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Reflections of Fidel
Health reform in the United States
(Taken from CubaDebate)
BARACK Obama is a fanatical believer in the
imperialist capitalist system imposed by the United
States on the world. "God bless the United States,"
he ends his speeches.
Some of his acts wounded the sensibility of world
opinion, which viewed with sympathy the African-American
candidate’s victory over that country’s extreme
right-wing candidate. Basing himself on one of the
worst economic crises that the world has ever seen,
and the pain caused by young Americans who lost
their lives or were injured or mutilated in his
predecessor’s genocidal wars of conquest, he won the
votes of the majority of 50% of Americans who deign
to go to the polls in that democratic country.
Out of an elemental sense of ethics, Obama should
have abstained from accepting the Nobel Peace Prize
when he had already decided to send 40,000 soldiers
to an absurd war in the heart of Asia.
The current administration’s militarist policies,
its plunder of natural resources and unequal
exchange with the poor countries of the Third World
are in no way different from those of its
predecessors, almost all of them extremely right-wing,
with some exceptions, throughout the past century.
The anti-democratic document imposed at the
Copenhagen Summit on the international community –
which had given credit to his promise to cooperate
in the fight against climate change – was another
act that disappointed many people in the world. The
United States, the largest issuer of greenhouse
gases, was not willing to make the necessary
sacrifices, despite the sweet words of its president
beforehand.
It would be interminable to list the
contradictions between the ideas which the Cuban
nation has defended at great sacrifice for half a
century and the egotistic policies of that colossal
empire.
In spite of that, we harbor no antagonism toward
Obama, much less toward the U.S. people. We believe
that the health reform has been an important battle,
and a success of his government. It would seem,
however, to be something truly unusual, 234 years
after the Declaration of Independence in
Philadelphia in 1776, inspired by the ideas of the
French encyclopedists, that the U.S. government has
passed [a law for] medical attention for the vast
majority of its citizens, something that Cuba
achieved for its entire population half a century
ago, despite the cruel and inhumane blockade imposed
and still in effect by the most powerful country
that ever existed. Before that, after almost half a
century of independence and after a bloody war,
Abraham Lincoln was able to attain legal freedom for
slaves.
On the other hand, I cannot stop thinking about a
world in which more than one-third of the population
lacks the medical attention and medicines essential
to ensuring its health, a situation that will be
aggravated as climate change and water and food
scarcity become increasingly greater in a globalized
world where the population is growing, forests are
disappearing, agricultural land is diminishing, the
air is becoming unbreathable, and in which the human
species that inhabits it – which emerged less than
200,000 years ago; in other words, 3.5 million years
after the first forms of life emerged on the planet
– is running a real risk of disappearing as a
species.
Accepting that health reform signifies a success
for the Obama government, the current U.S. president
cannot ignore that climate change is a threat to
health, and even worse, to the very existence of all
the world’s nations, when the increase in
temperatures – beyond the critical limits that are
in sight – is melting the frozen waters of the
glaciers, and the tens of millions of cubic
kilometers stored in the enormous ice caps
accumulated in the Antarctic, Greenland and Siberia
will have melted within a few dozen years, leaving
underwater all of the world’s port facilities and
the lands where a large part of the global
population now lives, feeds itself and works.
Obama, the leaders of the free countries and
their allies, their scientists and their
sophisticated research centers know this; it is
impossible for them not to know it.
I understand the satisfaction in the presidential
speech expressing and recognizing the contributions
of the congress members and administration who made
possible the miracle of health reform, which
strengthens the government’s position vis-à-vis the
lobbyists and political mercenaries who are limiting
the administration’s faculties. It would be worse if
those who engaged in torture, assassinations for
hire, and genocide should reoccupy the U.S.
government. As a person who is unquestionably
intelligent and sufficiently well-informed, Obama
knows that there is no exaggeration in my words. I
hope that the silly remarks he sometimes makes about
Cuba are not clouding his intelligence.
In the wake of the success in this battle for the
right to health of all Americans, 12 million
immigrants, in their immense majority Latin American,
Haitian and from other Caribbean countries, are
demanding the legalization of their presence in the
United States, where they do the jobs that are the
hardest and with which U.S. society could not do
without, in a country in which they are arrested,
separated from their families and sent back to their
countries.
The vast majority of them immigrated to Northern
America as a consequence of the dictatorships
imposed on the countries of the region by the United
States, and the brutal policy to which they have
been subjected as a result of the plunder of their
resources and unequal trade. Their family
remittances constitute a large percentage of the GDP
of their economies. They are now hoping for an act
of elemental justice. When an Adjustment Act was
imposed on the Cuban people, promoting brain drain
and the dispossession of its educated young people,
why are such brutal methods used against illegal
immigrants of Latin American and Caribbean countries?
