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Fidel Castro passes on

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Fidel Castro, in his declining years
Fidel Castro, in his declining years

Overnight, his brother and successor Raul announced the death of the former longest serving non-royal head of a state. While we must condole with those who mourn, we must also recognise his very mixed legacy, as a Communist dictator leading a state that — per fair comment — has been very un-free and hampered in its development.

Be that as it may, we must recognise this is the death of a former national leader and widely respected statesman. One, who will be mourned not just by family and friends or countrymen, but far and wide across the world.

The development also comes at a pivotal time, when the USA is undergoing its own leadership transition after a very polarised election, and is showing signs of deepening polarisation connected to progressivist ideologies. One issue is that there is a projection of dangerous “Alt-Right” “populism” which is being openly compared to Nazism (incorrectly, National Socialism is a form of Fascism — founded by a leader of the Socialist International — and as its name suggests, is a now dead ideology of the left). The populism smear, as presented by Bloomberg . . and, do not overlook, this is ordinary Americans responding to their National Anthem and/or Pledge of Allegiance:

populism_bloomberg

(In fact, it was plainly the fed-up Rust Belt working classes who previously voted for Mr Obama in 2008 and/or 2012 who delivered the decisive blow to Mrs Clinton — the progressive candidate — in the US presidential election.)

Across the Atlantic, Britain is undergoing a very unstable post Brexit transition (with the decisive blow delivered by the English working class in Labour strongholds . . . a pattern emerges), and Europe as a whole is pondering its implications in light of upcoming elections:

euro_electionz_wave

Okay, let’s get some basic stuff on the table, news announcement.

Video announcement:

[youtube lBV88edVd-c]

Added, Daily Mail’s bullet-point head and lead:

dm_castro_summ

Also added, US President-Elect Trump’s brief tweet a short while ago [now being 1341+ hrs GMT]:

trump_castro_death

Now, on the focal matters for us here at UD.

A useful de-spinning and e-YES re-framing exercise for UD’s readers will be to take time in coming hours and days to observe coverage in the media and reactions of world leaders across the ideological spectrum (insofar as such a LEFT vs RIGHT spectrum has any objective warrant).

In this regard, let us understand that

Marxism presented itself for many decades as an undeniable — and in many contexts, the uniquely “legitimate,” “correct” and even “consensus” — scientific analysis of the world of man in society as determined by base line materialistic factors and laws that play out in a chain of social forms across history;

. . . leading to an evolving pattern of superstructures of economic, social, political, legal, and socio-cultural frameworks, with ideology and particularly religion seen as disguising and reducing the raw necessity of force to sustain oppression:

 

base-and-superstructure-chart

This of course bears a strong resemblance to how Cultural Marxist, critical theories (typically [Critical] Studies of X) approach their diverse fields of interest and it drives the use of oppressed minority identity politics to wedge apart a broad societal consensus into balkanised polarisation.

That polarisation is used, through Alinsky-style agit-prop activism, to discredit and destabilise those seen as undesirable oppressive leaders — yes, the emphasis falls on personal attacks and name-calling — and to create revolutionary conditions for fifth- column- already- in- the- gates subversion and/or overthrow of the regime in power.  So, when such radicals attain power, they have never learned respect for others as made in God’s image, nor the roads of responsible, rational, genuinely objective analysis and reform by reasonable agreement. Consequently, communities and institutions under their domineering misrule tend to marches of folly, to attack and abuse or even murder dissenters, and ironically become just what they portray and project others to be in their base and superstructure analysis.

Yes, self-referential moral incoherence (cf. here) by way of being a mirror image of what such ideologues project unto others in order to supplant them.

Resemblance to the current course of our civilisation is NOT coincidental.

So, let us pose by contrast a much less loaded (while a lot is always wrong, much can be right also), seven mountains of influence perspective as a means of thinking through a more balanced approach to change:

seven_mountains_culture_agenda

Then also, let us look at [and link on] a model for law, government and leadership that draws out the inherent instability and desirability of a generally democratic, constitution based framework for governance:

U/d b for clarity, nb Nil

. . . duly noting the need for stabilisation in democratic polities.

