
by Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira
Forgive me, reader, for the banality of this assertion. When someone suffers a fracture and a severe scratch on the arm from a fall, they may not notice the scratch. If left untreated, the scratch can become infected and worsen to the point that it becomes more severe than the fracture.
In short, greater damage sometimes obscures a lesser one, and in certain circumstances, the lesser damage may be more severe than the greater.
This thought occurred to me while I read a three-month-old news item (how quickly news ages in today’s feverish world) in Time magazine, which reproduced an AP dispatch from Port of Spain, Trinidad.
According to the news, the new, small Caribbean nations that recently became independent inaugurated democratic, parliamentary, and multiparty regimes, following the English model inherited from the Commonwealth.
However, these regimes deteriorated rapidly and drifted toward advanced land-reformist socialism. Some of these nations, leading the march toward the abyss, especially British Guiana and Jamaica, are beginning to declare themselves Marxist.
Thus, fourteen Caribbean nations are marching in single file toward communism.
