victorin1 said...
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victorin1 — 1 month ago(February 16, 2026 05:59 AM)
victorin1 said...
In a truly free society, people are allowed the freedom of expression. With this freedom of expression comes freedom of speech, press, and dissent. Che spoke openly with José Pardo Llada, a Cuban journalist, and told him,
“We must eliminate all newspapers; we cannot make a revolution with free press.”
Having an open dialogue about different opinions was not an option in the “free Cuba.” Che’s fanaticism even infected his personal relationships; he only made friends with those who were like-minded:
“My friends are friends only so long as they think as I do politically.”
No doubt antifa national socialist activist are like-minded too.
Ernesto Che Guevara, the myth of the good partisan who proved not to be so |Al Día News
The statues of Conquerors and Slavers are not the only ones to be vandalized. Now it's the revolutionaries' turn.
By Beatriz García
October 28, 2020
In the middle of October, the city of Leganes, in Madrid (Spain), awoke to a change in its landscape that many of sleepy neighbors didn't notice.
The bust of Argentine guerrilla Ernesto Che Guevara, who together with Fidel Castro made the so-called Cuban Revolution, was covered with tape.
Immediately, three Spanish artists, Omar Jerez, Julia Martinez and Aritz Martin, claimed credit for the feat.
They had done it as part of a political performance, an action they called "criminal whitewashing," which they released with a video on YouTube. Click link for full article.
Che Guevara is the most bleached character in history. In the video "Criminal Whitening" the artists exercise a critical and direct reflection on the existing distortion around the mythical figure of "Che": the construction of the false myth and the dichotomy between reality and made up. -
victorin1 — 1 month ago(March 02, 2026 06:05 AM)
victorin1 said...
Ernesto Che Guevara, the myth of the good partisan who proved not to be so |Al Día News
The statues of Conquerors and Slavers are not the only ones to be vandalized. Now it's the revolutionaries' turn.
By Beatriz García
October 28, 2020
In the middle of October, the city of Leganes, in Madrid (Spain), awoke to a change in its landscape that many of sleepy neighbors didn't notice.
The bust of Argentine guerrilla Ernesto Che Guevara, who together with Fidel Castro made the so-called Cuban Revolution, was covered with tape.
Immediately, three Spanish artists, Omar Jerez, Julia Martinez and Aritz Martin, claimed credit for the feat.
They had done it as part of a political performance, an action they called "criminal whitewashing," which they released with a video on YouTube. Click link for full article.
Che Guevara is the most bleached character in history. In the video "Criminal Whitening" the artists exercise a critical and direct reflection on the existing distortion around the mythical figure of "Che": the construction of the false myth and the dichotomy between reality and made up.
expand
“The statues of Conquerors and Slavers are not the only ones to be vandalized. Now it's the revolutionaries' turn.” A homage bust to a murderer, homophobic and racist in the Madrid town of Leganés. Whitening of the false myth, a quid pro quo. Fidel Castro magnified him to the point that today many people have him as a saint and do not know that he was an s.o.b. -
victorin1 — 3 weeks ago(March 09, 2026 06:27 PM)
victorin1 said...
“The statues of Conquerors and Slavers are not the only ones to be vandalized. Now it's the revolutionaries' turn.” A homage bust to a murderer, homophobic and racist in the Madrid town of Leganés. Whitening of the false myth, a quid pro quo. Fidel Castro magnified him to the point that today many people have him as a saint and do not know that he was an s.o.b.
In the education system of the Castroit regime Cuban children begin their classes each day with the following chant:
“Pioneers for Communism, we will be like Che.”
As Bert Corzo wrote: “They will be then the new men; fanatics, liars, assassins and failed men, reaching the total realization of being like Che.…Che was fanatical, dogmatic, spiteful, envious, arrogant, proud, a liar, racist, devoid of morals, mercenary and homophobic, a bloodthirsty murderer, a cold killing machine, that the fanaticism of the left has turned into a hero.” -
victorin1 — 2 weeks ago(March 17, 2026 05:53 AM)
victorin1 said...
In the education system of the Castroit regime Cuban children begin their classes each day with the following chant:
“Pioneers for Communism, we will be like Che.”