So, now, let us discuss these factors here at UD in the aftermath of a death that is bound to trigger a global discussion, and one that will turn in key part on the tendency of progressives to claim scientific legitimacy, imply intellectual superiority and insinuate that those who differ are morally illegitimate. Not only, on the onward path of government in general, but relating to governance of science issues tied to the design controversy and other similarly ideologically freighted studies and controversies such as climate debates.

In so doing, let us also take due note of the foundational issue of worldviews (with their roots and their expression in ideologies)  and thus the cultural agendas they lend legitimacy to, with an eye to the significance of first principles of right reason as protective restraints on and guidelines for our thinking. END

Comments
KF "Castro is in many regards case study number 1 just now." Very true.CannuckianYankee
November 27, 2016
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bb When it goes well with the righteous, the city rejoices, and when the wicked perish there are shouts of gladness. Proverbs 11:10 (Doesn't mean we should be shouting along) The news is always interested in the fake response - world leaders who only knew the "statesman" Castro. We'll get no real response from Cubans in Cuba, who aren't free to speak their minds. The real response is from those who lived under Castro and gained freedom; the majority of whom now live in south Florida.CannuckianYankee
November 27, 2016
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DfO, statesman has two senses; one is professional, the other complimentary. As in, what a statesman ought to be. The other, when a man of the state fails in his sworn duty, actually gains further adverse force from the implied utter failure or outright betrayal. Let us learn and let us turn from sinful ruinous folly. Including, failing to speak truth in this moment of truth. KFkairosfocus
November 27, 2016
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AK, you just used this thread to accuse the President-Elect of the USA of treason most foul. You will either substantiate with adequate evidence of a quality that would stand up in impeachment and onwards in a trial for his life, or else withdraw and apologies for your remarks. Or else, kindly leave this thread and never return to any thread I am owner of at UD. Failing this, as thread-owner, I will call you a foul troll and wicked false accuser, treating you as your irresponsible behaviour deserves. KFkairosfocus
November 27, 2016
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Folks, I think we need to focus attention on the need for and challenge of change tied to power in society, contrasting Marxist materialistic base-superstructure analysis and calls to radical subversion and revolution with say the seven mountains of influence type approach of godly reformation. This should then factor in implications for freedom, for rights, prone-ness to tyranny and abuse, and the issue of management of economies. Castro's Cuba is a case in point, but it is one where many do not know or recognise the facts in any balanced context. But comparative analysies of similar cultures and countries on market/ centrally planned economies is decisive, and not in favour of overly centralised planning. I wish to suggest that there is a temptation to an arrogance of knowledge of the dynamics and illusion of being able to control that leads many to think that government and central planning and control offer superior solutions to the sort of perceived chaos and injustice of markets. The realities of trying to concentrate and centrally process so much time-sensitive, perishable, diffuse, uncertain, often inarticulate information and perceptions (including of relative values of alternatives) then poses a processor architecture problem. For, yes, the economy poses a planning problem that is in many regards tantamount to a processor architecture issue. Markets boil down to allowing the cluster of diffused individuals, households and firms to perceive, respond and plan for themselves, by and large coupled through markets, but with requisite socio-cultural structures that manage good order. These structures obviously require modification and onward development from time to time, hence the issue of reform. Many plans and hopes will fail, but in aggregate there is an exploration of the space of possibilities that promotes progress and the common good, leading to economic growth. Though it is known that such growth is in spurts with fall-backs that are quasi-periodic. In short, in aggregate the market approach trusts in a large number of simpler processing units running in parallel and with the population of processing units coupled through markets. It then moderates for reducing the places where markets fail, or where it is in the best interests of the community to act centrally or institutionally, e.g. through governments etc. Pareto, Coase et al and welfare economics then come to bear. In this context, debates over health care systems are seen as over whether so big a chunk and so dynamic a chunk of the economy should be brought under centralised control. The effective alternatives boil down to a system of insurance markets and support for the indigent