Monday 13 February 2017

A renewed personality cult, Goebelian and post modern

(PD) The imprint chosen to give continuity to the cult of the personality of the late ex-dictator Fidel Castro has specificities. He does not want statues that could be shot down at the time of the regime's fall. Their remains are sheltered from desecration.
Certainly, it is not known with certainty how Fidel Castro died and much less, where his remains are.
The cult of the missing Commander does not cease. The saturator bombarded his image and the litany of his deeds and words in the press, radio and TV, which began months before his death, as his 90th birthday approached, is still going on.
It is managed to poison many from the television screens and the radio waves from virtual pitfalls erected in the collective imagination. All through the proper use of hidden persuaders amid an absolute mediaeval Goebelian saturation. It can be said that after dying he has been able to annoy even more than when he was alive.
According to the imprint marked by the late Fidel Castro, the totalitarian and dynastic military regime that he founded, he is even more ready to repress, imprison, beat, and even kill.
It is known that this regime feels very free to fill all these gloomy expectations with the pact reached with the countries of the European Union, which repealed the Common Position towards this dictatorship.
Maintaining the influence of such a nefarious political pheromone affirms to the Castro regime totalitarian military to emphasize the cult to the personality and imprint of the deceased dictator. They have already gone beyond ridicule with the slogans: "I am Fidel", "We are all Fidel", "Raúl is Fidel" and others aimed at quelling the growing rejection of the Castro dictatorship within Cuba.
The late dictator Fidel Castro placed himself in the pillory of public opinion for refusing to accept any kind of change or anything that smells of democracy.
Fidel Castro was seen in public sometimes in 2012 and 2013. Then he was seen in January 2014 in the opening of a cultural center. After that date, he appeared in photos of dignitaries who visited his home in Havana. His last appearance was on August 13 last year, on his 90th birthday.
In recent years, Castro has appeared in public occasionally. He was seen in photos and videos in which he usually appeared with guests. He wrote hundreds of columns for the official media. From this platform there has been a post-modern and Goebelian projection of a neo-cult of personality that takes as platforms to the television space, radial and even walls and walls of the city graffiti in this sense.
Within a tight system of absolute totalitarian control, opponents attempted multiple forms of protest and resistance to make their demands visible. These started in protests of "planted" prisoners who at the time refused to wear prison uniforms, hunger and thirst strikes and lately the peaceful walks of the Damas de Blanco and opponents linked to the campaign #TodosMarchamos.
The abominable cult of the personality of the late dictator Fidel Castro seems to be the last of the last political offers that Castro's totalitarian military regime exposes to the people of Cuba. This is a further attempt to give permanence and continuity to the oldest dictatorship and even the most cruel of the continent.
As accounts in tax havens are not enough for everyone, it is a question of strengthening the clientelistic mechanisms of some armed servants of this regime from bribes and other corrupt. 
Primaveradigital2011@gmail.com; Writing Habana

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