Discussion:
Nada mas farsante que un bush. Tratan de engañar a la gente
(demasiado antiguo para responder)
CENTRO CONTRA EL KASTROFASCISMO
2006-01-30 17:19:22 UTC
Permalink
Amigos,
Nada mas farsante que un comunista. Tratan de engañar a la gente para disfrutar lo mas etenamente posible las mieles del poder. Como toda mentira al final la gente despierta y el sistema se cae.
Veamos extractos de discursos de Fidel:

* 'Yo no sé de qué forma se podrá hablar. ¿Es que
alguien pueden pensar que encubrimos oscuros
designios? ¿Es que acaso pudiera alguien afirmar que
hemos mentido alguna vez al pueblo? ¿Es que acaso
pudiera alguien pensar que somos hipócritas?
¿Entonces, cuando decidimos que nuestra revolución no
es comunista, por qué ese empeño en acusar a nuestra
revolución de lo que no es?
Si nuestras ideas fuesen comunistas lo diríamos aquí'.
((Discurso 8 de mayo de 1959, Plaza de la Revolución,
La Habana).

* 'Soy de los que creen sinceramente en las
libertades, soy de los que creen que cada cual debe
tener derecho a opinar lo que piensa. Pero jamás el
sistema de privar a nadie de sus derechos, de
enclaustrar la inteligencia, de amordazar el
pensamiento, por ninguna razón del mundo'.
(El Desarrollo Económico de América Latina. Imprenta
del Ejército Rebelde, La Habana, 1959; pág. 44).

* '¿Creo en el marxismo? Creo absolutamente en el
marxismo. ¿Creía el primero de enero? Creía el primero
de enero. ¿Creía el 26 de julio? Creía el 26 de julio.
¿Tengo alguna duda sobre el marxismo y entiendo que
algunas interpretaciones se equivocaron y que hay que
revisarlas? No tengo la menor duda. Lo digo aquí con
entera satisfacción y con entera confianza: soy
marxista-leninista y seré marxista-leninista hasta el
último día de mi vida'.
(Discurso pronunciado el 2 de diciembre 1961. Escuelas
de Instrucción Revolucionaria. La Habana).

* 'Les habla una persona que ha tenido el privilegio y
la oportunidad de haber adquirido alguna experiencia
política, de haber vivido todo un proceso
revolucionario, incluso en un país donde, como les
conté, la gente no quería oír hablar ni de socialismo.
Cuando digo la gente, es la gran mayoría... Quien no
supo cómo pensábamos fue porque no quiso saber cómo
pensábamos'.
(Discurso pronunciado a estudiantes de la Universidad
Central de Caracas, Venezuela, el 3 de febrero de
1999).

* 'Ya yo era marxista-leninista hacía por lo menos
cuatro años antes de Moncada'.
(Conversatorio en la Mesa Redonda Informativa del 24
de julio de 2000. Televisión Cubana. La Habana).

* 'Con la solidez de la Revolución, con el desarrollo
de nuestras relaciones con todo el mundo, con nuestros
sólidos vínculos con el CAME y con la Unión Soviética,
garantizado en este país el combustible, garantizado
en este país el trigo, los alimentos, los equipos, las
inversiones industriales, con qué nos pueden amenazar
los imperialistas? (...) Al principio bastante que
fastid iaron con sus cancelaciones (...) pero cuando ya
por suerte, no dependemos de ellos para nada, ni en el
comercio, ni en los abastecimientos, ni en nada, si ya
salimos victoriosos ahora, después de la victoria,
¿con qué nos pueden amenazar? ¿Con cancelar qué
cosa?'. (...). 'La bancarrota de la economía
capitalista ha
confirmado lo inexorable de las predicciones de Carlos
Marx, y contrasta con el creciente y vigoroso progreso
de las economías de los países que, agrupados en la
comunidad socialista del CAME, tienen en el sólido
desarrollo de la Unión Soviética su punto fundamental
de apoyo'.
(Discurso en el Primer Congreso del Partido Comunista
de Cuba. Diciembre de 1

¿QUE LES PARECE?

Pablo Yaruro
















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Super User For Ever
2006-01-30 19:15:12 UTC
Permalink
Post by CENTRO CONTRA EL KASTROFASCISMO
Amigos,
Nada mas farsante que un bush. Tratan de engañar a la gente para disfrutar lo
mas etenamente posible las mieles del poder. Como toda mentira al final la
gente despierta y el sistema se cae.
Vean estos videos que me mando el SUPER USER....
for tomorrow's State of the Union:

http://tinyurl.com/aqw2l

(the other videos are good too)
CENTRO CONTRA EL KASTROFASCISMO
2006-01-31 03:00:44 UTC
Permalink
VISIT THE LINKS BELOW TO SEE THE PHOTOS OF THAT OTHER CUBA BUILT BEFORE
THE KASTROFASCISM ARRIVE IN 1959 TO DESTROY AND LET IT ALL CRUMBLE DOWN TO
RUINS.

LA CUBA QUE EXISTIO ANTES Y QUE FUERA CONSTRUIDA POR LOS CUBANOS ANTES

AQUI EN ESTE SITIO WEB:

http://www.wisc.edu/arth/ah349/20c_01.html

http://www.wisc.edu/arth/ah349/20c_01.html

http://www.wisc.edu/arth/ah349/20c_01.html

www.therealcuba.com

http://www.cubafotos.net/cubafotos1.htm
http://www.wisc.edu/arth/ah349/20c_01.html
http://www.chileblog.com/modules.php?name=Sections&op=listarticles&secid=15
http://argentina.indymedia.org/news/2005/12/361336.php
http://www.juanperez.com/comerciales/tv.html

http://www.amigospais-guaracabuya.org

Sobre el ASESINO che:
http://members.aol.com/Guanabacoa/che.html
http://www.therealcuba.com/MurderedbyChe.htm
http://ernesto-el-che-guevara.piranho.de/

http://www.martinoticias.com/media/audio/M-001_051004.wma
http://www.martinoticias.com/MMtv.asp
Corrupcion_en_Cuba
http://www.cadal.org/libros/pdf/Corrupcion_en_Cuba.pdf
--
www.therealcuba.com

http://www.cubafotos.net/cubafotos1.htm
http://www.wisc.edu/arth/ah349/20c_01.html
http://www.chileblog.com/modules.php?name=Sections&op=listarticles&secid=15
http://argentina.indymedia.org/news/2005/12/361336.php
http://www.juanperez.com/comerciales/tv.html

http://www.amigospais-guaracabuya.org

Sobre el ASESINO che:
http://members.aol.com/Guanabacoa/che.html
http://www.therealcuba.com/MurderedbyChe.htm
http://ernesto-el-che-guevara.piranho.de/

http://www.martinoticias.com/media/audio/M-001_051004.wma
http://www.martinoticias.com/MMtv.asp
Corrupcion_en_Cuba
http://www.cadal.org/libros/pdf/Corrupcion_en_Cuba.pdf

http://www.killcastro.com/blog/

http://balseros.miami.edu/



------------------------------------------------
LA VERDAD NO SE PUEDE ESCONDER COMO NO SE PUEDE ESCONDER EL SOL CON UN
DEDO...!!!!

------------------------------
VISIT THE LINK BELOW TO SEE THE PHOTOS OF THAT OTHER CUBA BUILT BEFORE
THE KASTROFASCISM ARRIVE IN 1959 TO DESTROY AND LET IT ALL CRUMBLE DOWN TO
RUINS.

/
VISIT THE LINK BELOW TO SEE THE PHOTOS OF THAT OTHER CUBA BUILT BEFORE
THE KASTROFASCISM ARRIVE IN 1959 TO DESTROY AND LET IT ALL CRUMBLE DOWN TO
RUINS.

LA CUBA QUE EXISTIO ANTES Y QUE FUERA CONSTRUIDA POR LOS CUBANOS ANTES
DE LA ABYECTA TIRANIA KASTROFASCISTA Y MAFIOSA.

http://www.wisc.edu/arth/ah349/20c_01.html

http://www.wisc.edu/arth/ah349/20c_01.html

http://www.wisc.edu/arth/ah349/20c_01.html

www.therealcuba.com

http://www.cubafotos.net/cubafotos1.htm
http://www.wisc.edu/arth/ah349/20c_01.html
http://www.chileblog.com/modules.php?name=Sections&op=listarticles&secid=15
http://argentina.indymedia.org/news/2005/12/361336.php
http://www.juanperez.com/comerciales/tv.html

http://www.amigospais-guaracabuya.org

Sobre el ASESINO che:
http://members.aol.com/Guanabacoa/che.html
http://www.therealcuba.com/MurderedbyChe.htm
http://ernesto-el-che-guevara.piranho.de/

http://www.martinoticias.com/media/audio/M-001_051004.wma
http://www.martinoticias.com/MMtv.asp
Corrupcion_en_Cuba
http://www.cadal.org/libros/pdf/Corrupcion_en_Cuba.pdf
--
www.therealcuba.com

http://www.cubafotos.net/cubafotos1.htm
http://www.wisc.edu/arth/ah349/20c_01.html
http://www.chileblog.com/modules.php?name=Sections&op=listarticles&secid=15
http://argentina.indymedia.org/news/2005/12/361336.php
http://www.juanperez.com/comerciales/tv.html

http://www.amigospais-guaracabuya.org

Sobre el ASESINO che:
http://members.aol.com/Guanabacoa/che.html
http://www.therealcuba.com/MurderedbyChe.htm
http://ernesto-el-che-guevara.piranho.de/

http://www.martinoticias.com/media/audio/M-001_051004.wma
http://www.martinoticias.com/MMtv.asp
Corrupcion_en_Cuba
http://www.cadal.org/libros/pdf/Corrupcion_en_Cuba.pdf
--
www.therealcuba.com

http://www.cubafotos.net/cubafotos1.htm
http://www.wisc.edu/arth/ah349/20c_01.html
http://www.chileblog.com/modules.php?name=Sections&op=listarticles&secid=15
http://argentina.indymedia.org/news/2005/12/361336.php
http://www.juanperez.com/comerciales/tv.html

http://www.amigospais-guaracabuya.org

Sobre el ASESINO che:
http://members.aol.com/Guanabacoa/che.html
http://www.therealcuba.com/MurderedbyChe.htm
http://ernesto-el-che-guevara.piranho.de/

http://www.martinoticias.com/media/audio/M-001_051004.wma
http://www.martinoticias.com/MMtv.asp
Corrupcion_en_Cuba
http://www.cadal.org/libros/pdf/Corrupcion_en_Cuba.pdf
Super User For Ever
2006-01-31 16:16:34 UTC
Permalink
THE NEW YORK TIMES

January 29, 2006
Democracy Undone | Back Channels vs. Democracy
Mixed U.S. Signals Helped Tilt Haiti Toward Chaos

By WALT BOGDANICH and JENNY NORDBERG

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — As his plane lifted off the runway here in
August 2003, Brian Dean Curran rewound his last, bleak days as the
American ambassador in this tormented land.

