Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Thursday, February 12, 2015

Dinesh Weerakody was recently appointed to the Access Board....can he be PM's advisor and serve Racketeer Sumal Perera? 

sumal dinesh weera
Thursday, 12 February 2015
Dinesh Weerakody was recently appointed to the Access Board. Can he be an advisor to the Prime Minister and serve Sumal Perera at the same time ??

Sumal Perera of the Access Group and the notorious Access Group rolls out Rs. 13 Billion to the corrupt Rajapaksa Regime. - Who stands to gain the most out of the corrupt 9 year Rajapakse regime? - Who
embezzled over US$ 10 Billion of this country's wealth during the Rajapakse dictatorship?

Alteration of original H’tota port agreement at Sri Lanka’s expense revealed 


By Shamindra Ferdinando-February 11, 2015

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Deputy Minister of Policy Planning, Economic Affairs, Child, Youth and Cultural Affairs Dr Harsha de Silva yesterday alleged that an agreement with the Chinese as regards the funding of Hambantota Port had been altered at the expense of the country.

Economist Dr. Silva said that the alteration had resulted in the country having to pay a staggering 6.3 per cent fixed interest on US 306 mn loan, whereas the original agreement envisaged payment of variable interest, hence just 0.6 percent in accordance with LIBOR (London Interbank Offered Rate).

The Deputy Minister emphasised that Sri Lanka couldn’t benefit from lower interest rate due to controversial change in the agreement at the behest of the Chinese, a matter of grave concern.

Responding to a query, the MP said at the time Sri Lanka had accepted the original loan agreement on Oct. 17, 2007, LIBOR had been fixed at 5.5 percent plus 0.9 per cent. Then LIBOR had crashed and quickly come down to about 2.0 per cent prompting the Chinese to call for a revision of the agreement, the deputy minister said.

As the deputy to Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, who holds policy planning and economic affairs portfolios, Dr. Silva said that he would make further inquiries. The Central Bank and the Securities and Exchange Commission, too, come under Premier Wickremesinghe’s purview.

The DM said that the government would take up the matter with China.

According to him, the agreement was altered on Sept 10, 2008. Pointing out that in accordance with the agreement, Sri Lanka had to make the payments over 15-year period, the UNPer said that the country was paying a heavy price due to the altering of original agreement.

The DM said that the issue of that particular component of Hambantota funding had been raised by him both in and outside Parliament on many occasions, but the previous government refrained from responding to his queries. ‘I came across the relevant file a couple days ago. Perhaps, there will be more revelations in the coming days."

The new government would inquire into fraudulent activities that couldn’t be seen by the ordinary people, the DM said.

Responding to a query, he said that the Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption was turning a blind eye to what was happening.

Storming to Performing in 100 Days

GroundviewsTaking over the country’s governance, especially under the current circumstances in Sri Lanka must take an emotional and physical toll on the politicians.   At this level of stress, how can one keep a rational and a logical perspective, especially when there are so many complex, risky, divisive issues to deal with?
In organizational development theory and practice, the Tuckman Team Development Model (Bruce Tuckman- 1965) states that any team coming together for a common purpose has to go through the stages of Forming-Storming-Norming and Performing and that the cycle is bound to repeat itself.
The Forming stage is when everybody is cooperating with good intentions and controlling emotions.   As this new political leadership, as diverse and different as it is, comes together to work, the Storming stage is inevitable. As they let down their guard, competing personalities, ideologies, values and agendas emerge.
The Storming stage requires strong leadership, emotional control and equanimity from everyone with a focus on the common vision and purpose – assuming it is already articulated and clear to everyone.
Storming stage requires adjustment of expectations and compromise, as the way forward cannot make everyone happy. This is where true emotional intelligence comes into play for the team to move towards Norming andPerforming.
As competing agendas jockey for position fissures will emerge, yet experience shows that this is normal and conflict will arise.   Accepting conflict as inevitable and neutral is crucial, and to give and take in the larger interest takes skill, courage and a personal discipline and practice. It is also where the media and other onlookers have to be aware and patient not to capitalize to divide for sensationalism, but to unite for common purpose in the interest of the 100 day plan and beyond. Sri Lanka needs this space in this emotionally charged period.
The Personal Practice
Finding the power of balance is even more important, as the stakes are high and the only way to do so is through a discipline of a personal practice from individuals. The basic personal practice to find equanimity during theStorming stage is through the breath and meditation. This has to be complemented by downtime to rest and rejuvenate through sleep, good eating habits, exercise and positive social relationships.
Science and the Personal Practice
The Amygdale is the primal region of the brain and processes both the positive and negative emotions. Amygdale protects us when we are under threat by initiating the body’s response to react. Amygdale will be extremely active during the Storming stage and it can lead to reptilian unskilful action and conflict in relationships.
According to a blog article in Scientific American[i], latest research using MRI scans show that after an eight-week course of mindfulness meditation practice, the Amygdale, appears to shrink.   As the Amygdale shrinks, the pre-frontal cortex – associated with the “higher order brain” functions such as awareness, concentration and decision-making – becomes thicker.

