Puerto Rico: Not So Rico

Source: Progressive Media Project, July 23, 2008

Ed Morales takes the 110th anniversary of the U.S. invasion of Puerto Rico as an opportunity to talk about its status. "The United States invaded the island on July 25, 1898, and claimed it as booty after the Spanish-American War. Long since obsolete as a strategic outpost in the Cold War, the Caribbean island is America's best-kept secret: an unfree state within the land of the free." The island has never seriously been considered for statehood, often for racist reasons. A portion of Puerto Rico's Vieques Island was routinely used as a bombing range by the U.S. Navy. The island of nearly four million inhabitants "is an 'unincorporated territory,' which means that the island is subject to the authority of the U.S. Congress, which can overturn any action by the island's legislature." Puerto Ricans are not able to vote in U.S. presidential elections, nor do they having voting representatives in Congress. While there is often a misperception that Puerto Ricans receive certain rights without paying taxes (which is mainly false), Morales has this take: "Puerto Rico's commonwealth status was a dry run for the free trade practices of the last 15 years, where profit -- and the potential for local investment -- is extracted from a weaker economy by rampaging multinational corporations. Today, Puerto Rico is suffering from a failing economy with high unemployment rates, a fall-off in tourism due to the gas crisis, overdependence on government entitlements like food stamps and a failing public education system."

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Inaccurate Picture of Puerto Rico

While many of the details in this brief article are true, it misses the fact that prior to the United States occupying us we were among the poorest islands in the Caribbean and today we have the highest GDP of any of our neighbors. People did not have access to decent medical care, houses were not built to withstand the hurricanes which constantly threaten the island and our roads were practically nonexistent. While we might not have a vote in Congress, to paint Puerto Ricans as an oppressed people is utter nonsense and completely ignores the huge gains we have made due to our relationship with the United States.

Where are the Huge Gains??

I beg to differ with you about Puertoricans being an oppressed people. What huge gains are you talking about? Yes you are still oppressed when everything on the Island cost more than it does stateside. You are still oppressed when you retire you receive less social security payments than stateside. By now Puerto Rico should be competing with other states on the mainland. But you are not. What huge gains? You still have people still living in "shack"like homes. The mainland american companies took over and still run the economy in PR , and young Puertoricans are making an exodus to the mainland to find jobs, go to school and the return to visit families and leaving again. You have no real political voice , so what huge gains are you talking about. Take a trip around the island and take a goooooood look at the "huge gains" you talk about. I did not see any this past June when I went to visit family.

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