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Author Topic: Castro Resigns As Cuban President  (Read 436 times)
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The Wiseman
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Dead Press


« on: February 19, 2008, 02:05:14 AM »

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080219/ts_nm/cuba_castro_dc_2

Ailing Cuban leader Fidel Castro said on Tuesday that he will not return to lead the country, retiring as head of state 49 years after he seized power in an armed revolution.
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If you hate America so much, why don't you leave?

Leave America? That would potentially put me on the other end of U.S. foreign policy. No thanks.
SetuT
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« Reply #1 on: February 19, 2008, 02:32:23 AM »

Damn, I wonder what's gonna happen next ....


CIA will be spewing they never got a chance to assassinate him.
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cause i don't give a make love


« Reply #2 on: February 19, 2008, 08:32:04 AM »

US is gonna go to rape it again!
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Sativa Indica
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meow


WWW
« Reply #3 on: February 19, 2008, 02:17:44 PM »

im keen to see how is brother, Raul i think, will act on this. i hate to quote a cliche but absolute power and all.

that being said, im pretty sure hes been runing the show since fidel fell sick a few years ago.


but yeah, i read this earlier and thot it was quite comedy, dont know how accurate some of these are

                                                                                                                     
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/the-castropedia-fidels-cuba-in-facts-and-figures-432478.html

The Castropedia: Fidel's Cuba in facts and figures

The beard, the cigars, the fatigues, the interminable speeches - not to mention the plucky defiance in the face of the big bad bully from just across the water. There's so much about Fidel Castro that we're going to miss when he's gone, and that moment, it seems, is not far off. As Cuba braces itself for its first leadership change for nearly 50 years, Simon Usborne presents the armchair guide to the man and his nation

Reuters/Prensa Latina

Assassination plots - 'the exploding cigar': attempts were made to contaminate Fidel's favourite cigar brand with botulinum toxin

 
Wednesday, 17 January 2007

ASSASSINATION PLOTS

Attempts made on Castro's life since he came to power in 1959: 638 (according to Fabian Escalante, former Cuban security chief).

Quote attributed to Castro: "If surviving assassination attempts were an Olympic event, I would win the gold medal."

Selected CIA plots:

* The exploding cigar. Scientist contaminated Fidel's favourite brand with botulinum toxin, but the cigars were never delivered.

* The exploding conch. Exploiting Castro's love of scuba diving, the CIA planned to pack a mollusc with explosives and paint it in bright colours to attract Castro's attention.

* The poison wetsuit. Plans to send Castro scuba-diving equipment contaminated with deadly fungi were never followed through.

* The LSD. Agents planned to spray Castro's TV studio with the drug in an attempt to induce a humiliating psychedelic episode live on air.

* The lover. The CIA recruited a woman who was in a relationship with Castro. Agents gave her poison pills, which she hid in a jar of cream. She aborted the mission when they dissolved, but Castro, who was aware of the plot, handed her his gun. "I can't do it, Fidel," she told him.

BASEBALL

Number of US teams Castro is rumoured to have been scouted by in the 1940s: 2 (the New York Yankees and the Washington Senators).

Truth in the rumours: none, but he is a fan and excelled at Cuba's national sport as a student.

Number of teams that make up the Cuban National Baseball League: 16

Occasions on which Cuba has competed in baseball at the Olympic Games: 4

Olympic record: Gold in 1992, 1996 and 2004; silver in 2000

BOXING

Cuban boxers enshrined at the International Boxing Hall of Fame: Kid Chocolate, Kid Gavilan, Luis Rodriguez, Ultimino Ramos and Jose Napoles.

Gold medals won by Cuban boxers at the 2004 Athens Olympics: 5 (in 11 weight categories).

Venezuelan President, Hugo Chavez, on Castro's recovery from surgery last year: "He was moving his arms like a boxer. He looks like Cassius Clay."

BATISTA, FULGENCIO

Size of the original rebel army led by Castro and including Che Guevara that sailed to Cuba in 1956, eventually toppling President Batista on 1 January 1959: 82

Batista, who had ruled Cuba with an iron fist, fled to Portugal and then Spain, where he died in 1973. His widow, Marta, died in October last year.

BAYAMESA, LA

Translated lyrics of Cuba's national anthem, first performed during the Battle of Bayamo in 1868:

Hasten to battle, men of Bayamo

For the Fatherland looks proudly upon you.

Do not fear a glorious death,

For to die for the Fatherland is to live.

To live in chains, is to live

In dishonour and ignominy.

Listen to the clarions call

To arms, brave men go!

BAY OF PIGS INVASION

Number of exiled Cubans who carried out the botched invasion of Cuba in 1961: 1,400 (with US support from the sea and the air).

Number imprisoned by Castro's forces after the three-day battle: 1,189

Number killed: at least 100

The force's main landing point was the Bay of Pigs, which was surrounded by mosquito-infested swamps. Their only way through was via three well-defended roads.

Months that passed before the Cuban Missile Crisis, of which the failed invasion is seen as a catalyst: 18

CHINA

Percentage of the total value of imports to Cuba accounted for by China (2005): 14.9 (more than any other country).

Bilateral trade between Cuba and China (2005): $777m (£410m)

Number of refrigerators supplied to Cuba by China in a contract signed last year: 30,000

CIGARS

Age at which Castro began smoking cigars: 15

Age at which Castro gave up smoking cigars: 59

Preferred brand: Cohiba Esplendido

Brand of Cuban cigar favoured by former US President John F Kennedy: Petit Upmann Coronas

Number of Petit Upmanns Kennedy ordered his press secretary, Pierre Salinger, to buy the day before he signed the 1962 Cuban trade embargo (which stopped legal trade in Cuban cigars): 1,000

Number obtained by Salinger, according to an article he wrote in 1992: 1,200

Annual value of Cuban cigar exports: $200m

Finest Cuban cigar, according to Cigar Aficionado Magazine: Montecristo Edmundo (ranked second in the magazine's list of the top 25 cigars of 2005).

CIVIL PROTEST

Acts of "civil disobedience" logged in Cuba in 2005, according to a report by the exiled Cuban Democratic Directorate: 3,322

COMMUNICATIONS

In 2004 Cuba passed a law forbidding private citizens to access the internet. It is illegal to buy a computer without government approval, which is rarely granted to ordinary Cubans. Similar restrictions apply to the ownership of mobile phones.

Number of mobiles in Cuba (2005): 134,500

Number of internet users: 190,000

By comparison, Greece, which has roughly the same population (11 million), boasts 10 million mobile phones and 4 million internet users.

