T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1027.1 | What country should we take down today Bill? | POLAR::MAHANEY | Mikey - Deliver us from evil! | Sun Jan 26 1997 23:50 | 26 |
| The Americans do have a point but the problem is that they do not stand
by their convictions. They trade with China and other dictatorial
regimes, yet when it comes to Cuba it is a hands-off policy. I really do
not think that it is a debate about whether we should be trading with
Cuba or not. The debate is 'do the Americans have a right to tell other
countries where to trade?' The ethics of trading with Cuba is a debate
for Canadian Citizens to decide, and not for Mr. Helms and Mr. Burton
from the U.S.
Fidel Castro represents the last snub at the American way of life, he
is a hold over from the Cold War and a dictator whose human rights
record is absymal. Should we trade with him in hope that it will help
the people of Cuba or will it help Castro tighten his reign over Cuba
due to an increase in currency (power)? If the U.S. really wanted to
dipose of Castro they would have lauched an offensive years ago. Why
haven't they? If it is human lives and misery at stake, then why not
commit to extinguishing the problem. I think the American stance is
just to placate the Cuban political contigent in Florida while they
fill up their coffers with political contributions. I am not being
anti-american as they have defended in the past the values of
Western Culture (in which we belong) across the world. Yet I find their
stance on Human Rights just so hypocritical.
Regards,
Sean
|
1027.2 | Complex history here..be careful. | POLAR::ROBINSONP | Waiting for the Sun | Mon Jan 27 1997 13:05 | 4 |
|
Dispose of Castro? What about the Bay of Pigs??
The list of wounds goes way way back on this one..
|
1027.3 | Very Complex.... | POLAR::MAHANEY | Mikey - Deliver us from evil! | Mon Jan 27 1997 23:45 | 23 |
| The Bay of Pigs was unoffical and not recognized by the U.S.
government. This allowed the U.S. to commit certain American soldiers
to train and fight along with Cuban Nationals. It was done this way
because if the U.S. had of performed a full scale invasion, the USSR
would have intervened and perhaps we would have seen World War III. The
political climate at the time was tense and the Super powers were on
the brink of war. Things have changed since the cold war ended, and all
it would take would be a small ground force (remember Panama) to dispose
of Castro. The problem is that it would cost American lives, something
no President wants to be remember for. So, the U.S. does not invade to
make the majority of U.S. citizens happy, and keeps the heavy line on
Cuba to make the Cuban contigent in the U.S. happy. You are also right
about the wound thing, it is more of a 'Make Castro pay for the past
for defying us.'
Will getting rid of Castro help the people of Cuba? I have seen other
islands in the region in worse shape (St. Kitts/Turks and Cacos/
D.R.) than Cuba. In Cuba the people are educated and have health
care, but they are still poor due to lack of trade. Do the Human Rights
violations supercede the general welfare of the whole population?
Sean
|
1027.4 | | TROOA::MCRAM | Digital: There's no Life like it! | Tue Jan 28 1997 08:42 | 23 |
|
Re.3 "..all it would take is a small ground force"????
Really? Do you think Panama had several divisions of troops, jet
fighters, SAM networks, and a huge force of battle-hardened troops?
Any idea how much damage those Cuban construction workers did in
Grenada?
It would be very, very bloody and hardly welcome. Ask some marines
how many it would take to take Havana room-by-room. Castro has at
least half the population that really back him.
When Cuba 'opens' is must be internally, post - Castro, from within the
system, like in Russia.
Marshall
|
1027.5 | | TROOA::BROOKS | | Tue Jan 28 1997 12:55 | 24 |
| on the news the other night, they were covering Axworthy's trip to
Cuba. They briefly interviewed some workers at Sherritt's (SP?)
operation. The workers were making a decent buck, by Cuba's standards.
