Posted on 06/29/2007 8:29:34 PM PDT by slickeroo
>>>Hillary Befriends Cuba’s First Lady!
>>>Cuba’s “first lady,” Vilma Espin, passed away last week.
Let’s reunite these lovely ladies.
What on earth is that about?
I’ve got to ask...did they ever.......?
ping
Do you happen to know Hillary's D.C. mailing address, in which building her office is located? Thomas has shut down individual webpages. I want to tell this race-baiting woman of the blooper I heard her say last night - something to do with "if a White woman died of AIDS ..."
It’s Madonna and Brittany Spears at some awards (Grammys I think) banquet. When I saw the headline that picture came to mind. It’s been a tough week. Perhaps I should just go putter in the garage.
yeah, i remember reading that espin article in the nyt.
they really like commies at the nyt.
THIS makes you think of Brittany Spears and Madonna?
I think you have puttered in the garage with the car running :P
No it doesn’t. Neither does Hillary. Like I said, it was the headline that brought the pic to mind. I just got an indignant FR Mail about it too. No offence meant, but I’ve seen the same pic several times before on FR, in fact that’s where I copied it from.
I got it immediately!
Hilarious!
Serving as such, Ms. Espin was Cuba’s delegate to the U.N.’s 4th annual Women’s Conference held in Beijing in September 1995, where she hob-knobbed with U.S. delegate Hillary Clinton.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
At that conference is where Hillary said: Violence against women is not simply cultural; it is simply criminal (apparently her husband didn’t hear the speech)
>>>apparently her husband didnt hear the speech
I personally think all of these ‘feel good’ groups are just fronts to route foreign monies into deep pockets.
First Lady And Raul Castro
The essay “First Lady and Raul Castro” speaks about Vilma Espin, currently First Lady of the Cuban Dictatorship since 1960. She is one of the most important public figures in the government of Castros family. Since Fidel Castros accession in the 1960s, she has been President of the Cuban Womens Federation.
Different from the Peoples Republic of China and the Socialist Republic of Vietnam, Vilma Espin Guilloys is the only Cuban woman that has participated in government affairs in Cuba. She has been described as the most powerful woman in the Cuban Revolution. Little information has been published in the international press about her life. Early reports indicated that her health has declined since 2000.
She was member of the Cuban aristocratic in the 1940s and 1950s. Her father was vice-director of the Bacardi Run Company. She speaks Spanish and English very well. Her mothers French ancestry. Vilma enjoy reading and watching sports. Like member of Castros family, she lives in luxurious residences. She is famous because is wife of Raul Castro, brother of Fidel Alejandro Castro Ruz. Currently Raul Castro is acting president of Cuba. Furthermore, he is first Vice-President of the Council of State, Vice-President of the Council of Ministers, Vice-Secretary of the Politburu and the Central Committee of Communist Party of Cuba.
After completing her education as chemical engineering in her country, she went to the United States to attend at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, one of the best engineering schools in the United States. During the civil war she returned to La Havana. Vilma had known Raul Castro when she was leader of the Cuban Womens Movement. In 1959, guerrilla forces captured Havana city, the Cubas capital. Batista regime was deposed by Fidel Castro.
During the Cold War, Fidel Alejandro Ruz is as dictatorial as his predecessor. The countrys politics is gradually dominated by Castro Ruz family. The new dictator maintained control over the population thought his secret police organization. Castro regime became notorious for human rights violation and anti-American politics. Since 1961, the Island emerged as the first Socialist State in Latin America. After Vilma Espin made herself President of the Cuban Womens Federation (FMC) and she assumed full control of the Cuban woman.
Like Maria Lucia Hiriart de Pinochet (former First Lady of Chile: 1973-1990), Alicia Raquel Hartridge de Videla (ex- First Lady of Argentina: 1976-1981) and Imelda Remedios Visitacion Romualdez Marcos (ex- First Lady of Philippines: 1965-1986), Vilma Espin cooperated with one of the six worst dictatorships in the World. After Cuba became Socialist Republic, Soviet Bloc economic and military aid to Revolution Cubas increased. Ms. Espin immediately began a number of reforms, including human development programs and sporting projects. She built many schools, hospitals, museums, libraries, and stadiums. But she support human rights abuses by national government.
During the 1960s and 1970s Cuban intellectuals, as Lezama Lima, Heberto Padilla, Guillermo Cabrera Infante, and Reynaldo arenas, called for more freedom of expression and many women renewed their efforts to gain recognition for human rights. Certainly, strict control of the lives of the families emerged. Under her leadership, the abortion was declared legal and the “Marxist Education” has received emphasis in the schools, Institutes, academies and universities.