Haiti, Mr. Curran feared, was headed toward a cataclysm, another violent
uncoupling of its once jubilant embrace of democracy more than a decade
before. He had come here hoping to help that tenuous democracy grow. Now
he was leaving in anger and foreboding.

Seven months later, an accused death squad leader helped armed rebels
topple the president, Jean-Bertrand Aristide. Haiti, never a model of
stability, soon dissolved into a state so lawless it stunned even those
who had pushed for the removal of Mr. Aristide, a former Roman Catholic
priest who rose to power as the champion and hero of Haiti's poor.

Today, the capital, Port-au-Prince, is virtually paralyzed by
kidnappings, spreading panic among rich and poor alike. Corrupt police
officers in uniform have assassinated people on the streets in the light
of day. The chaos is so extreme and the interim government so
dysfunctional that voting to elect a new one has already been delayed
four times. The latest date is Feb. 7.

Yet even as Haiti prepares to pick its first elected president since the
rebellion two years ago, questions linger about the circumstances of Mr.
Aristide's ouster — and especially why the Bush administration, which
has made building democracy a centerpiece of its foreign policy in Iraq
and around the world, did not do more to preserve it so close to its
shores.

The Bush administration has said that while Mr. Aristide was deeply
flawed, its policy was always to work with him as Haiti's democratically
elected leader.

But the administration's actions in Haiti did not always match its
words. Interviews and a review of government documents show that a
democracy-building group close to the White House, and financed by
American taxpayers, undercut the official United States policy and the
ambassador assigned to carry it out.

As a result, the United States spoke with two sometimes contradictory
voices in a country where its words carry enormous weight. That mixed
message, the former American ambassador said, made efforts to foster
political peace "immeasurably more difficult." Without a political
agreement, a weak government was destabilized further, leaving it
vulnerable to the rebels.

Mr. Curran accused the democracy-building group, the International
Republican Institute, of trying to undermine the reconciliation process
after disputed 2000 Senate elections threw Haiti into a violent
political crisis. The group's leader in Haiti, Stanley Lucas, an avowed
Aristide opponent from the Haitian elite, counseled the opposition to
stand firm, and not work with Mr. Aristide, as a way to cripple his
government and drive him from power, said Mr. Curran, whose account is
supported in crucial parts by other diplomats and opposition figures.
Many of these people spoke publicly about the events for the first time.

Mr. Curran, a 30-year Foreign Service veteran and a Clinton appointee
retained by President Bush, also accused Mr. Lucas of telling the
opposition that he, not the ambassador, represented the Bush
administration's true intentions.

Records show that Mr. Curran warned his bosses in Washington that Mr.
Lucas's behavior was contrary to American policy and "risked us being
accused of attempting to destabilize the government." Yet when he asked
for tighter controls over the I.R.I. in the summer of 2002, he hit a
roadblock after high officials in the State Department and National
Security Council expressed support for the pro-democracy group, an
American aid official wrote at the time.

The International Republican Institute is one of several prominent
nonprofit groups that receive federal funds to help countries develop
the mechanisms of democracy, like campaigning and election monitoring.
Of all the groups, though, the I.R.I. is closest to the administration.
President Bush picked its president, Lorne W. Craner, to run his
administration's democracy-building efforts. The institute, which works
in more than 60 countries, has seen its federal financing nearly triple
in three years, from $26 million in 2003 to $75 million in 2005. Last
spring, at an I.R.I. fund-raiser, Mr. Bush called democracy-building "a
growth industry."

These groups walk a fine line. Under federal guidelines, they are
supposed to nurture democracy in a nonpartisan way, lest they be accused
of meddling in the affairs of sovereign nations. But in Haiti, according
to diplomats, Mr. Lucas actively worked against President Aristide.

Colin L. Powell, the secretary of state at the time, said that the
American policy in Haiti was what Mr. Curran believed it to be, and that
the United States stood by Mr. Aristide until the last few days of his
presidency.

But in a recent interview, Otto J. Reich, who served under Mr. Powell as
the State Department's top official on Latin America, said that a subtle
shift in policy away from Mr. Aristide had taken place after Mr. Bush
became president — as Mr. Curran and others had suspected.

"There was a change in policy that was perhaps not well perceived by
some people in the embassy," Mr. Reich said, referring to Mr. Curran.
"We wanted to change, to give the Haitians an opportunity to choose a
democratic leader," said Mr. Reich, one of a group of newly ascendant
policy makers who feared the rise of leftist governments in Latin
America.

Told of that statement, Mr. Curran said, "That Reich would admit that a
different policy was in effect totally vindicates my suspicions, as well
as confirms what an amateur crowd was in charge in Washington."

Bridging the divide between Mr. Aristide and his opponents would have
been difficult in even the best of circumstances. But what emerges from
the events in Haiti is a portrait of how the effort to nurture democracy
became entangled in the ideological wars and partisan rivalries of
Washington.

"What you had was the constant undermining of the credibility of the
negotiators," said Luigi R. Einaudi, a respected veteran diplomat who
led the international effort to find a political settlement on behalf of
the Organization of American States.

The I.R.I. did not permit The New York Times to interview Mr. Lucas, but
in a response to written questions, he denied trying to undermine
American policy. "I never told the opposition not to negotiate," Mr.
Lucas said in an e-mail message.

Georges A. Fauriol, the I.R.I.'s senior vice president, said that his
group faithfully tried to represent "the ideals of the American
democratic system," and that he personally pressed the opposition to
compromise. Mr. Fauriol blamed "innuendos and political interests" for
the complaints of Mr. Curran and others. He also said Mr. Curran never
gave him the specifics that he needed to act against Mr. Lucas, whom he
called "one of our best political party trainers."

In Haiti, Mr. Lucas's partisan activities were well known. Evans Paul, a
leader of the anti-Aristide movement and now a presidential candidate,
said Mr. Lucas's stand against negotiating was "a bit too harsh" even
for some in the opposition.

Jean-Max Bellerive, an official in three Haitian administrations,
including Mr. Aristide's, added, "He said there was a big plan for Haiti
that came from Washington, that Aristide would not finish his mandate."
As for the ambassador, Mr. Bellerive said, "he told me that Curran was
of no importance, that he did not fit in the big picture."

Micha Gaillard, a former spokesman for the main anti-Aristide coalition,
the Democratic Convergence, said Mr. Lucas went so far as to act as its
representative in Washington.

With Washington's approval, Mr. Lucas used taxpayer money to fly
hundreds of opposition members — but no one from Mr. Aristide's
Lavalas party — to a hotel in the Dominican Republic for political
training that began in late 2002. Two leaders of the armed rebellion
told The Times that they were in the same hotel during some of those
meetings, but did not attend.

The I.R.I. said the sessions were held outside Haiti because Lavalas had
physically threatened its staff, including Mr. Lucas. But another
American democracy-building group, the National Democratic Institute,
said it was able to work successfully with Mr. Aristide's party in
Haiti.

Mr. Curran left Haiti in August 2003 for a new assignment, and by fall,
Mr. Aristide's political opponents had decided there was little point in
negotiating. Still, there was one last hope. Mr. Einaudi persuaded some
opposition leaders to meet with Mr. Aristide at the home of the new
American ambassador, James B. Foley. But while the president was
prepared to give up much of his power, Mr. Einaudi said, American
officials "pulled the rug out," abruptly canceling the meeting without
consulting him.

Several months later, the rebels marched on Port-au-Prince and Mr.
Aristide left Haiti on a plane provided by the American government.
Since then, Haiti has become even more chaotic, said Marc L. Bazin, an
elder statesman of Haitian politics.

"I was suspicious that it would not be good," Mr. Bazin said. "But that
bad — no."

Added Mr. Einaudi, "Building democracy in Haiti now is going to take a
very long time."

A Voice for the Poor

After two centuries of foreign occupiers, dictators, generals, a
self-appointed president for life and the overthrow of more than 30
governments, Haitians finally had the chance in 1990 to elect the leader
they wanted. The people chose Mr. Aristide, a priest who had been
expelled from his Roman Catholic order for his fiery orations of
liberation theology.

"He was espousing change in Haiti, fundamental populist change," said
Robert Maguire, a Haiti scholar who has criticized American policy as
insufficiently concerned with Haiti's poor. "Right away, he was viewed
as a threat by very powerful forces in Haiti."

President Aristide promised not only to give voice to the poor in the
poorest country in the Western Hemisphere, but also to raise the minimum
wage and force businesses to pay taxes. He rallied supporters with
heated attacks on the United States, a tacit supporter of past
dictatorships and a major influence in Haitian affairs since the Marines
occupied the country from 1915 to 1934.

"He wasn't going to be beholden to the United States, and so he was
going to be trouble," said Senator Christopher J. Dodd of Connecticut, a
Democratic critic of Bush administration policy on Latin America. "We
had interests and ties with some of the very strong financial interests
in the country, and Aristide was threatening them." Those interests,
mostly in the textile and electronic assembly businesses, sold many of
their products cheap to the United States.

When the Haitian military, with the support of the business elite,
overthrew Mr. Aristide after just shy of eight months in office, the
administration of George H. W. Bush criticized the loss of Haiti's first
democracy, but did not intervene militarily.

Raymond A. Joseph, the current interim government's ambassador to the
United States, recalls a speech that Mr. Aristide gave in September
1991. "That's the speech," Mr. Joseph said, "that triggered the coup
d'état against him, where he said, 'Whenever you feel the heat under
your feet, turn your eyes to the mountains where the wealthy are,
they're responsible for you. Go give them what they deserve.' "

After the coup came repression. In the first two years, the United
States Coast Guard intercepted 41,000 Haitians at sea. Pressured by the
Congressional Black Caucus, President Bill Clinton sent troops to help
restore Mr. Aristide to power in 1994.

