Foreign Policy Blogs

Fidel in the U.S. health care debate

Reuters photo

Is the plan to reform health care in the United States a step toward socialism? Many Republicans say it is. Some of the loudest opponents to Obama’s plan at the Town Hall meetings across the country have been those arguing that the plan erodes the fabric of what defines “America” by turning toward socialism. Across Los Angeles, anonymous individuals have plastered iconic images of President Obama as the Joker, with the word “Socialism” beneath.

It’s difficult to gauge whether Fidel Castro’s newest commentary would fuel or detract from their argument. In today’s piece, he criticized the United States for being willing to spend billions on its high-tech military but finding it difficult to approve healthcare reform that would protect its poor people and “deliver health services to 50 million Americans that don’t have them.”

So… does Fidel’s implicit approval of health care reform confirm in the minds of the policy’s opponents that it is socialist and to be avoided?

Or would his commentary—“Even a blockaded country like Cuba has been able to [provide free health care to all of its citizens]”—be seen as a challenge to a country that refuses to be bested by the Castro brothers?

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