Boston Herald

No way to justify sympathy for communist dictators

- By MONA CHAREN Mona Charen is a syndicated columnist.

According to CNN, Bernie Sanders “has been consistent for 40 years.” Some find this reassuring. On the other hand, if someone has never changed his mind throughout 78 years of life, it suggests ideologica­l rigidity and impervious­ness to evidence, not high principle.

Why make a fuss about Sanders’ past praise of communist dictatorsh­ips? After all, the Cold War ended three decades ago, and a would-be President Sanders cannot exactly surrender to the Soviet Union.

It’s a moral issue. Sanders was not a liberal during the Cold War, i.e. someone who favored arms control, peace talks and opposed support for anti-communist movements. He was an outright communist sympathize­r, meaning he was always willing to overlook or excuse the crimes of regimes like Cuba and Nicaragua; always ready to suggest that only American hostility forced them to, among other things, arrest their opposition, expel priests and dispense with elections.

Good ol’ consistent Sanders reprised one of the greatest hits of the pro-Castro left last week on “60 Minutes.” When Anderson Cooper pressed the senator by noting that Castro imprisoned a lot of dissidents, Sanders said he condemned such things. But even that grudging acknowledg­ment rankled the old socialist, who then rushed to add: “When Fidel Castro came into office, you know what he did? He had a massive literacy program. Is that a bad thing?”

Actually, the first thing Castro did upon seizing power was to march 600 of Fulgencio Batista’s supporters into two of the island’s largest prisons, La Cabana and Santa Clara. Over the next five months, after rigged trials, they were shot. Some “trials” amounted to public spectacles.

Batista was a bad guy, one must say. But summary executions are frowned upon by true liberals.

Next, Castro announced that scheduled elections would be postponed indefinite­ly. The island is still waiting. Within months, he began to close independen­t newspapers, even some that had supported him during the insurgency. All religious colleges were shuttered in May 1961, their property confiscate­d by the state. NB, Sen. Sanders: Castro also found time to kneecap the labor unions. David Salvador, the elected leader of the sugar workers union had been a vocal Batista opponent. He was arrested in 1962 and would spend 12 years in Cuba’s gulag.

“The Black Book of Communism” recounts that between 1959 and 1999, more than 100,000 Cubans were imprisoned for political reasons, and between 15,000 and 17,000 people were shot. Neighbors were encouraged to inform on one another, and children on their parents. During the AIDS crisis of the 1980s, Cuba imprisoned gay people in concentrat­ion camps. Like other communist paradises, Cuba’s greatest export was boat people. About 2 million of the island’s 11 million inhabitant­s escaped. Countless others died in the attempt. Did Sanders ever wonder why a country that had done such great work on literacy and health care had to shoot people to prevent them from fleeing?

Yes, Cuba has high rates of literacy, but the state wanted readers in order to propagandi­ze them. To this day, the regime controls what people can know. There are two internets on the island. One for tourists and those approved by the government, and the other, with restricted access, for the people.

Bernie Sanders has access to all the informatio­n he can absorb, and yet he remains an apologist for regimes that violate every standard of decency. Unlike the Cuban people, he is responsibl­e for his own ignorance and pig-headedness. He claims to be a “democratic socialist,” but as his Cuba remarks suggest, the modifier may be just for show.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States