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Jimbo
11-23-2004, 10:23
http://www.bustedtees.com/product.php?name=che

Roguish Lawyer
11-23-2004, 10:25
http://www.bustedtees.com/product.php?name=che

LMAO! Welcome back, J.

NousDefionsDoc
11-23-2004, 11:32
Bwaaaa! Perfect! T Shirt of the year. The beauty is, they won't know what it says here and I can tell them anything!

Achilles
11-23-2004, 12:37
LOL, if only the hippies here knew they were wearing a shirt with a dude on it that ran mass executions for castro.... "He's like, uh, a revolutionary, isn't he?" There's about 50,000 students here and 45,000 of them are libs. Mostly because they are cattle and believe everything Mr. Government Professor and/or MTV says.

SP5IC
11-25-2004, 07:57
Last month, I was looking for a pub near Trinity College in Dublin, and this m*th*r f**ker walks by me with a Ho Chi Minh shirt. I'da popped his ass if it would have been in this country. Anyway, I said, "Hey, I killed him." Well, it wasn't a particularly intelligent quip, but it was the best I could do at the moment. Did I mention just how good Guinness tastes over there?

504PIR
11-26-2004, 03:56
I always ask people with "Che" t-shirts, "why do you have a picture of a loser on your shirt"? Usually leads to a discussion on how Che screwed up everything he touch as well as the murder & tortuing stuff. I suppose ignorance is bliss.

lrd
01-09-2005, 07:10
http://www.nationalreview.com/nordlinger/nordlinger200501050715.asp

January 05, 2005, 7:15 a.m.
Che Chic
It’s très disgusting.
Jay Nordlinger

EDITOR'S NOTE: This piece appears in the December 31, 2004, issue of National Review.

It sometimes seems that Che Guevara is pictured on more items than Mickey Mouse. I'm talking about shirts and the like (but mainly shirts). One artist had the inspiration to combine the two: He put Mickey's ears on Guevara. Guevara's fans must not like it much.

The world is awash in Che paraphernalia, and this is an ongoing offense to truth, reason, and justice (a fine trio). Cuban Americans tend to be flummoxed by this phenomenon, and so do others who are decent and aware. There is a backlash against Che glorification, but it is tiny compared with the phenomenon itself. To turn the tide against Guevara would take massive reeducation — a term the old Communist would very much appreciate.

You find his items in the most surprising places. Or maybe they are not so surprising. The New York Public Library has a gift shop, and until just the other day, it sold a Guevara watch. The article featured Che's face and the word "REVOLUTION." The ad copy went like this: "Revolution is a permanent state with this clever watch, featuring the classic romantic image of Che Guevara, around which the word 'revolution' — revolves." Clever, indeed.

That one of the world's most prestigious libraries should have peddled an item puffing a brutal henchman was not big news, but some Cuban Americans, and a few others, reacted. On learning of the watch, many sent letters to the library, imploring its officials to come to their senses. One Cuban American — trying to play on longstanding American sensibilities — wrote, "Would you sell watches with the images of the Grand Dragon of the KKK?" It was also pointed out that Communist Cuba, which Guevara did a great deal to found and shape, is especially hard on librarians. The independent-library movement has been brutally repressed, and some of the most inspiring political prisoners stem from that movement.

Yet there is virtually no solidarity between Free World librarians and Cuba's librarians, or would-be librarians. A year ago, the civil libertarian Nat Hentoff "renounced" — his word — the award given him by the American Library Association, because the ALA cold-shoulders the Cubans, preferring to stick with the loved "socialist" tyrant, Castro.

In any event, the New York Public Library withdrew the watch just before Christmas, offering no statement.

The fog of time and the strength of anti-anti-Communism have obscured the real Che. Who was he? He was an Argentinian revolutionary who served as Castro's primary thug. He was especially infamous for presiding over summary executions at La Cabaña, the fortress that was his abattoir. He liked to administer the coup de grâce, the bullet to the back of the neck. And he loved to parade people past El Paredón, the reddened wall against which so many innocents were killed. Furthermore, he established the labor-camp system in which countless citizens — dissidents, democrats, artists, homosexuals — would suffer and die. This is the Cuban gulag. A Cuban-American writer, Humberto Fontova, described Guevara as "a combination of Beria and Himmler." Anthony Daniels once quipped, "The difference between [Guevara] and Pol Pot was that [the former] never studied in Paris."