When the “higher order brain” becomes thicker, our limbic system – centre for compassion improves and we become more emotionally intelligent.   This will enable equanimity and balance through the Storming stage. With equanimity, the political leaders may perceive the threats to their own views and ideologies from different perspectives, and may become more comfortable to let go and compromise to cooperate for a common vision and purpose.
Our breath then becomes our foundational ally to help us to find the power of balance.  When we focus on our breath to meditate, we become mindful and present.  Breathing well helps our health and physiology, and clears our mind to realize when unhealthy and negative emotions arise.  It builds self-knowledge, esteem and confidence and helps put things in perspective.
All these point the way to a good prescription for our new political leaders to deal with overcoming Storming stage, fraught with differences and conflict. If the leaders are aware of this natural phenomenon, they will deal with this stage with better skill and move the country in what is left of the next 100 days onto the Norming and Performing stage.
Yet through all this, nothing is permanent, there will be many more Stormsas they govern and to realize that those Storms are normal and inevitable is to accept it without judgment, anxiety and fear. It is only a commitment and a discipline from each leader to a personal practice that will enable them to manage self through these turbulent times and perform this difficult feat for the country and its people who have been through so much.
Without management of self no one is fit for authority no matter how much they acquire, for the more authority they acquire the more dangerous they become. It is the management of self that should occupy 50 percent of our time and the best of our ability. And when we do that, the ethical, moral and spiritual elements of leadership are inescapable.   Dee Hock – Founder of VISA Credit Cards
[i] What Does Mindfulness Meditation Do to Your Brain?
By Tom Ireland | June 12, 2014 |  Scientific American

President’s secretary too, responsible for Rizana’s beheading – Wimal Weerawansa!

wimal rizana
Present secretary to the president P.B. Abeykoon too, should be held responsible for the death of Rizana Nafiq, who was beheaded in Saudi Arabia on 09 January 2013, former minister Wimal Weerawansa has charged.

Weerawansa was commenting to a group of journalists about the performance of the new government. He went onto say, “P.B. Abeykoon was a top bribe taker when he was the controller of immigration and emigration. He made Sri Lankan passports for even Pakistanis. He was a darling of the foreign employment agents. It was P.B. Abeykoon who had made a bogus passport with his signature to say Rizana Nafiq was 17 years old. We have the statement given by the agent who sent Rizana overseas. It is too early yet. The government still plays hell only a little. But, sooner or later, it is certain they will play hell to the maximum.  Then, we will expose what we have. You all better be prepared.”
We will keep a close tab, as things happen develop very soon.

I Don’t Even Have A House To Live: Gota


Colombo Telegraph
Former Secretary to the Ministry of Defence Gotabaya Rajapaksa has said the allegations leveled against him on plundering state wealth – particularly the wealth accumulated after the defeat of the LTTE – are baseless and claims he is not even financially well-off to buy a house for himself.
Gotabaya Picture courtesy businesstoday.lk“The truth is I don’t even have a house to live in still. I am trying to buy a house because the house that I currently live in is owned by my mother-in-law and she was living here for 40 years. I currently use this house because she is living in the US,” he has said in an interview with the Daily Mirror.
He has said the decision to not prosecute LTTE Leader KP was mutually agreed on by the former President Mahinda Rajapaksa and the three security commanders because they believed it would pave way for him to cooperate with their investigations into the LTTE network.
However, as for KP’s wealth and his fleet of ships that Gotabaya is accused of taking control, he has said that he has no idea about it because all details are with the military intelligence, some of which even he hasn’t had access to.
Meanwhile, he has stated that he believes the failure to punish members of the government promptly for their wrongdoings is one of the reasons that contributed towards the public losing faith in his brother’s regime.