Mr. Aristide quickly disbanded the country's most powerful institution
— the military. It did not help that Mr. Aristide — and for that
matter, Haiti — had little experience with the give and take of
democracy.

"He was not trained to be a politician, he was trained to be a priest,"
Mr. Einaudi said. "So that when he got involved heavily in politics, he
didn't know very much about the games politicians play."

Mr. Aristide returned with only one year left in his term, and because
the Haitian Constitution barred him from consecutive terms, his ally
René Préval was voted into office.

But the international community believed that Mr. Aristide remained a
real power, and it had grown frustrated with the government's
shortcomings. That frustration built to the parliamentary elections of
2000. Mr. Aristide's party declared victory in 18 of 19 Senate races,
even though international observers said runoffs were required in 8 of
them because no one had won a clear majority. Angry Lavalas opponents,
in turn, boycotted presidential elections in November; Mr. Aristide won
overwhelmingly.

Tensions rose further as international lenders withheld aid from the
Aristide government. "We could not deliver any goods, services to the
people," said Leslie Voltaire, a former minister under Mr. Aristide.

Even Mr. Bazin, a former World Bank official who ran against Mr.
Aristide in 1990, criticized the cutoff. "The poorer you are, the less
democratic you are," he said.

Indeed, the combination of a strengthening opposition, a weaker
government and an attempted coup drove Mr. Aristide deeper into the arms
of his most fervent supporters in the slums. "The urban gangs received
money, logistical support and weapons from the national police because
the government saw them as a bulwark against a coup," the International
Crisis Group, a conflict resolution organization that studies Haiti and
other trouble spots, said in a 2005 report.

When some Aristide supporters engaged in criminal acts, including
killings and drug trafficking, the president was often unwilling or
unable to stop them. That eroded his popular support.

A simple dispute over a handful of Senate seats had now morphed into a
showdown over the very legitimacy of Mr. Aristide's presidency.

It was in these months that two ingredients were added to the roiling
Haitian stew: a new American ambassador, Brian Dean Curran, arrived in
Port-au-Prince and a Republican administration was inaugurated in
Washington.

An Ambassador's Mission

Mr. Curran began his assignment at the start of 2001. To understand the
country better, he made a point of learning Creole, the language of the
poor, even though diplomats and the ruling elite conversed in French.

"He was amazing to watch," one former government official said. "He
would walk in a classroom with Haitian children and take over from the
teacher."

Mr. Curran said he wanted to believe in Mr. Aristide but slowly became
disillusioned. "I had many conversations with him about the police,
about human rights abuses," Mr. Curran said. "And in the end, he
disappointed me."

Even so, Mr. Curran said, his mission was clear. "The promotion of
democracy was at the very heart of what I was doing in Haiti," he said.
Clear, too, was how to go about that: supporting Mr. Aristide's right to
office while working to foster a compromise. "That was the officially
stated policy," Mr. Curran said. "Those were my instructions."

Mr. Curran was supposed to have help from the I.R.I., which had been
active in Haiti since 1990. Along with the National Democratic
Institute, the I.R.I. was formed in the early 1980's after President
Ronald Reagan called on Americans to fight totalitarianism.

Its board includes Republican foreign-policy heavyweights and lobbyists,
and its chairman is Senator John McCain, the Arizona Republican, who did
not answer requests for an interview. The group's financing comes from
the Agency for International Development, as well as the State
Department, foundations and corporations like Halliburton and Chevron.

More than its sister group, the International Republican Institute tends
to work in countries "it views as being strategically important to U.S.
national foreign policy interests," according to a 1999 report by the
international development agency.

The I.R.I.'s Republican affiliations did not go unnoticed on the streets
of Port-au-Prince. Graffiti condemning the I.R.I. had been showing up
for some time, the work of Aristide supporters. "I think they distrusted
I.R.I. as an organization because they were affiliated with the
Republican Party, and Lavalas just felt the Republican Party was out to
get them," said David Adams, a former A.I.D. mission director in Haiti.

And there was one more reason, he said: Stanley Lucas, the I.R.I.'s
leader in Haiti.

Mr. Lucas, who said he grew up in the United States and Haiti and worked
as a part-time Haitian civil servant, came from a land-owning family.
That background, along with his politics, "sends a very provocative
message, I think, to those supporting Aristide," said Mr. Maguire, who
runs the international affairs program at Trinity University in
Washington. Mr. Lucas joined the I.R.I. in 1993 and took over its Haiti
program five years later.

With his good looks, sociability and fluency in Creole, French and
English, he moved easily between Port-au-Prince and Capitol Hill. "He's
the Denzel Washington of Haiti," one A.I.D. official said. That he was a
karate champion only added to his aura.

The anti-Aristide message had currency around Washington. Mr. Einaudi,
the veteran diplomat, recalled attending the I.R.I.'s 2001 fund-raising
dinner and being surrounded by a half-dozen Haitian businessmen sounding
a common cry: "We were foolish to think that we could do anything with
Aristide. That it was impossible to negotiate with him. That it was
necessary to get rid of him."

A year later, the I.R.I. created a stir when it issued a press release
praising the attempted overthrow of Hugo Chávez, the elected president
of Venezuela and a confrontational populist, who, like Mr. Aristide, was
seen as a threat by some in Washington. The institute has since told The
Times that praising the attempted coup was wrong.

Mr. Lucas had been to Venezuela seven times for the I.R.I., but he was
not there at the time of the coup. Instead, he was focusing on Haiti,
where his work was creating another stir for the institute.

No Negotiations, No Compromise

In early 2002, Mr. Curran said, he began receiving troubling reports
about Mr. Lucas. As he urged the opposition in Haiti "to show
flexibility," the ambassador said, Mr. Lucas was sending the opposite
instructions: "Hang tough. Don't compromise. In the end, we'll get rid
of Aristide."

As his concern mounted, Mr. Curran asked that Mr. Lucas be removed from
the I.R.I.'s Haiti program. The institute resisted.

Mr. Fauriol, the institute's senior vice president, said Mr. Curran had
not been forthcoming with information about Mr. Lucas. "Specifics we've
never been given," he said, adding that Mr. Lucas's critics probably did
not know him very well.

"We don't have any questions about the quality of his work," Mr. Fauriol
said. "There is something of a cottage industry that's sort of built
around what he has or hasn't done, perceptions, rumors, whisperings. And
it has sort of created a profile of an individual that is, shall we say,
greatly exaggerated — simply not true."

Mr. Curran countered that he had ample witnesses to Mr. Lucas's
behavior. And opposition leaders said in interviews that Mr. Lucas had
actively opposed a political settlement.

"Mr. Lucas was of the opinion negotiations would be a bad idea; I was of
the opinion we should have negotiated to show our good faith," said Mr.
Paul, a former mayor of Port-au-Prince, who nonetheless praised Mr.
Lucas's support for the opposition against Mr. Aristide.

Mr. Gaillard, the former spokesman for the Democratic Convergence, the
main anti-Aristide coalition, said he also did not like that Mr. Lucas
was acting as the Haitian opposition's representative in Washington.
"That really disturbed us, because we didn't know exactly what he was
saying," he said.

Mr. Bazin added that Mr. Lucas "was prepared to act aggressively to get
Aristide out of power."

Mr. Einaudi said he found Mr. Lucas's role disturbing.

"Stanley Lucas is a very bright man, very able man," he said. But, he
said, "I thought it was a mistake the way Dean Curran did, I think, that
he should become the person in charge of I.R.I.'s policies and
activities."

At the A.I.D. office in Port-au-Prince, the agency's director, Mr.
Adams, said he found Mr. Lucas difficult to deal with.

"When Stanley tells you something, it's kind of hard to know exactly
what the kernel of truth is," Mr. Adams said.

With the I.R.I. standing behind Mr. Lucas, Mr. Curran complained to his
superiors in Washington — through cables, e-mail messages and, he
said, in meetings.

In a July 2002 cable, he wrote: "I continue to have grave misgivings
about the participation of an individual whose questionable behavior
could be to the detriment of U.S. interests. The USAID director shares
my concerns."

Mr. Curran also cautioned that Mr. Lucas's continued participation
"will, at best, lead to confusion as to U.S. policy objectives, which
continue to eschew unconstitutional acts and favor negotiations and, at
worst, contribute to political destabilization in Haiti."

The Old Policy Makers Return

Mr. Curran sent his cables to the Bush administration's Latin American
policy team, records show. In addition to Mr. Reich, then assistant
secretary of state for Latin American affairs, that group included
Elliott L. Abrams, a special assistant to the president and senior
director for democracy and human rights, and Daniel W. Fisk, a deputy to
Mr. Reich.

These men were veteran fighters against the spread of leftist political
ideology in Latin America, beginning with Fidel Castro and Cuba. Mr.
Fisk's former boss, Jesse Helms, then a Republican senator from North
Carolina, had once called Mr. Aristide a "psychopath," based on a C.I.A.
report about his mental condition that turned out to be false.

In the 1980's, Mr. Reich and Mr. Abrams had become ensnared in
investigations of Reagan administration activities opposing the
socialist government of Nicaragua. The comptroller general determined in
1987 that a public diplomacy office run by the Cuban-born Mr. Reich had
"engaged in prohibited, covert propaganda activities." In 1991, Mr.
Abrams pleaded guilty to withholding information from Congress in
connection with the Iran-contra affair. He was pardoned by the first
President Bush.

Now, with the advent of the second Bush administration, Mr. Reich, Mr.
Abrams and their colleagues were back in power. The Clinton era, they
felt, had been a bad one for United States interests in Latin America.

"The United States had squandered a good deal of its credibility by its
support for Aristide during the Clinton years," said Roger F. Noriega, a
former senior Helms aide who replaced Mr. Reich at the State Department
in 2003. "We essentially held his coat while stuffing millions of
dollars in it while he terrorized the opposition."

At the time of Mr. Curran's complaints, the I.R.I.'s current president,
Mr. Craner, was running the State Department's democracy and human
rights program. He questioned the charges leveled by Mr. Curran, who
goes by his middle name, Dean.

"I'm curious about why Dean has a very different opinion of Stanley from
his bosses," Mr. Craner said. He added that neither Mr. Noriega nor Mr.
Reich had come to him or the institute and complained, and he urged The
Times to call them.

Mr. Noriega said Mr. Curran had not worked for him, but offered that he
had seen no evidence of misconduct by the I.R.I. Mr. Reich was more
specific about Mr. Curran.

