{"id":2391,"date":"2011-04-11T10:42:49","date_gmt":"2011-04-11T16:42:49","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/lavozlit.com\/?p=2391"},"modified":"2011-04-11T10:42:49","modified_gmt":"2011-04-11T16:42:49","slug":"we-call-for-solidarity-to-the-cuban-toiling-masses","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/workersvoiceus.org\/es\/2011\/04\/11\/we-call-for-solidarity-to-the-cuban-toiling-masses\/","title":{"rendered":"We call for Solidarity to the Cuban Toiling Masses"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><strong><a href=\"http:\/\/litci.org\/en\/index.php?option=com_content&amp;view=article&amp;id=1801:we-summon-you-to-surround-cuban-toiling-masses-with-your-solidarity&amp;catid=78:statement-iwlfi-europe&amp;Itemid=65\">We call for Solidarity to the Cuban Toiling Masses<\/a><\/strong><\/p>\n<table>\n<tbody>\n<tr>\n<td valign=\"top\"><strong>Written by IWL-FI<\/strong><\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td valign=\"top\">Wednesday, 06 April 2011 02:50<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td valign=\"top\">Faced  with wages of $18 a month, massive layoffs, deterioration of public  health and education service and of the danger of brutal repression.<br \/>\nCuban workers, youth and toiling masses \u2013 who were the protagonists of  the first and only victorious socialist revolution on the American  continent \u2013 are now going through a distressing situation. The toiling  masses suffer famine, because they cannot make ends meet on $18 a month.  On the other hand, this situation tends to become qualitatively worse  as the government has already announced new attacks on the living  standards to take place in the forthcoming months, such as the layoff  for 1 300 000 civil servants.<br \/>\nSome Cuban workers manage to survive because they receive aid from a  relative from abroad. Most of them however, have no such relief and that  is why they have to humble themselves to tourists (2 million and a half  by 2010) and harass them to buy the famous stolen Havana cigars or  harass them requesting tips for services, real or invented, or beg for a  bar of soap, shampoo or simply a sweet. At the same time, two curses  that had vanished after the revolution: begging and prostitution accrue.<br \/>\nSo far, there have not yet been great demonstrations against the  government, similar to those that were put up against communist parties  in Eastern Europe, who were restoring capitalism. The prestige of the  Cuban leadership who had been in the past the leaders of the revolution  against capitalism and imperialism was what prevented the masses from  moving against the Communist Part. But Cubans\u2019 patience is running out.  The displeasure with the Castro bothers administration is generalized at  present and we cannot discard that sooner rather than later an  explosion similar to what happened in the 80s in European East, or are  taking place right now in the Arab countries.<br \/>\nThe Cuban government and their Communist Party are perfectly aware of  this danger and that is why they do not allow for any information about  the massive actions in the Arab countries to leak through TV or radio:  both controlled by the government. On the other hand we must remember  that Cubans have no access to Internet and that there are no newspapers  or magazines in Cuba except for those of the Communist Party.<br \/>\nSeeing all that exploitation and humiliation, however, it is very  unlikely for the government to be able to stop the Cubans from rebelling  against this situation, and as soon as this happens, a new and great  jeopardy, repression, will be awaiting them. That is why we are as from  now calling out for \u201csolidarity with Cuban toiling masses.\u201d<br \/>\n<strong>Tell the truth no matter how hard it may be<\/strong><br \/>\nThere a thousands and thousands of workers, peasants and students in  the whole world who regard Cuba and its leadership, especially Fidel  Castro, as the reference for all those who fight for socialism. There  are also many among those who are critical of the Cuban leadership and  yet they and yet, they believe that, unlike what has happened in the  USSR, China and European East, capitalism has not yet been restored.<br \/>\nFor all those comrades, concluding that capitalism has been restored in  Cuba would be very demoralizing. But we are duty-bound to tell these  workers, peasants, students and intellectuals from all over the world  the truth regardless of how offensive it may sound. That is so that only  the truth is revolutionary and there are two great truths that  everybody must know and that explain the tragedy they are going through.  The first one is that famine, unemployment, poor wages, begging and  prostitution are but mere consequence of something that has already  happened in our dear Cuba: <strong>the return to capitalism<\/strong>.  