CUBA STATISTICS

Capital: Havana

Area: 42,803 sq miles (about half that of the United Kingdom).

Population: 11,382,820 (July 2006 estimate).

Ethnic groups: 51 per cent mixed; 37 per cent white, 11 per cent black; 1 per cent Chinese.

ECONOMY

GDP: $40bn

Annual subsidies provided to Cuba by the Soviet Union prior to its collapse: up to $6bn. The loss of this support, as well as the US embargo, led to a recession known as the "special period".

Biggest export partners: Netherlands 25.4 per cent, Canada 20.7 per cent, China 9.8 per cent, Spain 6.8 per cent.

Biggest import partners: China 14.9 per cent, Spain 13.9 per cent, Canada 8.6 per cent, US 8.5 per cent.

Cuba's position on the Heritage Foundation's 2006 Index of Economic Freedom: 150 (out of 157 countries).

Average monthly state wage: $15-$20

ELECTIONS

Castro, on abolishing general elections in 1961: "The revolution has no time for elections. There is no more democratic government in Latin America than the revolutionary government."

Percentage of the 609-seat National Assembly that re-elected Castro in March 2003: 100

EMBARGO

After Castro began nationalising American-owned land and aligned himself with the Soviet Union, the US responded by imposing a trade embargo. It remains in place 44 years later.

Critics call it an illegal attempt to destabilise Cuba. Cuban Foreign minister Felipe Perez Roque said last year: "The economic war unleashed by the US against Cuba qualifies as an act of genocide and constitutes a flagrant violation of international law and the Charter of the United Nations."

Some accuse Castro of secretly supporting the embargo because it deflects the blame for his economic blunders.

Estimated annual loss to US exporters due to the embargo: $1.2bn

Result of last year's UN General Assembly vote on lifting the embargo: for: 183; against: 4 (USA, Israel, Marshall Islands and Palau).

Consecutive years that the UN has voted for the embargo to be lifted: 15.

Washington says it will lift the embargo only if Havana embraces democratic reforms.

FAMILY MEMBERS, NOTABLE

* Angel Castro, father. Moved to Cuba from Spain and prospered as a sugar farmer. Sired eight children, of whom six (including Fidel) were illegitimate.

* Raul Castro, brother. Vice-President, Defence minister and, more recently, acting President. Only emerged from his older brother's shadow when Fidel fell ill last year.

* Juanita Castro, sister. Emigrated to Miami, Florida in the 1960s. Subject of the 1964 Andy Warhol film, The Life of Juanita Castro. Criticised Miami's exile community after thousands celebrated the announcement of her brother's failing health.

* Alina Fernandez, daughter. Result of an affair during Castro's first marriage. Fled Cuba in 1993, disguised as a Spanish tourist. Now living in Miami, she is one of her father's most vocal critics. In 1998 she wrote Castro's Daughter: An Exile's Memoir of Cuba, which provoked a lawsuit from Castro's loyal sister, Juanita. Presents a talk-radio show called Simplemente Alina.

* Dalia Soto del Valle, second wife. The couple, who have been married for more than 30 years, have five sons: Alexis, Alexander, Alejandro, Antonio, and Angel. Castro has closely guarded his wife and sons' privacy and little is known about them.

FASHION

Number of trademark olive-green military fatigue uniforms owned by Castro: unknown (though in 47 years as Cuban leader, he has rarely been seen wearing anything else).

EXCEPTIONS:

* According to reports in the 1990s, Rotterdam designer Merel Van't Wout persuaded Castro out of his fatigues and fitted him for several suits in dark blue, grey and dark green.

* In recent videos released by Havana to quell rumours of Castro's demise, the leader has been seen wearing pyjamas and, on a separate occasion, an Adidas tracksuit in the colours of the Cuban national flag.

FIRING SQUADS

Castro's preferred form of capital punishment. It is not known exactly how many Cubans have been executed during his rule.

The Cuban authorities placed a moratorium on capital punishment in 2000, but a year later they introduced anti-terror legislation permitting its use in "extreme cases".

In 2003 three men were executed by firing squad after being convicted of a Cuban ferry hijacking in which nobody was hurt.

Number of executions since 2003: 0

Number of prisoners on death row, according to Amnesty International: more than 30.

FLORIDA, STRAITS OF

Shortest distance between Florida and Cuba: 90 miles (across the Straits of Florida).

Estimate number of Cubans who attempt the crossing each year: at least 3,000.

Number who die en route: unknown.

Number of individuals intercepted by the US coastguard in 2005: 2,952

Record year for such interceptions: 1994 (37,191, including 3,253 on 23 August).

Selected craft used in such attempts: fishing boats, dinghies, planks of wood, converted vintage cars.

First person to swim across the Straits: Susie Maroney, who in 1997 completed the 24-hour crossing in a shark-proof cage.

Number of official attempts made before the Australian's successful crossing (her second attempt): 50

GONZALEZ, ELIAN

* Number of Cubans killed in November 1999 when a boat carrying five-year-old Elian encountered a storm short of Florida: 11, including the boy's mother.

* Barely alive and tied to an inner tube, he was rescued by fisherman and later released to his Miami-based relatives by the US Coast Guard.

* Days of political wrangling that passed before US Attorney General Janet Reno ordered the return of Elian to his father's custody in Cuba: 138

* Number of immigration Swat team officers who in April 2000 stormed the Miami house where Elian was staying: 8

* Number of exiled Cubans arrested during the demonstrations that followed Elian's seizure: more than 250.

* Associated Press photographer Alan Diaz won a Pulitzer Prize for his image of an officer directing his machine-gun at a distressed Elian.

* Now 13 years old, Elian lives with his family in Cardenas, Cuba. His father is a waiter but in 2003 was elected to Cuba's National Assembly. A room in the town's museum is dedicated to Elian, and Castro was filmed at his seventh birthday party.

* The custody battle strained relations between Havana and Washington, and some say it directly affected the controversial 2001 presidential election result, in which the Florida count was decisive.

GRANMA

The rickety yacht used by Castro and his band of revolutionaries to sail from Mexico to Cuba in 1956. After toppling President Batista in 1959, Castro recognised the vessel's significance by assigning its name to a province, as well as the official newspaper of the Communist Party. It is now on permanent display next to the Museum of the Revolution in Havana.

GUANTANAMO BAY

The 45 sq miles of Cuban territory was ceded in perpetuity to the US under a treaty signed by President Theodore Roosevelt in 1903.