"He never expressed any problems with Stanley Lucas to me, and I was his
boss," Mr. Reich said. Asked why his name showed up on cables as having
received Mr. Curran's complaints, and why Mr. Curran's cables detailed
discussions with him, Mr. Reich replied: "I have absolutely no
recollection of that. I'm not questioning it, I just have no
recollection of that."

Mr. Reich said he could not understand why Mr. Curran would focus on
"some low-level bureaucrat" at the I.R.I. rather than the misconduct of
Mr. Aristide. That, he asserted, was why the United States had gradually
backed away from Mr. Aristide. "The crime is the Clinton administration
supported him as long as it did," Mr. Reich said.

Mr. Curran said it was "a patent lie" that he had never complained to
Mr. Reich.

Records show that in the summer of 2002, Mr. Curran sought tighter
control over the I.R.I. before signing off on a politically delicate
program that Mr. Lucas had organized in the Dominican Republic to teach
the opposition the art of campaigning.

Washington officials opposed Mr. Curran's request. Not only was there
pressure from Congress, according to an e-mail message from Mr. Adams of
A.I.D., but "there were senior State/N.S.C. officials who were
sympathetic to I.R.I.'s position as well."

Mr. Curran did secure several concessions suggested by Mr. Reich,
including that Mr. Lucas would be barred from participating in the
program for 120 days and would be dismissed from the I.R.I.'s Haiti
program if he misbehaved, records show. Even so, Mr. Curran thought the
grant was a bad idea if Mr. Lucas remained involved.

The Training Next Door

Haiti has had a long, tense relationship with the Dominican Republic,
its more affluent neighbor on the island of Hispaniola. Haitians who
work there are often mistreated, human rights groups say, and the
country has been a haven for those accused of trying to overthrow
Haitian governments.

In December 2002, the I.R.I. began training Haitian political parties
there, at the Hotel Santo Domingo, owned by the Fanjul family, which
fled Cuba under Mr. Castro and now runs a giant sugar-cane business.

The training was unusual for more than its location: only Mr. Aristide's
opponents, not members of his party, were invited.

Institute officials said this was because the opposition parties were
less powerful and needed more help. The goal, Mr. Fauriol said, "was to
broaden, if you will, the ability of various actors to participate in
the political process."

They also said they were not required to work with Lavalas because its
members condoned violence and the institute's workers were threatened,
which was why the meetings were held outside Haiti. And they pointed out
that no American officials had objected to excluding Lavalas.

There were perhaps a dozen sessions, spread over a year, the institute
said. Hundreds of opposition members came.

"The training programs were really run-of-the-mill political party
programs," Mr. Fauriol said. To the Dominican ambassador who issued the
travelers' visas in Haiti, though, the meetings "clearly conveyed a
confrontation, not a dialogue."

"For the opposition, it was interesting to know that the American
government, or people from the American government, supported and
validated its politics," the former ambassador, Alberto Despradel, said
last fall at the Hotel Santo Domingo.

Among the trainers brought in was Brian Berry, who worked on George W.
Bush's 1994 primary campaign for Texas governor.

Mr. Berry had an interest in the Caribbean. He said he had a small bag
of sand from the Bay of Pigs; he said he looked forward to returning it
to "a free Cuba beach" when Mr. Castro was gone. Mr. Berry said he
volunteered for I.R.I., to further the cause of democracy.

Mr. Bazin, a moderate Aristide opponent, sent representatives to the
Hotel Santo Domingo. They came away believing that more was going on
than routine political training.

"The report I got from my people was that there were two meetings —
open meetings where democracy would be discussed and closed meetings
where other things would be discussed, and we are not invited to the
other meetings," said Mr. Bazin, who is now running for president as the
candidate of a faction of Lavalas.

Mr. Bazin said people who had attended the closed meetings told him that
"there are things you don't know" — that Mr. Aristide would ultimately
be removed and that he should stop calling for compromise.

Afterward, he said, he spoke with Mr. Curran. "I asked him, "How many
policies do they have in the U.S.?' " Mr. Bazin said.

Mr. Lucas said Mr. Bazin's comments should be viewed in light of his
alliance with some former Aristide supporters. And Mr. Fauriol denied
that secret meetings had occurred. Also, A.I.D.'s inspector general said
in a 2004 report that the training sessions did not violate government
regulations.

But by attending the first training session, Mr. Lucas violated his
120-day prohibition.

Mr. Curran sent a blistering message to Washington. "I.R.I. has set us
on a collision course today," he wrote, adding, "I am afraid this
episode brings into question the good faith of I.R.I. in promising to
control Stanley's renegade activities of the past."

He asked that the institute's program be canceled or Mr. Lucas
dismissed. Neither happened.

Mr. Fauriol apologized, attributing the violation to a simple
misunderstanding of when the exclusion period began. Besides, one
American official said, Mr. Lucas had only a minor role in the meetings.

To Mr. Curran, however, any involvement was a problem. "How can we
control what is said in private conversations?" he wrote to Washington,
"Or what is conveyed by winks and nods?"

It turns out there was another matter, one that federal officials
apparently did not know about: two leaders of the armed rebels told The
Times they were spending time at the Hotel Santo Domingo while the
training was under way.

Guy Philippe, a former police commander who had fled Haiti after two
failed coup attempts, said in an interview that he had seen Mr. Lucas at
the hotel.

"I was living in the hotel, sleeping in the hotel," Mr. Philippe said.
"So I've seen him and his friends and those guys in the opposition, but
we didn't talk politics." He said he had not attended any I.R.I.
meetings.

Paul Arcelin, an architect of the rebellion, said he, too, had seen Mr.
Lucas at the hotel during the training sessions. In an interview there
last fall, Mr. Arcelin said, "I used to meet Stanley Lucas here in this
hotel, alone, sitting down talking about the future of Haiti." But he
said they had not discussed overthrowing Mr. Aristide.

Mr. Lucas said Mr. Arcelin showed up at an I.R.I. meeting and was told
to leave. He also disputed Mr. Philippe's account.

Several opposition activists said they wanted nothing to do with the
armed rebels. "Participation in our seminars was from a very restricted
list of people," Mr. Fauriol said.

The seminars were still under way in September 2003 when the Bush
administration sent a new ambassador to Haiti. Mr. Curran wanted to stay
longer, Mr. Reich said. But he said Mr. Curran was replaced because "we
did not think the ambassador was carrying out the new policy in the way
we wanted it carried out."

Mr. Powell disputed that, saying he recalled that Mr. Curran was not
removed because of a change in policy, but as part of a normal rotation.

Before leaving, Mr. Curran met with Haitian business leaders. "He made a
remarkable speech," Mr. Bazin said, recalling that Mr. Curran admonished
them not only for doing things "that are not acceptable, including
dealing with drug dealers," but also for listening to people who only
pretended to represent United States policy.

Mr. Curran called them "chimères of Washington" — invoking a word
commonly used to describe gang members loyal to Mr. Aristide.

"The Haitians, in their marvelous language, which is so full of
allusions and metaphor, have created this term for these people — the
chimères, the ghosts," Mr. Curran explained. "Because they're there and
they do things and they terrify you. And then they fade away."

Time Runs Out

The fall of 2003 was a perilous time for Haiti. In the north, the police
fought gun battles with a gang called the Cannibal Army. In the capital,
gangs professing loyalty to the Aristide government attacked journalists
and protesting university students. Across the Dominican border, the
rebels waited for the right moment to attack.

Over four years, Mr. Einaudi, a former acting secretary general of the
Organization of American States, had made some 30 trips to Haiti trying
to prevent such a moment. Yet he had failed. Mr. Aristide was finally
willing to share power, Mr. Einaudi said, but the opposition,
emboldened, felt no need to deal with him.

With time running out, Mr. Einaudi hit upon a new approach — one he
hoped would take advantage of the arrival of the new American
ambassador, Mr. Foley. Mr. Einaudi invited Mr. Aristide and his
opponents to meet at the ambassador's home — a clear signal that the
United States wanted negotiations, not regime change.

When members of both sides agreed to come, there was a glimmer of hope,
Mr. Einaudi said.


Terence A. Todman, a retired American diplomat who also worked in Haiti
for the O.A.S, said: "We knew there would be shouting. But at least they
were together."

Then, suddenly, it was over. In a move that stunned Mr. Einaudi, the
United States canceled the meeting, killing "what was in fact my last
move," he said.

His colleague was more blunt. "That blew it," said Mr. Todman, who like
Mr. Einaudi was speaking publicly about the scuttled meeting for the
first time. "That was the end of any effort to get them together."

Mr. Noriega, who had replaced Mr. Reich at the State Department, said in
an interview that the administration called off the meeting after
talking to Aristide opponents. It was "going to be a failure for us and
wreck our credibility," he said.

Representative Bill Delahunt, a Massachusetts Democrat who monitored
Haitian elections in 2000, had a different reaction when told of the
canceled meeting.

"If there was a last opportunity and it wasn't acted upon and we did not
pursue it, then that would be a stain upon the United States," he said.

The Rebels' Final Push

Several months later, the rebels crossed into Haiti and began their
final push. There were perhaps 200 in all, many of them former soldiers
in the army Mr. Aristide had disbanded years before. Leading the final
assault were Mr. Philippe and Louis-Jodel Chamblain.

Rights groups have identified Mr. Chamblain as the leader of death
squads when the military ran Haiti after Mr. Aristide's first ouster in
1991. He had twice been convicted in absentia — for his role in a
massacre in Gonaïves in 1994 and in connection with the 1993 killing of
an Aristide supporter.

As for Mr. Philippe, Mr. Curran said he was suspected of having had ties
to drug traffickers before leaving Haiti after a failed coup attempt.

Mr. Philippe, who is now running for president of Haiti, denies any
connection to the drug trade, pointing out that he has never been
charged with such a crime.

On Feb. 19, 2004, the rebels attacked the jail in Fort-Liberté, near
the border. Without the military to defend the country, the government
had to rely on the poorly equipped police, its ranks weakened by
corruption. Jacques Édouard, the jail supervisor, said he was forced to
release 73 prisoners, including convicted murderers.

Some prisoners joined the rebels, while others took over the city,
robbing residents and burning homes until the United Nations arrived a
month later, said Andrea Loi Valenzuela, a United Nations worker there.

When rebels reached the city of Cap Haitien on Feb. 22, the police
chief, Hugues Gabriel, told his 28 officers to flee. "They had machine
guns," he said. "We have little handguns with little ammunition."