The second truth is that it is impossible conceal that the despised  capitalism has not been restored by the loathed by the worms or by an  American invasion.<br \/>\nIn Cuba, the same as in the USSR or in China, capitalism was restored  in the name of socialism, by the government and the leadership of the  Communist Party. In 1959, in Cuba, guerrillas commanded by Fidel Castro,  Camilo Cienfuegos and the Che Guevara defeated the forces of the  dictator Batista. Soon after that, the Cuban Revolution challenged all  the capitalists whether national or foreign, and placed the economic  resources in the service of the development of the country. In order to  do so, three important measures were taken within the economic scope:  expropriation and nationalization of all the means of production  (factories, lands, trade, banks, etc.) and the monopoly of foreign trade  central planning of economy. It was due to these measures that workers  achieved a number of improvements, most of which did not exist in the  remaining countries on the continent (including the USA) they are not  yet there: full employment, housing for all, free high quality medicine  (also for all), the end of illiteracy, the end of prostitution, high  rated of school education (up to 50% of Cuban workers have been through  12 years of schooling, but not any less important was the pride of being  the people who have been able to prove for all the workers of the  continent to see that capitalism and imperialism can be challenged and  beaten.<br \/>\nHowever, all these measures (nationalisation of the means of  production, monopoly of foreign trade and central planning of economy)  were eliminated in the early 90s by the government and by the Communist  Party), so much so that even the very constitution of the country was  modified so as to allow private property of the means of production. In  this way the \u201crights\u201d of the capital \u2013 that had been eliminated by the  revolution \u2013 were now re-established and as capitalism cam back, the old  curses of the Batista days reappeared. Defenders of the Cuban  government say that capitalism has not yet been restored: only the  activity of foreign companies was allowed, but respecting Cuban laws and  that most of the companies were still state-owned, and the state was  still \u201csocialist\u201d.<br \/>\nNot everything is just as simple as that. It is true that foreign firms  are compelled to respect Cuban laws. But it is also true that new laws  have been passed, among them the Law of Foreign Investments, to make it  possible for foreign companies to have many more rights in Cuba than  they would have in any other country in the world. Furthermore, all the  companies that exist in the country, whether state-owned, joint venture,  whether Cuban or foreign \u2013 do not work for socialist economy (for a  central economic plan) but for the national and international market. It  is also necessary to make quite clear that Cubans who work for  international enterprises do not get any protection from the \u201csocialist\u201d  national state. The contrary is true: a Cuban worker does not earn the  same wages that the same companies pay elsewhere. Cubans earn only those  miserable $18 a month even though most of these firms are joint venture  (associated with State). What is, then, the role of the Cuban State? It  is not only to ensure the rights of the international capital to  exploit cruelly Cuban workers but also to be partners in this  exploitation, which is qualitatively higher to what is being done in  most of the Latin American countries and the world.<br \/>\n<strong>Cuba, the country of the unevenness<\/strong><br \/>\nCubans live in the worst of the countries. They work, the same as their  brothers in the remaining countries do, for a market economy, but  because of the wages they earn, they have practically no access to that  very market.<br \/>\nPerhaps the saddest scene a visitor to the island will see is that of  the beautiful Cuban children without any toys. Not just few toys: no  toys. Toys are prohibitive for parents who earn $18 a month. Compared to  the wages of workers from other parts of the world, have always been,  but as an outcome of economic measures taken after the revolution, the  social salary was very high. People used to spend very little on food  because workers ate free in the workplaces and children ate at schools  and the basic food products (as well as those for cleanliness) were  distributed by the government at symbolic prices by means of a supplies  booklet. Reality is very different today. When market economy was  restored salaries became even smaller than before and a great part of  the social salary has either disappeared already or is vanishing fast.  