http://www.puertorico-herald.org/LiveEd/52-CBWakeUp.shtml

 

Wake Up Silent Majority

By Manuel A. Casiano

December 23, 2004

Copyright © 2004 CARIBBEAN BUSINESS. All Rights Reserved.

You are being taken on a joyride to independence from the U.S. and you don’t
realize it.

The 8% or 9% of the people who actually believe Puerto Rico should be an
independent country know they can never obtain independence in the voting
booth.

They’ve realized that every year there are fewer people who believe in
independence for the island. More than 40 years ago, the Puerto Rican
Independence Party (PIP) received about 20% of the votes. Today, the PIP
receives at most 5% of the votes in each election and has a hard time
maintaining its electoral franchise as a registered political party.
Although there’s actually another 3% to 4% true independentistas, years ago
they started to vote for the Popular Democratic Party (PDP).

However, out of the political leadership of the three main parties, PIP
leaders are the cleverest. Over the past eight years, they have been able to
effectively take over the PDP leadership simply because the PDP wouldn’t be
able to win an election without the independentistas. The PIP received less
than 3% of the vote in this past election. Where has the other 5% or 6% gone
over the past years? To the PDP. And, even with most of the pro-independence
voters now voting for the PDP, if that party ends up winning the elections
this year it will be by a margin of less than two-tenths of 1%, out of 2
million votes, over the pro-statehood New Progressive Party (PNP).

The days of the PDP winning an election with just commonwealth sympathizers’
votes ended years ago. The PDP now owes a big debt to the independentistas.
One they are obligated to pay.

In 2000, Gov. Sila Calderon couldn’t have won the election without thousands
of independentistas abandoning the PIP and voting with the PDP. That PIP
crossover to the PDP was even more obvious this year. If PDP gubernatorial
candidate Anibal Acevedo Vila becomes governor, there is no question it will
have happened because the independentistas saved the PDP again.

And what does that mean for the PDP? Simply that the small minority of
hard-core independentistas who truly believe Puerto Rico should be an
independent republic have the PDP in their grip.

What happened when Sila Calderon won the governorship in 2000? For the first
few weeks all the meetings at La Fortaleza, the governor’s mansion, were
with independence leaders. The result was that many of the government
agencies’ heads and top agency officials were named from suggestions
submitted by PIP leaders. The top echelon of today’s PDP-controlled
government and the party itself is heavily staffed with hard-core
independence sympathizers. Not the commonwealthers or enhanced
commonwealthers of Luis Muñoz Marin’s or Rafael Hernandez Colon’s days.

Witness the events at the Women’s Advocate Office where the director Maria
Dolores Fernos removed the American flag from the lobby where for years both
the Puerto Rican and American flags had stood together. Never mind that
almost 30% of the funds of that agency are U.S. federal funds. Witness the
efforts by PDP leader and Senate president Antonio Fas Alzamora who has
wanted and attempted throughout the past four years to eliminate English as
one of Puerto Rico’s two official languages. Witness the destruction of
federal property in Vieques the day the Navy left during Sila Calderon’s
administration. That day, American flags were burned and U.S. government
property destroyed amid violent demonstrations right in front of Gov.
Calderon, with no action being taken against the perpetrators by the local
police, which she controlled. It was U.S. military police under a barrage of
rocks and bottles from the aggressors that had to stop the destruction and
arrest the perpetrators. And then it was the federal court here that had to
prosecute the terrorists. Some of them are still serving time in federal
jails.

The higher echelon of the PDP leadership is now riddled with fully pledged
independentistas. They are a small minority, but they control the party.
Since the PDP wouldn’t be able to win an election without this minority,
they have to treat the independentistas with kid gloves.

The PDP now has become a coalition of commonwealth and independence
supporters. While most of the rank-and-file populares are happy to be
Americans, they are part of the silent majority that is being taken to
independence without realizing it.

How is that happening? Through a very simple and very clever strategy of the
independentista minority in Puerto Rico.

Since they can’t achieve independence in the voting booths, their strategy
for years has been to antagonize, insult, and spit at Americans, burn
American flags, and do everything possible to give the impression to
national and international media that Puerto Ricans want independence.

Extreme independence supporters have done a lot over the years to antagonize
and insult the U.S. In the ‘50s, there was the shooting up of the U.S.
Congress while in session. Subsequently, the attempt to assassinate
President Truman at Blair House right across the street from the White
House. Then, there was the bomb that killed several people at Francis Tavern
on Wall Street also years ago. In the ‘70s, there was the terrorist bombing
and destruction of several U.S. National Guard planes at the National Guard
airbase in San Juan. There was also the killing of several Navy men in an
official Navy bus from the local Sabana Seca Naval Base. But those attacks
were always by a few terrorists and statesiders thought of them as a small
group of leftist radicals. They have extreme violent radicals in the States
also, so they never gave those attacks by a few, lasting importance.

