I may agree with everything the writer says but he has some very good
points.
Cort

The Old International Left and the New Cuban RightOctober 2, 2013 | [image:
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*Pedro Campos      *

Picture: cubadebate.cu

HAVANA TIMES — The Cuban revolution has always relied on the solidarity of
the international Left in its confrontation with imperialist aggression and
the criminal US blockade. Those who, in Cuba, continue to struggle for the
development of socialism, for a society without exploiters or exploited
people, should continue to enjoy this support.

It seems, however, that part of this international Left, the Old Left that
never managed to get in step with the times, hasn’t realized that this
revolutionary process has stagnated economically and politically, and not
because of the blockade or imperialist aggression, but as a result of the
government-Party-State’s resistance to the democratization of politics and
the socialization of the country’s economy.

They are the ones who do not see, do not want to see or find it
inconvenient to see that the revolutionary leadership – which has been in
power for over fifty years – continues to try and perpetuate a failed
political system borrowed from the Soviet Union, a neo-Stalinist model with
some superficial pro-capitalist reforms.

These reforms are aimed at creating the conditions that will allow Cuba’s
bureaucratic elite and its descendants to become the owners of major
profitable State companies (in the tourism, biotechnology and trade
sectors), on the basis of a new compromise with the island’s nascent small
and mid-sized capitalist businesses and international Capital – something
not unlike what happened in the former Soviet Union.

Waiting for the bus. Photo: Juan Suarez

Their lust for power, their insistence on maintaining the salaried
exploitation of workers and their current push towards and connivance with
Cuba’s incipient capitalist class and foreign Capital have transformed the
Cuban leadership into a new Right.

Of course, this Right is made up of people who are different from those of
the traditional Cuban right, based chiefly in Miami. Their objectives,
however, are not that different: giving more and more power to national and
international private capitalists through such familiar methods as the
reduction of funds destined to variable capital (labor), shutting down
companies, lay-offs and lowered salaries, the curtailment of worker rights
(to the benefit of employers) and others that have been clearly outlined in
the so-called reform process.

What we are seeing is a struggle between two capitalist classes, between
the capitalists of old and a leadership that aspires to become a new
capitalist class (and, in fact, currently lives like the bourgeoisie),
between those who were expropriated and those who did the expropriating and
never handed the means of production over to the workers.

In between, we have the great majority of Cubans, who do not want to return
to that odious past when the traditional Right was in power, and also do
not want to continue to be exploited by this new Right which declares
itself the rightful heir of a revolution that all of us have fought for.

Cuban pharmacy. Photo: Juan Suarez

The attitude of the old-school, international Left may stem from its
ideological affinity to neo-Stalinism, from the desire to continue
receiving favors from the Cuban government, from a lack of information or,
quite simply, from a misguided notion of revolutionary solidarity.

Whatever the reason, it has yet to understand that much of the opposition
faced by the Cuban government isn’t prompted by imperialism or the
Miami-based Right (as the Cuban government, its media and international
spokespeople want us to believe), but, rather, by its own economic and
political measures, its abusive exploitation of Cuban workers and
professionals, its restrictions on individual liberties, its
anti-democratic model of government, the lack of freedom of expression and
association it has brought about and the unnecessarily violent actions it
has taken against all dissenting thought, be it at the right, center or
left of the political spectrum.

Of course, the traditional Right, with the support of imperialism,
advertises all of the mistakes and civil rights violations that the new
Right is responsible for. The fact that the traditional Right and
imperialist powers use such facts in their campaigns against the Cuban
government (controlled by the new Cuban Right) does not make these
violations of the rights of Cubans any less real.

I am not asking for this sector of the international Left to deny Cuba’s
revolutionary process its solidarity. The Cuban revolution is much more
than what its current leaders, who have become the country’s new Right, are
doing. Those of us who continue to struggle for socialism need the Left to
continue to support us, and even to increase its support.

What this Left ought to do (if it still considers itself the Left) is
reconsider its distorted perception of the human rights situation in Cuba
and direct its support towards the criticisms coming from Cuba’s Left,
socialist and democratic movement, which opposes the economic and political
drift to the right brought about by the country’s current government. This
Left ought to support true and profound changes aimed at the socialization
and democratization of the Cuban system and against the repression of
dissenting political thought by State powers.

Photo: Juan Suarez

Otherwise, this solidarity will continue to be enjoyed by a State that
continues to distance itself from the libertarian and democratic ideals
that inspired the Cuban revolution of 1959 and, as such, from the genuine
interests of the Cuban people.

What’s become of the solidarity towards the Cuban people, towards the
workers, the exploited, those who are not part of the government, the Party
or the State?

Everyone is free to think and act as they wish, but no one who considers
themselves a member of the Left should ignore the violation of civil rights
practiced by governments, even when these call themselves revolutionary,
socialist or left-wing, particularly when they actually implement
right-wing policies. No one in the Left has any right to try and discredit
those who do criticize such violations.

To dispel any doubts about Cuba’s current situation, suffice is to review
the draft Labor Bill which the government wants to impose on Cuban workers
through the Cuban Workers Federation (CTC), an organization which, today,
in no way resembles what it was in the times of Lazaro, Jesus and Arcelio,
working-class, communist black men who sincerely defended the interests of
workers against those of Capital before the triumph of the revolution in 59.

The bill clearly defends the rights of employers, State or private
exploiters of salaried labor, that is, at the cost of undermining the
rights of workers, and makes absolutely no mention of a society in which
workers are the ones that administer, own or control the means of
production or services.

The traditional and new Right represents the past for Cuba, the times of
the Cold War, the confrontation between the two great superpowers, the
United States and Soviet Union. The future does not belong to them. New
waves of young and veteran activists who struggle for socialism, for the
democratization of the system, for the liberation of the productive forces,
for individual freedom, for freedom of expression and association, are
confronting this new Right, a class that, not unlike the traditional Right,
would take Cuba to the brink of real or virtual annexation by its northern
neighbor.

Human rights are precisely that: human. They are not the exclusive domain
of the Right or Left and their violation must be condemned by the Left
wherever it takes place. Otherwise, the Left would be guilty of the same
double standards that imperialism is criticized for.
—–
*pedrocampos...@yahoo.es*
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