Annual rent agreed in 1903: $2,000 in gold.

Rent cheques reported to have been cashed by Castro, an opponent of America's presence at Guantanamo: 1 (the first he received).

US troops at "Gitmo": more than 9,000.

Detainees held there since 2002: more than 750.

Inmates still imprisoned there without trial: more than 500.

Amnesty International, 2005: "The detention facility at Guantanamo Bay has become the gulag of our times."

SELECTED ENTRIES FROM "TEN FACTS ABOUT GUANTANAMO", A US DEFENSE DEPARTMENT PRESS RELEASE PUBLISHED LAST SEPTEMBER:

* More money is spent on meals for detainees than on the US troops stationed there. Detainees are offered up to 4,200 calories a day. The average weight gain per detainee is 20lb.

* Detainees receive medical, dental, psychiatric, and optometric care at US taxpayers' expense. In 2005, there were 91 cavities filled and 174 pairs of glasses issued.

* Recreation activities include basketball, volleyball, soccer, ping-pong, and board games. High-top sneakers are provided.

* Entertainment includes Arabic-language TV shows, including World Cup football matches. The library has 3,500 volumes available in 13 languages - the most requested books are the Harry Potter series.

GUEVARA, CHE

* The iconic Argentinian revolutionary was introduced to Fidel by his brother Raul, in Mexico in 1955. He joined Castro's movement to topple Cuban President Batista and became a key figure in the revolution.

* According to a 1967 British Foreign Office report released in 2004, London recognised Guevara as the second most important figure in Cuba after Castro.

* Guevara eventually left Cuba and continued to lead revolutionary movements in Africa and elsewhere, including in Bolivia, where he was killed by the Bolivian army in October 1967.

* In Cuba he remains a national hero. Each year more than 200,000 people visit his monument and mausoleum in Santa Clara.

HEALTHCARE, CUBAN

Life expectancy at birth: male 75.11; female: 79.85 (US: 75.02; 80.82).

Infant mortality rate: 6.22 deaths per 1,000 live births (US: 6.43).

HIV/Aids adult prevalence rate: < 0.1 per cent (US: 0.6 per cent).

HIV/Aids deaths per 100,000 per year: 4.4 (US: 5.4).

Physicians per 1,000 population: 5.91 (US: 2.56).

Hospital beds per 10,000 population: 49 (US: 33).

Per capita GDP: $3,649 (US: $39,901) .

(SOURCE: CIA WORLD FACTBOOK; WHO)

25,000 Cuban doctors are on humanitarian missions in 68 countries.

Last year 1,800 doctors from 47 developing countries graduated from Cuba's 21 medical schools.

Each year more than 5,000 "health tourists" travel to Cuba, generating more than $40m for the Cuban economy.

Number of Cuban doctors sent to Venezuela to provide free healthcare: 20,000 (in exchange for, among other things, 90,000 barrels of oil per day - see VENEZUELA).

Number of Venezuelan doctors who joined a march in protest last year: 400

Number of doctors Fidel Castro offered to send to the US to help the victims of Hurricane Katrina: 1,586

Castro, two days after making the offer: "We have received absolutely no response."

HEALTH SCARES, SELECTED

* July 1998: Castro flatly denies reports in a US newspaper that he has been treated for a potentially fatal brain disease.

* June 2001: Two hours into a speech being broadcast live from Havana, Castro faints at the podium.

* January 2004: After meeting Castro in Cuba, Luis Eduardo Garzon, mayor of Bogota, Colombia, tells a radio station: "He seemed very sick to me... you could tell he had physical limitations, especially in his speech."

* May 2004: Denying rumours of Castro's failing health, his doctor, Eugenio Selman Housein, says the Cuban leader could live at least to the age of 140.

* October 2004: At the end of a televised public speech, Castro trips and falls as he walks from the podium, shattering a kneecap and fracturing his right arm.

* November 2005: A leaked CIA report concludes that Castro is suffering from Parkinson's disease. Castro rejects the diagnosis, which apparently is based on analysis of his television appearances.

* July 2006: A spokesman for Castro announces the provisional transfer of power to Castro's brother, Raul. The reason: "an acute intestinal crisis, with sustained bleeding" requiring immediate surgery.

* November 2006: US officials say they believe Castro has cancer of the colon, stomach or pancreas and is unlikely to survive through 2007.

* December 2006: Diplomatic sources close to Castro say he is refusing treatment for stomach cancer and could be dead by Christmas.

* December 2006: The Spanish surgeon treating Fidel Castro says the ailing Cuban leader does not have cancer and is recovering slowly from a serious operation.

HUMAN RIGHTS RECORD

Number of Cubans in prison for political reasons, according to a 2005 report by the Cuban Commission for Human Rights and Reconciliation: 306

Number of political dissidents, journalists and human rights advocates imprisoned in a government crackdown in 2003: 75

Average prison sentence handed down after their trials: about 20 years (ranging from six to 28 years).

Number who remain in prison, according to Human Rights Watch: 61.

SELECTED EVIDENCE ON WHICH PRISONERS HAVE BEEN PROSECUTED AND IMPRISONED:

* Publishing articles or giving interviews said to be critical of economic, social or human rights matters in Cuba.

* Communicating with international human rights organisations.

* Having contact with those viewed as hostile to Cuba's interests, including US officials in Cuba, or members of the Cuban exile community.

* Cubans must obtain official permission to leave or return to the island. It is often denied, sometimes punitively.

* Cuba declines all requests from Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch to visit the island.

* Human rights awards won by Fidel Castro: 1 (the Muammar Gaddafi Human Rights Prize, presented in 1998 by the Libyan leader in recognition of Castro's "resistance to imperialism and defence of democratic values").

LONGEST SERVING LEADER

Percentage of Cubans who have known no other leader: about 70

The world's 10 current longest serving national leaders (excluding monarchs):

1. Fidel Castro, Cuba: 47 years

2. Omar Bongo, Gabon: 39

3. Muammar al-Gaddafi, Libya: 37

4. Khalifa ibn Salman Al Khalifa, Bahrain: 36

5. Maumoon Abdul Gayoom, Maldives: 28

6. Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, Equatorial Guinea: 27

7. Jose Eduardo dos Santos, Angola: 27

8. Robert Mugabe, Zimbabwe: 26

9. Hosni Mubarak, Egypt: 25

10. Paul Biya, Cameroon: 24

MIGRATION

Estimated net migration (2006): minus 1.57 people per 1,000.

Total number of Cubans believed to have emigrated since Castro came to power in 1959: about 1.4 million (81 per cent of whom have settled in North America).