In Washington, the Bush administration voiced its official policy. "We
cannot buy into a proposition that says the elected president must be
forced out of office by thugs and those who do not respect law and are
bringing terrible violence to the Haitian people," Secretary of State
Powell said.

But when Mr. Aristide asked for international troops, he did not get
them.

Mr. Powell said he continued to press for a political settlement to keep
Mr. Aristide in office. "We were doing everything we could to support
his incumbency," he said in a recent interview. Only in the last days,
when Port-au-Prince appeared "on the verge of a serious blood bath," he
said, did the United States explore other options. "There comes a point
when you have to make a judgment as to whether you should continue to
support President Aristide or whether it is better to try another
route," he said.

On Feb. 29 — Mr. Philippe's birthday — the United States flew
President Aristide to exile in South Africa.

Unanswered Questions

Almost immediately, Congressional Democrats and Caricom, the association
of Caribbean nations, called for an independent inquiry into Mr.
Aristide's ouster and why Haiti's neighbors had not come to its aid.

"It doesn't add up for the greatest country in the world to be fearful
of 200 thugs, my goodness," said Senator Barbara Boxer, Democrat of
California.

The State Department said there was nothing to investigate. "I think the
U.S. role was clear," a spokesman, Richard A. Boucher, said at the time,
adding, "The focus needs to be on moving forward."

Two years later, there has been no inquiry. Caricom refuses to recognize
Haiti's interim government. And questions about Mr. Aristide's fall
remain unanswered.

Among them is what the Bush administration knew about the rebels, who
plotted in the Dominican Republic, a country friendly to the United
States.

Their activities there had not gone unnoticed by Haitian authorities.
Edwin M. Paraison, a former Haitian diplomat in the Dominican Republic,
said his government contacted authorities there three times to express
concern "about subversive actions that were being planned on the
Dominican territory." But, he said, little was done.

American officials said they did not take the rebels terribly seriously.
"Our sense was that they were not a large force, not a well-trained
force, and not in any way a threat to the stability then in Haiti," said
Mr. Foley, the American ambassador at the time. "Now that proved to be
otherwise."

Mr. Despradel, the former Dominican ambassador, said American
authorities had to have known what the rebels were doing.

"Given the intelligence the United States has in place throughout the
Caribbean and their advanced technology that lets them hear a mosquito
in outer space — I think Guy Philippe is bigger than that," he said.

At a Senate hearing in 2004, Mr. Noriega was asked if he knew of any
ties between Mr. Philippe and the I.R.I. — specifically Mr. Lucas —
during the training meetings in the Dominican Republic. He said he did
not.

"If it were the case, we would certainly stop it," Mr. Noriega said. "We
knew who Guy Philippe was and that he had a criminal background."

The inspector general of A.I.D. also said that, based on interviews with
American officials and a review of federal records, it found no evidence
of contacts between the men during the year or so the sessions were
taking place, a view echoed by Mr. Fauriol. "If they occurred, they
would have been against any sense of responsibility of the I.R.I. and
any guidance from us," he said. "I don't think those meetings occurred."

And in his e-mail response, Mr. Lucas himself said, "To be clear, I do
not know Guy Philippe." He added that he might have met him once in the
1990's when Mr. Philippe was a police commander in Port-au-Prince.

Mr. Philippe tells a different story. In interviews with The Times, he
called Mr. Lucas "a good friend" whom he has known much of his life. "He
used to be my teacher in Ping-Pong," Mr. Philippe said.

Not only did he say he saw Mr. Lucas during the training at the Hotel
Santo Domingo; he said he met with him once or twice in 2000 or 2001,
while in exile in Ecuador. "He was working for I.R.I.," Mr. Philippe
said. "It was not a planned meeting." They did not discuss politics, he
said, adding, "It's like someone I knew when I was young."

Mr. Voltaire, the former minister in the Aristide administration,
recalled meeting Mr. Lucas at a diplomatic reception in Lima, Peru, in
September 2001. He said Mr. Lucas told him he was headed to Ecuador to
meet with a small group of former Haitian policemen who had trained
there. Mr. Philippe was known to belong to that group.

Mr. Craner, the I.R.I. president, said Mr. Lucas might have been in a
bar in Ecuador when Mr. Philippe was present, though Mr. Lucas could not
be sure. Mr. Lucas said, "We dug down deep into scenarios where Guy
Philippe was potentially present in the room, even if I could not
confirm that." He did acknowledge being in Peru during the time frame
cited by Mr. Voltaire.

Dashing Hopes for Calm

One day last August, Haiti's interim prime minister, Gérard Latortue,
invited a Times reporter into a private cabinet meeting. With his
ministers seated around a long wooden table, Mr. Latortue said he wanted
to deliver a personal message: Haiti was safe to visit now.

"I really would like people to know now that there is an improvement,"
said the prime minister, a former Florida businessman and United Nations
official. "Go where you want to go and after, report what you have seen
— whatever it is." And he added, "We are living in very exceptional
times."

Several days later, in a Port-au-Prince neighborhood, uniformed riot
police officers swept through a crowd at a soccer match, singling out
people to kill — with guns and machetes — outside the stadium.
Unable to leave, people screamed and huddled on the ground. An estimated
10 people were killed at the event, which had been financed by the
United States to promote peace in the area.

Things have only deteriorated from there. Kidnapping gangs hungry for
ransom money have waged an expanding war on the capital. Several months
ago, the Haitian police chief, Mario Andrésol, said a quarter of his
force was corrupt or tied to the kidnappers. Assassinations, mob
violence, torture and arbitrary arrests have created a "catastrophic"
human rights problem, a top United Nations official said in October.

After Mr. Aristide left, expressions of hope for a more stable, peaceful
Haiti came from Haitian business leaders and officials in other
countries, including the United States. "The Bush administration
believes that if we all do our part and do it right, Haiti will have the
democracy it deserves," Mr. Noriega told the American Enterprise
Institute in April 2004.

Those hopes have fallen short at nearly every turn, and for reasons that
go beyond Haiti's desperate poverty. The interim government is widely
viewed as politicized and inept. The local and international security
forces are undermanned and overmatched by the proliferation of guns and
drugs. The United States, which sent in troops to help stabilize the
country immediately after Mr. Aristide's ouster, pulled them out several
months later, even though they command unparalleled respect in Haiti.

Mr. Latortue's government, set up as an unelected caretaker, dashed any
hope of reconciliation when the prime minister praised the rebels as
"freedom fighters." Then, Mr. Chamblain, the rebel convicted twice in
absentia for his role in political killings, was acquitted of one murder
in a retrial that rights groups called a sham. His other conviction was
dismissed as well.

At the same time, Mr. Aristide's former prime minister, Yvon Neptune,
was jailed for a year without charges, prompting an international
outcry. Only after a hunger strike left him near death did the
government bring murder-related charges. Another prominent Aristide
supporter, the Rev. Gérard Jean-Juste, has been repeatedly arrested;
Amnesty International calls Father Jean-Juste, who has leukemia, "a
prisoner of conscience."

Still, the Latortue government cannot be blamed for all Haiti's
immediate problems.

Juan Gabriel Valdés, a Chilean who leads the United Nations mission in
Haiti, said the country needed 25,000 to 30,000 police officers, more
than three times the current number. International aid — $1.08 billion
has been pledged — has been slow to arrive in the slums, where
violence incubates.

"If Haiti underscored anything it is that security and development must
go hand in hand," said Caroline Anstey, director of the World Bank's
Caribbean unit. "Better security would have meant faster development
results on the ground. Faster development would have contributed to
better security."

The United States has played a diminished role since its troops left in
mid-2004. It pledged $230 million to Haiti from July 2004 to September
2006, A.I.D. said.

But Mark L. Schneider, senior vice president of the International Crisis
Group, said the United States pulled its forces out too soon, turning
the job over to United Nations peacekeepers while the country was still
in the grip of armed conflict.

On Jan. 24, a State Department spokesman, Sean McCormack, said United
Nations forces "are doing a good job," adding, "I take issue with this
idea that somehow the United States has not been deeply involved."

Yet the violence in Haiti, especially the kidnappings, is eating away at
society.

A reporter for The Times was with United Nations troops in Bel Air, a
Port-au-Prince slum, when they found and freed André Boujour, 41, who
said he had been kidnapped two weeks earlier and held in a 10-by-10-foot
hut, accessible only by a narrow path through a warren of tightly packed
shacks.

Mr. Boujour said he was abducted after delivering several thousand
dollars he had raised from friends and family to free his kidnapped
sister.

'A Tragedy of Partisanship'

When Mr. Curran and Mr. Einaudi went to Haiti, they said, they believed
that working with the elected government, whatever its flaws, would help
a young but already sputtering democracy take hold. They said they
believed that the people making policy in Washington shared that hope.
Then, they said, they ran into something larger.

"Haiti is a tragedy, and it is a tragedy of partisanship and hate and
hostility," Mr. Einaudi said. "These were divides among Haitians and
they are also divides among Americans, because Haiti came to symbolize
within the United States a point of friction between Democrats and
Republicans that did not facilitate bipartisanship or stable policy or
communication."

Mr. Fauriol said that the I.R.I., too, was frustrated with the interim
government. "We've got to deal with reality and the reality is rather
imperfect," he said. Even so, he wrote last spring that "Haiti's
democratic hopes have been given another chance." The institute's
activities in Haiti no longer include Mr. Lucas. He now works for the
group's Afghanistan program.

Both Mr. Reich and Mr. Noriega have left the government. Before Mr.
Noriega departed, he said America "will continue to be a firm supporter
of democracy in Haiti."

Mr. Maguire, the Haiti expert, is skeptical. "I don't see that the U.S.
is exporting democracy," he said. "I think it's more exporting a kind of
fear, that if we don't do the things the way the U.S. and powerful
interests in our country want us to do them, then perhaps we'll be as
expendable as Mr. Aristide was."

Mr. Curran has left the Foreign Service and is working for NATO. In the
final analysis, Mr. Einaudi said, the former American ambassador was
simply no match for the anti-Aristide lobby in Washington.

"The difficulty," Mr. Einaudi said, "is that he took on a battle that he
couldn't win."