In most of the work places eateries have been closed down, the  government is about to put an end to the double shift at schools and  most of the products on the supplies booklets have been eliminated,  while even the end of the booklet has already been announced.<br \/>\nAs an outcome of the revolution, a deep urban reform was introduced by  means of which, all Cubans could ensure their own housing in  consideration of a small sum of money. As from that moment on, it was  the government who was liable for maintaining the outer part of the  buildings and the inhabitants were liable for the upkeep of the inside.<br \/>\nHowever, at present (and at least for the past 20 years) neither does  the government do any maintenance to the outside of the building nor can  the inhabitants of the house in working class neighbourhoods, with  their $18 a month, afford to maintain the inside. The result is that  there are entire neighbourhoods where houses are full of broken glass,  leaking roofs, wall and floors are half-destroyed, electric fittings  exposed and in terrible conditions, wholes where doors and windows used  to be and even some of the oldest houses are about to crumble down for  lack of maintenance. In this way, the living conditions of the Cuban  working class families are very similar or even worse than those of  Argentine or Brazilian families living in shanty towns.<br \/>\nBut not everything is poverty in Cuba. There are neighbourhoods where  very well maintained old mansions are to be found and where all the new  bourgeois live, the bureaucrats from the government and the  representatives of the foreign firms. There are also the military  terraced houses which are so well maintained that even if quite old,  they look like brand new. There are millions of foreign tourists filling  the hotels and restaurants in Havana and other Cuban cities, where the  Cuban toiling masses cannot accede except to offer sexual services or  their beautiful music only to end up by going from table to table in  order to request a tip so as to be able to eat, because artists, who  cannot live on art alone, receive no pay for their performance.<br \/>\nAfter the revolution, Cuba became the most egalitarian country in  America, but today, it is precisely the opposite. Social unevenness is  so shocking that revolutionaries who visit feel surprised, shocked and  even uneasy. It is sad to hear may people in this admired nation say,  \u201cwe can choose: either eat or get dressed\u201d. Or \u201cWe, the Cubans are like  clowns. We look merry but inside we weep.\u201d<br \/>\n<strong>False arguments<\/strong><br \/>\nThose who defend Castro regime from abroad (it is hard to find anyone  in Cuba to do so) argue that the government had no choice but to open  the gates for the international capital, because Cuba was isolated after  the fall of the USSR and there was no other alternative. This is a  double falsehood. First of all it is not true that Cuban government  applied to capitalism to defend socialism. They applied to international  capitalism to restore capitalism. It was not to defend socialism that  there was an end imposed on the state ownership of means of production,  the state monopoly of foreign trade was eliminated and central planning  of economy was erased. It is not a socialist measure to lay off over a  million workers, or to leave social chemist\u2019s shop unsupplied and so  drive workers to buy necessary medicines in international hotel.<br \/>\nSecondly, it would be wise to ask oneself why is it that Cuba was  isolated when it was still a workers\u2019 state. Was it because workers and  peoples in the remaining parts of the continent did not fight and make  revolutions? No. That was not the reason. It was because Cuban  leadership carried out the same policy as the leaders of the USSR,  China, Eastern Germany, and so on: peaceful coexistence with imperialism  instead of making Latin American and world revolution. There is the  case of the Sandinist Revolution in Nicaragua. After defeating the  Somoza army and seizing power, Sandinist leadership went to interview  Fidel Castro, and he advised them as follows, \u201cDo not turn Nicaragua  into a new Cuba\u201d. That means, do not expropriate either the national  bourgeoisie or imperialism. And here are the results. Nicaragua is at  present ruled by the former guerrilla commander and current  multimillionaire, Daniel Ortega, is not only a capitalist state but also  one of the countries in the world where the greatest unevenness is  rampant.