Under the US "wet foot, dry foot" policy, of the 3,000 Cubans who each year attempt the crossing to Florida, those who make landfall are afforded immigrant status, while those intercepted at sea are usually deported.

Number of days such immigrants are required to remain on US soil before they can apply for permanent residency: 366

Number of Cubans who benefited from this policy between 1994 and 2005: 18,500

Critics of successive US administrations claim the relatively soft policy towards Cuban immigrants is part of an effort to destabilise the island and undermine Castro's leadership.

MISSILE CRISIS, CUBAN

Alternative names: "Caribbean Crisis" (Russia); "October Crisis" (Cuba).

Number of nuclear missiles shipped to Cuba by the Soviet Union in 1962, according to Fidel Castro: 162

Soviet President Nikita Khrushchev and Castro agreed to the missile installations to protect the island from US invasion and to counterbalance US superiority in the Cold War arms race.

Number of days that October the world teetered on the brink of nuclear war: 14

KEY MOMENTS:

* 14 October: Photographs taken from US aircraft reveal missile launch sites.

* 16 October: President John F Kennedy is informed and considers his response.

* 22 October: In a televised address, President Kennedy denounces the Soviets' actions and threatens the USSR with attack if Cuban missiles are fired at the US. He declares a naval blockade around Cuba as both sides prepare for war.

* 26 October: Khrushchev agrees to withdraw the missiles in return for a US guarantee not to invade Cuba and the removal of Jupiter missiles from Turkey. Kennedy agrees publicly to the first demand, and privately to the second.

* 28 October: Khrushchev announces the removal of missiles from Cuba.

MOVIE CAREER

Number of entries for Fidel Castro on movie website IMDB.com: 88 (of these, 85 are documentaries, but a pre-revolutionary Castro appeared as an extra in three 1940s Hollywood films.

He is listed as an "uncredited extra" in the 1946 musical Holiday in Mexico and as a "poolside spectator" in the romantic comedy Easy to Wed (also 1946).

It is also claimed he featured in the 1942 film You Were Never Lovelier, starring Fred Astaire and Rita Hayworth.

OPPONENTS, AMERICAN

Fidel Castro has faced 10 US presidents during his 47-year leadership.

1. Dwight Eisenhower 1953-61

2. John F Kennedy 1961-63

3. Lyndon Johnson 1963-69

4. Richard Nixon 1969-74

5. Gerald Ford 1974-77

6. Jimmy Carter 1977-81

7. Ronald Reagan 1981-89

8. George Bush 1989-93

9. Bill Clinton 1993-2001

10. George W Bush 2001-

ORGANIC REVOLUTION

Number of "organoponicos" (organic urban allotments) in Cuba: more than 7,000, totalling about 80,000 acres.

Number of such gardens in Havana: more than 200 (which supply the city with more than 90 per cent of its fruit and vegetables).

The organic revolution was seen by Castro as the only solution to the crisis brought on by the collapse of the Soviet Union, which had subsidised Cuban agriculture, and the US embargo.

UN figures for the average daily calorie intake per Cuban in the late 1980s: 2,600

Daily calorie intake in 1993 (after the collapse of the Soviet Union): 1,000-1,500 (8 per cent of the population was considered undernourished)

Current average daily calorie intake: 2,600 (less than 3 per cent of the population is considered undernourished).

PINOCHET, AUGUSTO

When General Pinochet toppled Chile's socialist president, Salvador Allende, in 1973, Castro lost one of his closest allies.

Two years before the coup, Castro and Pinochet met in Santiago.

Pinochet on Castro, in an interview in the 1990s: "He had a lot of charisma with civilians because he's pretty macho, attentive with the ladies. But I didn't like him much."

PRESS FREEDOM

The bottom of the Reporters Without Borders 2006 Press Freedom Index:

162. Iran

163. China

164. Burma

165. Cuba

166. Eritrea

167. Turkmenistan

168. North Korea

* In 2003, 27 independent journalists were tried summarily and imprisoned in a wide-ranging crackdown on political dissent. The journalists received sentences of up to 27 years. A handful have been released conditionally.

* Current number of journalist imprisoned in Cuba: 25 (including two sentenced last month).

PRISONS

Number of prisons and correctional facilities thought to be in Cuba: more than 500.

Last year the UN described food and hygiene levels as "sub-standard" and medical care as "either unavailable or inappropriate".

According the Cuban Commission for Human Rights and National Reconciliation, thousands of young Cubans are in prison on the charge of "peligrosidad predelectiva" (that is, they are considered likely to commit a crime).

Cuba is one of the few countries in the world to deny the International Committee of the Red Cross access to its prisons.

Castro himself served two years of a 15-year sentence handed down after his failed attempt to topple President Batista. After a period of exile in Mexico he achieved his goal in 1959.

QUOTES, SELECTED FIDEL CASTRO

* "Condemn me. It does not matter. History will absolve me." October 1953, while on trial for the failed rebel attack that launched the Cuban Revolution.

* "If Mr Kennedy does not like socialism, we do not like imperialism. We do not like capitalism. We have as much right to complain about the existence of a capitalist imperialist regime 90 miles from our coast as he has to complain about a socialist regime 90 miles from his coast." May 1961, at a parade in Havana.

*"We will win this battle for life, and not only for your lives, but also for the lives of all children in the world." December 1999, during the custody battle for Elian Gonzales.

* "Now, when our enemies have prematurely declared me moribund or dead, I'm happy to send to our compatriots and friends around the world this short film footage." October 2006, in a video released to quell rumours of his demise.

RELIGION

Percentage of Cubans who are Catholic: 85

Castro was himself raised a Roman Catholic but he expelled priests and nationalised Catholic schools soon after taking control of the country. In 1962 Pope John XXIII excommunicated the Cuban leader.

In 1998 Pope John Paul II became the first pontiff to visit Cuba. That same year, Castro reinstated Christmas as a national holiday. In 2005 Castro visited Havana's cathedral to mourn the Pope's death.

RAUL CASTRO

Fidel's younger brother and acting President. Less charismatic than his brother, Raul, 75, has a reputation as Fidel's enforcer. He was a committed socialist before Fidel and played a key role in the revolution. He is not expected to play a long-term role post-Fidel (see SUCCESSION).

SPEECHES

Castro is famous for his long speeches.

* Duration of a speech Castro made at the UN in 1960: 4 hours 29 minutes (listed by the Guinness Book of Records as the longest speech made in the United Nations).

