Jane Fonda's 'Biggest Regret'

Posted By Humberto Fontova On September 8, 2011 

A new biography of Jane Fonda by Patricia Bosworth reveals a lifelong lament
by the famous actress: "My biggest regret" Fonda is quoted as saying during
a "feminist consciousness-raising session," according to the book's account,
"is I never got to f*** Che Guevara."

In case you read Frontpage, Ms. Fonda, here's some consolation: "I used to
call him El Gallo (the rooster)," recalled Carlos Figueroa, who was Ernesto
"Che" Guevara's adolescent friend in Alta Gracia, Argentina. "I'd be
visiting him and eating in his family's dining room and whenever the poor
servant girl would enter Ernesto would promptly grab her and force her to
lay on the dining room table where he'd have rapid intercourse with her.
Immediately afterwards he'd throw her out and continue eating as if nothing
had happened. <http://www.hfontova.com/che.html> " (Many of Ms. Fonda's
feminist "consciousness-raising" fans likely consider much less to be rape.)

"Es un gallo-un gallo! (He's a rooster!-rooster!)," complained a scowling
Berta Gonzalez a few years later upon emerging from her Mexico City bedroom
in the summer of 1955. This was shortly after Che's Motorcycle Diary trip,
when the hobo Ernesto Guevara was scribbling unreadable poetry and mooching
off women in Mexico City, where he met Fidel and Raul Castro. Berta Gonzalez
was a Cuban exile in Mexico at the time.

Gallo, as you might have guessed, is a common pejorative by Spanish-speaking
women against men who terminate carnal encounters prematurely.

Alas, the reaction of the feminist listeners to Ms. Fonda's above-mentioned
confession is not mentioned in Bosworth's book. But we can guess. After all,
feminist swooning over Cuban Stalinism started early, and by the feminist
movement's very founders.

"Not only is [the Cuban Revolution] a great success but an example for the
rest of the world," gushed Simon De Beauvoir in March 1960. Her bellhop,
Jean Paul Sartre, was not to be outdone. He crowned Che Guevara "the era's
most perfect man." These "intellectual" hyperventilations of 1960 set the
tone for future ones <http://www.hfontova.com/fidel.html>  issued by
everyone from Maxine Waters to Jimmy Carter, from Ted Turner to George Mc
Govern, and from Barbara Walters to Andrea Mitchell.

"Fidel Castro is old-fashioned, courtly-even paternal, a thoroughly
fascinating figure," said NBC's Andrea Mitchell.

Alas, Cuban feminists view the Cuban Revolution somewhat differently from
Hollywood, Georgetown and Manhattan feminists. When feminist icon Barbara
Walters sat quivering alongside Fidel Castro in 1977, cooing: "Fidel Castro
has brought very high literacy and great health-care to his country. His
personal magnetism is powerful!" dozens of Cuban feminists suffered in
torture chambers within walking distance of the hyperventilating Ms. Barbara
Walters.

"They started by beating us with twisted coils of wire," recalls former
political prisoner Ezperanza Pena, today in exile. "I remember Teresita on
the ground with all her lower ribs broken. Gladys had both her arms broken.
Doris had her face cut up so badly from the beatings that when she tried to
drink, water would pour out of her lacerated cheeks." 

"On Mother's Day they allowed family visits," recalls Manuela Calvo, also in
exile today. "But as our mothers and sons and daughters were watching, we
were beaten with rubber hoses and high-pressure hoses were turned on us,
knocking all of us to the ground floor and rolling us around as the guards
laughed and our loved-ones screamed helplessly."

"When female guards couldn't handle us male guards were called in for more
brutal beatings. I saw teen-aged girls beaten savagely, their bones broken,
their mouths bleeding," recalls prisoner Polita Grau.

The gallant regime co-founded by Che Guevara jailed 35,150 Cuban women for
political crimes, a totalitarian horror utterly unknown - not only in Cuba -
but in the Western Hemisphere until the advent of the very Castro regime
that was found so "magnetic" by Barbara Walters, Andrea Mitchell, Diane
Sawyer, Jane Fonda, etc. Some of these Cuban ladies suffered twice as long
in Castro's gulag as Alexander Solzhenitsyn suffered in Stalin's.

Their prison conditions were described by former political prisoner Maritza
Lugo. "The punishment cells measure 3 feet wide by 6 feet long. The toilet
consists of an 8 inch hole in the ground through which cockroaches and rats
enter, especially in cool temperatures the rat come inside to seek the
warmth of our bodies and we were often bitten. The suicide rate among women
prisoners was very high."

Upon the death of Raul Castro's wife, Vilma Espin, in 2006 the Washington
Post gushed that "she was a champion of women's rights and greatly improved
the status of women in Cuba, a society known for its history of machismo."
Actually, in 1958 Cuba had more female college graduates as a percentage of
population than the U.S.

This Castroite "improvement of status" and "good life" for Cuban women also
somehow tripled Cuban women's pre-revolution suicide rate, making Cuban
women the most suicidal on Earth. This according to a 1998 study by scholar
Maida Donate-Armada that uses some of the Cuban regime's own figures.

On Christmas Eve of 1961, a Cuban woman named Juana Diaz spat in the face of
the executioners who were binding and gagging her. Castro and Che's
Russian-trained secret police had found her guilty of feeding and hiding
"bandits" (Cuban rednecks who took up arms to fight the Stalinist theft of
their land to build Soviet-style Kolkhozes). When the blast from the
Castroite firing squad demolished her face and torso, Juana was six months
pregnant.

Thousands upon thousands of Cuban women have drowned, died of thirst or have
been eaten alive by sharks attempting to flee the Washington Post's
understanding of a nation enjoying "improvement of status" post-communism.
This from a nation formerly richer than half the nations of Europe and
deluged by immigrants from same.

In 1962, a Cuban Catholic nun named Aida Rosa Perez was overheard in a
private conversation saying things about Fidel Castro and Che Guevara
similar to (but milder than) what Jane Fonda and Joy Behar typically trumpet
about Republicans. Sister Rosa Perez was sentenced to 12 years at hard
labor. Two years into her sentence, while toiling in the sun inside Castro's
gulag and surrounded by leering guards, Sister Rosa collapsed from a heart
attack.

The Cuban Archive Project, headed by Mrs. Maria Werlau, has fully documented
the firing squad executions of 11 Cuban women in the early days of the
regime. Another 219 women died from various brutalities and tortures while
in prison
<http://cubaarchive.org/home/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=44&It
emid=95> . The Taliban has nothing on the regime co-founded by Che Guevara.
So I trust you'll excuse these Cuban ladies if they regard the "struggles"
of Betty Friedan, Gloria Steinem and Jane Fonda as a trifle overblown. And
for many of them, though it's utterly ignored by the mainstream media, the
feminist struggle continues
<http://babalublog.com/2011/07/ladies-in-white-beaten-dragged-and-stoned/> .

  _____  

Article printed from FrontPage Magazine: http://frontpagemag.com

URL to article:
http://frontpagemag.com/2011/09/08/jane-fondas-biggest-regret/

 



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