by Nick Gillespie
How resilient is the ghost of Ernesto "Che" Guevara, the Argentine-born 
Marxist revolutionary who ably assisted the Castro brothers' sadly 
successful mission to turn Cuba into an island hellhole? His legend 
survives even a lackluster, long-winded biopic released in 2008 and now 
just out on DVD.
More important, Che's legend survives the facts of his own life. Born in 
1928 and gunned down in 1967 by drunken Bolivian soldiers, Che rarely 
missed an opportunity to make life miserable for those who opposed him. 
During the fight against the Batista regime, Che ordered the summary 
executions of dozens of real and suspected enemies, becoming the very 
thing he said revolutionaries must be: a "cold-blooded killing machine." 
As a leader in post-Revolution Cuba, Che became known as the "butcher of 
La Cabaña" prison, where he oversaw hundreds of murders of political 
prisoners and "counter-revolutionaries."
When he became the effective czar of the Cuban economy and attempted to 
create a "new man and woman," or workers fueled by revolutionary ideals 
rather than conventional workplace incentives, his plans failed 
catastrophically and helped make Cuba the economic basket case it 
remains to this day. Along the way, Che did more than his share to help 
ban rock and jazz music as "imperialist" forms of expression. Such 
actions mark Che less as the youthful idealist portrayed in the 
acclaimed film version of his own Motorcycle Diaries and more as a 
repressive, murderous thug, a Caribbean version of the Taliban.
By the mid-1960s, Che left Cuba to export armed revolution to Africa and 
South America, all without success. If his violent death at 39 secured 
his romantic martyrdom to a cause that now thankfully flourishes only in 
Cuba and North Korea, it is his iconic, beret-bedecked image from a 1960 
photo that persists everywhere in popular culture, from Mike Tyson's 
torso (the boxer sports a tattoo of Mao along with Che) to beer and 
booze labels to belt buckles to the T-shirts worn around the world. 
Despite Che's pronounced contempt for rock music, Carlos Santana wore a 
Che T-shirt during a performance at the 2005 Academy Awards ceremony. 
Other invocations of the Che image, such as the image above from a 
greeting card line that features a dog as Che, suggest unconscious (or 
at least unknowing) parody.
Increasingly, one hopes, Che's image is becoming openly mocked as the 
ugly reality of his life outlasts the shiny revolutionary veneer. As 
Alvaro Vargas Llosa reported five years ago, young Argentines have taken 
to sporting shirts emblazoned with the putdown, "I have a Che T-Shirt 
and I don't know why." The Australian band The Clap sings of the "Che 
Guevara T-Shirt Wearer" who has "no idea" of who he is. The Cuban punk 
band, Porno para Ricardo,  which has been arrested for "social 
dangerousness," openly declaims the Castro regime and its heroes such as 
Guevara.
Karl Marx, of all people, once remarked that history repeats itself, the 
first time as tragedy and the second time as farce. Marx argued that 
history was the key to understanding the real world, and history is 
certainly no friend to Che Guevara. If his younger admirers study the 
historical Che–the one reputed to have declared "I feel my nostrils 
dilate savoring the acrid smell of gunpowder and blood of the 
enemy"–they will understand that Che's original influence was indeed 
tragic, not just for Cubans but for many others as well. And they just 
might skip the farce phase, out of deference to the many victims of the 
butcher of La Cabaña.
Watch Reason.tv's 10-minute documentary, Killer Chic: Hollywood's Sick 
Love Affair With Che Guevara, by clicking below.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iQcUkd1w_TY
Che Guevara's History: First Time as Tragedy, Second Time as Greeting 
Cards - Big Government (24 January 2010)
http://biggovernment.com/2010/01/23/che-guevaras-history-first-time-as-tragedy-second-time-as-greeting-cards/
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