(Rosario, Argentina, 1928 - Higueras, Bolivia, 1967) Latin American revolutionary. Together with Fidel Castro, whose movement he joined in 1956, he was one of the main architects of the triumph of the Cuban revolution (1959). He later held positions of great relevance in the new government, but, dissatisfied with the ineffectiveness of the offices and faithful to his purpose of extending the revolution to other Latin American countries, in 1966 he resumed his guerrilla activity in Bolivia, where he would be captured and executed a year later.

Thus, Che Guevara became the greatest revolutionary myth of the twentieth century, having given his life in the struggle against imperialism and dictatorship. He was immediately an icon of the youth of May '68, and his figure has remained as a timeless symbol of ideals of freedom and justice that, like the heroes of yesteryear, he considered more valuable than life itself. Even today, in protest actions, that profile of him based on Alberto Korda's famous photograph is still frequently exhibited.

Biography

Ernesto Che Guevara was born into a well-to-do family in Argentina, where he studied medicine. His leftist militancy led him to participate in the opposition against Juan Domingo Perón; from 1953 he traveled through Peru, Ecuador, Venezuela and Guatemala, discovering the dominant misery among the masses of Latin America and the omnipresence of North American imperialism in the region, and participating in multiple protest movements, experiences that inclined him definitively towards Marxism.

In 1955 Ernesto Che Guevara met Fidel Castro and his brother Raúl Castro in Mexico, who were preparing a revolutionary expedition to Cuba. Guevara befriended the Castros, joined the group as a doctor and disembarked with them in Cuba in 1956. Once the guerrillas were installed in Sierra Maestra, Guevara became Fidel's lieutenant and commanded one of the two columns that left the eastern mountains to the west to conquer the island. He participated in the decisive battle for the capture of Santa Clara (1958) and finally entered Havana in 1959, putting an end to the dictatorship of Fulgencio Batista.

The triumph of the revolution, carried out with scarce means, was facilitated by the unsustainable situation of the country in those years. Despite registering the highest per capita income in Latin America, wealth was concentrated in few hands; this very strong social imbalance was repeated in the marked contrasts between the countryside and the city. On the political level, corruption, clientelistic mechanisms and ineffectiveness had been accentuated to unsuspected limits under the despotic and authoritarian regime of Fulgencio Batista; his government managed to bring together against him the most disparate sectors of opinion and interests. The Cuban economy, extremely conditioned by the presence of the United States, was based on tourism in urban areas and on a capitalist agriculture that had generated a large rural proletariat, a determining factor in the revolutionary process.

From revolution to politics

The new revolutionary government granted Guevara Cuban nationality and appointed him head of the Militia and director of the Agrarian Reform Institute (1959), then president of the National Bank and Minister of Economy (1960), and finally Minister of Industry (1961). In those years, Guevara represented Cuba in several international forums, where he denounced U.S. imperialism head-on. In a trip around the world he met Gamal Abdel Nasser, Jawaharlal Nehru, Sukarno and Josip Broz Tito (1959); in another trip he met several Soviet leaders and the Chinese Zhou EnLai and Mao Zedong.

In the task of building a new society in Cuba, and especially in the field of economy, Che Guevara was one of the most tireless collaborators of Fidel Castro. In the economic plan that took place at the beginning of the new government, he opted for an original, creative and non-bureaucratic and non-institutionalized interpretation of Marxist principles. Seeking a path for the real independence of Cuba, he strove for the industrialization of the country, linking it to the help of the Soviet Union, once the attempted invasion of the island by the United States had failed and the socialist character of the Cuban revolution had been clarified (1961).

His restlessness as a professional revolutionary, however, made him secretly leave Cuba in 1965 and go to the Congo, where he fought in support of the revolutionary movement in progress, convinced that only armed insurrectional action was effective against imperialism.

In Bolivia

Released from his positions in the Cuban State, Che Guevara returned to Latin America in 1966 to launch a revolution that he hoped would be continental in scope: valuing the strategic position of Bolivia, he chose that country as a center of operations to install a guerrilla movement that could spread its influence to Argentina, Chile, Peru, Brazil and Paraguay. At the head of a small group he tried to put into practice his theory, according to which it was not necessary to wait for social conditions to produce a popular insurrection, but that armed action itself could create the conditions for a revolutionary movement to be unleashed; such ideas were collected in his book La guerra de guerrillas (1960).

However, his action did not catch on among the Bolivian masses. From the beginning his group, baptized as the National Liberation Army and composed of Cuban veterans of the Sierra Maestra and some Bolivian communists, encountered a lack of support from the peasants, who were completely alienated from the movement. Without any popular support in the rural world, and without support in the big cities due to the rejection of the communist political organizations, the possibilities of success diminished drastically.

Isolated in a jungle region where he suffered the aggravation of his asthmatic ailment, Ernesto Guevara was betrayed by local peasants and fell into an ambush by the Bolivian army in the Valle Grande region, where he was wounded and captured on October 8, 1967. Since Che had already become a symbol for young people around the world, the Bolivian military, advised by the CIA, wanted to destroy the revolutionary myth, assassinating him and then exposing his corpse, photographing him and burying him in secret. In 1997 the remains of Che Guevara were located, exhumed and transferred to Cuba, where they were buried with full honors by Fidel Castro's government.