As Bert Corzo wrote: “They will be then the new men; fanatics, liars, assassins and failed men, reaching the total realization of being like Che.…Che was fanatical, dogmatic, spiteful, envious, arrogant, proud, a liar, racist, devoid of morals, mercenary and homophobic, a bloodthirsty murderer, a cold killing machine, that the fanaticism of the left has turned into a hero.”
PBS Hemingway Docuseries Covers Up His Communist Connections | Frontpage Mag
April 15, 2021 by Humberto Fontova
“They Are Giving Hemingway Another Look, So You Can, Too…Lynn Novick and Ken Burns consider the seminal writer in all his complexity and controversy in their new PBS documentary series. Could there be anything more subversive than turning a spotlight, in this moment, on Ernest Hemingway?” wrote Gal Beckerman in the The New York Times this month.
“Subversive?” Ah! At least the term appears in connection with the docuseries. And considering that Ernest Hemingway eagerly joined Stalin’s KGB (technically the NKVD at the time), secretly contributed tens of thousands to the Cuban communist party and (literally) drank, as a spectator, to Che Guevara and Fidel Castros’ firing-squad murder marathons, you might think the term “subversive” fits.Click link for full article.
Fontova nailed, after all McCarthy was right. Hemingway supported lefties causes, a hypocritical fellow traveler. The PBS documentary is just glamorizing his life. He watched mass executions like it was a sporting event. -
victorin1 — 1 week ago(March 25, 2026 04:48 AM)
victorin1 said...
PBS Hemingway Docuseries Covers Up His Communist Connections | Frontpage Mag
April 15, 2021 by Humberto Fontova
“They Are Giving Hemingway Another Look, So You Can, Too…Lynn Novick and Ken Burns consider the seminal writer in all his complexity and controversy in their new PBS documentary series. Could there be anything more subversive than turning a spotlight, in this moment, on Ernest Hemingway?” wrote Gal Beckerman in the The New York Times this month.
“Subversive?” Ah! At least the term appears in connection with the docuseries. And considering that Ernest Hemingway eagerly joined Stalin’s KGB (technically the NKVD at the time), secretly contributed tens of thousands to the Cuban communist party and (literally) drank, as a spectator, to Che Guevara and Fidel Castros’ firing-squad murder marathons, you might think the term “subversive” fits.Click link for full article.
Fontova nailed, after all McCarthy was right. Hemingway supported lefties causes, a hypocritical fellow traveler. The PBS documentary is just glamorizing his life. He watched mass executions like it was a sporting event.
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Hemingway described Fidel Castro regime as "very pure and beautiful", that alone tell you a lot about the man political leaning. He was just a typical fellow traveler. -
victorin1 — 8 hours ago(April 02, 2026 10:25 PM)
victorin1 said...
Hemingway described Fidel Castro regime as "very pure and beautiful", that alone tell you a lot about the man political leaning. He was just a typical fellow traveler.
Hemingway invited his friend George Plimpton, editor of the Paris Review, to witness the shooting of prisoners condemned by the tribunals under Guevara's control. They watched as the men were trucked in, unloaded, shot, and taken away. As a result, Plimpton later refused to publish Guevara's memoir, The Motorcycle Diaries. -
victorin1 — 2 years ago(October 26, 2023 01:46 AM)
Che: A revolution in pop culture misrepresentation - The Cougar (thedailycougar.com
)
By Sarah Backer
Published on Friday, April 12, 2013
Next time you see someone sporting a shirt or anything with the visage of Marxist freedom fighter, Ernesto “Che” Guevara, stop and ask them what they know about this romanticized symbol of revolution.
Clothing stores, like this one in Belfast, Northern Ireland, feature T-shirts with the image of Marxist freedom fighter Ernesto “Che” Guevara. Hollywood and counterculture young adults romanticize the life of a man who executed thousands and said, “the victory of Socialism is worth millions of atomic deaths.” | Wikimedia Commons
Chances are it’s not too much.
Among our generation, there exists a “cult of Che” completely ignorant in their adoration and glorification. Psychology freshman major Kiana Wall said he’s a symbol with a false or misunderstood value.
“As a symbol, Guevara had meaning in the past,” Wall said, “but it seems like those who wear those shirts now are just trying to exaggerate their political radicalism without knowing much about him at all.”
Click link above for full article.