China, Sri Lanka, and the Maritime Great Game

What the back-and-forth over a port project in Colombo says about Beijing’s plans to dominate the Indian Ocean.
China, Sri Lanka, and the Maritime Great Game

BY KEITH JOHNSON-FEBRUARY 12, 2015
The surprising decision by the new government of Sri Lanka to reverse course and support a billion-dollar Chinese port project underscores the long shadow of Beijing’s influence in the region, even in countries seemingly determined to push back. More importantly, the green light for the port project highlights China’s determination to secure access to a network of coastal installations across the Indian Ocean, a key part of President Xi Jinping’s own pivot to the West.
Last week, an otherwise mundane civil works project leapt into the headlines when newly elected Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena abandonedcampaign pledges to block Chinese plans for a $1.4 billion port city in Colombo, on the western coast of the island nation. That raised eyebrows, because his election was widely seen as a blow to China’s budding friendship with Sri Lanka; former President Mahinda Rajapaksa had steadily moved Sri Lanka closer to Beijing.
Last month, just after taking office, new Sri Lankan government officials had expressed concern about the security implications of the Chinese project, which Xi launched with great fanfare on a visit last September. Within weeks, however, Sirisena gave the go-ahead for the port development in order to avoid, as Sri Lankan officials said, a “misunderstanding” with China. (Just to further muddy the waters, the new prime minister tried to walk back the approval late last week in comments to Parliament, but the Chinese firm set to build the port is convinced it will now go ahead.)
Colombo Port City is about a whole lot more than a deep-water harbor, golf course, and Formula One racetrack. It’s part and parcel of one of Xi’s signature foreign-policy initiatives: a double-barreled, $40 billion plan to deepen China’s physical and economic links with neighbors to the West.
That includes development of new road and rail links between China, Central Asia, and the Middle East — dubbed the “New Silk Road.” The other half of the plan is a network of commercial port facilities in the Indian Ocean, meant to connect the dots between China and a region that is increasingly important to it — the “Maritime Silk Road.” China is heavily dependent on the Middle East and Africa for energy and natural resources, and is understandably anxious to safeguard those vital sea lanes. Xi launched the Maritime Silk Road notion on a visit to Indonesia in 2013, and again heavilytouted it on a regional road show late last year.
But the problem is that China’s lurch to the West, especially its efforts to increase its physical presence in the Indian Ocean, have neighbors like Indiaworried. A port visit to Colombo last year by a Chinese submarine set pulses racing in New Delhi. Many Indian security analysts see the Maritime Silk Road as an effort to encircle the subcontinent.
The United States, for its part, has spent several years trying to push back against a smothering Chinese embrace of its neighbors in the South China Sea. That’s one reason it’s now keeping a close eye on Chinese infrastructure investments in Sri Lanka, Pakistan, the Maldives, the Comoros, and the Seychelles that promise to extend China’s economic, diplomatic, and possibly military reach across the entire region.
“You have a bit of a maritime Great Game going on in the Indian Ocean that will involve us, it will involve India, and it will involve, of course, China,” Adm. Gary Roughead, a former U.S. chief of naval operations who is now at Stanford University’s Hoover Institution, told Foreign Policy. “I think we have to watch it and look at it with eyes wide open.”
For China, the new Maritime Silk Road, like its landlocked twin, is all about economic development. President Xi has touted the project’s potential to bring “common development and prosperity” to China and Southeast Asia. Building big, modern ports and other infrastructure will not only boost trade across the region; it is meant to provide a huge, short-term economic boost for countries on the receiving end. China believes that the Sri Lanka port plan could spur $13 billion in new investment, for example.
But it’s not all dollars and cents. Initiatives like the Maritime Silk Road also offer Beijing a way to boost its appeal in the region and win friends, after a tough few years of blowback thanks to heavy-handed diplomacy in Southeast Asia.
“I believe that the Maritime Silk Road has a strategic component. State-sponsored investment in infrastructure projects helps China advance its influence in the region and creates a network of friendly countries,” Virginia Marantidou, an Asia-Pacific security analyst at Pacific Forum CSIS, a think tank, told FP.
For those watching from Delhi and Washington, China’s efforts in the Indian Ocean seem to be about more than just trade and development. For a decade, some U.S. analysts have fretted over the idea that China is trying to build a “string of pearls,” or network of naval bases, across the Indian Ocean that would turn a regional naval power into a global one. Sri Lanka’s crucial position astride the trade routes between Europe and the Middle East and Asia fits squarely into that notion; Ceylon’s harbors provided a crucial stepping stone for Portuguese, Dutch, French, and British navies in centuries past.
To date, China’s outreach and port-building activities have been civilian in nature. The Colombo project, for example, is specifically designed for deep-draft container ships that carry the bulk of China’s maritime trade. And a naval base located just 150 miles off the Indian coast would be extremely vulnerable if the two countries came to blows again.
But ports that service cargo ships can also lend a vital hand to China’s growing navy, offering a sort of “dual-use” capability that masks military potential behind the veneer of commercial growth, many analysts say. China has made huge advances in building a modern navy in recent years, but still lacks the ability to operate far from home, because, unlike the United States, it doesn’t have a network of friendly bases that can serve as a port in a storm. The Rand Corporation just noted that logistics, and particularly the lack of basing facilities in the Indian Ocean, is one of the Chinese navy’s Achilles’ heels.
“I think that they will knit together a series of friendly relationships and infrastructure investments that will support this longer-term, two-pronged approach into the Middle East and Central Asia,” Roughead said — even if there are no plans afoot for formal military bases in the near future.
To be sure, grandiose plans for the port in Colombo come after numerous other billion-dollar Chinese investment promises have come to naught. For a decade, China has talked up massive investments in mines and power plants in Afghanistan and Pakistan that have been slow to materialize; big plans for energy projects, like a dam in Myanmar, ultimately went nowhere.
Even when China’s state-backed firms carry out big investment plans, it often just spurs backlash in countries worried about suffering a Chinese bear hug. That’s happened in Africa, Latin America, and Asia. Myanmar pulled the plug on a big dam project in part because of concerns about overbearing Chinese influence in Naypyidaw.
Still, for policymakers in the region and in the United States, seemingly mundane construction projects on far-off islands can carry a much deeper meaning.
“The broader strategic game that’s in play is China’s very thoughtful way of reshaping the landscape and the seascape and the security architecture in Asia and the Indo-Pacific,” Roughead said.