or those whose insurance fails. There are doubtless no solutions that cannot be criticised as in many ways deficient, but there is a tendency to compare idealised versions of favoured option A with challenges faced by option B. Beyond the narrow problem, it is to be realised that the concentration of power and control in Government itself is a manifestation of problems of monopolies and oligarchies, multiplied by some pretty grim lessons of history on the implications of Marxian base-superstructure materialism and amorality in action through ruthless activists. Hence the relevance of Mr Castro's passing as an occasion for a serious and responsible, factually informed discussion. On health care, there is no doubt that some very effective medical practitioners are in Cuba, and that there is provision of reasonably high quality care in some quarters, but the average situation of the ordinary person is grim -- and known to be grim. The UK type system does offer a lot of care but with serious wait-time problems and many other points of concern. There doubtless are many other difficulties that can be discussed. The former American market system was often critiqued as unjust and facing a challenge of the uninsured. The accretion of concentrated power in the state is a relevant factor, and reasonable, responsible people can and do have different balances of views. Which is part of the problem, we see far too much demonisation and denigration. I am also troubled deeply by the fact that law, government, education, media and medicine have been deeply corrupted and perverted to enable the mass slaughter of 800+ million unborn children globally across the past 40+ years, and mounting up at 1 million more per week. This is the worst holocaust in history, it is the central evil of our time, and it is a case of induced mass blood guilt, which will warp ability to think straight or heed the voice of clear conscience. (And of course, much of the debate shows there is a tendency to embed horrors such as this into centralised health services systems.) Let me be frank and direct:
We are the worst, most deceitful, most deceived, most conscience-benumbed, most blood guilt ridden, most defiantly wicked and richest [thus, most distracted] generation in history . . . and yes, I here deliberately echo the story of the pirate-loot enriched city of Port Royal, Jamaica on the verge of the destructive Earthquake of 1692. Today, Port Royal is a fishing village with rumours of ghosts and bells ringing under the sea where the former city once stood. I am not excepting the Nazis, Stalin, Mao, Pol Pot et al, we are far more blood guilty and deceitful than any of them or even the lot in combination. That is how wicked we are collectively, and every last one of us -- I speak specifically of myself, shamed by my letting this issue lie for years -- is tainted with some degree of enabling behaviour. Only repentance and godly reformation can save us, but we are the most stubborn, willfully blinded, en-darkened and conscience benumbed generation in history, so it may well take breaking the back of our civilisation by going over a cliff to wake up our survivors through massive pain. Survivors, who will for cause call us an accursed generation. That is a price that no responsible person would desire, so the question --I here echo both Lincoln and scripture -- is, yes offences do and must come, but woe to him by whom they come!
Until we see clear signs that we are frankly and fairly facing then responsibly resolving our blood guilt, we are not to be trusted with significantly centralised power on medical or legal and governance matters. Period. Nor, to carry out reforms in general. If this issue is not being faced by would-be reformers, we can be sure the proposed reforms are utterly corrupt and wicked. Never mind the veneer of oh we care about case X, you do not -- how dare you clutch your pearls, hold up a crucifix and cry some shibboleth like "Socialism." Sorry, enough of Alinsky's devilish agit prop tactics, astro-turfed fake grassroots front groups, marches of deluded fools led by judas-goats, rioting to create a false narrative, parading of cases to push an agenda, scapegoating, stereotyping, demonising, red herrings led away to strawmen soaked in ad hominems and set alight to cloud, poison, choke, confuse and polarise the atmosphere for discussion. Enough of deceitful policy arguments and twisted decrees under false colour of law and justice and rights. Enough! Have you not heard, that a right is a morally grounded demand to be respected in some wise based on our dignity as made in God's image and endowed with responsible rational freedom under moral government? That, your right therefore means my duty to support and sustain you in such a regard as life, liberty, property, innocent reputation, etc? That, therefore, to claim a right one must be manifestly in the right, as we can have no just cause to demand that others do or enable evil and taint their souls to allow us to proceed in our way? That, therefore, there can be no right to demand that we enable the shedding of the innocent blood of the unborn? And much more, down a long litany of the wickedness of our day marching under false colours of rights? Enough! The self-referential moral incoherence points unerringly to much deeper and broader