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jetdawgg
04-30-07, 10:33 AM
By Caren Bohan

MIAMI (Reuters) - President Bush took fresh aim on Saturday at Cuba's communist government, calling it a "cruel dictatorship" and predicting that democratic change was near.

The U.S. president's comments came amid signs that Cuban leader Fidel Castro was recovering from an intestinal ailment that has kept him out of the public eye for the past nine months and may soon resume some government duties.
Bush, who has tightened economic sanctions on Havana and boosted aid to dissidents with a goal of hastening the end of Castro's grip on power, said in a commencement speech at Miami Dade College that many Cubans were dreaming of a better life.

Unfortunately, those dreams are stifled by a cruel dictatorship that denies all freedom in the name of a dark and discredited ideology," Bush said, noting that many people at the graduation had roots in Cuba, which is just 90 miles (140 km) from Florida.


"Some of you still have loved ones who live in Cuba and wait for the day when the light of liberty will shine upon them again," Bush said. "That day is nearing."

Since Fidel Castro, 80, handed over power temporarily to his brother in July, he has since been seen only in videotaped footage and in photographs. A few months ago, U.S. intelligence agencies appeared to be expecting Castro's demise. In fact, former U.S. intelligence chief John Negroponte said in a December interview he was near death.


However, recent photographs of Castro's meeting with a senior Chinese Communist Party official showed he has regained some weight. And U.S. officials have since acknowledged he may be improving.

Many Cuba watchers say Raul Castro, 75, is likely to remain in control but there is still some speculation that Fidel Castro will assume a role as elder statesman or return to help set and even dictate policy.

In Bolivia, President Evo Morales said he was sure Castro would resume power during May Day celebrations in Havana, a Bolivian television station reported on Saturday.
"I'm sure, my Cuban brothers, that on May 1 comrade Fidel will return to governing Cuba and Latin America," Morales said, according to the private Unitel network.


After Castro's illness was announced last year, Bush reiterated a desire to see democratic change in Cuba but he has said little about the situation in Havana since then.
Bush did not mention either of the Castro brothers by name in his speech.
Among those at the commencement were some of the most vocal anti-Castro politicians in the U.S. Congress: Rep. Lincoln Diaz-Balart, Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart and Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen. All three are Republicans from Florida.
Bush also made a push for Congress to take up his proposal for broad immigration reform that would include steps to tighten the border along with a guest worker program.
"Our current immigration system is in need of reform. We need a system where our laws are respected," Bush said. "We need a system that meets the legitimate needs of our economy. And we need a system that treats people with dignity and helps newcomers assimilate into our society." Bush said in his weekly radio address he saw signs that some in Congress who had been hesitant to move forward on immigration last year now seem "open to supporting it."

marinegreen
04-30-07, 02:14 PM
By Caren Bohan

MIAMI (Reuters) - President Bush took fresh aim on Saturday at Cuba's communist government, calling it a "cruel dictatorship" and predicting that democratic change was near.

The U.S. president's comments came amid signs that Cuban leader Fidel Castro was recovering from an intestinal ailment that has kept him out of the public eye for the past nine months and may soon resume some government duties.
Bush, who has tightened economic sanctions on Havana and boosted aid to dissidents with a goal of hastening the end of Castro's grip on power, said in a commencement speech at Miami Dade College that many Cubans were dreaming of a better life.

Unfortunately, those dreams are stifled by a cruel dictatorship that denies all freedom in the name of a dark and discredited ideology," Bush said, noting that many people at the graduation had roots in Cuba, which is just 90 miles (140 km) from Florida.


"Some of you still have loved ones who live in Cuba and wait for the day when the light of liberty will shine upon them again," Bush said. "That day is nearing."

Since Fidel Castro, 80, handed over power temporarily to his brother in July, he has since been seen only in videotaped footage and in photographs. A few months ago, U.S. intelligence agencies appeared to be expecting Castro's demise. In fact, former U.S. intelligence chief John Negroponte said in a December interview he was near death.


However, recent photographs of Castro's meeting with a senior Chinese Communist Party official showed he has regained some weight. And U.S. officials have since acknowledged he may be improving.