Tobacco battle takes new turn with Maithri accusing former prez

... reveals MR met top CTC reps at Temple Trees


By Shamindra Ferdinando-

Maithripala Sirisena has accused his predecessor Mahinda Rajapaksa of humiliating him in the presence of Ceylon Tobacco Company (CTC) representatives towards the tail end of the Rajapaksa presidency.

President Sirisena alleged that he had been asked to justify the need to make it compulsory to display pictorial warnings on 80% of cigarette pack when both India and Pakistan adopted a much milder approach. According to the former SLFP General Secretary the meeting had taken place at Temple Trees.

The President said he was told that the CTC would move the court against his bid.

He was addressing a group of government nurses at the Maharagama National Youth Services Council on Tuesday.

Responding to a query by The Island, a spokesperson for the CTC yesterday said that a comment could be considered once the company studied the statement attributed to President Maithripala Sirisena.

President Sirisena asserted that it had been grossly unfair for his predecessor to take up the contentious issue of pictorial warnings with him in the presence of CTC officials.

The revelation was made hours after health minister Dr. Rajitha Senaratne on behalf of Premier Ranil Wickremesinghe’s government presented a Bill to amend the National Authority on Tobacco and Alcohol Act which would make it compulsory for the tobacco companies to print pictorial warnings on 80 percent of the display area of cigarette packets.

The bill states that 80% of the top surface area of both the back and the front of every packet, package or carton containing tobacco products must be covered in health warnings of legible print.

A new controversy erupted in the wake of the CTC strongly contradicting Minister Dr. Senaratne’s allegation that massive bribes had been paid to the previous government to thwart Maithripala Sirisena’s anti-tobacco campaign.

President Maithripala Sirisena lambasted the health sector officials, alleging that they were the worst as far as corruption was concerned.