Are they being exploited? By our standards, not theirs. Does it make
me uncomfortable to see them make $25/month (or a similarly small
amount)? Yes it does. But it would make me much more uncomfortable to
give aid $ to a corrupt regime. Trade with a corrupt regime is much
better than aid to a corrupt regime. I was pleased that some
concessions were made on the side of human rights. These sounded
significant, but the media commentators seemed to indicate they were
minor in nature. Oh well.
As to the Bay of Pigs. Wasn't that escapade backed by the CIA? Does
it suprise you that it wasn't 'officially sanctioned'? Not me.
Perhaps the US reaction to Castro is one of David and Goliath. Or
perhaps they have a problem with the fact that they 'lost' the bay of
pigs. Or perhaps, they just like to have a bad guy around to blame
every now and then, as well as to justify the ridiculous military
budget they still have.
I'd be interested in seeing the cash flows on that Sherritt deal
though to see how much is going to the 'state' of Cuba.
|
1027.6 | and he inhales too... | POLAR::ROBINSONP | Waiting for the Sun | Tue Jan 28 1997 12:58 | 6 |
|
Remember, the guy smokes those big Monte Cristos, it won't
be that long until he wakes up and starts coughing up
chunks of lung.
FWIW
|
1027.7 | AdIoS AmIgO! | POLAR::MAHANEY | Mikey - Deliver us from evil! | Wed Jan 29 1997 23:30 | 9 |
| At least Castro is predictable, what happens when el'presidenta dies?
Civil War/Coup? I feels sorry for the people of Cuba, but the fact they
have not risen up and disposed of Castro makes me suspect that he has
more than half the population on his side. I say trade! But with some
restrictions on human rights. I do think the transition to democracy
like Russia endured will be more violent and bloody. Sort of like Hati.
Small ground force... 50000 troops would do it! or one snipers bullet.
Sean
|
1027.8 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Patented Problem Generator | Thu Jan 30 1997 10:27 | 4 |
| You know what? I really don't give a load of dingos kidneys about Cuba
or the companies that deal with it or Helms/Burton. Really, who cares?
500 million in business? That's piddly. There are more important
things to worry about.
|
1027.9 | Well, excuuuussee me | TROOA::MCRAM | Digital: There's no Life like it! | Thu Jan 30 1997 11:32 | 24 |
| re. 8
What's your point? If you don't like the discussion stay out of it.
It's not out of line or personal yet, not that I had noticed.
Who pissed in your cornflakes?
|
1027.10 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Patented Problem Generator | Thu Jan 30 1997 12:54 | 10 |
| My point is it's much ado about nothing. I thought my point was
obvious.
|It's not out of line or personal yet, not that I had noticed.
So? I'm not allowed to have an opinion because I'm a moderator?
|Who pissed in your cornflakes?
I don't know, but I wish he'd wait until I poured them into a bowl.
|
1027.11 | More ado | TROOA::MCRAM | Digital: There's no Life like it! | Thu Jan 30 1997 13:48 | 18 |
|
No, not to me. It sounded like you were trivializing the topic
and it's contributors, rather than the issue.
Of course being a moderator doesn't mean you can't trivialize anything your
little heart desires. Pull an EDP if you feel like it (warn us first,
though).
Canada has a tradition of much ado about nothing, or least carrying on
for years in a lather. i.e. Blood enquiry, Somalia, some jerk stomps
on a flag, blah, blah.
Sorry about the corn flakes. I understand the cat was actually aiming at
the Fruit Loops but was reading the french side of the box and got
confused.
|
1027.12 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Patented Problem Generator | Thu Jan 30 1997 14:00 | 3 |
| |Pull an EDP if you feel like it
What and get myself sued?
|
1027.13 | Nudge, Nudge, say-no-more | TROOA::MCRAM | Digital: There's no Life like it! | Thu Jan 30 1997 15:34 | 7 |
|
Good point. It'd make a good topic for ::CANADA, though,
and you might get an interview with Wendy Mesley.
|
1027.14 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Patented Problem Generator | Thu Jan 30 1997 16:19 | 5 |
| !!!
