| The invincible federal Congresspeople |
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By Annie Betancourt Read Spanish Version How long are we going to believe that babies are brought from Paris by a stork? Or that our first baby tooth is taken away by a little mouse in exchange for a coin? Those were tales our parents told us when we were little, to conceal the truth of life by blindfolding us and thus prolong our childhood. How innocent we were as children! I ask myself the same questions in connection with the argument that the best barometer to gauge U.S. policy toward Cuba is the reelection last November of the three South Florida Republican legislators. Dear reader, this argument is nothing more than a myth, like the ones of the stork and the little mouse. How long will we allow ourselves to be deceived by this fable? Enough! The reality is that the easiest way to gain access to the U.S. Congress is when the chair is empty, the result of either "reapportionment" -- the creation of a new chair -- or the death or retirement of a member of Congress. Let's look at some examples and analyze how some of our Congresspeople came to occupy their prominent posts:
And so on and so on. To topple an incumbent is truly a heroic feat that few can achieve. Only two candidates in recent elections have been able to do it: Ron Klein, who defeated Clay Shaw in District 22, and Suzanne Kosmas, who beat Tom Feeney in District 24. At the end, of the 25 members of Congress who represent Florida in Washington, only five have beaten incumbents, the rest have taken the seat when it was vacated. Of these, 17 have been state legislators before achieving power at the federal level. The federal Congresspeople are invincible and it is practically impossible to oust them because power lies in occupying the post, in having links to special interests and previously established contacts in Washington. And that has nothing to do with U.S. policy toward Cuba. That's nothing but a myth, like those of the stork and the little mouse. Annie Betancourt was a state legislator in Tallahassee and ran for the U.S. House of Representatives in 2002 as a Democrat, against Mario Díaz-Balart. |
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President Obama, his latent example and inspiration for Cuba
By Rolando H. Castañeda y Lorenzo Cañizares
One hundred days into his administration, President Barack H. Obama shows the world a series of examples and challenges that are also particularly applicable to Cuba. He proposes to confront -- simultaneously and with determination -- several fundamental problems that affect U.S. society, and he wishes to establish good relations and détente with the rest of the world, especially with his closest neighbors.
On Sunday, death came to our dear poet, writer and comrade Mario Benedetti in Uruguay, his native country.
He taught us that our dead ask us to sing.

An example they’d like to impose on Cuba
By Germán Piniella
An article signed by Rolando H. Castañeda and Lorenzo Cañizares, published in this issue of Progreso Weekly (see “President Obama, His Latent Example and Inspiration for Cuba”) seems to pose an alternate position in regards to the relations of the island’s émigré.
It is convenient to remember similar perspectives in another moment in Cuban history. Halfway through the 19th century, when the country’s national conscience began to emerge, a roadway for the independence struggle was paved in the thoughts of the educator Felix Varela and the incendiary lyrics of Jose Maria Heredia. There were sectors of the bourgeoisie who feared that the “black danger” of the Haitian revolution would overpower Cuba, or that the “Jacobin” chaos would take the country towards the path of ruin. For these and other reasons two solutions arose: the autonomy linked to Spain and annexation to the United States.
By Bill Press
It's been 81 years since legendary coach Knute Rockne urged his players to "win one for the Gipper." But no Notre Dame football team ever faced a tougher challenge than President Obama does.
Since he was invited by university president Father John Jenkins to give this year's commencement address, Obama has faced a growing wave of protest. Judging from the howls of some critics, you'd think the devil himself was presiding over this year's graduation.
Notre Dame is one of our great universities...
Doing
what you want
“I’ve
experienced my own surge in
creativity… While it
would be nice to still be getting paid for my work, the need to be
more resourceful is having a beneficial effect on the arts community
around me. … Nobody wants
me to do anything, so I’m
just doing what I want.”
-- Liz Fallon, a visual artist from Maine, tells a NY Times reporter the bad economy has helped to spark her creativity.