21 YEARS – UN General Assembly Vote on The Embargo Against Cuba
This week’s UN General Assembly vote on “the
need to end the embargo against Cuba” marked the 21st straight time
that the world turned out in support of the small island.
The vote on Tuesday, November 13, 2012 went as
follows: 188 votes to END the embargo, 3 votes to KEEP the embargo (U.S.,
Israel and Palau) and 2 abstentions (The Marshall Islands and Micronesia).
This is what 21 years of votes against the
embargo looks like on a graph:
The trend line (in red) indicates the
increasing support for Cuba.
Below is another view. The red lines indicate
votes to end the embargo.
Below is a more exciting view… the dark yellow
area represents abstentions to the vote. For some reason few countries would
rather not vote on this issue. Over the
years this trend has decreased, as more nations are willingly to voice their
disapproval of the embargo.
The small red squares along the bottom indicate
votes to KEEP the embargo. In between are
the waters of hope and common sense.
Variations of this graph appear at the end.
I vaguely recall my 10th grade
algebra teacher (Mr. Gonzalez) claim that “numbers are beautiful…” I wonder
what he’d think about the Totals below.
Over the 21 years in which this measure has
been proposed at the United Nations, the General Assembly has cast 3,300 votes to
End the Embargo, 63 votes to Keep It, with 308 Abstentions.
A U.S. child born on the day the first vote was
cast can now walk into a bar and order a legal drink. The embargo itself is a
bit older.
On October 19, 1960, after the new Cuban
Government under Castro nationalized properties belonging to U.S. citizens and corporations, a partial
economic embargo was imposed on the island. In February and March of 1962 President
Kennedy made it the official foreign policy against Cuba that has now outlasted
10 U.S. Presidents and 5 decades of human/political evolution.
The table below shows the actual vote as it was
cast year by year.
Year by Year Count
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Americans tend to support ending the embargo whenever
they’re asked.
Just about every religious and humanitarian
agency in the world has called for an end to the embargo against Cuba.
If only President Obama would listen.