Cuban exile reminisces about the Bay of Pigs invasion Cuban exile reminisces about the Bay of Pigs invasion
Dozens of manuscripts, objects, and books on the Bay of Pigs invasion are among the items held by the Cuban Heritage Collection.
Photo: TJ Lievonen/University of Miami
By Barbara Gutierrez
04-14-2021
Dozens of manuscripts, objects, and books on the Bay of Pigs invasion are among the items held by the Cuban Heritage Collection.
Photo: TJ Lievonen/University of Miami Cuban exile reminisces about the Bay of Pigs invasion By Barbara Gutierrez
04-14-2021
Eduardo Zayas Bazán, a member of the Amigos board of the University’s Cuban Heritage Collection, recalls the unsuccessful incursion as its 60th anniversary approaches on April 17.
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One of the most remarkable articles written about the growth of government during the twentieth-century is “War is the Health of the State” by Randolph Bourne. Published in 1918, Bourne’s essay explained how it is human nature to mostly ignore the state because the state during peacetime has “almost no trappings to appeal to the common man’s emotions.” War, however, is the all-purpose tool of the state to stir up the public’s emotions in a way that motivates it to hand over to the state virtually unlimited powers, abandoning all constitutional constraints – and to subsequently relinquish most of their supposedly cherished freedoms.