Vieques, however, changed all that. What started out as a legitimate
Stop-the-Bombing movement by the government and people of Puerto Rico, long
before the World Trade Center disaster or the Iraq war, was turned very
cleverly by pro-independence leaders into a highly publicized broad-based
anti-American, anti-Navy movement.

Many in the silent majority stupidly and unwittingly got involved
emotionally with the demonstrations, bringing the crowds up to the tens of
thousands. Vieques was a great victory for the independentistas. The leaders
of that movement made sure members of the national and international press
could see the burning of American flags and of the effigies of the American
president, and the insults to the U.S. government and the Navy that took
place in the emotional heat of the demonstrations. This wasn’t a few
radicals but massive demonstrations led by independentistas cleverly made to
appear as if all Puerto Ricans are anti-American. At the time, the top
Independence Party leaders said, "Today, it’s Vieques; tomorrow, it will be
Puerto Rico."

Now, the diehard independentistas led the bandwagon again against the
federal courts, not so much because of the elections, but because it’s
another great issue to poke their thumbs in the Americans’ eye and get press
coverage. And the PDP, that wanted to make sure its candidate is elected
governor, inflated the demonstrators’ ranks into thousands, all shouting and
yelling against and insulting the U.S. federal judges, the federal court,
and the federal government.

What the silent majority isn’t aware of is the effect this is having on the
White House, the U.S. Congress, and the American public in general. We now
definitely are being viewed as anti-American, as a large mass of people who
want independence. Now, it isn’t a few radicals. The independentistas have
learned how to turn an emotional issue into massive demonstrations that give
the impression of a massive anti-American movement by all Puerto Ricans, not
the 8% or 9 % who really want independence.

Unfortunately, the perception now is that most people in Puerto Rico want
independence and that we want the Americans out! In fact, President Bush a
few years ago said, in reference to Vieques, "They don’t want us there." But
his thinking went farther than just Vieques. In fact, the thinking of others
in the White House and in Congress is just that.

The U.S. has much bigger problems to deal with right now than Puerto Rico.
But little by little, that perception is growing and, from the White House
on down, they are someday going to say: "Wait a minute. We don’t need Puerto
Rico anymore! We gave up the Ramey Air Force Base, Navy operations in
Culebra, Sabana Seca Base, Vieques, Roosevelt Roads Naval Base, the U.S.
Army South Headquarters in San Juan. In fact, all we have in Puerto Rico is
the Coast Guard working to try and stop massive drug smuggling into Puerto
Rico and thousands of foreign immigrants from illegally entering the island
every month; and a small Army operation at Fort Buchanan that is really not
a military base so much as a convenience post for American veterans. If we
remove the few Coast Guard personnel and vessels in Puerto Rico, who are
here to prevent the entry of illegal drugs and immigrants, these problems
then become Puerto Rico’s problems. We just have to see that the drugs and
illegal immigrants don’t enter the U.S. mainland from Puerto Rico. That
wouldn’t be too hard for us to control since Puerto Rico is 1,000 miles away
over the ocean from the U.S. mainland."

The bottom line is that the silent majority of Puerto Ricans–easily 85% who
are very happy and proud to be both American and Puerto Rican–are being
taken for a ride to independence.

All the U.S. has to do when it finally gets fed up with those "ungrateful
Puerto Ricans" who receive $17 billion net a year from the federal
government, from taxes paid by stateside Americans, is to declare us
independent. The U.S. can do that unilaterally.

What would you do if you were a stateside American, not Puerto Rican, and
were being insulted and your flag was being burned continuously? What if you
were being pushed out despite the fact that you are sending $17 billion of
your tax dollars down here to "ungrateful people" who hate you? What if you
didn’t need them anymore for strategic military defense reasons?

Having been born and raised in the States, having served in the U.S. Marines
for four years with men and women from all over the country, and having
dealt for years with many city, state, and federal officials in government,
in Congress and right up to the White House, I know one thing. Americans are
an easy-going people, a very generous and benevolent people. But they will
be pushed only so far. When they say "enough," they are the most powerful
people in the world and will do what has to be done.

Independentistas know that and are counting on it to bring independence to
Puerto Rico.

If the silent majority here doesn’t wake up soon we won’t need a plebiscite
to decide the status issue. It will be decided for us and it will be too
late to reverse that decision in Washington.

If the silent majority stays silent, we’ll find out soon enough.

This Caribbean Business article appears courtesy of Casiano Communications.

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