente. Just pure unadulterated foul breath.



The moral to be taught to young kids:

Boys & girls, if you want your praise to be sung well into the next century, kill people and don't brush your teeth.



re: Che the Butcher en>fr fr>en
By popocatptl Comments: 780, member since Mon Apr 09, 2007
On Tue Sep 18, 2012 09:38 AM
If americans were facing the truth with poetic latino guerillero
in the same way they should have delt with german ex nazi assasins after WW2 , we probably would not have thousands of nuclear russian warheads able to reach western cities...

Thanks for Omaha beach anyway , but overall thanks to the russians for Stalingrad , Butcher guevara or not...
re: Che the Butcher (karma: 6)  en>fr fr>en
By Bat2 Comments: 5296, member since Wed May 25, 2011
On Tue Sep 18, 2012 09:44 AM
The best photograph of the Argentinian scumbag was taken of his corpse.

Image hotlink - 'http://t2.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQczDi4ufRtahmarra4WHKgnC0DyIHAa5Mm6dDSEsizpUzcx-ppUvpDhmm2fg'
re: Che the Butcher (karma: 3)  en>fr fr>en
By Hellish Comments: 1288, member since Sat Apr 09, 2005
On Tue Sep 18, 2012 09:57 AM
The article makes the summary execution of Che by a drunken Bolivian soldier all the more satisfying.

Shot to shit nine times before the kill shot was finally delivered, viva la revolution. Though probably nothing compared to an eternity burning in hell.

Fuck che and his band of merry murderous thugs.
re: Che the Butcher en>fr fr>en
By AmericanLaFrance Comments: 998, member since Sat Sep 08, 2012
On Tue Sep 18, 2012 10:07 AM
Edited by AmericanLaFrance (83420) on 2012-09-18 10:13:26
thechestore.com

All Che Guevara merchandise is officially licensed By whom?
re: Che the Butcher (karma: 4)  en>fr fr>en
By balls Comments: 28498, member since Tue Aug 24, 2004
On Tue Sep 18, 2012 10:08 AM
Close your eyes and imagine a person wearing a Che t-shirt explaining to you that waterboarding is torture.
re: Che the Butcher en>fr fr>en
By FrogBites Comments: 2860, member since Mon Nov 14, 2005
On Tue Sep 18, 2012 11:10 AM
I have this image in head of Obama speaking in front of a Che banner.

That photo of Che always reminded me of the Klingons on the original Star Trek series and then I realized that's who it was based on - Gene Rodenbury was a genius!
re: Che the Butcher (karma: 4)  en>fr fr>en
By hungNV Comments: 1503, member since Sat Jun 26, 2004
On Tue Sep 18, 2012 11:52 AM



Bat2 wrote:

The best photograph of the Argentinian scumbag was taken of his corpse.

Image hotlink - 'http://t2.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQczDi4ufRtahmarra4WHKgnC0DyIHAa5Mm6dDSEsizpUzcx-ppUvpDhmm2fg'


Makes for a better t-shirt doesn't it?
re: Che the Butcher en>fr fr>en
By hungNV Comments: 1503, member since Sat Jun 26, 2004
On Tue Sep 18, 2012 11:54 AM
AmericanLaFrance wrote:



All Che Guevara merchandise is officially licensed By whom?


Me!

pay up!
re: Che the Butcher en>fr fr>en
By bestinUS Comments: 4956, member since Tue May 15, 2007
On Tue Sep 18, 2012 01:49 PM
Che: a people without hatred cannot vanquish a brutal enemy.


Is that not the kind of moral principle most of you promote all day long on this website ?

Really, to be honest, you should acknowledge that, at least, in term of violence and hatred, you indeed share common values with the Ché.

.
re: Che the Butcher en>fr fr>en
By FuhkFrenchToads Comments: 6429, member since Thu Sep 01, 2005
On Wed Sep 19, 2012 07:01 AM
bestinUS wrote:

Che: a people without hatred cannot vanquish a brutal enemy.


Is that not the kind of moral principle most of you promote all day long on this website ?

Really, to be honest, you should acknowledge that, at least, in term of violence and hatred, you indeed share common values with the Ché.

.


No one here has murdered 700 persons per week.

As for hatred.....

Go fuck yourself.
re: Che the Butcher en>fr fr>en
By PistolPierre Comments: 3589, member since Fri Mar 03, 2006
On Wed Sep 19, 2012 08:27 AM
Castro and Che killed a greater percentage of their own people than the Nazis. That is a fact.
re: Che the Butcher en>fr fr>en
By martsy Comments: 3549, member since Mon May 19, 2003
On Wed Sep 19, 2012 09:14 AM
He is ruthless, frequently executing suspected traitors quickly and dispassionately. In a 1957 letter to his first wife (he remarried to a fellow guerilla in 1959), Che' writes, "I'm here in Cuba's hills, alive and thirsting for blood." In a letter to his father, he writes, "I really like killing." Che's instructions to a subordinate are simple: "If in doubt, kill him."



He is placed in charge of La Cabana prison, where the majority of the executions take place. According to the Black Book of Communism, by the mid-1960s, 14,000 Cubans have been executed without fair trials. 500,000 Cubans were incarcerated in labor camps. At one point, in 1961, one of every 19 Cubans was a political prisoner. Che' plays a major role in developing Castro's penal system and defends the executions publicly in 1964 after he had ceased to command the prison. He even dismisses his victims as "all CIA agents" before his death in 1967.


voices.yahoo.com . . .

ReplySendWatch

Advertise Here




. . . Return to Top of Page