* In 2000 Castro caused a rare outbreak of laughter at the greatest ever gathering of world leaders. Before beginning his speech at the UN Millennium Summit, he draped a white handkerchief over the yellow light that would, after five minutes, signal the end of his allotted time. He went on to speak for precisely five minutes, before removing the handkerchief and leaving the stage.

* Typical Castro sign-off: "Patriotism or death! Socialism or death! We shall overcome!"

SUCCESSION

Raul Castro, Fidel's 75-year-old brother and acting President, is Fidel's designated successor, but his rule is expected to be transitional.

THE POST-CASTRO CONTENDERS:

* Felipe Perez Roque, Foreign minister. Only member of the Cuban cabinet to be born after the 1959 revolution. A fierce critic of the US trade embargo, he describes Cuba as a "country under siege". Key figure in Cuba's growing trade relations with China. Nicknamed "Fax" for his faithful devotion to Castro.

* Ricardo Alarcon, President of the National Assembly. Formerly Castro's representative at the UN and Fidel's chief advisor on US relations. Remains close to the leader. Third highest ranked in the cabinet, behind Fidel and Raul.

* Carlos Lage Davila, Secretary of the Council of Ministers. Less well known outside Cuba but a key player in the country's economic affairs. Instrumental in post-Soviet economic reforms and recently secured a subsidised supply of oil from Venezuela.

* Fidelito Castro, Fidel's son. Wild-card in the succession stakes. Ran Cuba's nuclear energy programme until his dismissal in the early 1990s. Recently appointed as an adviser to his father, to whom he bears a striking resemblance.

SUPPORTERS, HIGH PROFILE

* George Galloway. The MP is as fond of Castro as he is of Cuban cigars. He said in an interview in 2004: "I think Castro is by far and away the greatest person I have ever met." He also claims once to have joined Castro for a midnight swim.

* Ken Livingstone. On a controversial visit to Cuba last month, the London Mayor called Castro's Communist revolution "one of the high points of the 20th century".

* Naomi Campbell. During a 1998 trip to Havana, the supermodel compared Castro with Nelson Mandela. She said: "Fidel Castro and Nelson Mandela are two sources of inspiration for me. Two men who fought for... a just cause. Two intelligent, impressive men."

* Diego Maradona. The retired Argentinian footballer has a tattoo of Castro on his left leg. In 2005 he secured a rare interview with the Cuban leader on his talk show La Noche del 10. He has said of Castro: "For me, the comandante is a god."

* Steven Spielberg. The film director described a 2002 meeting with Castro as "the eight most important hours of my life".

* Pierre Trudeau. The former Canadian Prime Minister forged a friendship with Castro in the 1970s. In 2000 Castro had a rare encounter with a US President when he and Jimmy Carter attended Trudeau's funeral in Montreal.

* Oliver Stone. The acclaimed director praised Castro while promoting his film Comandante in 2003. He said: "We should look to him as one of the Earth's wisest people, one of the people we should consult." Later that year cable network HBO cancelled plans to screen the film, saying it looked "dated" following Castro's crackdown on dissent (see HUMAN RIGHTS RECORD).

TOURISM

Castro, at a speech in 1998: "Tourism has a great future and it is up to us to take over as much of that market as possible."

Average annual growth in tourism in the Caribbean (including Cuba) during the past five years: 4.3 per cent

Average annual growth in tourism in Cuba during the same period: 19.3 per cent

Visitors to the island in 1999: 1.9 million

Visitors to the island in 2005: 2.5 million

By the end of 2005 the number of hotel rooms on Cuba had reached 50,000.

Cuba is a popular destination for American tourists but direct flights are only available with the permission of the US government, which restricts travel to journalists, students and a few other groups.

Cuba has a reputation as a destination for sex tourists. In 2004 US President Bush accused Castro of "welcoming" the trade. An indignant Castro suggested Bush's accusations were rooted in his "alcoholic past".

UBRE BLANCA (WHITE UDDER)

Quantity of milk yielded by Ubre Blanca, a cow turned propaganda tool, on 23 June 1982: 110 litres (four times the average yield)

The feat was acknowledged by the Guinness Book of Records to be the highest reported milk yield in a day.

Castro seized the opportunity to visit the farm and appeared on television stroking the cow, pointing out that no American animal could match White Udder's productivity.

The cow featured daily in Granma, the Communist Party's official newspaper, and earned a full obituary on its death in 1985. Castro commissioned a marble statue of Ubre Blanca, who was also stuffed and put on permanent display at the National Cattle Health Centre near Havana.

In an effort to boost milk production, which fell drastically when Soviet subsidies dried up in 1989, Cuban scientists attempted in 2002 to clone Ubre Blanca, but failed.

VENEZUELA

Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez openly admires Fidel Castro as his political mentor.

In 2000 the two leaders sang a duet live on Venezuelan radio.

Venezuela is an important trading partner for Cuba and part of what Chavez has called the "axis of good" - an anti-American trading bloc that includes Bolivia.

Barrels of oil Venezuela sends to Cuba each day: 90,000 (at heavily subsidised prices).

In return, Cuba provides Venezuela with, among other things, doctors and, in 2005, free eye treatment for 5,000 people.

WEALTH, PERSONAL

Size of Fidel Castro's fortune, according to Forbes' Rich List 2006: $900m

According to Fidel Castro, it's $0

An incensed Castro appeared on TV to dismiss the Forbes claim, calling it "repugnant slander".

In May last year George Galloway appeared on Cuban TV to defend Castro. He said: "The Cubans are the only people in the world who have a leader who can say that he doesn't possess one dollar to his name."

Forbes admits that estimating the wealth of world leaders is "more art than science", but says the figure is based on Castro's "economic power over a web of state-owned companies".

Some claim the true figure is in fact much higher, pointing to "the Comandante's reserves", billions of dollars in real estate, yachts and other assets in Europe, Latin America and Asia.

YANK TANKS

Cuba has been described as the largest American car museum in the world.

An estimated one-sixth of Cuba's 500,000 cars were imported from the US in the 1950s. The supply of classic "yank tanks" stopped when America declared a trade embargo in 1962, forcing Cubans to become experts in car maintenance.
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« Reply #4 on: February 19, 2008, 02:24:06 PM »

Oh noes, lets hope Cuba won't turn into another Panama or Columbia after his gone Sad  Fuck "pro-Western moderate allies"!!!!
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« Reply #5 on: February 19, 2008, 02:29:43 PM »

President Bush, traveling in Rwanda on a tour of African nations, greeted the news by saying that the resignation should be the beginning of a democratic transition in Cuba leading to free elections. “The United States will help the people of Cuba realize the blessings of liberty,” he said.