incoherence and folly, liable to trigger manipulated marches of folly to ruin. As it is, our civilisation is already far down a road to ruin, and we need to stop, and think again. In this light, the way we discuss the case of Mr Castro's passing is yet another warning sign of where we are headed, and JAD is quite right to highlight the glaring gaps and politically correct talk-arounds in Mr Trudeau's remarks. We must never forget the people of Cuba have been subjected to a generation of tyranny, and have suffered perhaps 80,000 - 100,000 plus dead at the hands of tyrants as a result. Cuba went from Batista and the Mafia to Castro, the Communists and the DGI backed up by your friendly neighbourhood committees for the defence of the revolution. All, subsidised by the late unlamented USSR, and paid for in the blood of Cubans sent out as mercenaries of revolution all around the world as well as that of the victims of those wars and subversions. Including, in Jamaica and Grenada. With a long list of other places. Enough! Sophia is warning us. And, given the significance of evolutionary materialism and its undermining of reasonable, responsible freedom and of morality, so is Plato in The Laws Bk X:
Ath [in The Laws, Bk X 2,350+ ya]. . . .[The avant garde philosophers and poets, c. 360 BC] say that fire and water, and earth and air [i.e the classical "material" elements of the cosmos], all exist by nature and chance, and none of them by art . . . [such that] all that is in the heaven, as well as animals and all plants, and all the seasons come from these elements, not by the action of mind, as they say, or of any God, or from art, but as I was saying, by nature and chance only [ --> that is, evolutionary materialism is ancient and would trace all things to blind chance and mechanical necessity] . . . . [Thus, they hold] that the principles of justice have no existence at all in nature, but that mankind are always disputing about them and altering them; and that the alterations which are made by art and by law have no basis in nature, but are of authority for the moment and at the time at which they are made.-
[ --> Relativism, too, is not new; complete with its radical amorality rooted in a worldview that has no foundational IS that can ground OUGHT, leading to an effectively arbitrary foundation only for morality, ethics and law: accident of personal preference, the ebbs and flows of power politics, accidents of history and and the shifting sands of manipulated community opinion driven by "winds and waves of doctrine and the cunning craftiness of men in their deceitful scheming . . . " cf a video on Plato's parable of the cave; from the perspective of pondering who set up the manipulative shadow-shows, why.]
These, my friends, are the sayings of wise men, poets and prose writers, which find a way into the minds of youth. They are told by them that the highest right is might,
[ --> Evolutionary materialism -- having no IS that can properly ground OUGHT -- leads to the promotion of amorality on which the only basis for "OUGHT" is seen to be might (and manipulation: might in "spin") . . . ]
and in this way the young fall into impieties, under the idea that the Gods are not such as the law bids them imagine; and hence arise factions [ --> Evolutionary materialism-motivated amorality "naturally" leads to continual contentions and power struggles influenced by that amorality at the hands of ruthless power hungry nihilistic agendas], these philosophers inviting them to lead a true life according to nature, that is,to live in real dominion over others [ --> such amoral and/or nihilistic factions, if they gain power, "naturally" tend towards ruthless abuse and arbitrariness . . . they have not learned the habits nor accepted the principles of mutual respect, justice, fairness and keeping the civil peace of justice, so they will want to deceive, manipulate and crush -- as the consistent history of radical revolutions over the past 250 years so plainly shows again and again], and not in legal subjection to them [--> nihilistic will to power not the spirit of justice and lawfulness].
Will we heed such warnings? KFkairosfocus
November 27, 2016
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Some comments from the Canadian Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, on the passing of Fidel Castro:
“Fidel Castro was a larger than life leader who served his people for almost half a century. A legendary revolutionary and orator, Mr. Castro made significant improvements to the education and healthcare of his island nation. “While a controversial figure, both Mr. Castro’s supporters and detractors recognized his tremendous dedication and love for the Cuban people who had a deep and lasting affection for “el Comandante”. “I know my father was very proud to call him a friend and I had the opportunity to meet Fidel when my father passed away. It was also a real honour to meet his three sons and his brother President Raúl Castro during my recent visit to Cuba. “On behalf of all Canadians, Sophie and I offer our deepest condolences to the family, friends and many, many supporters of Mr. Castro. We join the people of Cuba today in mourning the loss of this remarkable leader.”
