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Useful idiots, PBS edition. (Agitprop praising Castrocare)
Power Line ^ | December 28, 2010 | Scott Johnson

Posted on 12/28/2010 10:31:34 AM PST by neverdem

One would have thought we were well past the day when the the folks at PBS would be shilling for Castro and Communism, but one would be wrong. Mary Anastasia O'Grady brings us a remarkable example of Castroite stupefaction in her Wall Street Journal column "A Cuban fairy tale from PBS," noted here by Tim Graham at NewsBusters. O'Grady finds reporter Ray Suarez declaring the glories of Cuban health care in a three-part PBS NewsHour series last week.

Suarez took the Potemkin village tour of the Cuban health care system; O'Grady notes that the NewsHour series was taped in Cuba with government "cooperation," so it is not exactly a great surprise that it went heavy on the party line. Yet Cuba is a national museum of Communism, the clock having been stopped around the time that Castro seized power half a century ago. It is something of a ramshackle paradise for political pilgrims that has been exposed as such many times over.

O'Grady contrasts Suarez's series with Los Funerales de Castro, the 2009 memoir by Vicente Botin covering his four years in Cuba as a correspondent for Spanish Television:

Boti­n tells about a Havana woman who was frustrated by the doctor shortage in the country. She hung a sheet on her balcony with the words "trade me to Venezuela." When the police arrived she told them: "Look, compañeros, I'm as revolutionary as the next guy, but if you want to see a Cuban doctor, you have to go to Venezuela."

The NewsHour has posted Suarez's installment on Cuba's purported emphasis on preventive care online. This seems like a sick joke. One would indeed be well advised not to succumb to an illness requiring medical care in Cuba.

Suarez reports that, according to the World Health Organization, the country has earned bragging rights. The average Cuban lives to the age of 78. That's slightly longer than the life span of the average American. The cost of health care in Cuba is less than $400 a year per person. In the U.S., the annual tab is almost 20 times higher. As George Orwell said, "There are some ideas so absurd that only an intellectual could believe them." Not that Suarez is exactly an intellectual.

Suarez wants us to understand that we have much to learn from Cuba and Castro. The Maximum Leader has created a system producing better outcomes than the United States at a fraction of the cost. You might think he'd look a little harder to discover how such a "miracle" was accomplished. Is it for real?

I can believe that the per year per person cost of health care in Cuba is minimal; health care professionals are slaves who are paid slave wages and medical infrastructure is, shall we say, deficient Commenting on Michael Moore's film Sicko, Jay Nordlinger provides a slightly more realistic portrait than Suarez's:

Testimony and documentation on the subject are vast. Hospitals and clinics are crumbling. Conditions are so unsanitary, patients may be better off at home, whatever home is. If they do have to go to the hospital, they must bring their own bedsheets, soap, towels, food, light bulbs -- even toilet paper. And basic medications are scarce. In Sicko, even sophisticated medications are plentiful and cheap. In the real Cuba, finding an aspirin can be a chore. And an antibiotic will fetch a fortune on the black market.

A nurse spoke to Isabel Vincent of Canada's National Post. "We have nothing," said the nurse. "I haven't seen aspirin in a Cuban store here for more than a year. If you have any pills in your purse, I'll take them. Even if they have passed their expiry date."

The equipment that doctors have to work with is either antiquated or nonexistent. Doctors have been known to reuse latex gloves -- there is no choice. When they travel to the island, on errands of mercy, American doctors make sure to take as much equipment and as many supplies as they can carry. One told the Associated Press, "The [Cuban] doctors are pretty well trained, but they have nothing to work with. It's like operating with knives and spoons."

And doctors are not necessarily privileged citizens in Cuba. A doctor in exile told the Miami Herald that, in 2003, he earned what most doctors did: 575 pesos a month, or about 25 dollars. He had to sell pork out of his home to get by. And the chief of medical services for the whole of the Cuban military had to rent out his car as a taxi on weekends. "Everyone tries to survive," he explained. (Of course, you can call a Cuban with a car privileged, whatever he does with it.)

So deplorable is the state of health care in Cuba that old-fashioned diseases are back with a vengeance. These include tuberculosis, leprosy, and typhoid fever. And dengue, another fever, is a particular menace. Indeed, an exiled doctor named Dessy Mendoza Rivero -- a former political prisoner and a spectacularly brave man -- wrote a book called ¡Dengue! La Epidemia Secreta de Fidel Castro.