Mr. Bush called for Cuba to release political prisoners and to begin building “institutions necessary for democracy that eventually will lead to free and fair elections.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/20/world/americas/20cuba.html?_r=1&ref=world&oref=slogin

Ah shit here we go again.
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« Reply #6 on: February 19, 2008, 02:43:14 PM »

President Bush, traveling in Rwanda on a tour of African nations, greeted the news by saying that the resignation should be the beginning of a democratic transition in Cuba leading to free elections. “The United States will help the people of Cuba realize the blessings of liberty,” he said.

Mr. Bush called for Cuba to release political prisoners and to begin building “institutions necessary for democracy that eventually will lead to free and fair elections.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/20/world/americas/20cuba.html?_r=1&ref=world&oref=slogin

Ah shit here we go again.
Oh hell no.....
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« Reply #7 on: February 19, 2008, 03:38:26 PM »

"The United States will help the people of Cuba realize the blessings of liberty,”


HHAHAAHAHAA
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« Reply #8 on: February 19, 2008, 03:50:36 PM »

"The United States will help the people of Cuba realize the blessings of liberty,”


HHAHAAHAHAA

Lol, this sounds like more of the same bullshit from America
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« Reply #9 on: February 19, 2008, 06:36:26 PM »

While we're on the discussion of Cuba:

Quote
Should the United States lift its embargo on Cuba?
Yes    62%    64477
No    38%    39237
Total Votes: 103714

(as of feb. 19, 6:35PM central time)

I'd really like to know what you guys who are good on these kinds of topics think. Both the embargo and whats gonna happen with cuba
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« Reply #10 on: February 19, 2008, 10:47:33 PM »

Wow that was an interesting read. I'm tired of America trading with China, who have terrible human rights, while they won't trade with Cuba, where communism works.

I hope they stay a communist country. Honestly, what other country in central America & the Carribean is as well off as Cuba is.
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« Reply #11 on: February 19, 2008, 10:54:41 PM »

how is cuba "well off"?
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« Reply #12 on: February 19, 2008, 11:00:52 PM »

I'm tired of America trading with China, who have terrible human rights
Yeah, while America supports all the dictators around Latin America, Indo Chinese, Africa and Middle east who does the same.    Maybe you should stop buying Chinese slaver labour made products then?  most of them are American companies!!! 
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« Reply #13 on: February 19, 2008, 11:02:25 PM »

best off luck to fidel after retiring
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« Reply #14 on: February 19, 2008, 11:57:44 PM »

how is cuba "well off"?

lets look at Haiti. Did you know they are eating dirt for food? Their economy is shit. Compared to Haiti, Cuba is well off, its a third-world country nonetheless.

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« Reply #15 on: February 20, 2008, 12:05:21 AM »

Yeah, while America supports all the dictators around Latin America, Indo Chinese, Africa and Middle east who does the same.    Maybe you should stop buying Chinese slaver labour made products then?  most of them are American companies!!! 

I agree, but here is the dilemma for me. The people that are working there need a source of income, that company provides them that source of income. While its unusually harsh, people have to eat, and to provide for their families so they will take anything they can get. Often young children who can't get a job in these companies, will end up in the sex trade.

Its so fucked up (the conditions), its Americans' responsibilities to lobby and persuade companies to provide better conditions for their workers and to pay them better. I don't know how you will do that.

I am so frustrated by the situation...i don't know what to do, because i have both dilemmas in my head. I'll try and buy from thrift stores and buy fair-trade products.
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« Reply #16 on: February 20, 2008, 04:48:28 PM »

Raul Castro to take over?

Quote
"Is there going to be a transition here toward something?" Raúl Castro once commented to reporters asking about post-Fidel Cuba. "Yes, toward a better form of socialism and -- here's something you'll like -- toward a more democratic society."

http://edition.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/americas/02/20/raul.castro/index.html


Posted on: February 20, 2008, 04:45:57 pm
Quote
"No one will ever again have as much authority as Fidel Castro has had, because of who he is, because he made a true revolution," 76-year-old Raúl Castro said.
advertisement

Still, he says only the Communist Party can guarantee continuity.

76...
76 years old, doubt his reign will last long if it does begin.
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« Reply #17 on: February 20, 2008, 05:07:32 PM »

Cuba'd better not embrace free trade!!! 
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« Reply #18 on: February 20, 2008, 07:04:12 PM »

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« Reply #19 on: February 20, 2008, 11:08:53 PM »

http://www.counterpunch.org/eckardt02202008.html

No News is Big News
Cuba Sans Fidel
By STEVE ECKARDT

It's big news in the U.S. that Fidel Castro has declined to accept election when Cuba's Parliament meets this Sunday to select the country's Ministers--it's the headline story in every form of media, along with more than the usual background and opinion pieces.

But it's the media brouhaha itself that's the real big news, for the actual top story is that there's almost no news here at all.

Look: despite half a century of U.S. portraying Fidel as the Western Hemisphere's Stalin ­and the Cuban people as both suffering and ready to explosively grasp freedom the moment his totalitarian grip slips­ there are no demonstrations, let alone riots, in Cuba today.

Nor are there any prospects of them.

Nor was there any form of unrest or disruptions of daily life when Fidel first handed over his posts to a team of seven leaders after falling ill at the end of July 2006.

Indeed Cuba just completed an immense and thorough-going Parliamentary election process where some 96% of the electorate (voting age begins at 16) cast secret ballots--and 92% of them chose the united slate put together by union, women's, youth, small farmers' and other popular organizations (the Communist Party cannot field candidates).

This puts the percentage opposing what Washington calls the 'Castro regime' ­read the Cuban Revolution­ at 10% under the most liberal possible interpretation.

With the vast majority of Cubans solidly backing their revolution and government, the effect of Fidel's reassignment to regular columnist for Juventud Rebelde (the newspaper 'Rebel Youth') goes little beyond ache at the tragedy of human aging, especially of the world's greatest leading political figure -one so popular that he's almost universally and uniquely referred to by his first name.

Without Fidel, is the Cuban Revolution about to collapse? What are the chances that Cuba's about to go down either the Soviet, Yugoslav, or Chinese roads?

The old phrase "slim to none" is a too generous an answer.

What about U.S. policy toward Cuba? Without Fidel ­ and, for that matter, without Bush ­ what are the chances that will change?

Call that one slimmer and none-er.