Here are a couple responses: https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CyPKOSLUoAAUjYk.jpg:large And from twitter: Leslie Eastman ?@Mutnodjmet #trudeaueulogies: With this, Canadians have forfeited all rights to mock or deride President Trump. Are these from Canadians? Can they still criticize their Prime Minister? I am asking because he doesn’t seem to realize that is Cubans haven’t had that right since Castro came to power. It has been a while since I have visited Canada. Maybe the conditions there are now the same as they are in Cuba. Any Canadians here? Hopefully I won’t get you in trouble.john_a_designer
November 26, 2016
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The united states just elected a man who is a puppet of the russians. Look at all the KGB intel that went into propaganda to get trump elected. Look at how he won't release his taxes because he is deeply in hock to russians and chinese. I really fear what will happen. Thank god I will get to view it from a distance; I just hope mine isn't the country he starts a war with as a distraction.AhmedKiaan
November 26, 2016
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Seversky, The global death toll of socialism is north of 100 millions in the past century, and it has consistently been a massive economic failure. Even in Venezuela, sitting on a pool of oil. your mockery on raising crucifixes verges on gross disrespect including to God as well as to people, and you need to take a time out to reconsider your language and arguments. Good night. KFkairosfocus
November 26, 2016
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mike1962 @ 7
My health insurance went up 3X because of Obamacare. I’m not rich. I had to cancel it last month. I can’t afford it any more. No pre-existing conditions. Excellent health.
CannuckianYankee @ 8
Sev, It was also the middle class who could afford healthcare. Now they can’t
Before the advent of Obamacare, around fifty million of your fellow Americans had no insurance at all. One study concluded around 100,000 Americans died every year from lack of any medical treatment. No one's denying the Affordable Care Act has its issues but it was at least an attempt to address the problem, which was a lot more than Republicans had been able to do and they still have nothing better to put in its place. My mother lives in the UK and is in her nineties. She has received knee and hip replacements and surgery for cataracts. All free. My brother is in his sixties and also in the UK. He has just undergone surgery for colon cancer and is completing a course of chemotherapy. Again, he didn't have to pay anything. Another thing: here in the US, one study found that around half of all personal bankruptcies involved medical bills. In the UK, no one goes bankrupt because they can't pay their medical bills. So which system is better? There is no doubt the UK's National Health Service faces serious problems but, honestly, when it comes to assuring adequate healthcare for you and your family which would you prefer? But suggest this to conservative Americans and they clutch their pearls, make the sign of the cross or hold up a crucifix and back off muttering about "Socialism!" And that's all they seem to have to offer. It's a disgrace.Seversky
November 26, 2016
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Sev, What cheap health insurance?bb
November 26, 2016
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PaV @ 6
Severesky: I had lunch a couple of months ago with a doctor who works at a health clinic. Obamacare was supposed to reduce their workload because everyone would have healthcare. She says the workload is the same. Can you explain that?
Actually, I would have expected the workload to increase, if anything. With the availability of cheap health insurance, people should have felt able to go and seek treatment from any health provider whereas, before, they would have avoided it as far as possible because of the cost.Seversky
November 26, 2016
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Dean_from_Ohio, There is a subtle difference between respected and respectable. As kf noted, many worldwide respect Castro, even though he wasn't respectable by any means. Regarding the misinformed, or corrupt publicly mourning on camera....
4 Those who forsake the law praise the wicked, But such as keep the law contend with them. 5 Evil men do not understand justice, But those who seek the Lord understand all.
-Proverbs 28, which is referring to God's law in verse 4.bb
November 26, 2016
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CY, that undermining of the props for successful democratic self governance is real, is dangerous, and is in wide parts not being recognised for what it is. I notice for instance the attempts to label responsible sources as "fake news," and many other schemes (doubtless, including us here at UD too). In part, that is why I have commented as above on Castro's passing, as we see here a global media consensus that has been manipulated, and we see how the Marxist, cynically subversive analysis of community is feeding it by in effect glorifying rebellion and undermining all legitimate authority from family to school to workplace to law and government . . . revealing its inherently demonic nature. Alinsky's dedication of his Rules for Radicals to the Devil is no joke, it is a clue. Notice, how I point out how the same analysis extends to successful radicals who seize power. Castro is in many regards case study number 1 just now. If, we are willing to learn. KFkairosfocus