The devastating earthquake that lashed Haiti –
the poorest country in Latin America, which has just
suffered an unprecedented natural disaster that
involved the death of more than 200,000 people – and
the terrible economic damage that a similar
phenomenon has caused in Chile, are eloquent
evidence of the dangers that threaten so-called
civilization, and the need for drastic measures that
can give the human species hope for survival.
The Cold War did not bring any benefits to the
world population. The immense economic,
technological and scientific power of the United
States would not be able to survive the tragedy that
is hovering over the planet. President Obama should
look for the pertinent data on his computer and
converse with his most eminent scientists; he will
see how far his country is from being the model for
humanity he extols.
Because he is an African American, there he
suffered the affronts of discrimination, as he
relates in his book, The Dreams of My Father; there
he knew about the poverty in which tens of millions
of Americans live; there he was educated, but there
he also enjoyed, as a successful professional, the
privileges of the rich middle class, and he ended up
idealizing the social system where the economic
crisis, the uselessly sacrificed lives of Americans
and his unquestionable political talent gave him the
electoral victory.
Despite that, the most recalcitrant right-wing
forces see Obama as an extremist, and are
threatening him by continuing to do battle in the
Senate to neutralize the effects of the health
reform, and openly sabotaging him in various states
of the Union, declaring the new law unconstitutional.
The problems of our era are far more serious
still.
The International Monetary Fund, the World Bank
and other international credit agencies, under the
strict control of the United States, are allowing
the large U.S. banks – the creators of fiscal
paradises and responsible for the financial chaos on
the planet – to be kept afloat by the government of
that country in each one of the system’s frequent
and growing crises.
The U.S. Federal Reserve issues at its whim the
convertible currency that pays for the wars of
conquest, the profits of the military industrial
complex, the military bases distributed throughout
the world and the large investments with which
transnationals control the economy in many countries
in the world. Nixon unilaterally suspended the
conversion of the dollar into gold, while the vaults
of the banks in New York hold seven thousand tons of
gold, something more than 25% of the world’s
reserves of this metal, a figure which at the end of
World War II stood at more than 80%. It is argued
that the [U.S.] public debt exceeds $10 trillion,
more than 70% of its GDP, like a burden that will be
passed on to the new generations. That is affirmed
when, in reality, it is the world economy which is
paying for that debt with the huge spending on goods
and services that it provides to acquire U.S.
dollars, with which the large transnationals of that
country have taken over a considerable part of the
world’s wealth, and which sustain that nation’s
consumer society.
Anyone can understand that such a system is
unsustainable and why the wealthiest sectors in the
United States and its allies in the world defend a
system sustained only on ignorance, lies and
conditioned reflexes sown in world public opinion
via a monopoly of the mass media, including the
principal Internet networks.
Today, the structure is collapsing in the face of
the accelerated advance of climate change and its
disastrous consequences, which are placing humanity
in an exceptional dilemma.
Wars among the powers no longer seem to be the
possible solution to major contradictions, as they
were until the second half of the 20th century; but,
in their turn, they have impinged on the factors
that make human survival possible to the extent that
they could bring the existence of the current
intelligent species inhabiting our planet to a
premature end.
A few days ago, I expressed my conviction, in the
light of dominant scientific knowledge today, that
human beings have to solve their problems on planet
Earth, given that they will never be able to cover
the distance that separates the Sun from the closest
star, located four light years distant, a speed that
is equivalent to 300,000 kilometers per second – if
there should be a planet similar to our beautiful
Earth in the vicinity of that sun.
The United States is investing fabulous sums to
discover if there is water on the planet Mars, and
whether some elemental form of life existed or
exists there. Nobody knows why, unless it is out of
pure scientific curiosity. Millions of species are
disappearing at an increasing rate on our planet and
its fabulous volumes of water are constantly being
poisoned.
The new laws of science – based on Einstein’s
theories on energy and matter and the Big Boom
theory as the origin of the millions of
constellations and infinite stars or other
hypotheses – have given way to profound changes in
fundamental concepts such as space and time, which
are occupying theologians’ attention and analyses.
One of them, our Brazilian friend Frei Betto,
approaches the issue in his book La obra
del artista: una vision holística del Universe (The
Artist’s Work: a Holistic View of the Universe),
launched at the last International Book Fair in
Havana.
Scientific advances in the last 100 years have
impacted on traditional approaches that prevailed
for thousands of years in the social sciences and
even in philosophy and theology.
The interest that the most honest thinkers are
taking in that new knowledge is notable, but we know
absolutely nothing of President Obama’s thinking on
the compatibility of consumer societies with science.
Meanwhile, it is worthwhile, now and then, to
devote time to meditating on those issues. Certainly
human beings will not cease to dream and take things
with the due serenity and nerves of steel on that
account. It is a duty – at least for those who chose
the political profession and the noble and essential
resolve of a human society of solidarity and justice.

Fidel Castro Ruz
March 24, 2010
6:40 p.m.
Translated by Granma International
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Reflections
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