Venezuela's violence. The 'farce' of Cuba. And Marco Rubio's best speech
@MarcACaputo
Marco Rubio couldn't stand it.
The U.S. Senator from Florida had listened patiently to Sen. Tom Harkin
of Iowa speak favorably about his recent trip to Cuba, all the while
omitting any real references to the oppression of the totalitarian
government there.
To Rubio, like many Cuban exiles and their descendants, it was too much
to bear.
"Let me tell you what the Cubans are really good at," Rubio said Monday
when he took to the Senate floor. "What they are really good at is
repression…They have exported repression in real time, in our
hemisphere, right now."
This wasn't some Cold War-era fulmination about Castro's regime.
Rubio's speech was about current events: the protests in Venezuela, the
Maduro government and the ties it has with the Castros, who repress
their own people and helped inspire the suppression in Caracas.
Venezuela is becoming the new Cuba.
For 14 minutes and 16 seconds, Rubio gave the best oration of his
political career, speaking largely off the top of his head and with only
the barest of notes. Rubio sometimes dripped with sarcasm or simmered
with indignation as he made the case to Congress that the United States
needs to continue – if not increase – Cuba sanctions.
Over the next few days, Rubio said, he'd propose sanctions "we should be
pursuing against the individuals responsible for these atrocities."
Rubio said it's "shameful" that the United States and Congress haven't
done more to denounce or punish the government-sponsored violence in
Venezuela.
As an aide flipped through over-sized photos of Venezuelan protests,
Rubio ticked off the struggles of living in the country, the horrors of
its citizens dying and being jailed at the hands of its government.
"This gentleman here is the former mayor of a municipality in Caracas.
His name is Leopoldo Lopez," Rubio said. "And this is the National Guard
of Venezuela pulling him into an armored truck last week. You know why?
Because he's protesting against the government."
Then came the next photograph, a picture of a young woman being driven
off on a motorcycle.
"This is Genesis Carmona," Rubio said. "They shot her in the head. She
died last week."
Rubio continued: "Let me show you the next slide. Here's a demonstrator
detained by police. Look how they drag him through the streets. This is
in Caracas, Venezuela."
Rubio also took issue with a recent survey, cited by Harkin, that
indicated a thaw in American and Floridian perceptions of relations with
Cuba.
"He cited a poll, 'More Americans want normal relations with Cuba.' So
do I — a democratic and free Cuba," Rubio said.
"But you want us to reach out and develop friendly relationships with a
serial violator of human rights, who supports what's going on in
Venezuela and every other atrocity on the planet? On issue after issue,
they are always on the side of the tyrants. Look it up," Rubio said.
"And this is who we should be opening up to? Why don't they change? Why
doesn't the Cuban government change? Why doesn't the Venezuelan
government change?"
Rubio said that, just as the United States has sanctions against North
Korea and Syria – allies of Cuba – it should keep pressuring the
government in Havana.
And he disagreed with the notion that the embargo hurts the Cuban
people. Instead, he said, it's the totalitarian-socialist government
that's to blame for problems in Cuba – as well as in "oil-rich" Venezuela.
"We don't have an embargo against Venezuela," he said. "They have a
shortage of toilet paper and tooth paste. Why? Because they are
incompetent. Because communism doesn't work. They look more and more
like Cuba economically and politically every single day."
Rubio repeated that last line elsewhere in his speech:
"They look more and more like Cuba economically and politically every
single day. What's the first thing the Venezuelan government did when
these broke out? They shut off access to Twitter and Facebook and the
internet. They ran CNN out of there. They closed down the only Colombian
station. Years before, they had closed down all the independent media
outlets that criticized the government.
"Where did they learn that from? From Cuba. And yet we have to listen to
what a paradise Cuba is."
Rubio also said members of Congress who visit Cuba should ask the regime
tough questions about dissidents and protestors.
"I would suggest to my colleagues, the next time they go to Cuba, ask to
meet with the Ladies in White. Ask to meet with the Yoani Sanchez. Ask
to meet with the dissidents and the human rights activists that are
jailed and repressed and exiled," Rubio said. "Ask to meet with them. I
bet you're going to hear something very different than what you got from
your hosts on your last trip to the wonderful Cuba, this extraordinary
socialist paradise. Because it's a joke. It's a farce."
http://miamiherald.typepad.com/nakedpolitics/2014/02/venezuelas-violence-the-farce-of-cuba-and-marco-rubios-best-speech.html
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