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The more you read about Dr.Barbosa's struggle for
statehood,you got to ask yourself did he have a clue? Should he have known?Should he have made it his business to know?Or was he STUPID? I say this for several reasons,you see Dr.Barbosa was a black man at a time when blacks had no civil rights in the U.S.A.. This was a time when blacks could be lynched for the most trivial offence,where blacks lived in poverty (and still do)what I'm trying to say is that the U.S. was not that great for people of color. Why would the good doctor want this for his compatriots? Was he just another sellout working for his colonial masters while holding up the dream of statehood and equality to his poor compatriots to keep them quiet? If he wasnt a sellout then shouldnt he have made his to know what went on stateside,and what could happen to him and all Puertoricans under statehood? Maybe he was a dreamer,dreaming for statehood,the impossible dream the dream now held by the most corrupt of Puertorican society,"La estadidad es para los pobres" so said Romero Barcelo a welfare state that they can steal from. Before I go I must ask,Will statehood really help the poor? Food for thought in 1952 Puerto Rico per capita income was half of Mississippi the poorest state,today 50 years later Puerto Rico still lags behind the poorest state,yes that still is Mississippi,statehood hasnt helped the either. |
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Unfortunately, Barbosa and Albizu lived on the wrong time.
I don't agree with Barbosa, but I know he was living in the wrong Puertorican era. The same goes for Pedrito. If he was alive today, things could had been diferent in PR.
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![]() EL NACIONALISTA desde La Capital Confederada, Richmond, Virginia. "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." - Benjamin Franklin |
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I think he lived in the perfect era or a few decades ahead. It was a time that PR was completely feed up, impoverished to a greater degree, and was more supportive of any struggle that would put food on their table. (I think if Don Pedro spoke of an economic plan more than nationalism, maybe more would have followed.) That was the time of his life, maybe he could of been the José Martí of PR if he had lived in José's time, and free PR from Spain. In this day and age, after the Commonwealth and mass welfare, the people think the PPD and PNP are the ones that will put food on their tables. Sad, but true. Let Don Pedro be the hero and role model to those who want to set PR free now, because whatever we write, we can't erase the past.
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Rafael Tufiño Psicoanalisis del vejigante
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BarbosaQuote:
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"Yo soy Boricua, mi amor es Puerto Rico, Para mi Islita no encuentro parangón, Nací en los montes del centro de mi tierra, Yo soy Boricua de sangre y corazon." ![]() [i]"Al morirme que me entierren en la tierra en que yo nací, pues quiero darle a mi tierra lo que ella me ha dado a mi." [/b]-El Nene de Río Grande ![]() [b][i]¡FIEL A LA VICTORIA! ¡QUE VIVA LA REVOLUCIÓN! |
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