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/01/29/international/americas/29haiti.html?_r=1&oref=slogin&pagewanted=all
Super User For Ever
2006-02-08 15:44:44 UTC
Permalink
Me gusto este asunto que reproduce el SUPER USER....
Her's your daddy: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeffrey_Dahmer
Interesante "prueba" de la "superioridad" del "hombre blanco":

Jeffrey Lionel Dahmer (May 21, 1960 – November 28, 1994) was an
American serial killer who murdered 17 men between 1978 and 1991
(...)
Many people were outraged to learn that Milwaukee police returned one of
Dahmer's naked, dazed, bleeding but yet still alive victims, Laotian
teenager Konerak Sinthasomphone, to Dahmer after Konerak had managed to
escape from his captor in 1991. Sinthasomphone did not speak English,
and Dahmer convinced officers that the 14-year-old boy was his adult
19-year-old homosexual lover. Later that night, Dahmer dismembered
Sinthasomphone and kept his skull as a souvenir. (It is notable that
Konerak Sinthasomphone was the younger brother of the boy Dahmer
molested in 1988.)

John Balcerzak (Elected president of the Milwaukee Police Association
union in May 2005) and Joseph Gabrish, the two police officers who
returned Sinthasomphone to Dahmer were terminated from the Milwaukee
Police Department after their actions were widely publicized. The
officers had never checked the boy's ID, had joked on the way back to
the station about the "homosexual lovers" and about "getting deloused,"
and had not noticed the smell of the decaying body Dahmer had hidden in
his apartment nor the drill holes already in Sinthasomphone's head. The
two officers appealed this termination and were reinstated with back
pay. The two officers were named officers of the year by the police
union for fighting a "righteous" battle to regain their jobs.
Super User For Ever
2006-02-02 19:04:26 UTC
Permalink
Post by CENTRO CONTRA EL KASTROFASCISMO
Amigos,
Nada mas farsante que los curas. Tratan de engañar a la gente
para disfrutar lo mas etenamente posible las mieles del poder.
Como toda mentira al final la gente despierta y el sistema se
cae.
"Dejeme ver si yo le he entendido bien: ud. tiene 32 a~nos
y ud. vive aun con su mami, ud. se pasa todo el dia en una
batola junto con un monton de otros tipos envueltos en
batolas tambien, y todos ustedes se la pasan en la botanica,
sin trabajar, ud. tiene una amiga que suele andar de puta,
y ud. solo la mantiene alrededor de ud. para que le lave
los pies y le traiga perfumes.... y la marca de beso que
ud. tiene en la majilla me dice que es de otro compa~nero
suyo.... Es eso correcto?...."
Miguel
2006-02-03 05:02:20 UTC
Permalink
Post by Super User For Ever
Post by CENTRO CONTRA EL KASTROFASCISMO
Amigos,
Nada mas farsante que los curas. Tratan de engañar a la gente
para disfrutar lo mas etenamente posible las mieles del poder.
Como toda mentira al final la gente despierta y el sistema se
cae.
"Dejeme ver si yo le he entendido bien: ud. tiene 32 a~nos
y ud. vive aun con su mami, ud. se pasa todo el dia en una
batola junto con un monton de otros tipos envueltos en
batolas tambien, y todos ustedes se la pasan en la botanica,
sin trabajar, ud. tiene una amiga que suele andar de puta,
y ud. solo la mantiene alrededor de ud. para que le lave
los pies y le traiga perfumes.... y la marca de beso que
ud. tiene en la majilla me dice que es de otro compa~nero
suyo.... Es eso correcto?...."
Esto es un SUPER ejemplo de un farsante comunista. El escrito es sobre
un farsante comunista y el SUPERDUPER lo cambia para "curas" Como no
puede discutir trata de cambiar la verdad.
Super User For Ever
2006-02-03 15:46:24 UTC
Permalink
Post by Miguel
Post by Super User For Ever
Post by CENTRO CONTRA EL KASTROFASCISMO
Amigos,
Nada mas farsante que los curas. Tratan de engañar a la gente
para disfrutar lo mas etenamente posible las mieles del poder.
Como toda mentira al final la gente despierta y el sistema se
cae.
"Dejeme ver si yo le he entendido bien: ud. tiene 32 a~nos
y ud. vive aun con su mami, ud. se pasa todo el dia en una
batola junto con un monton de otros tipos envueltos en
batolas tambien, y todos ustedes se la pasan en la botanica,
sin trabajar, ud. tiene una amiga que suele andar de puta,
y ud. solo la mantiene alrededor de ud. para que le lave
los pies y le traiga perfumes.... y la marca de beso que
ud. tiene en la majilla me dice que es de otro compa~nero
suyo.... Es eso correcto?...."
Esto es un SUPER ejemplo de un farsante comunista. El escrito es sobre
un farsante comunista y el SUPERDUPER lo cambia para "curas" Como no
puede discutir trata de cambiar la verdad.
Si, si, si.... me equivoque en un parrafo y "cambie" la "verdad"!
El parrafo dice asi:

ud. tiene una amiga que suele andar de puta,
y ud. SUPUESTAMENTE solo la mantiene alrededor
de ud. para que le lave los pies y le traiga
perfumes....

Co~no gracias, maria magdalena, digo miguelina, por haberme
ayudado a poner la "verdad" de nuevo en su podesto, pues sin
el "SUPUESTAMENTE", se trata de una falsedad....

QUE HARIA UNOS SIN ESTA GUSANAS DE SECRETARIAS....
Crusader
2006-02-06 03:39:08 UTC
Permalink
Ya sabemos la mierda humana que son ,la pregunta ahora es "Es sabio
dejarlos serguir jodiendo?
Post by Super User For Ever
Post by CENTRO CONTRA EL KASTROFASCISMO
Amigos,
Nada mas farsante que los curas. Tratan de engañar a la gente
para disfrutar lo mas etenamente posible las mieles del poder.
Como toda mentira al final la gente despierta y el sistema se
cae.
"Dejeme ver si yo le he entendido bien: ud. tiene 32 a~nos
y ud. vive aun con su mami, ud. se pasa todo el dia en una
batola junto con un monton de otros tipos envueltos en
batolas tambien, y todos ustedes se la pasan en la botanica,
sin trabajar, ud. tiene una amiga que suele andar de puta,
y ud. solo la mantiene alrededor de ud. para que le lave
los pies y le traiga perfumes.... y la marca de beso que
ud. tiene en la majilla me dice que es de otro compa~nero
suyo.... Es eso correcto?...."
Esto es un SUPER ejemplo de un farsante comunista. El escrito es sobre
un farsante comunista y el SUPERDUPER lo cambia para "curas" Como no
puede discutir trata de cambiar la verdad.
Miguel
2006-02-06 05:02:49 UTC
Permalink
Post by Crusader
Ya sabemos la mierda humana que son ,la pregunta ahora es "Es sabio
dejarlos serguir jodiendo?
Recomiendas que es mejor no contestarles? Cuando lo hago no es por
ellos, sino para que otros vean quienes son los que apoyan al regimen
castro fascista. Por lo general, les respondo enviandole un sitio de la
internet sobre Cuba libre, aunque no lo hice en esta ocasion.

A la marioneta del Super la tenian sin actuar por algun tiempo. De
pronto resucito. Yo pienso que algunas de estas caricaturas son
inventos de la Seguridad del Estado.

Correcta o no, esta ha sido la tactica que he utilizado. Esta gentuza
no puede dialogar porque tratan de defender lo que es imposible
defender: Un tirano con poderes absolutos por 47 a~nos que ha
destruido una nacion.

Por eso enseguida salen con los epitetos y con los insultos.
Post by Crusader
Post by Super User For Ever
Post by CENTRO CONTRA EL KASTROFASCISMO
Amigos,
Nada mas farsante que los curas. Tratan de engañar a la gente
para disfrutar lo mas etenamente posible las mieles del poder.
Como toda mentira al final la gente despierta y el sistema se
cae.
"Dejeme ver si yo le he entendido bien: ud. tiene 32 a~nos
y ud. vive aun con su mami, ud. se pasa todo el dia en una
batola junto con un monton de otros tipos envueltos en
batolas tambien, y todos ustedes se la pasan en la botanica,
sin trabajar, ud. tiene una amiga que suele andar de puta,
y ud. solo la mantiene alrededor de ud. para que le lave
los pies y le traiga perfumes.... y la marca de beso que
ud. tiene en la majilla me dice que es de otro compa~nero
suyo.... Es eso correcto?...."
Esto es un SUPER ejemplo de un farsante comunista. El escrito es sobre
un farsante comunista y el SUPERDUPER lo cambia para "curas" Como no
puede discutir trata de cambiar la verdad.
Super User For Ever
2006-02-06 19:55:23 UTC
Permalink
Post by Miguel
Post by Crusader
Ya sabemos la mierda humana que son ,la pregunta ahora es "Es sabio
dejarlos serguir jodiendo?
Recomiendas que es mejor no contestarles? Cuando lo hago no es por
ellos, sino para que otros vean quienes son los que apoyan al regimen
castro fascista.
aaaah.... ud. pertenece a aquellos que van donde las putas a
"salvarlas" de su "situacion" porque les dan pena, pero nunca
para hacer aquello....
Post by Miguel
Por lo general, les respondo enviandole un sitio de la
internet sobre Cuba libre, aunque no lo hice en esta ocasion.
lo mismo puede poner un sitio del vaticano para "demostrar"
que el papa tiene "razon"....

QUE BUEN PENDEJO!
Post by Miguel
A la marioneta del Super la tenian sin actuar por algun tiempo.
oiga! oiga!.... que es eso de "la"?.... ya le esta pasando como
a la babasucia, que se convirtio en una copia de mal gusto mia?
Es cierto que yo soy el trend setter, y que me imiten, pero
desarrollen por lo menos algo que las identifique...
Post by Miguel
De
pronto resucito. Yo pienso que algunas de estas caricaturas son
inventos de la Seguridad del Estado.
co~no.... ESA misma sospecha se ha expresado aqui muchas veces
sobre su "persona" y la canallada alrededor suyo....
Post by Miguel
Correcta o no, esta ha sido la tactica que he utilizado.
ji-ji-ji-ji-ji-ji.....
Post by Miguel
Esta gentuza
me esta imitando!....
Post by Miguel
no puede dialogar porque tratan de defender lo que es imposible
defender: Un tirano con poderes absolutos por 47 a~nos que ha
destruido una nacion.
Por eso enseguida salen con los epitetos y con los insultos.
.... es que su mariconi es un buen maestro de lo malo!!!!....

CUA-CUA-CUA.... (YA, que como chistes uds. son tambien una
CATASTROFE!....)