And yet, he is celebrated by "liberals," this most illiberal of men. As Paul Berman summed up recently in Slate, "Che was an enemy of freedom, and yet he has been erected into a symbol of freedom. He helped establish an unjust social system in Cuba and has been erected into a symbol of social justice. He stood for the ancient rigidities of Latin-American thought, in a Marxist-Leninist version, and he has been celebrated as a free-thinker and a rebel."

Those who know, or care about, the truth concerning Guevara are often tempted to despair. The website of our own National Institutes of Health describes him this way: an "Argentine physician and freedom fighter." Guevara was a physician roughly like Mrs. Ceausescu was a chemist. As for freedom fighter . . . again, the temptation to despair is great.

And yet, Cuban Americans and their friends do not succumb altogether, as we have seen in the New York Public Library episode. Here is another episode: Not long ago, Burlington Coat Factory — a giant clothing retailer — ran a television ad featuring a teenager in a Guevara shirt. The ad was called — get this — "Values." Anti-Communists organized boycotts, picketing, and letter-writing, and the company withdrew the shirt — but not before calling the activists "provocateurs," "fanatics," and "extremists." (The company should get with it: The preferred Castroite term for democrats and human-rights advocates is gusanos, or "worms.")
...
One of the most nauseating recent celebrations of Guevara took the form of a movie, The Motorcycle Diaries, whose executive producer was Robert Redford (one of the most dedicated Castro apologists in Hollywood, which is saying something). The movie received a standing ovation at the Sundance Festival. About this obnoxious hagiography and whitewash, I will confine myself to quoting Tony Daniels: "It is as if someone were to make a film about Adolf Hitler by portraying him as a vegetarian who loved animals and was against unemployment. This would be true, but rather beside the point." There is another movie coming out about Guevara, directed by Steven Soderbergh. We can guess at its contents by the publicity material: "He fought for the people." Sure he did. A prominent Cuban American recently lunched with a famous and powerful actor to discuss a movie that tells the truth about Guevara. The actor was entirely sympathetic, but said it simply could not be done — Hollywood would not permit it.

Beyond the occasional protest or boycott, there is some of that Guevara backlash: in the form of T-shirts, or counter-T-shirts, if you like. (Yes, anti-Communism is countercultural, in a sense.) One shirt shows Guevara with a diagonal line drawn through him and the words, "Commies Aren't Cool." Another has Guevara in crosshairs (violent — too Che-like). Still another has the statement — underneath the image — "I have no idea who this is"! A fourth shirt is an exercise in camp, festooning Guevara in rhinestones and calling him "Liberache" (linking him to the late, flamboyant pianist).

A far more serious shirt is purveyed by the Center for a Free Cuba, in Washington, D.C. It does many things, one of which is to put "Cuba Libre" in Guevara's hair, and another of which is to list Cuban political prisoners on the back, complete with the lengths of their sentences.

In France, the remarkable group Reporters Without Borders took an image well known in that country: that of a policeman wielding a truncheon and a shield. But it put Guevara's face in place of the policeman's and cried, "Welcome to Cuba, the world's biggest prison for journalists." A woman named Diane D"az LÛpez objected: She is the daughter of "Korda," the late Cuban photographer who snapped the "iconic image" of Che. She seems to be a bitter-end Marxist. She took Reporters Without Borders to court, and won — they had to abandon that particular tactic.

Weazle23
01-10-2005, 10:57
I was on CQ duty back at Bragg and a new kid was hanging out with a Che shirt on. My sergent nearly flipped.

"Do you even know who that is!!?? Are you a communist?? Don't ever wear that shirt around here again!"

Not a direct quote, but you get the picture.

Taylor5.56
01-10-2005, 13:25
I just want to know which reprobate piece of crap, started this whole iconic symbol of youth freedom, with Che as the parade leader.

Most kids I see wearing the shirt with his face on it, do not even know his background, other than "He helped free Cuba!" Then I ask them if they know the cuurent condition there, and they just shrug their shoulders.

What are we teaching the kids here in America !!

Jimbo
03-13-2005, 16:25
http://www.curefornudity.com/product.cfm/chethisshirtbroughttoyoubycapitalism.htm

Roguish Lawyer
03-13-2005, 19:01
Nice. I have the other one with me now. I think I'll wear it through the Miami airport on Tuesday. :D

Smokin Joe
03-13-2005, 21:55
What was the original one???

The current link goes to a More Cowbell t-shirt.