Free Cuban Exiles
09-08-2007, 21:45
By Joel Rock
http://i88.photobucket.com/albums/k172/ikapitanzurseei/Communism.jpg
New Havana (Rooters) - President Ben De Pereda of the Democratic Republic of Free Cuban Exiles met with CBS reporters for a highly controversial interview in which he expressed his disapproval of totalitarian governments. “How are we of the UN supposed to set an example for the world if we permit these corrupt leaders with in our ranks to deny their citizens the most basic of human freedoms?” said the evidently upset leader during the interview. “I have lived in many places, and I have experienced the pain of having no rights or political freedoms. I cannot accept these corrupt and terrorist governments, nor will I tolerate their greed.” The Democratic Republic of Free Cuban Exiles was founded fairly recently, and has already developed a stable economy with a political diverse populous. Located in the Eastern Pacific, the small nation has already experienced the struggles of large nations, such as morality, crime, and the euthanasia of cancer patients. De Pereda confessed that the nation “isn’t perfect,” but he insisted that the citizens of his nation enjoyed the rights that every person should have. The interview ended with powerful words as De Pereda spoke on about his stance on the UN: “The UN is an outstanding world organization for peace and civil rights, but I cannot believe that some delegates have the face to pass resolutions for civil rights while they allow totalitarianism to exist within our ranks. It saddens me.”
http://i88.photobucket.com/albums/k172/ikapitanzurseei/Communism.jpg
New Havana (Rooters) - President Ben De Pereda of the Democratic Republic of Free Cuban Exiles met with CBS reporters for a highly controversial interview in which he expressed his disapproval of totalitarian governments. “How are we of the UN supposed to set an example for the world if we permit these corrupt leaders with in our ranks to deny their citizens the most basic of human freedoms?” said the evidently upset leader during the interview. “I have lived in many places, and I have experienced the pain of having no rights or political freedoms. I cannot accept these corrupt and terrorist governments, nor will I tolerate their greed.” The Democratic Republic of Free Cuban Exiles was founded fairly recently, and has already developed a stable economy with a political diverse populous. Located in the Eastern Pacific, the small nation has already experienced the struggles of large nations, such as morality, crime, and the euthanasia of cancer patients. De Pereda confessed that the nation “isn’t perfect,” but he insisted that the citizens of his nation enjoyed the rights that every person should have. The interview ended with powerful words as De Pereda spoke on about his stance on the UN: “The UN is an outstanding world organization for peace and civil rights, but I cannot believe that some delegates have the face to pass resolutions for civil rights while they allow totalitarianism to exist within our ranks. It saddens me.”