Where do I sign up!!!!
{fwoooaaaar}
|
1027.15 | Hmm.. Ahh.. Ohhh. really... | POLAR::MAHANEY | Mikey - Deliver us from evil! | Thu Jan 30 1997 23:27 | 6 |
| What's an EDP?
Sean
|
1027.16 | Shhh... he might be out there | TROOA::MCRAM | Digital: There's no Life like it! | Fri Jan 31 1997 09:30 | 14 |
|
EDP is a very unique "noter" (see the Digital file) with a different
style.
Can't say more than that as managers, lawyers, and US labour
authorities frequently get involved. Moderators tremble at their
keyboards.
|
1027.17 | | TROOA::BROOKS | | Fri Jan 31 1997 12:40 | 7 |
| Not sure where the $500 mil figure came from but if that is the trade
between Canada and Cuba, I think it IS worthwhile discussing. Get your
head out of the US-based mindset (multi-trillion$ economy, world
leader, superpower, etc.) and realize that this is Canada and Cuba at
issue - both small-mid sized countries and economies. $500 Mil? what
is Digital's total sales in Canada per year? You get the idea, don't
you?
|
1027.18 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Patented Problem Generator | Fri Jan 31 1997 13:08 | 9 |
| I still maintain that 500 mil in business isn't much to warrant the
attention it's getting.
I got that figure from an article I read when this whole thing got
started. That was the worth of the total transactions, it wasn't
profits or revenues.
The picture is U.S. trade is our bread and butter whether we like it or
not.
|
1027.19 | Senator Jesse Helms - BITE ME!!!!! | POLAR::MAHANEY | Mikey - Deliver us from evil! | Sun Feb 02 1997 23:43 | 22 |
| RE. -1
The U.S's trade with Canada is also their bread and butter. I think
the U.S. is mad that they cannot have a shot at Cuba's markets due to
Castro being el'presidenta. Lets see how much the Americans would like
it if Canada being pushed by Chinese Nationalists decided to make a law
similar to the Helms/Burton law. Any U.S. company doing business on
lands formerly owned/ruled by Chiang Kai-shek and his Nationalist party
supporters would forfeit their earnings in Canada. So Coca-cola and
McDee's profits would now belong to Chinese-Canadians who suffered
under Mao's reign. Make sense to me. The whole absudity of the U.S.
telling other countries where to trade only controvenes their
capitalist doctrine of free markets and trade.
The 500 million is just chicken feed, but the right to trade to
whoever you want is the decision of our sovereign nation not the U.S's.
And until I see the Red, White and Blue flying on Parliament Hill (some
day maybe), the U.S. can just bite me on this issue. I still have not
decided though if it is a good idea to trade with Castro.
Sean
|
1027.20 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Patented Problem Generator | Mon Feb 03 1997 09:54 | 14 |
| Well, I think that the U.S policy is egocentric too, be that as it may,
who is more important to us? Why do we care so much about Cuba? We must
remember how deeply the wound runs for Americans when it comes to
Cuba.
I agree that philosophically it goes against all America stands for.
After all, it was born out of revolution in which many people lost
property and business.
Also, let's not forget that Americans, by virtue of being our
neighbours, helped us survive the cold war.
I just don't think Cuba/Castro is worth straining what is probably an
international partnership that is the envy of the world.
|
1027.21 | re. -1 | TROOA::BROOKS | | Mon Feb 03 1997 13:13 | 4 |
| Brian! Brian Mulroney!! You're back!!
:^)
|
1027.22 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Patented Problem Generator | Mon Feb 03 1997 16:11 | 4 |
| You'll have to come out of your house one day....
;^)
|
1027.23 | For our American note readers | POLAR::MAHANEY | Mikey - Deliver us from evil! | Fri Apr 11 1997 07:33 | 3 |
| Think I'll go smoke a mellow Cuban Cigar.
|