AHORA: FUERA DE MI VISTA GALLINACEA!....
Crusader
2006-02-07 02:23:53 UTC
Permalink
La mierda humana como el Supermierda and Company se flushea down the toilet
.
Post by Crusader
Ya sabemos la mierda humana que son ,la pregunta ahora es "Es sabio
dejarlos serguir jodiendo?
Recomiendas que es mejor no contestarles? Cuando lo hago no es por
ellos, sino para que otros vean quienes son los que apoyan al regimen
castro fascista. Por lo general, les respondo enviandole un sitio de la
internet sobre Cuba libre, aunque no lo hice en esta ocasion.

A la marioneta del Super la tenian sin actuar por algun tiempo. De
pronto resucito. Yo pienso que algunas de estas caricaturas son
inventos de la Seguridad del Estado.

Correcta o no, esta ha sido la tactica que he utilizado. Esta gentuza
no puede dialogar porque tratan de defender lo que es imposible
defender: Un tirano con poderes absolutos por 47 a~nos que ha
destruido una nacion.

Por eso enseguida salen con los epitetos y con los insultos.
Post by Crusader
Post by Super User For Ever
Post by CENTRO CONTRA EL KASTROFASCISMO
Amigos,
Nada mas farsante que los curas. Tratan de engañar a la gente
para disfrutar lo mas etenamente posible las mieles del poder.
Como toda mentira al final la gente despierta y el sistema se
cae.
"Dejeme ver si yo le he entendido bien: ud. tiene 32 a~nos
y ud. vive aun con su mami, ud. se pasa todo el dia en una
batola junto con un monton de otros tipos envueltos en
batolas tambien, y todos ustedes se la pasan en la botanica,
sin trabajar, ud. tiene una amiga que suele andar de puta,
y ud. solo la mantiene alrededor de ud. para que le lave
los pies y le traiga perfumes.... y la marca de beso que
ud. tiene en la majilla me dice que es de otro compa~nero
suyo.... Es eso correcto?...."
Esto es un SUPER ejemplo de un farsante comunista. El escrito es sobre
un farsante comunista y el SUPERDUPER lo cambia para "curas" Como no
puede discutir trata de cambiar la verdad.
pariguayo
2006-02-07 16:15:42 UTC
Permalink
"Yo pienso que algunas de estas caricaturas son
inventos de la Seguridad del Estado"

Acá es donde ustedes se desacreditan doble: primero afirmas 'Yo
pienso'.... lo cual es una total falsedad..... pues si pensaras no
expresarías una segunda falsedad en la misma oración: ''son
inventos de la Seguridad del Estado".

Definitivamente hay que ser estúpido para ello.

Pero hablemos de responder o no hacerlo.... si ustedes se mantuvieran
en su pocilga, el grupo cubano, y no intentaran destruir el usenet no
tendríamos que ocuparnos de tirar la basura constantemente.

Así miguelita y crusada, me pregunto "es sabio dejarlos seguir
jodiendo?".... es posible que no sea sabio.... pero qué podemos hacer
crusadita?
Crusader
2006-02-07 21:10:46 UTC
Permalink
ja,ja,ja,ja,ja.flushed down the toilet,another turd surfaced and down he
went!!

"pariguayo" <***@gmail.com> wrote in message news:***@o13g2000cwo.googlegroups.com...
"Yo pienso que algunas de estas caricaturas son
inventos de la Seguridad del Estado"

Acá es donde ustedes se desacreditan doble: primero afirmas 'Yo
pienso'.... lo cual es una total falsedad..... pues si pensaras no
expresarías una segunda falsedad en la misma oración: ''son
inventos de la Seguridad del Estado".

Definitivamente hay que ser estúpido para ello.

Pero hablemos de responder o no hacerlo.... si ustedes se mantuvieran
en su pocilga, el grupo cubano, y no intentaran destruir el usenet no
tendríamos que ocuparnos de tirar la basura constantemente.

Así miguelita y crusada, me pregunto "es sabio dejarlos seguir
jodiendo?".... es posible que no sea sabio.... pero qué podemos hacer
crusadita?
Miguel
2006-02-08 02:38:10 UTC
Permalink
Post by pariguayo
"Yo pienso que algunas de estas caricaturas son
inventos de la Seguridad del Estado"
Acá es donde ustedes se desacreditan doble: primero afirmas 'Yo
pienso'.... lo cual es una total falsedad..... pues si pensaras no
expresarías una segunda falsedad en la misma oración: ''son
inventos de la Seguridad del Estado".
En algunos casos si lo son.
Post by pariguayo
Definitivamente hay que ser estúpido para ello.
Pero hablemos de responder o no hacerlo.... si ustedes se mantuvieran
en su pocilga, el grupo cubano, y no intentaran destruir el usenet no
tendríamos que ocuparnos de tirar la basura constantemente.
Así miguelita y crusada, me pregunto "es sabio dejarlos seguir
jodiendo?".... es posible que no sea sabio.... pero qué podemos hacer
crusadita?
No nos leas
Super User For Ever
2006-02-08 21:28:41 UTC
Permalink
Post by Crusader
La mierda humana como el Supermierda and Company se flushea down the toilet
ji-ji-ji-ji-ji-ji-ji.... pero una mierda humana que te mantiene
en zozobra!..... JA-JA-JA-JA-JA-JA!!!!....

(Y no dizque eramos nosotros los que "contestabamos" con
improperios?....) JA-JA-JA-JA-JA-JA-JA.....
Super User For Ever
2006-02-06 20:06:10 UTC
Permalink
Post by Miguel
Esto es un SUPER ejemplo de un farsante comunista. El escrito es sobre
un farsante comunista y el SUPERDUPER lo cambia para "curas" Como no
puede discutir trata de cambiar la verdad.
ah, pero entonces expliqueme esta pornografia catolica (no le da
vergüenza que las ni~nas en las escuelas tengan que leer este
porno, mientras el cura les da clases "practicas" del texto):

"Vi a mi lado a un ángel que se hallaba a mi izquierda, en
forma humana.

Confieso que no estoy acostumbrada a ver tales cosas, excepto
en muy raras ocasiones. Aunque con frecuencia me acontece ver a
los ángeles, se trata de visiones intelectuales, como las que he
referido más arriba . .

El ángel era de corta estatura y muy hermoso; su rostro estaba
encendido como si fuese uno de los ángeles más altos que son todo
fuego. Debía ser uno de los que llamamos querubines . . . Llevaba
en la mano una larga espada de oro, cuya punta parecía un ascua
encendida. Me parecía que por momentos hundía la espada en mi
corazón y me traspasaba las entrañas y, cuando sacaba la espada,
me parecía que las entrañas se me escapaban con ella y me sentía
arder en el más grande amor de Dios. El dolor era tan intenso,
que me hacía gemir, pero al mismo tiempo, la dulcedumbre de aquella
pena excesiva era tan extraordinaria, que no hubiese yo querido
verme libre de ella."
El Llanero Solidario
2006-02-03 01:07:42 UTC
Permalink
OJOS QUE VEN , CORAZONES QUE SIENTEN

Los ojos de Manuel no habían visto nunca a su hijo.

Lo había acariciado, lo había abrazado, le había contado todas las
historias escuchadas a su abuelo, pero no le conocía el color del
pelo, ni los gestos al reir ... o al lagrimear.

Los ojos de Julián no habían podido registrar jamás la sonrisa de su
padre,o el verdor de la montaña en que viven.

Había sentido sus palabras, se había cobijado en su abrazo, se había
dormido con sus cuentos, ...pero Julián no conocía la imagen de su
padre.

Hace tres meses Manuel y Julián se miraron a los ojos por primera vez
en La Habana.

Ambos son parte de los noventa y cinco mil venezolanos ciegos que ahora
pueden ver gracias a la solidaridad cubana.

Cuatrocientos cincuenta bolivianos hoy miran con la esperanza que nunca
habían tenido.

Viajaron ciegos a Cuba y volvieron con la mirada limpia y la vida
salpicada de colores.

El viernes 28 volaron los primeros veintidós uruguayos con la retina
cubierta por un velo empañado .

En pocos días estarán de vuelta, cargados de contrastes,de formas y
arcoiris.

Después de estos vecinos, elegidos entre los que menos tienen y más
necesitan,seguirán otros, y otros, y otros más ... hasta que todos
los uruguayos que padezcan cegueras corregibles con cirugía sean
operados y puedan ver con sus propios ojos.

Todo empezó con el Programa "Barrio Adentro" de Venezuela.

Esta iniciativa que lleva casi dos años compromete a quince mil
médicos cubanos a asistir en el Primer nivel a venezolanos que estaban
por fuera del sistema de Salud de ese país.

Al mismo tiempo, médicos venezolanos se están formando junto a los
cubanos para reemplazarlos en unos tres años más.

En la campaña Barrio Adentro, se detectaron una enorme cantidad de
personas ciegas cuya causa era alguna de las tres patologías que se
corrigen mediante cirugía. Las cataratas son las más frecuentes.

Los oftalmólogos cubanos empezaron a operar ciudadanos venezolanos con
resultados tan eficientes como conmovedores.

Esta ayuda se extendió a los bolivianos más carenciados mediante un
acuerdo con las autoridades del país del altiplano que no podía
satisfacer esta humana demanda con sus propios técnicos.

La propuesta llegó al gobierno uruguayo hace poco más de un mes:

Cuba tenía cupo para operar a 20 uruguayos por semana haciéndose
cargo de los costos de la cirugía, de la estadía y del
post-operatorio.

Lo único que tenía que hacer nuestro país era resolver el traslado.

Se buscaron soluciones por parte de compañeros del Ministerio de Salud
.

Pluna no contaba con lugares para viajar a La Habana hasta el 2006.

Las Fuerzas Armadas aportaban un avión, pero no contaban con gasolina.

Tras realizar unas gestiones, se logró que Venezuela colaborara con el
combustible desde Caracas a la Habana, ida y vuelta.

Para que 20 uruguayos por semana recobraran la visión, Uruguay sólo
tenía que encargarse del costo de la gasolina del avión desde
Montevideo a Caracas!

Pero ... aunque no lo crean, aparecieron opositores muy enojados con la
medida. El gobierno cubano dio por resuelta la cuestión:

Cubana de Aviación se ocupa de los costos del traslado desde Buenos
Aires hasta La Habana.