<br \/>\nIt was precisely this policy of peaceful coexistence with imperialism  in a world where imperialism prevails that led the economies of all the  workers\u2019 states into crisis and, in the late 1980s, \u00a0drove all the  ruling bureaucracies of the former workers states to seek support from  imperialist powers to get out of the crisis. And it was not simply under  the disguise of credits, the way they used to do in the past, but with  the restoration of all the right of the capital to super-exploit workers  of those countries. Because Cuba was led by a bureaucracy, whose  interests were very different from those of the workers of that country,  was not and could not be an exception to the rule<br \/>\n<strong>\u201cDemocracy\u201d in Cuba<\/strong><br \/>\nDefenders from abroad of the Cuban government say that there is  democracy in that country, that actually there is no democracy for the  worms, but there is democracy for the toiling masses. In Cuba nobody  would say that for in the best of the cases they would receive a horse  laugh as a reply. Those who say there is democracy for workers in Cuba  should say what proletarian organisms vote the $18-worth wages; what  organism voted that a 1 300 000 workers were to be left out in the  street; which one voted that Cubans can read no periodicals except the  official paper of the Communist Party; Which one voted that Cuban  toiling masses cannot accede to Internet?<br \/>\nBut as for this issue of proletarian democracy, it is also necessary to  say all the truth, no matter how hard it may be. And the truth is that  there has been no democracy for the workers, not even in the golden  years of revolution, when they were expropriating capitalists and  imperialism and that is what explains a lot of what is happening now.<br \/>\nCuba used to be a workers\u2019 state because ever since the expropriation  of the bourgeoisie, the right of the capital to exploit workers, but it  has never been the workers who \u2013 through their organisms \u2013 controlled  the destiny of their country. What has been there and still is there is a  regime identical to the one that existed in the former USSR and that  still exists in China: a regime based on a sole party, the Communist  Party, supported by the armed forces. But is would actually be wrong to  say that the Communist Party leads or has ever led Cuba for, in order  for the Communist Party to lead, it would have to have some kind de  internal democracy, and this is something that is simply not there.  There are practically no congresses of the Cuban Communist Party. IN the  forthcoming month of April, they will hold one, after 16 years, but  actually this \u201ccongress\u201d will be just a gathering of bureaucrats, for  representatives \u2013 according to Granma &#8211; will be elected by a plenary  meeting of general secretaries.<br \/>\nRestoration of capitalism on the Island, combined with total lack of  democracy has spawned a dictatorship that is very similar to the worst  and most bloodthirsty dictatorship in the world.<br \/>\nActually, in some aspects, it is a much worse dictatorship than some of  them. For example, during the Mubarak dictatorship in Egypt, there were  some legal bourgeois opposition parties, there were several newspapers,  subject to censorship, but still there; the was full access to Internet  and there were a few independent trade unions. All this is what Cuba is  in dire need of.<br \/>\nYou might argue against us that in those dictatorships of Mubarak in  Egypt, Pinochet in Chile or Videla in Argentina, there were thousands of  political prisoners, kidnapped and tortured and murdered and that this  does not exist in Cuba. This is true, but what is going to happen in  Cuba as soon as the first strikes cop up together with demonstrations,  guerrilla groups and confrontations against police, the way it happened  in those countries? What will the Cuban dictators do? Will they  willingly give up the fabulous privileges accumulated with the  restoration of capitalism? Or will they repress the activity of the  toiling masses that will be questioning such privileges? In order to  have a glimpse at what may happen, let us have a look at what is  happening in Libya, where, the same as in all the remaining Arab  countries, the toiling masses started by demonstrating against poverty  and against the dictator, colonel Gadafi. Faced with this reality,  Gadafi who in the past used to do what the Cuban dictatorship did: had  serious confrontations with imperialism (now he is their partner) but  today is drowning those mobilisations in blood so badly that he has  actually caused a civil war. On whose side did Fidel Castro stand in  this war? On the side of the genocide Kadafi.<br \/>\nThis is not the first time Fidel takes such a posture. When in 1967,  soviet tanks annihilated the Czechoslovakian revolution against the  bureaucracy \u2013 which finally led the country to the restoration of  capitalism \u2013 Fidel Castro stood on the side of the soviet tanks against  the Czechoslovakian toiling masses. But now, in the case of the civil  war in Libya this is not a repetition of a mistake. It is a threat for  the future and unavoidable mobilisation of the Cuban toiling masses.