November 26, 2016
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DfO, I simply reported a fact, he is a statesman by profession and praxis, and a widely . . . albeit in my view mistakenly in great parts [notice, my first reference: Communist Dictator, and the onward link has links that explore his death toll, likely 80 - 100+ thousand] . . . respected one. We must respond to that wide perception and feeling in how we deal with his passing. And he is in fact being widely mourned across the world. We have to understand and respond to such facts; even as the Pope, a person from Latin America, understands. I add, we should never wish for the ultimate shipwreck of any man's soul. KF PS: By contrast, Pol Pot was not a widely respected figure, nor was he mourned across the world.kairosfocus
November 26, 2016
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KF "a literate public is a necessary but not sufficient condition, likewise a vigorous and free press." Yes, that seems to be a given. But the current powers that be are content in reframing freedom of the press to mean freedom to manipulate facts into support for a particular political agenda. It's no different than a dictator controlling the press. In fact, recent attempts to control the internet (currently the only truly free media available), by passing current American controls to an international body that does include dictators, seems like the logical next step in curbing free speech. Once that freedom is eliminated, the one world government by the globalists, seems much more attainable.CannuckianYankee
November 26, 2016
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Jerry, Trump knew just where to cut the remark while making the point. KFkairosfocus
November 26, 2016
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CY, a literate public is a necessary but not sufficient condition, likewise a vigorous and free press. A whole society has to move to a point where it accepts that core, bedrock principle based law established legitimate rights, and these control foundational law, then general law and regulations. Leadership has to come to that point, not just one or a few individuals, the culture and classes of leaders. The state has to come to a point of lawfulness and restraint, so that it is limited and fair-minded. A whole culture of governance has to be built up, and the first time that was feasible anywhere on earth was about 1700 in the North Atlantic. It is no accident this happened where the reformation had had impact for nearly 200 years, and that it is where modern representational democracy was born, rooted in Alfred's Book of Dooms, Common law, Magna Carta and the 1689 Bill of rights, with strong influences from what some have called political Calvinism. We are discarding that heritage heedlessly, and will pay an awful price if we do not wake up real soon. KFkairosfocus
November 26, 2016
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Sev, one of my church sisters at one point was a doctor with a Grandmother living in Cuba -- there are strong connexions between some Caribbean islands. She went to a conference, and needed a guide of some sort. The guide had what seems to have been a migraine, a bad one. Not even basic painkillers were accessible to ordinary people in the shops, things like acetaminophen or the like; things I routinely pick up in bottles of 100. Minor pain killers from her bag were most welcome and a blessed relief. A little later, I also spent a week there on the ground as part of a delegation, we drove coming on 1,000 miles on the ground to visit various facilities in connexion with a regional project. While I am very impressed with Cuban professionals, I cannot but observe how run down Cuba had become, and how obviously big Govt backed schemes often failed -- a universal problem; and who paid the price when it failed. I will never forget the plight of the ordinary Cuban people, though I am not comfortable detailing, as I do not know who is watching and may add up two and two and harm people who are so obviously wonderful and needy. I saw team after team of oxen ploughing (first time in my life). I saw horse drawn makeshift "minibuses" in the provinces -- put a 4' x 8' ply on top of an old axle or two, with two wheels each, set up planks and rebars, use old flour bags etc. for cover, don't forget a drop cloth arrangement for the horse droppings; collect in bucket. Use a pony-sized horse to pull. (This seems to be an upgrade to what I saw: http://samisarkis.photoshelter.com/image/I0000GbLZleu5BRw this is close: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Cuban_transport.jpg ) Micro entrepreneurship, no doubt. I saw the people and their plight . . . and my heart goes out to them, I wish Cuba the very best. Once it is unshackled, it has the potential to be a super-Israel in the Caribbean; but it went from Batista and the Mafia to the Communists. A short time after we left, three young black Cuban men were shot at dawn at the citadel in Havana on the far side of the river, for trying to escape to Florida, hijacking a ferry to try to do so. After a period of somewhat opening, there was a clampdown; again. Don't even try to pretend to talk to me about socialist paradises, I lived through Jamaica, I saw Cuba, I can read between the lines regarding Venezuela. Marxism failed for good reason, and when it comes to inherently complex vastly distributed time-sensitive systems to match often inarticulate needs to supplies, nothing beats the market. I have seen what bureaucrats do when they have power and even obvious common sense cases that are not welcome stand before them, so don't try to tell me about the compassion of government. It is time for you to wake up to reality. KFkairosfocus