Nuestro país no gasta un peso por las operaciones ni la estadía, ni
el viaje de los uruguayos ciegos, seleccionados dentro de las personas
con mayores carencias socio-económicas.

Pero han continuado algunas críticas:

¡En Uruguay se podrían operar igual que en Cuba!

Y tienen razón: nuestros técnicos tendrían la capacidad de resolver
las cataratas de muchos compatriotas.

Sin embargo estos vecinos hace años que cargan con su ceguera,
habiendo podido resolver la enfermedad con una operación que en
nuestro país no se les realizaba. Las perversas y variadas razones
para esta situación se encuentran en el sistema de Salud injusto,
ineficiente, insolidario y mercantil que hasta ahora tenemos en
Uruguay. El mismo sistema asistencial que hoy luchamos por cambiar.

Ante la generosidad cubana se despliegan intencionadas desconfianzas.

¿Por qué nos ayudan?, ¿Qué le damos a cambio?, ¿Qué negocio
estarán buscando?...

Qué fácil olvidamos!,digo yo. Hace cuatro años tuvimos un brote de
Meningitis en Canelones.

El gobierno de Batlle había roto relaciones con Cuba tras una excusa
que fabricó nuestro ex-presidente para justificar un favor a Bush.

A pesar de eso Cuba ofreció la única vacuna que era útil a nuestros
hijos y que se fabricaba sólo en la bloqueada isla.

"Los niños son mucho más importante que las ofensas políticas" ...
dijo Fidel.

Nuestro ex-presidente se negó.

Más trascendente que nuestros gurises era su ¿orgullo?( o su
compromiso).

El gobierno de Cuba, de todos modos y silencio, nos envió un avión
cargado de vacunas que aterrizó una neblinosa madrugada en Carrasco.

Nunca pagamos por esas vacunas ... Nunca leí o escuché a Cuba
reclamar por esa ayuda solidaria.

¿Ustedes sí? Cuba enseña Medicina a diez mil estudiantes
latinoamericanos sin costo alguno en una Universidad que promueve la
asistencia humanista.

Algunos de ellos son uruguayos.

Unos cuantos ya terminaron sus estudios y están de nuevo entre
nosotros.

¿Alguien ha escuchado exigir alguna contrapartida por este apoyo?

Los cubanos han aprendido a cultivar la solidaridad que a nosotros nos
han pretendido arrancar desde la cultura del individualismo consumista.

Los cubanos no reclaman nada por esta ayuda.

Simplemente cuentan con la capacidad de dar una mano ... y la dan con
franqueza y calidez. Aunque tal vez,... pensándolo bien,... quizás
... podría ser que hubiese un interés:...que a través de sus
acciones de hermano solidario los cubanos aspiren a nuestra defensa
cuando el bloqueo norteamericano los ahogue y no puedan respirar. Es
posible que ni siquiera lo piensen, pero seguro lo desean desde ese
viejo aforismo que nos demuestra que:

"ojos que ven -generan- corazones que sienten"

Tal vez ..., rescatando del naufragio los rincones de utopía que en el
mundo quedan, Ismael Serrano nos conmueva una vez más:

"... y mientras tanto, si hoy se cae La Habana, el día de mañana,
¿quién será nuestro dueño? así yo canto para recordar que aún
seguimos vivos.

Si no ves más allá de tu horizonte estaremos perdidos".
Super User For Ever
2006-02-06 14:29:12 UTC
Permalink
Post by CENTRO CONTRA EL KASTROFASCISMO
Amigos,
Nada mas farsante que un papa. Asi es como yo voy a discutir
con fidel.... en silencio.....
NADA ES VERDAD O MENTIRA, TODO DEPENDE DEL CRISTAL CONQUE SE MIRA"

* Hace varias centurias*, el Papa decretó que todos los judíos debían
convertirse al Cristianismo ó abandonar Italia. Esto produjo una fuerte
reaccion de parte de la comunidad judía, de modo que el Papa ofreció
un acuerdo:

Tendría un debate con un lider de la comunidad judía y si él ganaba,
podrían quedarse, pero si ganaba el Papa, deberían abandonar Italia.
Aceptaron los judíos y buscaron a un anciano y sabio Rabino para que los
representara en el debate. Pero como el Rabino no sabía hablar italiano
y el Papa no sabía hablar hebreo, acordaron que el debate fuera *en
silencio. *

El día elegido para el Gran Debate, el Papa y el Gran Rabino se sentaron
uno frente al otro y durante un minuto ninguno se movió.

*De pronto* el Papa levantó su mano é hizo un giro con ella apuntando
con tres dedos.
El Rabino miró hacia atrás, levantó su mano y apuntó con su dedo medio
hacia el Cielo.

Luego el Papa giró su mano alrededor de la habitación.
Y el Rabino apuntó con su dedo hacia abajo.

El Papa sacó la *Hostia y el vino.* El Rabino sacó * la manzana.*

El Papa entonces se levantó de su
asiento y se declaró vencido:
-Éste Rabino fue muy sabio y los judíos pueden quedarse en Italia.

Más tarde los cardenales le preguntaron al Papa qué había pasado:
* - Primero levanté tres dedos* para representar la Trinidad. Y él
entonces levantó un solo dedo para mostrar que creemos en un solo Dios,
lo que es común para ambas religiones.

Luego yo levanté un dedo y giré mi mano para mostrar que Dios está
alrededor de todos nosotros.
Entonces él contestó apuntando hacia abajo con su dedo, diciendo que
Dios estaba aquí con nosotros.

Luego tomé la Hostia y el vino para mostrar que Dios nos absuelve de
todos los pecados. Entonces él sacó la manzana para *recordarme el
pecado original. *Con ello me venció y no pude continuar.

Entretanto los miembros de la comunidad judía se reunieron a celebrar el
buen resultado del debate y le preguntaron al Rabino qué había sucedido:

*- Primero me dijo * que teníamos tres días para abandonar Italia, así
que le mostré el dedo mandándolo a la M...

Luego me dijo que el mundo iba a quedar limpio de judíos y le contesté:
"estás equivocado Papa, nosotros nos quedamos aquí".

- Y luego, que pasó?

*- Y qué se yo? él sacó su almuerzo y yo saqué el mío.... *
TORREBLANCA®
2006-02-06 16:26:44 UTC
Permalink
Post by Super User For Ever
Post by CENTRO CONTRA EL KASTROFASCISMO
Amigos,
Nada mas farsante que un papa. Asi es como yo voy a discutir
con fidel.... en silencio.....
NADA ES VERDAD O MENTIRA, TODO DEPENDE DEL CRISTAL CONQUE SE MIRA"
-aqui nadie "discute con fidel " , al tirano se le exige y se le
desenmascara, se le pone en evidencia.

- segun lo que escribe, con usted todo el mundo pierde y ud siempre
gana, sin embargo vive de comemierda 365 dias al año en los foros y lo
mejor que saca es el negocito aquel de virgenes garantizadas de santo
domingo.

- por ultimo, NADIE MIRA CON UN CRISTAL, se mira DETRAS de un cristal o
a traves del cristal, comemierda.
Super User For Ever
2006-02-06 22:01:44 UTC
Permalink
Amigos, Nada mas farsante que YO.
La mariconi, que trabaja para el cia, agarra el teléfono y llama
a la la miguelina, y le dice:

"¡¡¡HEY, MIGUELINA, MENEA ESE CULO Y SÚBEME UN CAFE Y DOS EMPANADAS,
RAPIDITO... MUÉVETE, QUE SE TE ACABÓ EL TIEMPO!!!!"

Al otro lado del teléfono se oye una voz varonil que dice:

"¡¡¡IDIOTA, TE HAS EQUIVOCADO DE EXTENSIÓN, ¿SABES CON QUIÉN
ESTÁS HABLANDO?... ESTÁS HABLANDO CON EL COMANDANTE DE CUBA,
FIDEL CASTRO, IMBÉCIL!!!"

La mariconi, alterada, le responde:

"¿Y QUÉ?, TIRANO DE MIERDA, GRANDÍSIMO HIJO'E PUTA. ¿ACASO
SABES TÚ CON QUIÉN ESTÁS HABLANDO?"

Fidel, sorprendido, responde: "NO"

La mariconi le contesta suavemente: "COÑO, MENOS MAL" ..... y
cuelga....
Super User For Ever
2006-02-06 22:04:43 UTC
Permalink
CENTRO CONTRA EL KASTROFASCISMO wrote:


Amigos, Nada mas farsante que YO. Veamos extractos de mi conversacion
con Fidel, como se entero el SUPER USER:

La mariconi, que trabaja para el cia, agarra el teléfono y llama
a la la miguelina, y le dice:

"¡¡¡HEY, MIGUELINA, MENEA ESE CULO Y SÚBEME UN CAFE Y DOS EMPANADAS,
RAPIDITO... MUÉVETE, QUE SE TE ACABÓ EL TIEMPO!!!!"

Al otro lado del teléfono se oye una voz varonil que dice:

"¡¡¡IDIOTA, TE HAS EQUIVOCADO DE NÚMERO, ¿SABES CON QUIÉN
ESTÁS HABLANDO?... ESTÁS HABLANDO CON EL COMANDANTE DE CUBA,
FIDEL CASTRO, IMBÉCIL!!!"

La mariconi, alterada, le responde:

"¿Y QUÉ?, TIRANO DE MIERDA, GRANDÍSIMO HIJO'E PUTA. ¿ACASO
SABES TÚ CON QUIÉN ESTÁS HABLANDO?"

Fidel, sorprendido, responde: "NO"

La mariconi le contesta suavemente: "COÑO, MENOS MAL, CHICO" .....
y cuelga y se desmaya del susto....
Super User For Ever
2006-02-10 17:01:16 UTC
Permalink
Post by CENTRO CONTRA EL KASTROFASCISMO
Amigos,
Nada mas farsante que un gusano cubano. Tratamos de engañar
a la gente para disfrutar lo mas etenamente posible las mieles
del cheqesito del CIA. Como toda mentira al final la gente
despierta y el sistema se cae. POR ESO APROVECHO PARA
DESPEDIRME DE USTEDES PORQUE ME CANCELARON EL CHEQUESITO
QUE RECIBIA POR INEFICIENCIA Y POR LOGRAR LO CONTRARIO DE
LO QUE ESTABA ACORDADO. ADIOS.... FRACASAMOS.....
POR FIN!!!!..... QUE TE LLEVE EL DIABLO, SINVERGÜENZA!!!....

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