<br \/>\nFidel has said that it is not the Libyan people who are out for  Gadafi\u2019s defeat, but imperialism. And he uses the NATO and American bomb  raids as an argument and concealing the fact that what imperialism is  really out to get is the control of the country (oil), something that  has been challenged not by Kadafi but by re rebellious masses that rose  against him. When he picked side by Kadafi, Fidel is not only announcing  that he is willing to do the same when the toiling masses challenge his  power, but he is also forwarding the arguments he will use to justify  the repression against workers and youth. He will say that all this is  the work of the CIA.<br \/>\n<strong>Has there not been another way, is there not any now?<\/strong><br \/>\nIt is not true that Cuba has never had another alternative but to run  into the arms of world capitalism. The impressive resources provided by  the tourist industry, the production and the reserves of nickel, the  production of sugar and tobacco \u2013 I once more placed in the hands of the  state, and if that state once more functioned according to planned  economy, that would be enough for the Cubans to have \u2013 to say the least  of it \u2013 access to food and medicines.<br \/>\nOf course, even if the new bourgeoisie and the imperialist corporations  were all expropriated it would still be impossible for isolated Cuba to  be able to overcome the capitalist countries of the region and let  alone the great imperialist powers. But why should Cuba, if once more  expropriating capitalism, stay isolated if dozens of revolutions against  capitalism started cropping up? What would happen if the Cuban  leadership supported these revolutions? Cuba would no longer be  isolated. For example, in Libya, the toiling masses are carrying out an  armed revolution against dictator Kadafi, very similar to the one that  the Cubans fought against Batista in the 50s. What would happen if the  Cuban leadership supported this revolution? The likelihood of victory  would accrue and, at the same time Cuba\u2019s isolation would dwindle. But  unfortunately, Cuban leadership has long ago given up wanting new Cubas.  That is why they were against the expropriation of the bourgeoisie in  Nicaragua and in Salvador and now they are against the expropriation of  the fabulous wealth of Colonel Kadafi. It is now even worse than that.  Now they are in favour of the genocide.<br \/>\nIt is not true that Cuba had no other way out except for embracing  capitalism. It was the Cuban leadership who has no other way out because  right from the very beginning they failed to defend the path towards  the international revolution and moved along that of the coexistence  with imperialism.<br \/>\n<strong>Surround Cuban toiling masses with solidarity<\/strong><br \/>\nWe appeal to the workers, to the peasants and to the students and the  intellectuals of Latin America and the World: show your solidarity with  the Cuban people for they suffer famine, supporting a brutal  dictatorship and are running the risk of being massacred as soon as the  start moving against their exploiters and oppressors.<br \/>\nThis solidarity must stem out of learning and spreading the information  about what is really happening in Cuba. This knowledge will be an  important barrier to prevent future Cuban fighters from being accused of  being CIA agents and with this excuse, being beaten, jailed and shot  the way that this friend of the Castro brothers, colonel Kadafi, is  doing in Libya. We make this summons extensive to all the leaders of  left, including those who at present defend the regime. We do so for we  believe that these organisation, accomplices of the brutal exploitation  to which Cuban workers are submitted, have not yet stained their hands  with the blood of those workers.<br \/>\nWe make a very special summons for the thousands of activists all over  the world, who quite oblivious of the reality of Cuba, believe Cuba to  be the stronghold of socialism. Perhaps, they do not believe us because,  even though we have always stood by the Cuban revolution, we never  trusted the Castro brothers\u2019 regime. Just the same we appeal to them:  get acquainted with Cuban reality using your own means; if possible,  travel to Cuba to see how they live and so draw their own conclusions as  to whether what we are saying in this statement is true or not. After  that we simply beg you to tell your workmates of classmates the whole  truth.<br \/>\nThe Cuban regime is polluting the glorious banners of socialism.  Probably the most evil thing of all those that are happening now in Cuba  is the fact that the government is trying to justify their  counterrevolutionary project (restoration of capitalism by using a  terrible dictatorship) in the name of socialism, for in this way they  are playing havoc in the awareness of the masses, and in the awareness  of the Cuban toiling masses.