Cuba
Is Obama’s End Of The Road: The President And His Liberal
Cohorts
14 January 2010By Jacob G. Hornberger
American liberals have long extolled Cuba as a model
of their economic philosophy, which entails government
control of economic activity, socialized health care,
government-provided education, and equalization of
wealth. While Cubans correctly call this socialism, to
avoid the stigma associated with that word American
liberals have long called it “progressivism.”
Opposed to the socialist/progressive economic
philosophy is that of economic liberty, which
libertarians favor. It holds that there should be a
complete separation of economy and the state, just as
we have a separation of church and state. That would
mean the right of people to freely engage in any
economic activity, the right to freely enter into
trades with people all over the world, the right to
accumulate unlimited amounts of wealth, and the right
to decide what to do with one’s own money — all
without the permission, control, regulation, or
interference of the government.
The New York Times recently carried an article that
shows what happens when socialist/progressive
principles are carried to their logical conclusion.
The article began by describing three people in Cuba:
A mother of two who goes door-to-door selling ribbons;
an old man sells cookies and candies to people who
knock on his door; a grandmother sells cheap rum in
used beer cans.
Now here’s the kicker: “Such entrepreneurship is
outlawed.”
Yes, outlawed! It’s illegal to engage in such economic
enterprise in Cuba.
In fact, the job of block captains for Cuban
neighborhoods is to report transgressions to the
authorities, who are expected to arrest, prosecute,
and punish people for engaging in such heinous
activity.
But as the article points out, the activity “thrives
nonetheless.” It’s what people do in a desperate
attempt to survive the near-starvation conditions in
which they live.
Several years ago, I visited Cuba. A Cuban citizen
told me that block captains know that if they rat on
their neighbors for engaging in economic enterprise,
the neighbors will deal with him severely. So, the
block captains keep their mouths shut.
Such illegality is the logical outcome of the
socialist/progressive vision, the vision that
President Obama and his liberal cohorts wish to
continue foisting on our nation. What Castro has done
in Cuba is simply carry the liberal economic vision to
its logical conclusion. Castro didn’t just nationalize
a few automobile and insurance companies, as President
Obama has done, he nationalized everything. The
government became the sole employer, and everyone
supposedly was made equal by becoming a salaried
employee of the state. The government provides “free”
health care to everyone and “free” education to
everyone’s children.
There was no more capitalist “exploitation” of workers
because there were no more privately owned businesses
to hire people. Everyone worked for the government. No
one was permitted to become too wealthy because
everyone’s salary was controlled by the state, the
sole employer.
Entering into economic exchanges had to be made
illegal because the socialist mindset holds that in
every trade, there is a winner and a loser. Permitting
people to enter into trades would permit some people
to become wealthier than others by taking advantage of
those with whom they are trading.
The government became the sole provider of everything,
from health care, to education, to food, to
employment, to retirement.
Cradle to grave security — the
liberal/socialist/progressive dream.
That’s where Obama and his fellow liberals are leading
America. That’s the end of their road. Oh, sure, they
have to play the game in which they ardently deny that
they are socialists and explain how they’re just using
government ownership and control to save America’s
“free enterprise” system. But step by step, their
programs, and resulting economic crises, are leading
our nation toward the logical economic outcome, as
manifested in Cuba.
And what has been the result of all this in Cuba?
Poverty. Severe poverty, as in near-starvation
conditions. Oh, sure, liberals blame it all on the
cruel and brutal embargo that the U.S. Empire has
enforced for decades against the Cuban people. But
they’re only half right because the embargo is only
half the vise under which the Cuban people have been
squeezed. The other half of the vise is Cuba’s
socialist economic system, which would squeeze the
lifeblood out of any society.
When Fidel Castro finally dies, it would not surprise
me if the Cuban people were to rise up and demand
economic liberty. In my conversations with ordinary
Cubans, they expressed deep respect and admiration for
Castro for having opposed the U.S. Empire’s longtime
aim of controlling and managing their country, but at
the same time they know that Castro’s socialist
experiment has been a disaster for them.
In fact, one of the most surprising parts of my visit
to Cuba was my encountering ordinary Cuban citizens
who were knowledgeable and committed advocates of
economic liberty. One of them even took me to his
home, where he showed me his extensive collection of
books, which included works by Milton Friedman, Ludwig
von Mises, Friedrich Hayek, and many other free-market
economists.
Wouldn’t it be ironic if the Cuban people were to
suddenly move toward economic liberty while the
American people were continuing to move toward
socialism?
Jacob Hornberger is founder and president of The
Future of Freedom Foundation.
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