Monday, June 9, 2014

Cuba and the Perversion of Language

Cuba and the Perversion of Language
June 6, 2014
The Cuban government continues to rely on defamation and personal attacks.
Alejandro Armengol*


HAVANA TIMES — The campaign against dissidents, the peaceful opposition
and civil society activists that the Cuban press has maintained for
decades illustrates the ideological decadence of a dying regime.

The means employed are not novel: insult and taunting, the spreading of
lies that, though based on isolated elements of truth on occasion,
present us with a false picture of the situation, a shift in perspective
that deforms the whole and demonizes the enemy. The difference now is
that these strategies have been reduced to their crudest form.

In its infancy, the ideology of Castroism advanced the image of a better
(albeit future) society. Political attacks were fundamentally aimed at
various groups, but all references pointed to the past: "vestiges of the
past," "ills of the past," "petite-bourgeois attitudes that still
prevail," "members of the old, privileged classes," "remnants of the old
society."

The identity of the enemy was diluted in their alleged persistence
within a social class. Terror was aimed at extermination and
segregation. The method was not new. In similar and varied fashion,
communism and fascism had resorted to the same discourse, as had
colonial and slaveholding empires before, wielding different arguments.

Language was then deformed in two ways. Abstraction was used as a means
of depersonalizing and distorting words. One heard talk of the
"liquidation" of exploitation, serving "justice" to traitors and "taking
back" the "people's" properties.

All the while, opponents were dehumanized: they were called "worms",
"scum" and parasites in Cuba, "rabid dogs of capitalism" in China, and
"vampires", "bastards" and "lice" in the former Soviet Union.

Because of these discursive strategies, the ideological language of
Castroism was deformed at birth and began to deteriorate almost from the
very beginning. Paradoxically, two contradictory factors contributed to
this: the failure to consolidate the ideal social model it had promised
and the successful segregation of its traditional enemies.

For years, the government chose to ignore the dissidents and to continue
to label them "ills of the past", intent on eliminating all criticisms
and identifying those who opposed the system with the "previous society."

The permanence of the new government's power gradually eroded these
arguments. The most formidable blow was felt during the crisis that
culminated with the Mariel exodus in 1980, when thousands who had been
children in 1959, or had been born after that year, thousands of workers
who had never owned properties before the revolution, decided or were
forced to leave the country.

This forced the government to resort to a less political and more vulgar
form of defamation. The head-on attack on the "class enemy" was replaced
with humiliation and labeling. The most oft-repeated words were
"prostitutes," "homosexuals," and "procurers" (in their crude versions,
of course).

The Mariel crisis did not, however, change the fact that these insults
continued to be based on broad generalizations. The word "scum" was used
to label everyone, despite the fact that, in many cases, individual
differences far outweighed any similarities.

These defamatory tactics were maintained in the course of years, but
their language was gradually changed. Now, there are no attacks on the
exile community in general. The government prefers to speak of the
"diaspora", "émigrés", "Cubans living abroad." It refers to the "Miami
mafia" to define and limit its attacks on a city and a sector of the
Cuban community abroad.

A lack of ideological arguments has led Cuba to resort to personal
attacks which are more vulgar and more limited.

This new approach stems from a weighty financial problem: the island's
economy depends, to a great extent, on the remittances sent from Miami.
The government, however, also acknowledges the financial and political
influence of a sector of the Cuban exile community.

It no longer speaks of the "puppets of imperialism", but of recalcitrant
"mercenaries" on the "Empire's payroll."

The duality the regime maintains to employ the fetishism of money as a
weapon – more political than ideological – is curious.

When Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez expressed disdain over the
possibility of having Cuban-Americans invest on the island during a
gathering with members of CAFE (Cuban Americans for Engagement), he did
so by showing a predilection for large figures.

"I don't know how many Cubans you know who could invest 200, 300 or 500
million, perhaps even a billion dollars, which is the investment Cuba
needs," he said.

Astronomically lower figures, however, are quoted in Cuba as part of a
perfect, disparaging argument used to awaken envy and give additional
impetus to those who participate in violent reprisals against alleged
dissidents.

If you were born in Cuba, live abroad and have managed to amass a
billion-dollar fortune, know that the doors of the island are open to
you, but do not dare do anything that could make the government accuse
you and discredit you (without proof) for having scrounged up a few dollars.

Individual defamation has shed the language of the class struggle to
take on the contours of the pettiest envy, and the revolutionary saga
and epic of the early years has degenerated into crude neighborly
quarrels, vulgarity and obscenity.

A significant step in this direction was taken during the incident
involving Elian Gonzalez, a Cuban child who was lost at sea following
the wreck of a raft, was taken to Miami, held in custody by relatives
and finally returned to Cuba. During this time, the shipwrecks Cuban
balseros suffer was reduced to descriptions typical of the so-called
"culture of poverty": of abusive and inebriated men who beat their
wives, family relationships based on violence, prostitution and theft.

In the end, we were left with the language of a novel that was not quite
rose-colored, that was lost in a dirty grey, where intentions were more
important than facts – that people left the country on makeshift rafts,
as was repeated on a daily basis then -, where reality was reduced to
crude, formulaic anecdotes and endless, empty-sounding spiels.

During the time of the "Elian incident", Cuban ideology no longer
aspired to be doctrine. It limited itself to being a forceful distraction.

Fidel Castro had not understood that Elian was an exceptional incident
and tried to repeat a similar campaign (this time at an international
level) in connection with the conviction of five Cuban agents accused of
espionage in the United States. The campaign continues, unrelenting, and
it is one of the legacies of the last years of Fidel's active leadership.

The propaganda surrounding the so-called Cuban Five – who have been
reduced to three in the course of time – seeks to give us a kind of
sugary buzz, invoking the injustice of the case, the arbitrariness of
the trial and Miami's hostile atmosphere. It appeals to false arguments,
like the one used by former spy Gerardo Hernandez, who, according to
Cubadebate and an EFE cable, during a press conference in Washington
held on June 4, said that the "Miami Herald fired three journalists in
2006 when it learned that they were covering the case 'on the payroll of
the United States government'". This is a barefaced lie.

All the while, attacks on the opposition increasingly rely on an
aggressive language.

These demands for righting a "wrong", rapprochement, conciliation and
debate contrasts with the hostility towards those who are merely calling
for the free spread of information, changes under the current
legislation and the expansion of civil society.

The Cuban government shows itself incapable of discussing ideas and
proposals in a civilized manner. Personal attacks and insults continue
to be part of the system's essence – even after the class enemy has been
replaced with one dressed in money.
—–
(*) An HT translation published with permission from Cubaencuentro.com.

Source: Cuba and the Perversion of Language - Havana Times.org -
http://www.havanatimes.org/?p=104117

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