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Ernesto ‘Che’ Guevera’s image is one of the most internationally recognized symbols of rebellion in the world today. The South American guerrilla leader, known primarily for his role in Fidel Castro’s Cuban Revolution, has the fantasy image of a sort of Marxist Robin Hood.
The real story though, as it turns out, is that Che isn’t all that cool.
In fact you may want to think twice about wearing around that Che Guevara shirt you bought at the mall after you read this.
Guevara has become sort of a hipster icon for American youth who believe in free speech and radical ideologies, but did you know that Guevara brutally enslaved the ‘free speech types’ after he ‘liberated’ Cuba? I thought that would catch your attention.
After helping Fidel Castro take Cuba from Fulgencio Batista’s regime, Che was appointed as Castro’s executioner, and it was a job which he excelled at. See the above video for more on that.
In 1960, it was Che Guevara’s idea to take China’s brutal practice of ‘corrective work camps’ and implement them in the Caribbean nation. These ‘corrective work camps’ were called gulags by the Russians, though many historians just call them concentration camps.
Any public disagreement with Guevara’s thought or his disastrous economic policies was met with swift imprisonment or death. What’s so revolutionary about that? Mao Zedong and other brutal dictators had been using that practice for years. Che’s implementation of Cuba’s secret police was inspired by Lavrenty Beria, head of Josef Stalin’s NKVD.
Actually, if you take an objective look at the role models that Guevara had it isn’t a surprise that he once wrote: “Hatred as an element of struggle; unbending hatred for the enemy, which pushes a human being beyond his natural limitations, making him into an effective, violent, selective, and cold-blooded killing machine. This is what our soldiers must become.”
If you read a lot more of his writings you’ll see how pathological he was.
If you also read up about his role in the Cuban crisis of 1962, you’ll find he was one of the most hard line of anyone involved in an event that nearly brought the world to nuclear oblivion.
So if you used to love Che Guevara it’s likely because you didn’t know the true story. It’s not really your fault, as Hollywood and the world have marketed the romanticism of the good looking revolutionary for decades.
The truth is though, that he wasn’t that much different than the other brutal dictators of his time, in fact he followed their playbook exactly. Stalin, Mussolini, Hitler or Mao all had similar ideologies. They also had similar personality cults going on.
Adding to the allure of it all, Che Guevara died at a relatively young age. He was a guy with a pretty face who spoke poetically that many feel he was different than Mao or Stalin. After all, both those guys are way too ugly to put on a t-shirt right?
If instead of a picture of Che every t-shirt instead had printed on it: “Hey I’m Che Guevara I’ve forced thousands into slavery, and drove over a million people into exile.” Would you still wear it? There’s nothing cool about that.
See the short video above more.
www.visiontimes.com
Nothing says Rebel, like an image of a man who stood up for impoverished workers, on a t-shirt made by impoverished workers.