"At the risk of seeming ridiculous, let me say that the true revolutionary is guided by a great feeling of love. It is impossible to think of a genuine revolutionary lacking this quality."

  • Che Guevara

Che guevara internet archive :caught-in-4che:

Statement by Mr. Che Guevara (Cuba) before the United Nations General Assembly on 11 December 1964 :che-cigar:

Megathreads and spaces to hang out:

reminders:

  • 💚 You nerds can join specific comms to see posts about all sorts of topics
  • 💙 Hexbear’s algorithm prioritizes struggle sessions over upbears
  • 💜 Sorting by new you nerd
  • 🌈 If you ever want to make your own megathread, you can go here nerd
  • 🐶 Join the unofficial Hexbear-adjacent Mastodon instance toots.matapacos.dog

Links To Resources (Aid and Theory):

Aid:

Theory:

  • Frank [he/him, he/him]
    ·
    1 year ago

    I'm currently going though my system registry with a blow torch and a machete cleaning out all of microsofts spyware and bullshit. I do this not for any practical reason, but because I hate. I HATE Bill Gates. I hate what he's done to computing. I hate what he's done to America's education system, and education systems around the world. I hate how he uses his foundation as a blunt instrument to impose policy on global south countries and gets applauded for it as "philanthropy." I hate that he's gotten away with all this for decades despite having once been considered a super-villain by everyone who knew how to install a program in DOS. I hate that he's gotten away with this despite being, at the very least, a friend of the notorious Jeffery Epstein. I hate that he used Cortana, a character I was very fond of, and used it as a psychological hack to try to make people trust his natural language spyware bullshit. I hate that he locks down all of kinds of bullshit spyware and bloatware and "productivity apps:" and other bullshit that you can't easily un-install in an attempt to re-gain his monopoly over computing. HATE. HATE.

    So I'm going through my system registry purging everything that isn't necessary for the working of the operating system. I'm fussing around in powershell using commands I found on random webpages and just barely understand. I'm modifying the registry, which everyone will tell you not to do unless you're a power user super hacker. My friends think, as they often do, that this is bizarre and unwarranted behavior, that my hatred is inexplicable, that I take this all too personally, and that I'm going to brick my computer (these are very simple operations. I grew up using dos where you could brick your computer by deleting the whole file system and it wasn't ever hard.)

    And all this just to remove software that I don't want, that should never have been installed in the firstplace, that Microsoft will probably re-install without my permission at some point.

    I hate how the tiny amounts of control I have over my life have been taken away. Want to install a program on your phone, but you don't want to use someone's walled garden? Well you have to do hacker surgery to your phone because users aren't allowed to have control over what is or isn't installed or where it goes. My phone didn't even come with a fucking file browser, I had to download one, and it sucks. Trying to find anything is a pain in the ass and god help you if you need to mass delete something.

    And now I'm weird and unreasonably and yelling at clouds because I want to remove bloatware from my computer, because that's apparently inconceivable for a normal home user in 2023 or something, idfk. I don't even know why these guys think it's weird, a lot of them are programmers or hardware hackers. I guess it's different because I see the walls of my little cage and I want to rattle them and scream.

    Sometimes it really does feel like that. I've lived long enough now to see the bars of the cage become more and more obvious, to see the systems of surveillance and control become more and more grotesque and intrusive, to see it all normalized. Reddit, one news agregator that hosts a really shitty discussion forum format, shuts down for a few days and the whole internet becomes useless because it's so clogged with SEO trash and semantically void Markov chain written articles and anything written by people has been shoved so far down the search index by increasingly desperate and pathetic attempts to make the internet profitable that it effective doesn't exist anymore.

    Now Execs are talking about firing customer facing workers and replacing them with prodcedural text generators that people are convinced are intelligent. We've failed the turing test, not against an ambiguously intelligent machine that could potentially be the first step to creating a real machine intelligence, but to a fancy math program that re-mixes reddit comment to produce fun mad-libs for the kids.

    If anyone needs me I'm going to be standing on the roof screaming and throwing beer bottles at god.

    • Kuori [she/her]
      ·
      1 year ago

      really been feeling these rants you've been posting recently, comrade.

      :rat-salute: aim one at god's ambiguous and undefinable genitals for me

    • DrBeat [they/them]
      ·
      1 year ago

      I went over to fix my grandparent's email recently, and what struck me was how chill and fun of a time I had with what would otherwise be a bothersome chore, because it was socially embedded work.

      On my own, annoying tech shit heads toward the sentiment of your comment, because I'm just in a feedback loop of garbage stimuli and futility, and it can ruin my day with stress. But I can wade through all of that no problem if I'm tethered to others, I'd even be happy about it.

      So idk, I guess yeah capital puts us in cages of various sorts, real, digital and mental. Dismantling that is an obscene nightmare on our own. You could edit every registry in the world and change nothing, people would generate the same problems again, because nothing changed socially. We can't build socialism by ourselves, it has to be a fun thing you do with your friends for a laugh, because that's what makes the work tolerable for most people, and we need most people.

      Would love to scream and throw bottle with you comrade, sounds dope