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58 Years Since the Death of “Castro’s Favorite Executioner”

58 Years Since the Death of “Castro’s Favorite Executioner”

Ernesto “Che” Guevara was one of the world’s most ruthless mass murderers.

October 9th marks the 58th anniversary of Che Guevara’s death. Ernesto “Che” Guevara was one of the world’s most ruthless mass murderers, whom the leftist propaganda machine successfully turned into a heroic symbol of the West’s spoiled and misguided youth.

When I first arrived in America nearly three decades ago, I was shocked to see affluent students proudly wearing T-shirts with Che Guevara’s image. After all, this was the man who represented everything Western hippies and angry young people stood against. For instance, he detested and imprisoned gays and sent to camp teenagers wearing jeans or listening to “Yankee-Imperialist” rock and roll.

According to the historians who produced The Black Book of Communism, Cuba’s revolutionary executioners murdered at least 14,000 innocents, many of whom were in their twenties or younger. I tried to reason with the American Che-worshippers by bringing to bear indisputable facts about his terrorist and murderous activities, but to little avail.

Humberto Fontova, the author of the eye-opening monograph Exposing Che Guevara and the Useful Idiots Who Idolize Him, provides witness testimonials and detailed evidence about Che’s atrocities. By his own notorious admission, Che Guevara proclaimed that he “really liked killing” and that “a revolutionary must become a cold killing machine motivated by pure hate.” Fontova writes in the Introduction to his book:

This is the man who boasted that he executed from “revolutionary conviction” rather than from any “archaic bourgeois details” like judicial evidence and who urged “atomic extermination” as the final solution for those American “hyenas.” … He declared that “individualism must disappear!” …

“Certainly, we execute,” boasted Che, while addressing the U.N. General Assembly in December 1964. “And we will continue executing as long as it is necessary.”

A curious fact about Fidel’s favorite executioner is that he was afflicted by an extreme case of tone-deafness, referred to as amusia, and was strikingly unable to recognize or reproduce musical sounds. One might humorously speculate whether Che Guevara’s inability to enjoy the beauty of music was somehow related to the pathological ruthlessness of his soul. More likely, though, the reason was the spiritual poison and inverted moral compass that totalitarian socialist ideology engenders.

Fontova examines the depths of fraudulent delusions that Western scholars, entertainers, and journalists exhibit in their admiration for one of the cruelest communist murderers, who embodied much of what the woke elites today claim to fervently denounce. His carefully curated image and sham biographies are one of the most insidious examples of the extreme power and influence of the falsified reality created by anti-Western indoctrination. Fontova explains:

Ignorance, of course, accounts for much Che idolatry. But so do mendacity and wishful thinking, all of it boosted — covertly and overtly — by reflexive anti-Americanism.

Thankfully, more research and evidence are emerging and spreading to dispel the perpetuated myths about Che Guevara’s life. Those who wear T-shirts with his image — just like the woefully misguided protesters on our campuses today — would be well served by watching Agustin Blazquez’s documentary Che: The Other Side of an Icon and heeding its warning: “Remember the real Che and the blood on his hands if you’re ever tempted to wear a T-shirt in his honor. The only thing you will really be displaying is your ignorance.”

[Featured image via YouTube]

Nora D. Clinton is a Research Scholar at the Legal Insurrection Foundation. She was born and raised in Sofia, Bulgaria. She holds a PhD in Classics and has published extensively on ancient documents on stone. In 2020, she authored the popular memoir Quarantine Reflections Across Two Worlds. Nora is a co-founder of two partner charities dedicated to academic cooperation and American values. She lives in Northern Virginia with her husband and son.

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Comments

Rest in piss, Che.

Castro wanted him dead. I suspect Castro helped the Bolivians and CIA to take him out.

They are both burning in hell.

Geez, it seems like it was just yesterday….
Rot in Hell.

Frezz in the hizzy | October 10, 2025 at 9:48 pm

Good job on the article. Back in the day I used to see a Che shirt every now and then. But now, not so much. Maybe it’s because I’m not around patchouli-drenched hippies as much as I used to be.

Like you say, I’ve always thought talking about Che is like talking about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. You get very different versions of events depending upon who you talk to.

It’s well known that he personally executed thousands of people in the ‘59 revolution. He went back to the continent to whip up the populace and ended up getting his ticket punched by Bolivian paramilitaries, I believe. He should’ve stayed with Fidel. The picture of him dead on a pallet with them holding his head up is famous.

In the movie Motorcycle Diaries, Gael Garcia Bernal plays Che, and is depicted as this Christ-like figure incapable of telling a lie. It’s an interesting movie, in spite of the whitewashing.

Good piece. I haven’t been able to find footage of the “we execute” statement, but he definitely said it. https://unwatch.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/Guevara-we-execute-people-english.pdf

It was part of a back-and-forth exchange where he went up and spoke in response to something (it wasn’t in his famous speech for which there is video).

https://unwatch.org/unesco-honors-executioner-che-guevara/

Ché, quite ironically and tragically, was a trained physician. He used this knowledge to inflict great pain while torturing and executing his victims. It was one of the reasons that the Bolivians were so eager to shoot the SOB when they caught up with him. He was Argentinian, as was my family before they emigrated legally back in the early part of the 20th Century to Texas. Difference is—my great-great grandfather and grandfather were also physicians but were healers, and not psychotic killers. Ché viewed South America as a single nation, a vision that those countries (with very, very diverse histories and cultures) disagreed with vehemently. The idiots, sycophants, sociopaths, and psychotics who celebrate that cold-blooded POS have no idea what he was like. He was worse than the Perons, Getulio Vargas (Brazil), Rafael Trujillo (Dominica), and Augusto Pinochet put together with Pol Pot.

I confess, I DO have a favorite portrait of Che from back in the day… I even had it on the wall of my college dorm room for quite a while.

http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-84Le3CtQXz4/UA9F-o5aIjI/AAAAAAAAFFw/zEE1oZ2fYCY/s1600/NL+Che+lr.jpg

    henrybowman in reply to Hodge. | October 11, 2025 at 12:00 am

    I went looking for a cartoon I saw within the past several weeks of Che Guevara wearing an Obama tee shirt. Can’t find the damn thing for love nor money.

I’d love to organize a parade for the 60th anniversary of his death in my left wing town. By then, I’ll have retired and either sold or closed my business and the real hell raising can begin.

2smartforlibs | October 11, 2025 at 7:26 am

That amazing part is how many people don’t see him as the cold blooded killer he was.

MoeHowardwasright | October 11, 2025 at 7:47 am

The interesting thing for me is how the Russians tried all the atrocities committed by Beria during Stalin’s reign of terror. Then Castro did the same thing with Che. I’m sure some scholar could dig around those musty KGB files and find that Castro was told to get rid of him.

Zo

If he were around today, I suspect that Che would have been a huge Antifa guy.

In 1960 or thereabouts, Castro was asked how he came to select Guevera as his economist. When Castro asked Guevera what he was, he said “communist”. Castro thought he said “economist”.

Just skimmed through the Wiki on Che. Not a hint of the fact that Guevara was a virulent racist, mass murdering psychopath….he was just an upstanding revolutionary attempting to improve the life of exploited poor, etc., etc.