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Why normalizing relations with Cuba is long overdue

THE ULTIMATE idiocy of the stay-the-course-in-Cuba crowd was displayed Wednesday on CNN.

Asked why she so vehemently opposes any initiative to normalize relations with Cuba, CNN commentator Ana Navarro gave us this gem:

"For no other reason than the calendar," she said. "We're so close, 55 years closer, and now [Obama] does this."

Her point, and the misguided point of our irrational, inconsistent, duplicitous and counterproductive Cuban policy for the last five decades, is that our breakthrough is just a body bag away. With Fidel about to die, she said, and Raul's state funeral to follow shortly thereafter, Cuba will cast off communism and embrace democracy.

But common Cubans have never embraced communism. Communism is a paternalistic, elitist ideology imposed by dictators. Like the masses in every communist country since the Bolsheviks turned out the czar, most Cubans have never been party members or true believers.

But to believe that Castro's death will make us, by default, the choice of Cuba's people ignores our long history of indifference to their plight.

Where were we when Sgt. Fulgencio Batista promoted himself to commander-in-chief and divided Cuba up among his friends and family? Today, we offer democracy, albeit from afar. But democracy was a nonstarter in U.S. policy toward Cuba back then.

We want the Cubans to remember our words and forget our deeds. We want them to believe our platitudes about justice and ignore the fact that we use part of their island to imprison people without trials and to violate the international conventions against torture that we authored. That's a contradiction that can't be explained from afar.

Can we make them forget the past and buy the promise?

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Why normalizing relations with Cuba is long overdue

Socialism and Capitalism – Video


Socialism and Capitalism
My video talking about why capitalism is the oppression of the working class and why socialism is better hope you guys enjoy!

By: JUCHE REVOLUTION

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Socialism and Capitalism - Video

Greg Bell: Socialism vs. the safety net

Socialism superficially seems so simple to create economic equality. But rather than engineer economic equality, human decency and compassion demand we provide basic, life-sustaining opportunities for quality education to the indigent.

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Everybody agrees that capitalism has been a success. Everybody agrees that socialism has been a failure. The conclusion therefore? We need more socialism. Milton Friedman.

As modern democracies have matured, most of them have embraced socialism and given their citizens elaborate government-provided benefits. The fall of the USSR proved the bankruptcy of the socialist/communist ideal and its pillars of central planning, government control of production, quotas, price controls, forced labor, common ownership of land and other assets. Ultimately, pure socialism impoverishes everyone. The contrast between East and West Germany when the wall came down in 1989 provided stark and undeniable proof that free enterprise works and socialism doesnt.

Nonetheless, die-hard socialists believe that if done right, that is with enough government force, these methods will finally achieve economic equality. But they cannot because the tenets of socialism are at odds with immutable human nature. We act in our self-interest. No edict can change that.

In "Of Plymouth Plantation," William Bradford tells of that 17th century colonys experiment with a crude form of socialism. Plymouths citizens worked the ground in common for the first two years. The arrangement proved unsatisfactory as food scarcity prevailed. By necessity they changed the system, and Bradford assigned to every family a parcel of land, according to the proportion of their number. This had very good success; for it made all hands very industrious, so as much more corn was planted than otherwise would have been. The women now went willingly into the field, and took their little-ones with them to set corn, which before would allege weakness, and inability; whom to have compelled would have been thought great tyranny and oppression. He concluded that from Plato to modern times, people have erred in thinking, that the taking away of property, and bringing [it] into a commonwealth would make them happy and flourishing .

Why then does socialism perpetually rear its ugly head? It is because superficially it seems so simple to create economic equality. If Paul has $100 and John has no money, the government can take $50 away from Paul for John so both have $50. Whats wrong with that? First, the salary and expenses of the bureaucrat who seizes, re-distributes and enforces the system must be paid from the $100, leaving significantly less than $100 to share. Paul gets to keep less than half of what he produces, so his incentive to produce and invest has been significantly reduced.

Conversely, if John knows the government will give him half of what Paul produces, irrespective of whether he tries to support himself, his incentive to work will naturally be diminished. As the fruits of hard work, investment, saving, and education are reduced, aggregate production of income and wealth will diminish, resulting in less for both Paul and John. If you start socialism with a rich enough society and great enforcement power, you can forestall the inevitable consequences for a time before you run out of other peoples money, as Lady Margaret Thatcher once observed. But that time always comes because socialist systems subtract; they dont add.

Many liberals argue that a free-enterprise system is based on greed and unfairly leaves people behind. People will always have different economic outcomes because people are so different. Some have greater business acumen, work harder or invest better and many less fortunate are denied a decent education and are barred from entering the economic mainstream. Our social compact has rightly created a safety net for those who cant support themselves.

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Greg Bell: Socialism vs. the safety net

DPRK's Sovereignty Invariably Defended

Pyongyang, December 18 (KCNA) -- The DPRK has invariably advanced along the road of independence, Songun (military-first) and socialism for the past three years since the demise of leader Kim Jong Il.

When the Korean people suffered a great national loss on December 17, Juche 100 (2011), the U.S. and its followers desperately attempted to dismantle the DPRK's nuclear weapons and topple its regime, clamoring about "change of social system" in it.

In a bid to pull down the fortress of socialism in the East, the U.S. deployed in south Korea vast means for preemptive nuclear attack and staged mad-cap joint military drills with its puppet forces, driving the situation of the Korean Peninsula to the brink of a war.

Under such situation, Marshal Kim Jong Un provided a sure guarantee, through his distinguished and energetic Songun leadership, to defend the sovereignty of the DPRK and win the final victory in showdown with the U.S.

He built up the Korean People's Army into a powerful elite revolutionary army and put the army-people unity on a higher stage.

Always finding himself in the frontline areas, he worked hard to train all the servicepersons into master-hands at modern warfare. And he even went to the biggest hotspots, indicating operational tactics to frustrate the enemy's scheme for aggression.

His Songun leadership further cemented the politico-ideological position of the DPRK and its position as a satellite-launching state and a nuclear weapons state, thus bringing a radical change to the world political structure and correlation of forces around the Korean Peninsula.

Now the DPRK people absolutely trust Kim Jong Un making a brilliant history of defending the country's sovereignty under the banner of Songun and bringing about the rosy future of national prosperity. Under his guidance, they will surely build a great prosperous and powerful nation.

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DPRK's Sovereignty Invariably Defended

Minnie Mouse Play Doh Mickey Mouse in Stop Motion Tea Party and Minnie Singing by ToysReviewToys – Video


Minnie Mouse Play Doh Mickey Mouse in Stop Motion Tea Party and Minnie Singing by ToysReviewToys
Minnie Mouse with Play Doh Tea Party and Mickey Mouse in Stop Motion Tea Party and Minnie Talking and Singing by ToysReviewToys in collaboration with DisneyCarToys. This is a Toy Review of...

By: ToysReviewToys

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Minnie Mouse Play Doh Mickey Mouse in Stop Motion Tea Party and Minnie Singing by ToysReviewToys - Video