|




|

|
Fidel Castro: Obama’s
speech in Arizona.
Reflections by
Fidel Castro
Yesterday I listened to him when he spoke at the University of
Tucson where homage was being paid to the 6 people murdered and the
14 wounded in the Arizona massacre, especially the Democratic
congresswoman for that state, seriously wounded by a gunshot to the
head.
|
It was
the deed of an unbalanced person, drunk on the preaching of
hatred that reigns in American society, where the fascist Tea
Party has imposed its extremism on the Republican Party which,
under the aegis of George W. Bush, led the world to where it is
now, on the brink of the abyss.
Added to the disaster of wars was the greatest economic crisis
in the history of the United States and a government debt that
today is equal to 100% of the GDP, together with a monthly
deficit totalling more than 80 billion dollars and again more
homes being lost as a result of unpaid mortgages. The prices of
oil, metals, and food are progressively going up. Lack of
confidence in paper currency causes gold purchases to increase
and there are quite a few people who see the price of gold
ascending to $ 2,000 a Troy ounce. There are some who even think
it will
reach $2,500.
Climatic phenomena have worsened, with considerable losses to
harvests in the Russian Federation, Europe, China, Australia,
North and South America and in other areas, putting in danger
the food supplies for more than 80 Third World countries,
creating political instability in a growing number of them.
The world is facing so many political, military, energy, food
and environmental problems that there is no country wanting the
United States to return to extremist positions that would
increase the risks of nuclear war.
International condemnation of the crime in Arizona was almost
unanimous, a crime that demonstrates an expression of that
extremism. No one expected the President of the United States to
make an impassioned or confrontational speech, something that
wouldn’t correspond to his style or with the domestic
circumstances and the climate of irrational hatred that is
prevailing in the United States.
The victims of the shooting were definitely brave, each with
their merit, and in general they were humble citizens; if it
hadn’t been so, they wouldn’t have been there, defending the
right of all Americans to medical care and opposing the
anti-immigrant laws.
The mother of a 9-year-old girl born on September 11th had
courageously stated that the hatred unleashed in the world had
to cease. I do not harbor, any doubt in the least that the
victims were worthy of recognition by the President of the
United States, along with the citizens of Tucson, the students
at the University and the doctors who, whenever events of this
type occur, always unreservedly express the solidarity which
human beings carry inside themselves. The severely wounded
congresswoman, Gabrielle Giffords, deserves the national and
international accolade being given her. Today, the medical team
was continuing to give positive information on the state of her
condition.
Of course, Obama’s speech was lacking the moral condemnation of
the policies which inspired such an act.
I was trying to imagine how men such as Franklin Delano
Roosevelt would have acted in similar circumstances, not to
mention Lincoln who didn’t shrink from giving his famous
Gettysburg Address. What other moment is the President of the
United States waiting for to express the opinion that I am sure
is being shared by the great majority of US people?
It is not a matter of the government of the United States
lacking an exceptional personality to lead it. What transforms a
president into a historical personage, who has been able to
reach that position because of his merits, does not lie in the
person, but in the need for him at a determinate moment in the
history of his nation.
Yesterday when he began his speech, he looked tense, and very
much dependent on the written pages. He soon recovered his calm,
his usual command of the stage, and the precise words to express
his ideas. What he didn’t say was because he didn’t want to say
it.
For delivery of well-written and just praise for those deserving
it, he could be awarded a prize.
For a political speech, he left a lot to be desired.
Fidel Castro Ruz
January 13, 2011
7:38 p.m.
|
|


|