In
this regard, the people of Cuba in general suffer the hardships of this
inefficiency, which insists on its political nature; in an eternal dispute with
the United States, which has historical bases, but involving the government and
not the people it sacrifices. In this sense, it is not the nature of this
national institutionality to defend that dignity, but of individuals; whom as
nationals, would have to endorse with political mechanisms the
representativeness or not of that government. That is not possible in Cuba,
which thus falls into the conventional category of political dictatorship; even
with its violence, which is necessarily directed against the people, as a form
of political control.
Indeed,
one of the paradigms of the Cuban revolution is that of its solidarity with the
international proletariat; as a single category, in which every stratum other
than the bourgeoisie, including the blacks, is gathered. The first defect of
this category is that as a determination it is political and not existential in
nature; but beyond that technicality, the problem is the demonization of Black
dissent by the rest of Blackness.
Thus,
the black Cuban —like all conservatives by extension— is morally disqualified
on principle, as anti-black; identifying racism with capitalism, as if all
African development were not capitalist, for example. Worse than that, all of
these categories are established by a white, Western, eighteenth-century
ideology; which, acting in its own interest, subordinates everything else in its
own sense of the historical, including the racial problem.
Above
all, an ideology so Western that it is a derivation of its culture in the
inhumanity of its Humanism; and that for that reason alone, it should force black
people to look over the wall, even to contemplate the suffering of their
brethren. In an incomprehensible way —or not at all— the intellectual elite of
black Americans persists in averting their gaze; which is also not surprising,
if they had already subordinated their own blackness, since the dissolution of
the Niagara Movement by W.E.B. Du Bois.
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