<br \/>\nVery little, next to nothing of the Cuban revolution remains in Cuba.  Revolution can only be found in museums and its symbols: portraits of  the Che, of Fidel and Camilo Cienfuegos have turned into souvenirs, but  only for tourists, because no matter how hard you may seek you will be  very lucky if you find a young Cuban with a Che Guevara T-shirt, a Cuban  banner and let alone portraits of Fidel.<br \/>\nApart from what they say always and everywhere, apart from the clothes  they wear, this is just another way to say they wish to have nothing to  do with the fatal policy of the government and the Communist Party and  that they drift away not only from the government but also from  socialism, for inevitably, unfortunately, there are many who will say,  \u201cIf this is socialism, I am not a socialist any more\u201d or even worse than  that, \u201cif this is socialism, I am all for capitalism\u201d.<br \/>\nAnd yet we have no right to be pessimistic. Revolutions that toppled  the dictatorships of communist parties in the European East, the massive  mobilisations and the Arab revolutions do not entitle us to any sort of  pessimism. And the same goes for Cuba, for \u2013 even though it is true  that the \u201959 revolution can only be found in the museums, it is also  true that a new and powerful revolution against this current dictatorial  and restoring regime is being spawned. So far it has only been  expressed as this dissatisfaction with the dictatorship, but before long  this displeasure which at times turns into hatred, it will turn into  action, and when this occurs, then it will be more understandable why  Cubans are so proud of their people and their country, in spite of the  everyday humiliations they have to put up with.<br \/>\n<strong>International Executive Committee of the International Workers\u2019 League \u2013 Fourth International (IWL-FI)<\/strong><br \/>\nS\u00e3o Paulo, March 19th 2011<br \/>\n&nbsp;<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>We call for Solidarity to the Cuban Toiling Masses Written by IWL-FI Wednesday, 06 April 2011 02:50 Faced with wages of $18 a month, massive layoffs, deterioration of public health and education service and of the danger of brutal repression. Cuban workers, youth and toiling masses \u2013 who were the protagonists of the first and [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":13882120,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_crdt_document":"","_jetpack_newsletter_access":"","_jetpack_dont_email_post_to_subs":false,"_jetpack_newsletter_tier_id":0,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paywalled_content":false,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":"","jetpack_publicize_message":"","jetpack_publicize_feature_enabled":true,"jetpack_social_post_already_shared":false,"jetpack_social_options":{"image_generator_settings":{"template":"highway","default_image_id":0,"font":"","enabled":false},"version":2},"_wpas_customize_per_network":false,"jetpack_post_was_ever_published":false},"categories":[27832],"tags":[28037,27902,28032,28038],"class_list":["post-2391","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-litla-voz-declaracionesstatements","tag-communist-party","tag-cuba","tag-fidel-castro","tag-surround-cuban"],"translation":{"provider":"WPGlobus","version":"3.0.2","language":"es","enabled_languages":["en","es"],"languages":{"en":{"title":true,"content":true,"excerpt":false},"es":{"title":false,"content":false,"excerpt":false}}},"aioseo_notices":[],"jetpack_publicize_connections":[],"jetpack_featured_media_url":"","jetpack_likes_enabled":true,"jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"jetpack_shortlink":"https:\/\/wp.me\/pdQxqk-Cz","amp_enabled":true,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/workersvoiceus.org\/es\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2391","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/workersvoiceus.org\/es\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/workersvoiceus.org\/es\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/workersvoiceus.org\/es\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/13882120"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/workersvoiceus.org\/es\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=2391"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/workersvoiceus.org\/es\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2391\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/workersvoiceus.org\/es\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=2391"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/workersvoiceus.org\/es\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=2391"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/workersvoiceus.org\/es\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=2391"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}