|
"Carter's
Castro"
When I lived in Atlanta,
Governor Jimmy Carter visited our men's Bible study and announced
that he was going to run for President. We all looked at one another
in disbelief. I like Carter, always have. But I really didn't want
him to be President.
Jimmy Carter was a so-so
governor of Georgia at the time, and had no chance of winning the
Presidency. Who would vote for him? The Republicans would have to
find their worst possible candidate if they were to lose this one!
They did. Gerald Ford
was nominated to run against Carter, and people were already angry
with Ford for pardoning Richard Nixon of his Watergate lies.
The Democrats ran an effective
campaign, raised a ton of money, and got their man elected. Trilateral
Commission chief David Rockefeller gave millions to Carter's campaign
and selected nearly all Carter's Cabinet. Advisor to the President
on National Security Affairs, Zbigniew Brzezinski, was Rockefeller's
director of the Trilateral Commisssion. Controlling the Presidency
would come in handy for David Rockefeller, just as it had in the
past.
Businessmen remember the
Carter years for their double digit inflation, and 20% interest
rates. Builders remember the Carter years as a time when people
could not afford a mortgage. Workers remember the Carter years as
one of the worst job markets in history.
I remember the Carter
years for one of the most terrible crimes against America. President
Carter gave away our canal in Panama to General Omar Torrijos, a
dope-running socialist dictator. Our Canal was then prepared for
its ultimate destiny - the takeover by communist China.
The Red Chinese army now
has over 180,000 "workers" there. America's military bases
have been taken over the Chinese military and large container ships
are being unpacked. We are not allowed to know what the Chinese
are unpacking, just a short missile flight from here, but it can't
be good.
Last week Carter visited
his old friend Fidel Castro in Cuba. It was the first visit by a
US President, past or present, to visit Cuba since it became a communist
dictatorship. Fidel loved the opportunity to build his prestige.
Carter's fondness for the old dictator could not have been more
evident.
Most Americans know something
of Fidel Castro, but few can imagine the evil this man perpetrated
against his country. I know several men who don't have to imagine
anything. Last month I visited Puerto Rico to write a story about
my old friend Juan San Emeterio for THE SAN JUAN STAR. Juan introduced
me to his friends Luis and Orlando Burguera. These brothers were
teenagers when Castro overthrew the Cuban government and took power.
Their father had helped this effort by supplying Castro's guerillas
with food and money. The elder Senior Burguera believed Castro to
be a good man who could lead Cuba away from the dictatorship of
President Batista - and lead Cuba to freedom.
Luis and Orlando's father
was wrong. As soon as Castro took power, he announced that he was
a communist, seized the Burguera family business, and sent the family
away. You see, Communists have a diabolical hatred for business
owners - even the ones who had helped them.
Luis and Orlando decided
to escape to America. They checked into a hotel in Havana, and when
it seemed safe to travel, headed toward the harbor where they caught
a boat northward.
They nearly made it. But
their boat was captured by Castro's men and they were both thrown
into prison.
This is where Luis and
Orlando would learn about brutality and Castro's disdain for everything
decent. Luis was stripped naked and locked into solitary confinement.
He heard the cries of innocent men before machine guns cut them
down. He heard the cries of men tortured because they were not ardent
disciples of Castro and communism.
Luis was in prison from
age fifteen to age twenty-five. Orlando spent five years in prison
before escaping to the coastline where he swam to Guantanamo Bay.
Two years after prison, Luis also escaped. Both brothers made their
way to America where they learned English, worked very hard, and
saved their money.
Both brothers arrived
in America only with borrowed clothes - and the freedom to become
whatever they wanted to become. The Burguera brothers separately
became very successful businessmen who have provided jobs for dozens
of workers.
What do Luis and Orlando
think of Castro? Surprisingly, they don't seem to harbor bitterness
towards the tyrant who lied to them, destroyed their father, took
their family's wealth, imprisoned and tortured them, and tried to
have them captured and killed. They have only gratitude for their
freedom, for their wives and kids, and for the wonderful country
that made it all possible. (If only Americans had that same kind
of gratitude!)
What do Luis and Orlando
think of Jimmy Carter? I haven't asked them, but I think I know.
The must surely believe that Jimmy Carter is a fool to trust his
friend Fidel. They know what happened to others who put their trust
in a tyrant.
©
2002 by George V. Caylor. All rights reserved.
|