November 26, 2016
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KF, “SUTAINABLE CENTRE: Constitutionally Democratic, limited, lawful Gov’t & L/ship “requires “eternal vigilance” & a foundation of a literate public with a vigorous press)” While we have a literate public, so does Cuba. The capacity to digest propaganda does not seem to me to be congruent with “literate.” Furthermore, our American press is not vigorous enough to differentiate between propaganda and news. I think therein lies our downfall.CannuckianYankee
November 26, 2016
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Sev, It was also the middle class who could afford healthcare. Now they can't.CannuckianYankee
November 26, 2016
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My health insurance went up 3X because of Obamacare. I'm not rich. I had to cancel it last month. I can't afford it any more. No pre-existing conditions. Excellent health. Waiting to see how thing go under Trump before I try to get new insurance. Health care in Cuba stinks for the average person. I know people who live there. Good luck if you need major treatment. The love the Cuban people. I hope to God they get democracy and a free market soon.mike1962
November 26, 2016
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Severesky: I had lunch a couple of months ago with a doctor who works at a health clinic. Obamacare was supposed to reduce their workload because everyone would have healthcare. She says the workload is the same. Can you explain that?PaV
November 26, 2016
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Great for Republicans, though. Pretty soon we'll be back to the good old days when only the rich could afford decent health insurance and education.Seversky
November 26, 2016
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What a horrible month for the Democrats. First Hillary goes down in flames, and now this.George E.
November 26, 2016
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kairosfocus, I come to UD about once every two weeks now to see what people are saying and comment even less. I usually do not comment on your pieces because they are too long to read and very complicated. They are obviously very well thought out but it takes an effort to read all the details. Today I read most of the OP and congratulate you on the effort it took to put such a piece together. It lays out a lot of the issues of our times. I am sure there will be the usual nit picking of points here and there and the interesting thing is that belief in Darwinian evolutionary processes correlates highly with certain political behavior for those who comment here. Obviously not a perfect correlation but over times here I have seen that people end up in boxes that have similar views on a wide range of issues. I find this the most fascinating thing about ID and politics in general. As far as political behavior, I will pass on this observation. I sat through a long tribute of Emily Dickinson about a year ago. I said to my wife afterwards that she was a good poet but an air head on thinking. Her main claim to thinking was to take what was the common belief at the time and espouse the opposite. She showed little insight or thought in what she advocated. She primarily opposed. But because she could manipulate words in a delightful fashion, one gave her credit as a thinker which she did not deserve. If I comment on blogs at all anymore it is on economics and human behavior and not here. You have provided both insight and thought in this OP, something that is missing from many who write OP's on current events around the internet. I will have to check out your links. I am sure the "usual suspects" will appear to criticize. They are good at criticism, the bane of our time. I believe that Critical Thinking is the real corruption of our times. PS - I would have added to Trump't tweet, "Ding dong, the witch is dead!" Unfortunately there are too many witches to take his place. (I know witch is feminine but the meaning is clear.) PPS - I love the "marches of folly" comment given what has happened in the US in the last two weeks.jerry
November 26, 2016
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NYT retrospective on Castro: http://www.nytimes.com/2016/11/26/world/americas/fidel-castro-dies.html Daily Mail: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3973238/Fidel-Castro-died-aged-90.htmlkairosfocus
November 26, 2016
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Fidel Castro passes on, there is an agenda of issues we need to discuss not only relevant to ID in scientific institutions but also the wider onward path of our civilisation at a highly polarised time.kairosfocus
November 26, 2016
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