A Federal Court in Miami has ruled that six-year-old Elian
Gonzalez must be returned to his father in Cuba. The only alternative
is a grant of political asylum by Janet Reno; but that eminent
person is, Judge Moore tells us, "determined to see that
a father's wishes to be reunited with his son be given primacy
in law and fact." Absent from the opinion of the federal
court, and from the pronouncements on the matter by the attorney
general, the INS commissioner, and the president himself, has
been any understanding that the wishes of Juan Miguel Gonzalez
cannot be known to us while he is in Cuba. Missing, indeed, is
any understanding of what life is like in a totalitarian state,
where the wishes of the individual count for nothing, and the
child of an "enemy of the people" (Elian's mother committed
an act of treason by attempting to flee Castro's paradise) may
not enjoy even that semblance of a normal life grudgingly permitted
to other citizens.
Actually it would not
be difficult to determine Mr. Gonzalez's true feelings. We need
only insist that he travel the 90 miles to the United States to
state his case, bringing with him anyone Castro might hold hostage
to his behavior. Fox News has already offered to pay his entire
expenses for the trip. Parents in similar cases routinely travel
halfway round the world at their own expense to assert
their rights. Where is Mr. Gonzalez? But no one in the Clinton
administration is going to insist on his appearance. These are
people who, 30 years ago, decorated their college dorm rooms with
posters of Che Guevara. Castro, of course, knows very well what
kind of creatures he is dealing with.
Casting its shadow
over the whole Gonzalez affair is the strange, hulking figure
of Reno. It beggars belief to recall that our current attorney
general first came to the attention of the Clintons as a champion
of children. What more dire fate could befall any child than to
find himself the object of her cold gaze? As a state attorney
in Florida during the 1980s, Reno distinguished herself as a leader
of the "child abuse" witch-hunts. At her urging, preschoolers
were subjected to long sessions with interrogators like the unspeakable
Drs. Joseph and Laurie Braga. With the aid of anatomically correct
dolls, the tots were browbeaten and intimidated into "remembering"
abuse by innocent child-minders--whose own children were then
deprived of loving parents for the decade or so it took the authorities
to realize that the whole thing had been a ghastly mistake.
At the siege of the
Branch Davidians in Waco, Reno was told--she cannot remember by
whom--that the cultists were "beating babies." To spare
the little ones this abuse, she had them incinerated alive. Now
Elian Gonzalez must be returned to a father whose feelings and
character cannot be known to us, and to the phalanx of secret
policemen who ensure that Mr. Gonzalez says and does nothing unscripted.
Such is the determination of Janet Reno. Add one to the tally
of kids who have suffered and died to advance the career of this
latter-day Bluebeard.
National Review, April 17, 2000
In discussing this with a number of individuals their response was invariably that Elian belonged with his father. Alas, Elian will in effect be sent to a re-education camp, not to live with his father!