(Dr. Miguel Faria has more on ¡Dengue! here.)

University of Oklahoma Professor of Anthropology Katherine Hirschfeld actually conducted ethnographic field work in Cuba on the health care system for 10 months in 1997. She experienced the effects of Cuban health care first hand: "Hirschfeld, then a 29 year-old doctoral student, was hospitalized in May 1997 with dengue fever in Santiago. Doctors were expected to keep the outbreak quiet, she says. And she was sent to a secret ward where an armed guard stood before her door."

In a paper on her field work in Cuba, Hirschfeld noted some of the difficulties: "Formally eliciting critical narratives about health care would be viewed as a criminal act both for me as a researcher, and for people who spoke openly with me."

Professor Hirschfeld's increased awareness of Castro's tyranny caused her to ask a question that evidently did not occur to Suarez: "to what extent is the favorable international image of the Cuban health care system maintained by the state's practice of suppressing dissent and covertly intimidating or imprisoning would-be critics?"

Professor Hirschfeld's book is Health, Politics, and Revolution in Cuba Since 1898. Professor Hirschfeld discovered that Castro has been cooking the books on his health care system, another revelation that would undoubtedly come as a shock to Suarez.

Suarez's report on Cuban health care in 2010 is a disgrace. When Congress gets around to examining the funding of National Public Radio in connection with the termination of Juan Williams, it ought to do likewise with respect to the Public Broadcasting System.

O'Grady discusses her column on Suarez's Cuba series in the video below. It is well worth a look.

ONE MORE THOUGHT: With Suarez's report, PBS returns to its venerable Cold War role as one of Communism's useful idiots. Why now? I believe the answer is obviously Obamacare. Suarez wants to persuade Americans that a state-run health care system is just what the doctor ordered. Like NPR, PBS is a media adjunct of the Democratic Party.


TOPICS: Cuba; Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: castro; castrocare; communism; democraticparty; obamacare; pbs
The video is at the source.
1 posted on 12/28/2010 10:31:37 AM PST by neverdem
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To: neverdem

I’ve read studies that show that those who eat fewer calories per day live longer than those that eat a normal diet. Lack of the complications from diabetes due to obesity probably help their stats, too.


2 posted on 12/28/2010 10:38:56 AM PST by Twotone (Marte Et Clypeo)
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To: neverdem
Cuban doctors earn the equivalent of $25.00 a month? Shhhh. Please, keep your voice low lest American MD’s hear that and bolt for the socialist, paradise climes of Cuba. Of course, they can stay here and earn that much when Obamacare is in full bloom.
3 posted on 12/28/2010 10:46:03 AM PST by JPG (There is hope for America and her name is Sarah.)
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To: Twotone
I’ve read studies that show that those who eat fewer calories per day live longer than those that eat a normal diet. Lack of the complications from diabetes due to obesity probably help their stats, too.

LOL! There are two threads found using the keyword calorierestriction. One is from yours truly. There have been a number of studies. We live in one of the few countries in which the poor are fat.

4 posted on 12/28/2010 11:00:56 AM PST by neverdem (Xin loi minh oi)
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To: neverdem

Castro won’t allow the agitprop film Sicko by Micheal Moore to be shown on Cuba because people would riot if they thought such a wonderful health care system actually existed.


5 posted on 12/28/2010 11:12:35 AM PST by massgopguy (I owe everything to George Bailey)
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To: neverdem

mark


6 posted on 12/28/2010 11:30:03 AM PST by nkycincinnatikid
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To: neverdem
We live in one of the few countries in which the poor are fat.
There are NO poor people in this country. Fifty years of liberals, welfare and one-sided tax laws have seen to that.
7 posted on 12/28/2010 12:15:11 PM PST by oh8eleven (RVN '67-'68)
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To: Quix; Whenifhow; houeto; null and void; Squantos; xrmusn; bronxville; Screaming_Gerbil; ...
Defund-PBS ping.

"Enemies Domestic" ping.

Increasing volume ping list monitoring the Leftist/government axis agitprop, psyops, and instigation of violence.

FReepmail me if you want on or off The Comedian's "Enemies Domestic" ping list...


Frowning takes 68 muscles.
Smiling takes 6.
Pulling this trigger takes 2.
I'm lazy.

