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Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Blogger creates freedom

CUBA
Blogger creates freedom
Posted on Tue, May. 13, 2008
BY CARLOS ALBERTO MONTANER
www.firmaspress.com

Raúl Castro lost the perfect opportunity to let the world know that his
government is slightly less clumsy and repressive than his brother Fidel's.

Foreign ministries and the most important communications media had fixed
their eyes on the ''new'' president. The reason was simple: Would he
allow Yoani Sánchez, a young Cuban blogger, a professional philologist
on whom the Spanish newspaper El País had bestowed the Ortega y Gasset
Award for online commentary, to travel to Madrid and receive the prize?

Instead, exiled essayist Ernesto Hernández Busto had to accept it,
reading a moving letter he directed to his friend, immobilized in
Havana. Before the ceremony, Sánchez, whose very popular blog Generation
Y gets millions of hits, had been selected by Time magazine as one of
the 100 most influential people today.

Sánchez has lucidly explained the reasons for her success. She has
created a small space of freedom in a society asphyxiated by unanimity.
In her blog, www.desdecuba.com -- without bitterness but also without
fear -- she frequently writes her observations about the Cuban reality.
Literally thousands of people -- mostly abroad, because the Internet is
barred to the great majority of Cubans -- read, refute, support or
comment on what she has written on the Web.

Sánchez is demonstrating what should be obvious to all Cubans, Raúl
Castro and his acolytes included: that every society is inevitably
diverse, and that the multiplicity of opinions that emerge from that
plural reality is what gradually improves the living conditions of the
whole.

The freedom to gain information, to interpret reality and to dissent is
not a luxury, but a tool to correct mistakes, denounce abuses and, sure,
to replace those responsible for the noxious behavior.

The iconography of freedom, which is usually mistaken for a picture of
the republic, shows a beautiful and fierce woman, sometimes
bare-breasted and wearing a Phrygian cap. But that romantic image
conceals a transcendental fact: The exercise of freedom is the essential
feature of humankind.

Freedom is making individual decisions without any coercion other than
one's sense of responsibility and the fair and impartial standards
determined by society. The more free decisions are made by individuals,
the greater the emotional felicity they will reach and the greater
progress their societies will achieve.

The existence of total correspondence between collective prosperity and
individual freedom is not casual. The world's 30 wealthiest countries
are those whose people make decisions freely and define and seek their
own objectives without major interference from the state.

In Cuba, people cannot decide where they wish to live, travel or work,
how they want to spend their money, what they choose to read or what
ideas seem to them brilliant or unwise. In Cuba, the government has
decided what is the correct vision of reality -- from the war in Iraq to
the poverty in Haiti to the production of ethanol -- and any discrepancy
becomes ``deviationism.''

In Cuba, you cannot judge the past from a different perspective, because
that's ''revisionism;'' and it is dangerous to dare foresee a future
different from the one predicted by the mandarins of the sect. You walk
into the minefield of ''ideological treason.'' In Cuba, entrepreneurial
people cannot create a lucrative economic activity, lest they are
charged with exploitation, and cannot even express their wish to
emigrate, lest they are considered to be ``enemies of the motherland.''

In Cuba, the kidnapping of individual freedoms is such that the tenants
of this poor island don't even have the right to make decisions about
the intimate subject of affection. They are barred from openly loving
people who are discontented with the regime; they may not have contact
with them without suffering harm. And if they have the misfortune of
falling in love with a foreigner (except for the children of the big
bosses), an awful, bureaucratic Via Crucis begins.

When people say Cuba needs reforms, what they really mean is that Cubans
need freedom. Freedom to own property, to communicate ideas, to move, to
start businesses, to come together in accordance with their ideals and
interests. Freedom, in sum, to make their own decisions and regain
control over their own lives. From the pope to the last Cuban, half the
world is waiting for those profound changes. Sánchez, who by herself
already has made a small change, gave an opportunity to Raúl Castro to
show that he is moving in the right direction. Foolishly, he chucked it
away.

http://www.miamiherald.com/opinion/other_views/story/530770.html

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