Look no further than the statements by the Democratic candidates (even granting the far- from-certain assumption that one of them will be the next U.S. president) responding to yesterday's news, statements solidly fixed in the past half-century of Washington's obdurate hostility to the Cuban Revolution:

Declared Hillary Clinton:

"As you know, Fidel Castro announced that he is stepping down as Cuba's leader after 58 years of one-man rule. The new leadership in Cuba will face a stark choice ­continue with the failed policies of the past that have stifled democratic freedoms and stunted economic growth­ or take a historic step to bring Cuba into the community of democratic nations."

Declared Barack Obama:

"Today should mark the end of a dark era in Cuba's history. Fidel Castro's stepping down is an essential first step, but it is sadly insufficient in bringing freedom to Cuba."

(For their complete statements, along with those from other leading U.S. politicians, go to http://www.lawg.org/)

Of course no surprise here ­after all, if there's been one eternal bipartisan constant across the past fifty years, ten U.S. presidents, and 23 Congresses, it's the unwavering agreement on crushing Cuba's socialist revolution, on the demand that (as the 1996 Helms-Burton Act puts it) Cuba "return property taken on or after January 1, 1959."

(Want to guess which country's corporations owned most of Cuba's valuable land and infrastructure then?)

This is a central and inescapable fact that all those favoring restoration of travel rights to Cuba and normalization of relations need to grasp. Washington is no more about to recognize Cuba's government and allow its citizens to travel there with Fidel out any more than it did after Cuba met all of Washington's previous demands: that the island end its special relationship with the Soviet Union, that it remove troops from Africa, that it halt support for rebel movements in Central America, that it sign on to international anti- terrorist and nuclear proliferation treaties, that it deploy forces to halt drug trafficking in its waters, or that etc, etc, etc.

When it comes to U.S. demands on Cuba, one thing is certain: the goal posts always move.

It's not enough that Fidel is no longer part of Cuba's government, he needs to be dead. Until ­ and even after ­ then, Raul Castro needs to go as well. And when that inevitably happens, it'll be "well, the Castro brothers might be gone, but their regime lives on."

And so on and so on into eternity ­until Cuba returns "property taken on or after January 1, 1959."

Cuba's free and universal healthcare? Its free education through college and beyond? Rent-free home ownership? Guaranteed foreclosure-free farm land? Twenty-eight thousand ((28,000) volunteer doctors providing free medical care in 67 countries?

All that has to go.

Property relations must be restored to their pre-January 1, 1959 condition.

Unfortunately for Washington, as the most recent events ­and the past 50 years ­ have clearly demonstrated, the chances of that happening goes all the way to slimmererer and none-erer.

And it's that 'no news' that's the big news.

Steve Eckardt produces CubaSolidarity.com for the National Network on Cuba. He can be reached at: seckardt@aol.com
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Mobile-friendly version Immortal Technique Biography

Born Felipe Andres Coronel on the 19th of February 1978, hip-hop artist Immortal Technique is a controversial figure in the U.S. His songs speak of the need for social justice and equality among all races, with special emphasis on the people of color or Latin Americans, but they also cover topics such as the fight against unfair imprisonments or militarism and many others.

His biography is hence quite intriguing, to say the least, and, just like the best anti aging cream is probably going to be lingering over the shelves of all cosmetic stores for many years to come, Immortal Technique’s songs are going to remain hot, fresh and sought after for a really long time. Due to the fact they speak about topics which are to be considered taboos, his lyrics continue to be listened to with the exterior shutters down in most homes.

Immortal technique was born in Peru, in El Hospital Militar de Lima; several years later, his family moved to America in order to escape the harsh living conditions in Peru. Even though they could not afford to buy any terrain a vendre there, they managed to move to Harlem in the ‘80s. Immortal Technique went to Hunter High School, but just like a hip replacement recall is never of good omen, his grades and behavior weren’t any good during high school either. He was the school bully, he harassed other students and he was not afraid to get involved in scandals with drug dealers from around the area. And while his interactions with these drug dealers were not as numerous as used cars in Phoenix are, they still managed to leave an ugly mark on his biography.

Plus, his graffiti did not actually resemble any Dreamweaver templates, but he was famous for his controversial acts of vandalism. His violence against others almost got him expelled in 1996, but he somehow managed to finish high school and even attend college at Pennsylvania State University. This time, his college experience only lasted for two years; he was then charged and convicted and he was eventually imprisoned in Pennsylvania.

In prison, just like a SEO San Antonio company would focus on booting a web site’s ranking, Immortal Technique also focused on boosting his own social ranking. He began studying the policy of religious history, and, finding the inspiration he needed, he began putting his thoughts in lyrics. In 1999 he was paroled and, even though he was first considered some sort of Agen Bola, as no one had heard of him at first, he began to attend freestyle battles he started winning.

From there on, his career started to bloom, as he gave birth to albums such as “Revolutionary Vol 1” in 2002, “Revolutionary Vol 2” in 2004 and “Revolutionary Vol 3” in 2008. He also became a political activist and started to sing about political injustice (check out his opinion on the imprisonment of Mumia Abu-Jamal or the songs on George W. Bush). Despite of the fact that his albums might not have gotten the type of positive reviews African mango reviews are usually comprised of, this has not stopped him from getting involved in future projects, including an important film collaboration. He might not approve the work of the CNA Financial Corporation, but we all need to eat, right?




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Recently I've been in the market for used cars. Which I'm sure many of you know how long that process can take. Having to go from dealer to dealer and look at one car after another. What a painstaking process! Its a good thing I don't have to take a personality test after the whole process. I'm sure I'd have some pretty skewed results. After finally settling down and buying a new Audi A4, I found out I had a bigger problem on my hands. Where am I gonna park the car during winter? I decided I had to contact a local contractor and get remodeling estimates to redo our garage which had been having problems with leaks all last winter. After getting some rather expensive estimates back from contractors our family finally decided to move to a different area of New York, we took a look at jamestown ny homes which was recommended by a close friend of mine. Have you ever just had that feeling after looking at a town? You just knew it was the one. Well thankfully we had a lot of wonderful homes to look at that were priced perfectly. We eventually decided to go with a home with a nice garage for the new car, a gym witih a full pull up bar, and best of all my wife could stop taking her proactol and finally begin to use our at home gym!

