Che Guevara was a killer or a revolutionary?

Fifty years after Che Guevara's murder, efforts to commercialise and distort his image continue. Fifty years ago, on October 9, 1967, Ernesto “Che” Guevara é doctor born in Argentina and Cuban revolutionary hero was executed in Bolivia as part of a conspiracy orchestrated by the United States to release [...]
Fifty years ago, on October 9, 1967, Ernesto “Che” Guevara íria doctor born in Argentina and Cuban revolutionary hero Alzeera”, broadcasts Periscopi.
Given that Guevara is so popular and symbolic that never half a century later, it seems that the American government can safely deposit this project under the “Oops” category.
Of course, Americans have long denied responsibility for the murder a carefully filed request by American lawyers Michael Ratner and Michael Steven Smith in their book “Who killed Che? As the CIA lost the” murder.
CIA Cuban-American Agent Felix Rodriguez, present at the fall of Guevara in the village of Bolivia in La Higuera, has helped promote the American line that the fatal decision was undertaken by the Bolivian combat action.
Rodriguez also rejected the noise of the Romanticism of a man who says he was nothing more than “a killer” who “enjoyed killing people” a rich statement coming from someone who had voluntarily expressed willingness to kill Fidel Castro and Smith refer to former dictator of the Dominican Republic, Rafael Trullio, as a “ran”.
The Greatest Human Man
Writing at the Washington Post in 1997, documentary director Saul Landau described Guevara as a “person with severe discipline, who refused to let the wounded enemy not be treated” a man who built hospitals and school rooms, where “pushed to completely sacrifice his physical comfort in pursuit of a more just society”.
French philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre praised the guerrilla leader as “not only an intellectual human being, but a more complete being of our time”.
However, the “killer's folder” continues to be played by many people, many with suspicious right-wing data.
When a few years ago it was discovered that US-based Urban Outcomes had decided to adopt Che's image of a T-shirt and other goods since we all know that American-based corporations strongly support the anti-capitistic revolution, CEO of the company was kidnapped by a suspicion group of human rights for “deregulation of a killer<1> with a bloody “ideology”.
Never worry that Urban Outcomes and many other such entities have also been known for market products in mass decorated with the American flag a symbol of a system that takes cake in the direction of ideological blood.
Che wasn't superhuman, but he was more than himself probably why they've never been able to kill him.
At the time of Guevara's murder, for example, the US was engaged in a bloody spectacular affair known as the Vietnam War, in which up to a few million people were finally eliminated.
As if that wasn't enough, “New Yorker” reported last year that “ [after the end of the war in 1975, more than forty thousand Vietnamese were killed by UXO [unbroken communities]”.
It is also noteworthy that Guevara's disgust by the imperialism Yankee was not materialised by anyone. He personally witnessed the 1954 CIA coup in Guatemala against democraticly elected President Jacobo Arbenz, who had entered the finger of American banana company United Fruit and other enemies of Guatemalan democracy.
In the coming decades of civil war, the U.S., as usually played, some 200,000 people slaughtered.
Guevara continued to face American power at various international nodes. In Cuba, he helped overthrow the former friend of the American dictatorship, Fulgencio Batista.
In Congo, as John Gerasus wrote in “Los Angeles Times”, Guevara tried to help the remains of Prime Minister Patrice Lumumba's nationalist movement, which was killed at the complaint of Belgian agents and CIA”.
Sadly, the American Empire seized Bolivia. Gonne was the man who had once declared, “at the risk of funny showing, that the real revolution is guided by strong feelings of love”.
The Real Danger
In decades since Che's death, the U.S. has continued business as usual, causing global slaughter on behalf of the elite capital.
That the country has a serious lack of human emotion department should be clear from the health of the arms industry and the physical and economic punishment regularly inflicted on human troops from Afghanistan to Mexico.
Some useful bites from the US crisis have shed additional ideological light as is the response of Madelene Albright, former US Ambassador to the United Nations and Secretary of State, for a question about the reports that half a million children had died thanks to US sanctions in Iraq: “We think the price is worth”.
To be sure, some <x0 strong love feelings” would come to the right especially useful for now just to assure themselves that reality should not be what US President Donald Trump says it is.
In a final letter that Guevara wrote to his children, to give them in case they are killed, he advised: “Remember that the Revolution is what is important and that each of us, for ourselves, is worthless”.
And while his executioners were certainly not under the impression that Guevara itself was the worthless “”, the real risk he presented to capitalist order, in fact, lies in his example of interhuman solidarity.
In the end, Che wasn't superhuman, but he was more than himself, which is probably why they've never been able to kill him./Periscopi/
It says: Belen Fernandez
Subtitles by Leapin Periscope











