Rosa María Rodríguez Torrado, Translator: Adam Cooper
In Cuba we have six television channels, but at 8 p.m. our options 
narrow, because the national news (the primetime program) is broadcast 
repeatedly on three of them (channels 4, 6, and 27), we are treated to 
sports news on channel 2, on channel 21 they show a documentary (the 
ones during that half hour are generally less interesting), and on 
channel 15 they rebroadcast (they never show it live) the "friendly" 
news show from TeleSur. Our satellite newscaster "informs" us how well 
things work in Cuba in contrast to other countries, mainly capitalist, 
of the world. He tells us of the abundance of products in the markets, 
"satisfied consumers" are interviewed, and the magnanimity of our 
government is sugarcoated daily. So in the face of such "marvels" I am 
quick as a hare with the remote control, surfing through channels and 
looking around in the scraps of programming for topics which I expect 
won't make me nauseous.
There is a journalist on the TeleSur program who wears an eye patch in 
the old style of buccaneers and pirates. They say he lost that eye in a 
helicopter accident during a mission. His image strikes me as somewhat 
grotesque, because I think that his warlike nature and the blackened 
eye-socket which highlights it are part of a well-modeled image of the 
militant journalist committed to a 21st century socialism without manual 
or program, who bases his raison d'être on the perpetuity of the power 
of the strongmen and on the fight against the "Empire of the United 
States". I have to give credit to this man, the anchor of "Dossier", 
which opens and closes with a catch-phrase, saying that it broadcasts 
"from our beloved, contaminated, and only (here he raises an index 
finger) spaceship", referring to Earth. I credit him and his production 
team, because it seems that they are getting their signal out to various 
corners of the Milky Way. That feeling leaves me every time he uses that 
unnecessary sentence to refer to his location. It wouldn't surprise me 
if on the same program we found another host wearing a surgical mask 
because he had a decaying smile or was missing his teeth. It would 
simply be yet another eccentricity.
TeleSur, with its headquarters in Caracas, and which counts on financing 
from Ecuador, Nicaragua, Venezuela, and Cuba, among others, is 
transitioning on its journalistic path toward the "Cuban disinformation 
style", evidence of the protective and consultative role of the largest 
of the Antilles in that Latin American media outlet with international 
distribution. It is an echo discordant with democracy and anachronistic 
in a particularly fashion to repeat the formulas of this long-lived, 
mature, and failed sociopolitical and economic experiment, and to adapt 
them to a project which claims to promote regional integration in 
societies where, despite the influence of our Antillean archipelago, 
plurality still survives. What would be fairer with respect to the 
realities of our brethren to the south is the exercise of objective, 
impartial, and truthful journalism in which there is no need, as there 
is in Cuba, for recourse to the "censorship patch" or the "surgical gag" 
to violate their people's rights and deceive them with disinformation 
and manipulation.
Translated by: Adam Cooper
December 20 2011
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