Ms Espin has carried out major diplomatic missions on behalf of the Cuban dictatorship. She was selected by Soviet World to become anti-American activist in the United Nations World Conferences on Women ( Mexico-75, Denmark-80 and Kenya-85).After Cuban government broke off diplomatic relations with Chile, Vilma Espin became an outspoken critic of Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet Ugarte. Certainly, she won popularity in the Socialist Universe. From 1960 to 1990, she went to the USSR, East Germany, Bulgaria, Hungary, Czechoslovakia and other nations. As First Lady of the Cuban revolution, she established good relations with the Third World states.
In 1976, she introduced “The Family Code”, a project about the social equality between men and women in the Island. Ironically, internationals reports which Cuba has the lowest proportion of ministers and congresswoman in its government, exceeded by Liberia, Seychelles and Mozambique.
She is an outspoken critic of capitalist society, but the prostitution is growing in the Island. For many opportunities, Cuba has been compared to Thailand. the prostitution contributes more income to Cubas economy.
Vilma Espin de Castro has been called “the facto First Lady of Cuban revolution because she is not Fidels wife. Certainly, Dalia Soto del Valle is the real First lady of the Cuban Revolution because she is married with Fidel Alejandro Castro Ruz since the 1980s.
REFERENCES:
-Bourne, Peter. Fidel: A Biography of Fidel Castro, Dodd Mcad, New York, 1986.
-García, Magali. “Recorre Consuelo Gonzáles de Velasco, en compañía del Comandante Fidel Castro, la Escuela Secundaria Básica en el campo Batalla del Jique de La Habana, Granma, La habana, 25 de febrero de 1973
-Gasparini, Juan. Mujeres de Dictadores, Ediciones Península, Barcelona, 2002
-Granma. Discurso de Vilma Espín: A las mujeres chilenas, hermanas de lucha en la causa antiimperialista, les reiteramos desde este combativo acto de solidaridad firme e inquebrantable de las mujeres cubanas, La Habana, 17 de septiembre de 1973
-—————”23 de Agosto, 17° Aniversario de la Federación de Mujeres Cubanas”, La Habana, 4 de septiembre de 1977
-—————”Intervención de Vilma Espín, Presidenta de la Federación de Mujeres Cubanas”, La Habana, 23 de septiembre de 1976
-Grogg, Patricia. “Debora”, Cuba Internacional, La Habana, diciembre de 1988
-Guevara Onofre, Alejandro. Historia de la Mujer de los Estados Unidos, Cecosami, Lima, 2002
-Informe sobre Desarrollo Humano 1995: Género y Desarrollo Humano, PNUD, Nueva York, 1995
-Rodríguez Calderón, Mirta. “Comenzará a regir el próximo 8 de marzo, Día Internacional de la Mujer, el Código de la Familia, según Ley 1289 recién dictada por el Consejo de Ministros, Granma, La Habana, 2 de marzo de 1975
By alejandro guevara onofre
Published: 2/27/2007
http://www.buzzle.com/articles/first-lady-raul-castro.html
I've no wish to be offensive to others on the forum, so I'll think a bit harder before I post.
.
HILLARY RODHAM & WILLIAM CLINTON’s supporting Communist North Vietnam’s push to take over a then Free South Vietnam during the Vietnam War ended up giving us to sadly see in the End:
Pictures of a vietnamese Re-Education (SLAVE LABOR) Camp
http://www.Freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1308949/posts
http://www.JourneyFromTheFall.com
.
>>>Little information has been published in the international press about her life. Early reports indicated that her health has declined since 2000.
I think times are changing here:
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-bloggers/1858230/posts
F.B.I. Monitoring; a Nazi Artifact; the Weak Dollar; and More
(snip)
From 1940 to 1975, the F.B.I. carried out an intense campaign of covert surveillance against the National Lawyers Guild, an organization founded in 1937 and long associated with the labor movement and liberal causes. As Colin Moynihan reports in The Times, the F.B.I. turned over copies of some 400,000 pages from its files on the group under a 1977 lawsuit. In 1997, the copies were donated by the guilds lawyers to the Tamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives at New York University with the understanding that they could be made available to the public this year.
NLG Cuba Subcommittee
Send an email to nlgcuba-subscribe@topica.com. Contents of this site:. Archived News Stories. The Right to Travel to Cuba. Reports from past NLG trips to ...
www.nlg.org/cuba
POWs tortured by the “Cuban Program.”
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1209454/posts?page=201#201
Cuban War Crimes Against American POWs
During the Vietnam War*
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1209454/posts?page=202#202
Cubans piloting MIGs in North Vietnam
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1209454/posts?page=203#203
“Fidel”, “Chico” and “Pancho” torture and murder American POWs
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1209454/posts?page=204#204
In addition to being the wife of the president of Penn State, Doctora Spanier is a professor of Womens Studies.
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