The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #95014   Message #1844477
Posted By: Old Guy
27-Sep-06 - 05:30 PM
Thread Name: BS: Something Bad is about to Happen
Subject: RE: BS: Something Bad is about to Happen
"Everyone else in the world can see it plainly. Why the hell can't so many of you?"

Hunh?

Now what would happen to LH if he was a citizen of Cuba or Venezuela ans spouted off such bullsit.

He would be begging to be sent to Guantanmo rather that the prisons of Cuba or Venezeula.

Santiago Valdeolla Pérez

A Cuban dissident, Santiago Valdeolla Pérez, used his own blood to write these messages while in prison. "The fatherland belongs to all of us" - "For Cuba it is time" - "Lets open the door"

"Long live the APPSC (The Assembly to Promote a Civil Society in Cuba) - "Long live a free and democratic Cuba"

The flag was sent to Marta Beatriz Roque, one of Cuba's best known dissident and a director of the APPSC.

Santiago Valdeolla is a pacifist [like Little Hawk] whose only crime is to ask for democratic changes in Cuba. He is 35 years old and is still in jail. In April of this year his mother, Gladys Perez, denounced that her son received a brutal beating while at the Taco Taco prison. In addition, the religious literature that he was keeping at his cell was removed; the food that his family had brought to him in the last visit was confiscated by the prison guards. A bucket that he had in his cell and that was used to carry water in order to bath, was also taken away by Castro's prison guards.

Gladys Perez also has another son, Emilio Leyva, who is currently at the Kilo 5 1/2 prison in Pinar del Rio...
...

Castro's thugs can run, but they can't hide.

Those criminals who are terrorizing peaceful dissidents in Cuba need to know that they will be identified and their names will be made public. And when Cuba is free, these thugs will have to respond for what they have done.

According to the Castro regime, these thugs are regular people who do these acts on their own and have no connection to the Cuban government. But that is another lie, as can be seen here in this photo taken by

international journalists during one of the 'actos de repudio' against Cuban dissident Vladimiro Roca.

Two of those yelling insults in front of Mr. Roca' home are clearly identified. Jesús Prieto Medina. Is a delegate to the so called 'Asamblea National del Poder Popular' (Cuba's National
Assembly) whose president is Ricardo Alarcon. This fascist thug is supposed to represent Pinar Del Rio.

He is also a member of other organizations that are part of Cuba's Communist Party.

This woman is Nidia Diana Martinez Pití. She is, believe it or not, director of the William Soler

Pediatric Hospital! She is also a member of the Cuban Federation of Women and a delegate to the

National Assembly. She was born in the city of Holguín.



Humberto Perugoria, a dissident who has been terrorized by these paid mobs has sent a list with the

name and addresses of many of those who have participated in these brutal acts against him and his

family. Click here to see the list





Read the letter from the young daughter of a political prisoner to dictator Castro Sahilí Navarro Alvarez is the daughter of Felix Navarro Rodríguez, a Cuban dissident who is currently in one of Castro's jail after being sentenced to 25 years in prison.

Click here to read the letter from this courageous young woman to the dictator that is keeping her father in jail. She quotes from Castro's letters when he was jailed during the Batista regime and the difference between the way Castro was treated after an armed attack against a government garrison and how he now treats those who peacefully oppose his regime.

Castro's deaths

Watch this video with Maria C. Werlau, President of the Free Society Project, Inc. and Dr. Armando Lagos director of The Cuban Archives who have been working to document all the victims caused by the Castro regime.   The video is in Spanish and is produced and directed by Eduardo A. Palmer.

Click here to see it Watch the video "The tortures of Castro"


During the Batista dictatorship, there were 11 prisons in Cuba. Now, as can be seen on the

above map, there are over 300! The entire island is surrounded by prisons!

The questions are: Why so many prisons in a country where everyone is supposed to be equal?

Why so many prisons in a country where the people are in charge?

Why so many prisons in a country that for 46 and a half years has been 'educating' the 'new man'

that is supposed to be like Che?

Why so many prisons in a country where 99.9999% of the people 'vote' in favor of the dictator for life?