Sarah Baker is a business major at the University of Houston and has written several Op-Eds for the school's paper, The Daily Cougar. In this opinion piece she takes on the obsession a number of people have with Che Guevara, wearing t-shirts with his image while being totally oblivious to the fact Guevara was a psychotic, sadistic mass murderer. -
victorin1 — 2 years ago(October 29, 2023 06:27 AM)
If you buy a Che shirt what are you endorsing? Capitalism, one of the many things Che was fighting against. By plastering his face on every piece of merchandise imaginable you have completely gone against his socialist beliefs.
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victorin1 — 2 years ago(November 08, 2023 08:54 PM)
Ms. Baker took the time to learn the facts and provides us with that glimmer of hope that perhaps not all of America's college youth is completely ignorant of Cuban history. She paints a very different picture of the “revolutionary” poster icon.
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victorin1 — 2 years ago(November 14, 2023 01:18 AM)
Che, the radical left symbol, was a homophobe. He played a principal role in setting up Cuba's first labor camp in the Guanahacabibes region in western Cuba in 1960-1961. This camp was the precursor to the eventual systematic confinement, starting in 1965 in the province of Camagüey, of dissidents, homosexuals, Catholics, Jehovah's Witnesses, Afro-Cuban priests, and other such scum, under the banner of UMAP, Military Units to Help Production.
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victorin1 — 2 years ago(November 17, 2023 11:42 PM)
Che defended that initiative in his own words:
“We only send those doubtful cases where we are not sure people should go to jail.”
These people would be transported at gunpoint into concentration camps. Some would never return; others would be raped, beaten, or mutilated; and most would be traumatized for life. This type of forced confinement without due process was also applied to AIDS victims during the decade of the 80s and 90s. -
victorin1 — 2 years ago(November 22, 2023 02:34 AM)
“Happy” Birthday, Che Guevara (townhall.com)
Humberto Fontova | Jun 21, 2013
June 14th marked Ernesto Che Guevara’s 85th birthday. Yet amazingly, no celebrations were reported by the Obama campaign precinct-captain who in 2008 decorated her Houston office with his famous visage.
And this precinct-captain was not your usual bubble-headed Che Groupie who seemed to recall the awesome dude opening for the Foo Fighters at Lollapalooza. No, this Che fan was middle-aged woman born in Cuba where she lived during a period when Che Guevara was Cuba's chief executioner and second in command. At the time, Cuba had the highest political incarceration and execution rate on earth, far surpassing that of their Soviet mentors and suitors. Chile’s much-reviled Pinochet regime never even approached it.
Click link for full article.
This Cuban American woman, with the Che image on the Cuban flag in the background, is obviously a Castro sympathizer. She is doing the same thing that some Cuban sympathizers are doing. See what they can find out and what they can organize against this Great Country.
Under Che Guevara's rule "Change" indeed came to Cuba. If I was running for President, I would make damn sure that I wasn't being misrepresented by ANY office, especially on TV, unless of course I endorsed it.
Video link: -
victorin1 — 2 years ago(November 26, 2023 10:27 PM)
During the Cuban missile crisis on October 1962, Che demanded that nuclear war be unleashed on the United States. He told British reporter Sam Russell that
“if the nuclear missiles had been under Cuban control (during the Cuban missile crisis), they would have fired them off.”
Reportedly, he was disappointed when Khrushchev decided to draw back his weapons in the missile crisis.
"If the rockets had remained, we would have used them all and directed them against the very heart of the United States, including New York, in our defense against aggression."
And a couple of years later, at the United Nations, he was true to form:
“As Marxists we have maintained that peaceful coexistence among nations does not include coexistence between exploiters and the exploited.” -
victorin1 — 2 years ago(November 30, 2023 09:37 PM)
Che failed miserable in the Congo and Bolivia, after being marginalized by Fidel Castro. Before, during and after the Castroit regime grab power in Cuba, he customarily violated the doctors Hippocratic Oath torturing and executing prisoners. An Argentinean, son of a well to do family and a favorite of his mother, start out a revolution in the Bolivia countryside without knowing that the Bolivian Indians spoke Quechua instead of Spanish. He and his men got lost, suffer starvation and at the end were track down by the Bolivian army, made prisoner and executed. For a guy that practically failed at everything, it is hard to understand how this loser became an icon of freedom.