Many Cuba watchers say Raul Castro, 75, is likely to remain in control but there is still some speculation that Fidel Castro will assume a role as elder statesman or return to help set and even dictate policy.

In Bolivia, President Evo Morales said he was sure Castro would resume power during May Day celebrations in Havana, a Bolivian television station reported on Saturday.
"I'm sure, my Cuban brothers, that on May 1 comrade Fidel will return to governing Cuba and Latin America," Morales said, according to the private Unitel network.


After Castro's illness was announced last year, Bush reiterated a desire to see democratic change in Cuba but he has said little about the situation in Havana since then.
Bush did not mention either of the Castro brothers by name in his speech.
Among those at the commencement were some of the most vocal anti-Castro politicians in the U.S. Congress: Rep. Lincoln Diaz-Balart, Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart and Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen. All three are Republicans from Florida.
Bush also made a push for Congress to take up his proposal for broad immigration reform that would include steps to tighten the border along with a guest worker program.
"Our current immigration system is in need of reform. We need a system where our laws are respected," Bush said. "We need a system that meets the legitimate needs of our economy. And we need a system that treats people with dignity and helps newcomers assimilate into our society." Bush said in his weekly radio address he saw signs that some in Congress who had been hesitant to move forward on immigration last year now seem "open to supporting it."


NEWS FLASH GW...........Duuuuhhhhhh ! theres always change when a dictator dies or gets killed,hell look at the change were gonna have when you leave office. Dam GW you should put in your application for the physic hotline, Latoya is looking for a few good men/woman politicians to man them phone lines:D
:yes: MG

killerinstinct
04-30-07, 02:35 PM
HAHA after bush saying that i bet fidel is probably already dead and what comes to mind is that movie weekend at bernies where they draged him around making everyone believe he was still alive and waving hands and everything.... dunno if this makes sense but if it does ya get me

10thzodiac
04-30-07, 03:35 PM
The Yankee Capitalist can't wait to get their property back that Castro sized, and put those sugar picking Cubans to work in sweat shops.

According to the National Labor Committee, a worker in El Salvador earns about 24 cents for each NBA jersey she makes. These same jerseys then sell in the U.S. for $140 each. The 60 cents an hour the Salvadoran NBA seamstresses earn covers only about a third of the cost of living, and even the Salvadoran government says this wage leaves a worker in "abject poverty." In poorer countries such as the Dominican Republic and Nicaragua, the wages are even lower. http://www.leatherneck.com/forums/images/icons/icon14.gif

SkilletsUSMC
04-30-07, 04:00 PM
The Yankee Capitalist can't wait to get their property back that Castro sized, and put those sugar picking Cubans to work in sweat shops.

According to the National Labor Committee, a worker in El Salvador earns about 24 cents for each NBA jersey she makes. These same jerseys then sell in the U.S. for $140 each. The 60 cents an hour the Salvadoran NBA seamstresses earn covers only about a third of the cost of living, and even the Salvadoran government says this wage leaves a worker in "abject poverty." In poorer countries such as the Dominican Republic and Nicaragua, the wages are even lower. http://www.leatherneck.com/forums/images/icons/icon14.gif

No I dont think thats it, because they are risking life and limb to get into the US so they can get jobs at sweat shops.

10thzodiac
04-30-07, 04:29 PM
No I dont think thats it, because they are risking life and limb to get into the US so they can get jobs at sweat shops.

Is then Castro really the Cubans problem per se if the e.g. Dominicans, Haitians, Mexicans, etc. are risking life and limb to come here who already have American sweat shops in their native country ?

In other-words, after Castro, the only change will be who controls sweat shops in Cuba. Then if the Cubans want something close to a fair wage you will still have to risk life and limb besides breaking American immigration Law by entering illegally into America (no longer a political refugee) http://us.i1.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/i/mesg/tsmileys2/02.gif

I think beforehand the Cuban people should ask some Iraqis first, "was Iraq better off under Saddam or GW http://us.i1.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/i/mesg/tsmileys2/06.gif

The answer is obvious to me...

kato811
04-30-07, 06:08 PM
hes not to good at estimating how long anything diplomatic is going to take