Leaking Against the Impossible: Whistleblower John Kiriakou, CIA Torture and Leaking

cia_torture
“What about the CIA officers who directly violated the law, who carried out interrogations that resulted in death?  What about the torturers of Hassan Ghul?” – John Kiriakou, Democracy Now, Feb 10, 2014
By Binoy Kampmark-February 12, 2015
He was the only agent of the Central Intelligence Agency to blow the otherwise hesitant whistle on the torture program made infamous by the Bush administration.  And for all that good grace, he paid with a prison sentence, having violated the covenant of the espionage service. In 2007, John Kiriakou publicly confirmed and noted the use of waterboarding by agents in dealing with terrorist suspects.  And it hardly came with bells and whistles.
His CIA credentials as officer and analyst were well minted – 14 years in service, and designated head of the operation that led to the finding of al-Qaeda member Abu Zubaydah in 2002.  It should be noted that Kiriakou was no angel coming late to a feast of innocence.  As an agent, he had been privy to the darker sides of the supposed “war on terror”.  He had also, at one point, defended waterboarding as a practice.  In his own words to Scott Shane of The New York Times, “I think the second-guessing of 2002 decisions is unfair.”
In January 2013, he was sentenced to two-and-a-half years, pleading guilty to confirming the identity of a covert officer to Shane.  Material for a second story was also provided to another reporter, which also involved disclosing the name of another agent.  A plea bargain ensued, trimming a sentence, but affirming his guilt.  He is currently under a house arrest term of three months.
This case reveals, as do whistleblowing cases in general, that the discloser is presumed to be guilty, the tribal member who went against the creed.  The result of that disclosure – exposing an illegal program, implemented by individuals who, one would think, would be the subject of prosecution – is evaded.  Twisted logic ensues: the perpetrator of abuse escapes the exposure; and the one doing the exposing received due punishment.  Rules, not substance, matter.
As Assistant Director in Charge of the case, James W. McJunkin, explained after Kiriakou’s plea with an almost vulgar clarity, “Disclosing classified information, including the names of CIA officers, to unauthorized individuals is a clear violation of the law.”[1]  Kiriakou, it was noted, had conceded to sign “secrecy and non-disclosure agreements” to the effect of not disclosing such material to unauthorised persons.
Some commentary on Kiriakou has been ambivalent, cutting fine distinctions as to the nature of sensitive leaks on the one hand, and their supposed effect on the other.  There are generic leaks, and then, suggests Seth Mandel, writing in Commentary (Jan 7, 2013), there are those naughty, destructive leaks that sink the state. “First of all, not all leaks are created equal: some are legal and others break federal law.  Second, some leaks are clearly damaging to national security, and thus put Americans in unnecessary danger.”[2]
Mandel seeks to draw one example out of the hat of bad leaks – the New York Times’ decision to publish details of a successful clandestine program used by the government to monitor and track the finances behind terrorist activity.  “The program was legal and constitutional, but the Times saw an opportunity to damage the Bush administration’s national security efforts, and took it – safety to Americans be damned.”
But Mandel misses the vital point: that such distinctions are artificially made when it comes to prosecuting leakers, and those connected with the process. It follows, as a rule, that any such disclosure breaks the law irrespective of the motivation of the whistleblower, or the damning quality of the material.  The onus is on the whistleblower to deny or disprove his or her putative illegality, to dig deep into the legislative drawer to find viable defences.
Then come the more troubling apologias scripted by the White House.  Presidential candidate Barack Obama may have expressed his concerns about torture, but President Obama wore a different, adjusted hat when in office.
In 2009, he cooled on the issue of whether to prosecute those in government who had made the program possible.  In August 2014, he would show considerable latitude to the torturer whose task it was to defend the United States, despite breaching the law in cavalierly bloody fashion.  “I understand why it happened. I think it’s important, when we look back, to recall how afraid people were when the twin towers fell.”[3] Fear justifies bestial retaliation, fuelling the engine of vengeance.  The odds, in other words, lengthen for such individuals as Kiriakou, who ended up disclosing improper conduct that was looked upon favourably by excusing authorities.
Obama goes even further, using the desk defences that were dismissed at such trials as those of Adolf Eichmann.  “It’s important for us not to feel too sanctimonious in retrospect about the tough job those folks had.”  The patriotic brute of pen and action is well and truly alive – as long as the job is tough.
Assessments made as to whether a “leak” is damaging are shoddy at best, largely because they are based on the grand hypothetical that is “national security” – protective measures that seek justifications in the vaguest, most nominal of terms.  Justifying the concealment of a torture program can be justified by any source keen to conserve the illusion that rights trump the security machinery of the state, even if that state is the US.  We really are good chaps who tend to err in the name of goodness.
Process, in its uncritical, unthinking form, is what matters in the cult of security; the quality of the classified material – revealing, for instance, a program of abuse – is irrelevant to an establishment that simply assumes that its own secret status is threatened.  This flaw in exposing abuses in governance, and in a specific sense, intelligence processes, is a defect that has been treated, less with relief than contempt.  The reformers on this subject, at least, remain at bay, since the problematic assumptions still hold sway.
Dr. Binoy Kampmark was a Commonwealth Scholar at Selwyn College, Cambridge.  He lectures at RMIT University, Melbourne.  Email: bkampmark@gmail.com

