Sure, but, bad as things are here in many ways, it's infinitely preferable to 
the Castro regime. Still, like it or not, it wasn't our place to try and take 
him from his dad. 


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Mr. Worf" <hellomahog...@gmail.com> 
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com 
Sent: Tuesday, April 6, 2010 11:44:58 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern 
Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] OT: Cuban Government Releases Votes of Teenaged Elian 
Gonzalez 






There is a lot of propaganda here too. 


On Tue, Apr 6, 2010 at 8:34 PM, Keith Johnson < keithbjohn...@comcast.net > 
wrote: 






Well, I'm not happy that little Elian is being indoctrinated into the Communist 
party of Cuba, nor that he's used as a propaganda tool for the government. But 
i also know that returning him to his father was the right thing to do. There 
was no real reason for his legal, biological father to be denied custody of his 
son--the late mother's feelings notwithstanding. While I understand his 
relatives and other Cubans wanting him to enjoy the freedoms of America, they 
didn't have a leg to stand on in this case. Elian wasn't abused, he loved his 
father, and, reports to the contrary, he wasn't starving. We can't start 
breaking the bonds of family across international waters just because we don't 
like the governmental system under which a child may be raised. 

I also must say I found all the wailing and teary-eyed celebs, ex-pats, and 
Americans decrying his "horrible" future a bit irritating, given all the 
children living here in the States who could use some of that concern. 
A lady at my old job was extremely upset with me when I said he should go back 
to Cuba. 
"But Keith, he want even have milk to drink there!" she cried, quoting that 
curiously oft-stated "fact". 
I replied, "I can take you to half a dozen spots not twenty miles away right 
here in Atlanta where black kids don't have milk, bread, or eggs", I replied, 
"and I've *never* heard you utter one word about wanting to help them". 
The horrified look on her face as she walked away was memorable. She rarely 
spoke to me after that... 

Oh--and what's up with this Yahoo story talking about a "paramilitary" outfit 
"menacing" Elian? They weren't menacing the boy, they were simply following 
orders to retrieve him. Menacing would connote intentionally trying to 
threaten, frighten, bully, or hurt him... 

******************************************************** 
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ynews/20100406/ts_ynews/ynews_ts1481_4 

Cuban government releases photos of teenaged Elian Gonzalez 

Ten years ago this month, the saga of a Cuban boy named Elian Gonzalez 
captivated the nation and much of the world. Elian, 6, was found floating on an 
inner tube off the coast of Florida, after his mother drowned trying to reach 
America. 

The Cuban immigrant community in Florida embraced the boy as a symbol of the 
struggle of ordinary Cubans to flee the oppression of Fidel Castro 's communist 
regime, and rallied behind the boy's extended family in Miami, which sought 
custody of young Elian. 

But U.S. immigration officials insisted that the boy be returned to his father 
in Havana . Agents of the Immigration and Naturalization Service conducted an 
armed raid on Elian's adoptive Miami home - yielding a powerful image of 
paramilitary forces in America menacing a frightened 6-year-old. Florida's 
Cuban immigrant community brandished that infamous photo as a reminder of what 
they considered American power effectively doing the bidding of a heartless 
Castro government. 

A decade later, however, there are new photos of a nearly grown-up Elian 
Gonzalez - and they present a very different kind of propaganda image. 


( AP ) 

The new pictures show a serious-looking 16-year-old sporting a closely cropped 
haircut, wearing an olive-green military school uniform with red shoulder 
patches, as he attends a Young Communist Union meeting. The Cuban government 
press released the images under the none-too-subtle headline "Young Elian 
Gonzalez defends his revolution in the youth congress ." 

Since winning Elian's return to Cuba in 2000, the Castro regime has closely 
tracked the boy and his father. (Indeed, Cuban State Security has a monitoring 
station next to their home.) In his homeland, Elian Gonzalez is hailed as a 
national hero who embodies the triumph of Cuba over the United States. Every 
few years, the Cuban government has floated news updates and photographs 
trumpeting Elian's progress as a model young citizen of the Castro regime. 

In 2004, NBC's Keith Morrison traveled to Cuba to interview Elian's father, 
Juan Miguel Gonzalez, and filmed footage of a communist museum that houses a 
bronze statue of Elian raising a clenched fist. After Elian's return home, his 
father was made a member of the Cuban National Assembly , and Castro has been 
known to show up at Elian's birthday parties and school graduation ceremonies. 
In 2005, in an interview with CBS' Bob Simon for "60 Minutes," Elian referred 
to Castro "not only as a friend, but also as a father." In 2008, Elian joined 
Cuba's Young Communist Union. 

While Cuba has played up Elian Gonzalez's symbolic value in stoking nationalist 
sentiment, he still remains a more divisive figure in the United States, 
provoking fierce reactions on the American left and right. After the latest 
batch of photos went public Monday, the American Thinker weighed in with a 
rallying cry from the right, no doubt seconded widely in the Cuban immigrant 
community: 



If Elian had been granted asylum, today he would be a teenager preparing to go 
to college with every opportunity for success ahead of him. Instead, on the 
cusp of adulthood, Elian poses for propaganda photos sandwiched between Cuban 
army soldiers attending the Union of Young Communists congress in Havana ...The 
youthful Gonzalez should have been wrapped in the America flag. Instead a boy 
who once represented the quest for the God given right to be free, waves a 
Cuban flag symbolizing poverty, oppression, authoritarianism and 
misinformation. 



--Brett Michael Dykes is a national affairs writer for Yahoo! News 






-- 
Celebrating 10 years of bringing diversity to perversity! 
Mahogany at: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/mahogany_pleasures_of_darkness/ 



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