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The History and Growth of Rap Music

If you are a music enthusiast, then it is very likely that you have come across a genre of music called rap music. Rap music is area that has very clear distinguishing features most notably the rapid and rhythmic chanting of the lyrics perfectly timed to the beat and musical accompaniment that forms the base of the song. Rap music traces its roots to the development of the hiphop subculture which predominantly carries four complementary musical styles namely: rapping, dancing and in particular break dancing, scratching or more popularity known as DJing, and graffiti writing which others dub as vandalism. Another sub-element of this genre is beat-boxing which also features heavily in the repertoire of many rap artists. If you thought this was an easy musical genre to characterize, then you were poorly informed: consider, many research papers and doctoral dissertations have been written on the subject of rap music and its accompanying stylistic elements.

The history of rap music, or hip-hop music, is composed of a series of rapid development phases that have all culminated in the popular rap versions of today. Before rap music took off in the 1990s, it was predominantly referred to as disco rap in the late 1970s. The three rappers who had a hand in coining the term “rap music” were DJ Hollywood, Lovebug Starski, and Keith Cowboy, the last one being officially credited with the term hip-hop. Rap music original began with improvisations and freestyle singing to add an element of unpredictability to the songs in parties and other gatherings. Even in the 1960s to 1970s, the initial elements of rap music where already sown in urban subcultures particularly in New York City where adhoc performances in the streets led to a coalescing of influences in the wake of the Civil Rights era. Like the iPhone 5 release date, it had a slow and steady rise building into an explosion of creativity and style that has made it into what it has become today.

At this very early stage of rap development, it was particularly tied to emcee-ing more than it was associated to any specific song. It predominantly tied songs together as an adlib in between. It was born out of the creative inputs of DJs who had to work with self-imposed musical constraints such as the 4/4 time beat and sampling or sequencing sections of other songs to create a smooth flow of uninterrupted musical stimuli. These were eventually married with electronic equipment such as drums and synthesizers, and ultimate melodies to give it that bite and identity. In a sense, rap music artists were basically like a video game designer who had to figure out each artistic component at every turn until it developed into a more coherent musical genre that became the rap music we know today.

The first recorded version of rap music came alive in the early 1980s when DJs decided to make records out of their freestyle MCing. This necessitated the documentation of song lyrics so they do not change during each and every rendition. The age of the stromanbieter for rap music was gone paving the way for more organized chaos. Still, the freestyle and improvisation element remained a part of many DJ interludes as the song goes through certain sections that did not require too much rap singing.

Likewise, as a consequence of the hip-hop records, the influence of rap began to spread faster than ever before. Artists no longer had to travel far to get their music heard. Now, records from New York City and Philadelphia can be reproduced and transported to cities like Los Angeles, New Orleans, Dallas, Baltimore, Washington, D.C., and Seattle among others for people to appreciate and enjoy. This was primarily the reason for rap music’s rapid growth. Like Christmas mini lights, cities formed the nodes through which rap music would spread to other parts of the country. From small beginnings to grand achievements, the birth certificate translation to true stardom took a matter of years for rap music to be realized. Since then, its take-off and rise has been meteoric.

In this regard, it is almost impossible to talk about rap music but not discuss the golden age of rap. This was the era from the late 1980s to the mid 1990s when rap grew at an astounding rate fueled by the creative contributions of many artists from all over the continental United States and in many parts of the world. The primary trait of the Golden Age or Rap was that it was an almost unbroken wave of transformative music with every single pushing the boundaries of the genre. From this age and in the succeeding Gansta Rap age came names like Run-D.M.C., Dr. Dre, Ice T, MC Hammer, The Wu-tang Clan, Snoop Dogg, and The Notorious B.I.G. among others. The list of names can virtually fill a Sharepoint Hive without any problems.

According to social studies published in 2005, teenagers and children are more familiar with hip-hop and rap music more than any other musical genre. Up to 65% of all children from ages 8 to 18 hear hip-hop music on a daily basis, making it their routinary keratin hair treatment session, almost to the point that it has become an intrinsic part of their lives. With the diversification of the genre to include the more stylish R&B or rhythm and blues, it is not difficult to explain how rap music has continued to pervade radio station, TV and movie song line-ups. The marriage of rap and jazz which paved the way for R&B is itself a phenomenon that warrants all sorts of social analysis.

And with its very strong following, it is safe to say that rap music is here to stay. Years from now, when you open your TV on a bright Saturday morning, there’s a big chance you would be watching the next stage in the evolution of rap music, and there’s an even better chance you would be dancing or singing to that tune.

Immortal Technique Rapper Biography

Immortal technique is the stage name for which rapper Felipe Andres Coronel is popularly known. His lyrics characterized by its unique mixture of socialist commentary of social class hierarchy, religion, wealth, poverty to contemporary issues touching on governmental and institutional racism. Perhaps you may have come across information about this popular icon as you undertake research for that mba online, or for whatever course you are undertaking, be it bachelors in criminal justice, performing arts degree, governance systems, online nurse practitioner programs, history, or any other course for which you have to do online research.

The rapper was born on the 19th day of February 1978 in Lima, Peru. During the internal conflicts that took place in their country at the time, his parents migrated to Harlem, New York. Probably, in the process of migration to the country, they may have used boats at least once in the journey. Like many American teenagers, the rapper was engaged in various acts against the law that led to his arrest several times, which in one his public interviews admitted that they were selfish and at best childish acts. After completing his incarceration terms, he took up a political science course in a bid to mend his seemingly torn life, while living with his father.

After completing his studies, he was not lucky enough to secure a job in his field of study owing to the unemployment situation prevailing in the entire United States. Like many American fresh graduates who take up it jobs, nursing jobs, waiter and nursing jobs among many other common jobs that may not necessarily need a specialist, he took up a working in a restaurant to earn a buck from which he could live on.

Through his deep interest in championing for equality between the elite and the under privileged in society, and being not a Mesothelioma Lawyer, the rapper begun his music career basing his lyrics on such issues as injustice, exploitation and mistreatment of the poor. This is captured clearly in his desire to keep control over his production, since he strongly believes that in the music industry, the producers normally make a large profit while the artist for who credit belongs, normally end ups earning peanut amounts at the end of the day.

His popular sediments are captured in his albums that include the revolutionary, both volume one and two, and the 3rd world and the middle passage album. the rapper is increasingly involved in prison visits and working with migrant rights activists, though which he speaks to youths and the unprivileged in the society trazer amor de volta. His investments are largely in farmland in Latin America, which like soweto properties is an unpopular investment option for many celebrity figures. His advice to the youth is not much on taking up an aacsb online mba or an online criminal justice degree, but rather it is based on exploiting ones talents and living soberly within the law.

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