Damaged buildings in Donetsk, eastern Ukraine

If fragile agreement holds, ambitious political measures including a new Ukrainian constitution and special status for rebel-held areas should follow

Vladimir Putin announces ceasefire for Ukraine after all-night negotiations
, Europe editor-Thursday 12 February 2015

A ceasefire in eastern Ukraine intended to pave the way for a comprehensive political settlement of the country’s crisis has been agreed in Minsk following a fraught 16 hours of overnight negotiations between the leaders of Russia, Ukraine, Germany, and France.
Ukraine Ceasefire Aims to Pave Way for Comprehensive Settlement of Crisis by Thavam Ratna

Myanmar revokes Rohingya voting rights after protests

Buddhist monks and other people take part in a protest to demand the revocation of the right of holders of temporary identification cards, known as white cards, to vote, in Yangon February 11, 2015Monks have been at the forefront of anti-Rohingya protests
11 February 2015
BBCRohingya Muslims will not be able to vote in Myanmar's referendum after President Thein Sein withdrew temporary voting rights following protests.
Hundreds of Buddhists took to the streets following the passage of a law that would allow temporary residents who hold "white papers" to vote.
More than one million Rohingya live in Myanmar, but they are not regarded as citizens by the government.
In 2012, violence between Muslims and Buddhists left more than 200 dead.
The clashes broke out in Rakhine province and sparked religious attacks across the country.
The so-called white papers were introduced in 2010 by the former military junta to allow the Rohingya and other minorities to vote in a general election.
A man holds up a banner during a protest to demand the revocation of the right of holders of temporary identification cards, known as white cards, to vote, in Yangon February 11, 2015The protesters demanded that the Rohingya's right to vote be revoked
Protestors hold posters and flags as they march past Shwedagon Pagoda during a protest march against the Myanmar parliament decision on the White Card issue, in Yangon, Myanmar, 11 February 2015Analysts suggested the law might have been passed under international pressure
Thein Sein had originally persuaded parliament to grant white-paper holders the vote, but later apparently changed his mind.
The announcement came just hours after demonstrations in Yangon. Those protesting resent what they see as the integration of non-citizens into the country.
"White card holders are not citizens and those who are non-citizens don't have the right to vote in other countries," said Shin Thumana, a Buddhist monk who took part in the protest.
"This is just a ploy by politicians to win votes."
However, Rohingya MP Shwe Maung, whose constituency is in Rakhine, argued that voting rights had only become an issue following the violence in 2012.
Buddhist monks are at the forefront of protests against Muslims. One high-profile leader is monk Ashin Wirathu, who recently used abusive language to describe the UN's special envoy to Myanmar.
In December, the UN passed a resolution urging Myanmar (formerly known as Burma) to give access to citizenship for the Rohingya, many of whom are classed as stateless.

Cuba Uncensored


Answers to some very pointed questions about Cuba

Cuba and some of America's favorite cars. Photos by David Swanson

Cubahttp://www.salem-news.com/graphics/snheader.jpg(WASHINGTON, DC) - This evening, February 9, 2015, a handful of visitors from the land to the north asked an assistant (or “instructional” which I take to be a step below “assistant”) professor of philosophy about his studies and his teaching experiences here in Cuba.
One of our group made the mistake of asking whether this philosopher thought of Fidel as a philosopher. The result was an almost Fidel-length response that had little to do with philosophy and everything to do with criticizing the president.