8 posted on 12/28/2010 12:22:32 PM PST by The Comedian (Government: Saving people from freedom since time immemorial.)
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To: neverdem
[Art.] Like NPR, PBS is a media adjunct of the Democratic Party.

Worse, I think they're a tool of international Communism. PBS has staged one panegyric to American Communists after another. A "documentary" on the Tulia trial (Communist lawyers and the ACLU -- but of course, I repeat myself). A "vita" of Dalton Trumbo, one of many Communist Hollywood apparatchiks outed by HUAC. Frida Kahlo and her Communist muralist (propagandist) playmates in Mexico. Jewish Communists in 1930's New York co-ops. Communist photogs on cushy New Deal propaganda gigs in the 30's. On and on, spreading glory and lies like PB&J on American Communism.

Ray Suarez is a tool. When "same-sex marriage" </cant> first came up as an issue, Suarez toured the discussion threads at Salon "TableTalk" (some of those old threads are still there) and got all the argument points -- then regurgitated the ones homosexuals were spreading around, on his NewsHour gig. Way to play up-the-middle, Ray.

9 posted on 12/28/2010 12:43:22 PM PST by lentulusgracchus
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To: neverdem

Interestingly enough, Cuba has the best statistics on the prevention of HIV. When a number of their soldiers contracted it in Africa, the Cuban Government placed everyone with HIV into a “camp”, and the inhabitants were told that if they had sex with anyone not residing in the “camp”, they would be guilty of murder and shot.

Cuba has no HIV problem.

Don’t you think we could learn at least one lesson from Cuban healthcare?


10 posted on 12/28/2010 4:14:22 PM PST by Mack the knife
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To: JPG

Both of my family doctors, MD and chiropractor, are retiring to Australia before Obamacare is in full bloom.


11 posted on 12/28/2010 5:05:21 PM PST by B4Ranch (Do NOT remain seated until this ride comes to a full and complete stop! We're going the wrong way!)
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To: The Comedian

And send all their leaders and all the leading congress critters voting for funding them

to . . . a Siberian gulag . . . or at least to the Sheriff in AZ.


12 posted on 12/28/2010 5:56:18 PM PST by Quix (Times are a changin' INSURE you have believed in your heart & confessed Jesus as Lord Come NtheFlesh)
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To: Quix
And send all their leaders and all the leading congress critters voting for funding them to . . . a Siberian gulag . . . or at least to the Sheriff in AZ.

Dude! Another T-shirt!

Why didn't you get on this kinda roll before Christmas when you could have Cafepress'd the heck outta this muse?

;-)


Frowning takes 68 muscles.
Smiling takes 6.
Pulling this trigger takes 2.
I'm lazy.

13 posted on 12/28/2010 6:05:59 PM PST by The Comedian (Government: Saving people from freedom since time immemorial.)
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Comment #14 Removed by Moderator

To: The Comedian

YOU’RE A DEAR HEART.

I’m not familiar with

Cafepress

A T-shirt place?

LUB

Heading to shower—all the more eagerly given no water last night!

PTL FOR RUNNING HOT WATER.

In China . . . . it was bucket baths . . . mercifully, they indulged me with extra big thermoses of hot water. They made the mistake of saying I could have as much of such hot water as I wanted . So I told them 10 thermoses every evening.

They couldn’t lose face by going back on their word. So at least my bucket baths were warmer than some.

LOL.


15 posted on 12/28/2010 6:20:52 PM PST by Quix (Times are a changin' INSURE you have believed in your heart & confessed Jesus as Lord Come NtheFlesh)
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To: AdmSmith; Arthur Wildfire! March; Berosus; bigheadfred; ColdOne; Convert from ECUSA; Delacon; ...
One would have thought we were well past the day when the the folks at PBS would be shilling for Castro and Communism, but one would be wrong.
I wouldn't have thought that. Would you have thought that? :') Thanks neverdem.


16 posted on 12/28/2010 6:49:54 PM PST by SunkenCiv (The 2nd Amendment follows right behind the 1st because some people are hard of hearing.)
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To: neverdem

I know a man who smuggles vitamins and soap into Cuba. He says the people have severe vitamin deficiencies, and soap is almost impossible to get.

He said there isn’t a toilet seat to be found except in the hotels for foreigners.


17 posted on 12/28/2010 6:53:38 PM PST by gitmo ( The democRats drew first blood. It's our turn now.)
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