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Democratic Primaries
Showing Original Post only (View all)Washington Post-Why Bernie Sanders's repeating Cuban propaganda rankles so many Latinos [View all]
sanders praise of Cuba is pissing off an important segment of voters https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2020/02/25/why-bernie-sanderss-repeating-cuban-propaganda-rankles-so-many-latinos/
The first thing to grasp is that Cubas global reputation for having an excellent education system isnt a result of the quality of its education system. As scholars have long known, Cubas overall educational performance is middling for the region: roughly similar to that of many other Latin American countries that brought their literacy rates from round-about 75 percent in the 1950s to not-far-from 100 percent today.
Yes, Cuba made education available free to everyone through the university level. But so did countries such as Argentina, Ecuador, Uruguay and Mexico. There was never any need to build a police state to bring people to school an insight so obvious, its ludicrous to even have to write it.
In reality, Cubas reputation for educational prowess is mostly a product of a relentless, multi-decade propaganda campaign. Virtually every speech by every Cuban diplomat and regime admirer for the past seven decades has made a point of praising Cubas supposed literacy miracle. Cubans who have left know the propaganda only too well, and understand why a government desperate to establish its legitimacy in the face of the mass impoverishment of its population would turn to it again and again.
To Cubans and Venezuelans who have witnessed much the same kind of propaganda talk of Cuban educational prowess grates not because its wrong, exactly, but because it serves as a simple way to identify whos ready to be duped by regime apologists. We know propaganda doesnt need to be entirely false to be profoundly damaging. So we despair when we hear it parroted by those who ought to know better.
The bottom line is that when you associate yourself with an ideology whose past contains some of historys worst crimes, you take on a special duty to denounce. When those denunciations come hedged with qualifiers that rest on propaganda lines, they ring entirely hollow.
Yes, Cuba made education available free to everyone through the university level. But so did countries such as Argentina, Ecuador, Uruguay and Mexico. There was never any need to build a police state to bring people to school an insight so obvious, its ludicrous to even have to write it.
In reality, Cubas reputation for educational prowess is mostly a product of a relentless, multi-decade propaganda campaign. Virtually every speech by every Cuban diplomat and regime admirer for the past seven decades has made a point of praising Cubas supposed literacy miracle. Cubans who have left know the propaganda only too well, and understand why a government desperate to establish its legitimacy in the face of the mass impoverishment of its population would turn to it again and again.
To Cubans and Venezuelans who have witnessed much the same kind of propaganda talk of Cuban educational prowess grates not because its wrong, exactly, but because it serves as a simple way to identify whos ready to be duped by regime apologists. We know propaganda doesnt need to be entirely false to be profoundly damaging. So we despair when we hear it parroted by those who ought to know better.
The bottom line is that when you associate yourself with an ideology whose past contains some of historys worst crimes, you take on a special duty to denounce. When those denunciations come hedged with qualifiers that rest on propaganda lines, they ring entirely hollow.
primary today, I would vote for: Joe Biden
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Washington Post-Why Bernie Sanders's repeating Cuban propaganda rankles so many Latinos [View all]
Gothmog
Feb 2020
OP
the WAPO sould only print poor bernie press releases from the bernie campaign lol nt
msongs
Feb 2020
#12