CHAPTER 17
More Than a Hero,
Less Than a Citizen
Euripides Rubio was born on March 1, 1938 in Ponce, Puerto
Rico. Were he alive in the year 2003, he would be reaching
retirement age. He might be looking forward to spending more time
with his wife or his grandchildren. Captain Rubio died at age 28 in
Tay Ninh Province, the Republic of Vietnam.
Capt. Rubio was attached to the 1st Battalion, 28th Infantry of
the U.S. Army. He had entered service at Fort Buchanan in Puerto
Rico. He was serving as his unit’s communications officer when it
came under fire from the Viet Cong. Capt. Rubio and his comrades
were badly outnumbered. The communist forces raked the
American position with machine gun fire and launched mortar
rounds and rifle grenades into the midst of the Americans.
Had he remained where he was, Capt. Rubio might have been
safe. Instead, he left his position and moved to the area where the
firing was the most intense, distributing ammunition, tending to the
wounded, and helping re-position the Army defenders. By exposing
himself this way, he was wounded twice, but he kept on. When one
of the battalion’s rifle company commanders was wounded and
evacuated, Capt. Rubio quickly took command. Moving among his
men to rally their spirits in the face of the devastating Viet Cong
fusillade, he was wounded a third time.
When more men were wounded, Capt. Rubio attended to them
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Pay to the Order of Puerto Rico
when he noticed something that put the company in danger of drawing
friendly fire. A smoke grenade that had been dropped to mark
the position of the Viet Cong for U.S. air strikes had fallen dangerously
close to the American and Republic of Viet Nam lines. Rubio
rushed to grab the smoke grenade and reposition it to safeguard his
countrymen and our allies, when enemy fire drove him to his knees.
Somehow, undeterred, he scooped up the grenade, “ran through the
deadly hail of fire to within 20 meters of the enemy position,” as the
citation reads, and hurled the smoking grenade into the midst of the
Viet Cong before collapsing for the final time.
Using the grenade to target their attacks, allied air strikes were
directed to destroy the Viet Cong forces and end their assault. As
the citation further reads, “Capt. Rubio’s singularly heroic act
turned the tide of battle, and his extraordinary leadership and valor
were a magnificent inspiration to his men. His remarkable bravery
and selfless concern for his men are in keeping with the highest
traditions of the military service and reflect great credit on Capt.
Rubio and the U.S. Army.”1
Capt. Euripides Rubio died on November 8, 1966. He is one of
four Puerto Ricans who have won the Congressional Medal of
Honor. All four were killed in action.
438
Afterword
The last 13 years that I have been involved in Puerto Rico’s selfdetermination
have been the most rewarding ones in my life. I
have had the opportunity to contribute to what I believe would be a
better life for 4 million U.S. citizens. I own property in and have
income from both Puerto Rico and from the United States. My U.S.
taxes go to subsidize people in Puerto Rico, who pay no federal
taxes yet enjoy all the federal benefits that my tax dollars buy. This
is both unfair and irresponsible, and it outrages me. Most of all it
outrages me because these billions in tax dollars are spent largely
due to the maneuvers of pharmaceutical firms trying to protect their
$4 billion annual “cut.”
My involvement in this process has helped me gain a better
understanding and appreciation of the genius of our founding
fathers, who developed the model for our democracy. You will
probably not find my definition of our democratic system of
government in any political science textbook, but this is what I have
learned as I have observed it in action.
Our biggest strength (and perhaps our biggest weakness) is that
our elected lawmakers and executives are limited to the amount of
integrity they can exercise in our system of government. We usually
think of integrity as something good. It typically is, but it can also
be very evil. If you look at one definition of the word ”integrity,” it
means commitment to one’s values and the guts to stick to them.
But who decides which values are good for humanity and which are
not? Hitler’s values reflected his sordid concept of a master race.
With that understanding, his actions had “integrity.” Thankfully,
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Pay to the Order of Puerto Rico
under our system of government, that definition of integrity would
not fly because it would be filtered through the hearts and minds of
America’s voters.
False definitions of American values have played a major role
in our history. “Manifest Destiny” represented the idea that
European Americans were superior to Native Americans and had a
natural right to America’s resources. The execution of that idea
contributed to the relocation and extermination of hundreds of thousands
of Native Americans.
Before our constitution was written, the Declaration of
Independence proclaimed that “all men are created equal” and that
they are entitled to “inalienable rights.” As a statement of universal
values, this document had tremendous integrity. As applied in real
time, however, it was literal, not universal, because in the late 1700s
women, indentured servants, Native Americans and slaves were
specifically exempt from those “inalienable rights.” They were not
considered “men.”
Eventually, as we all know, the definition of “men” was
expanded, sometimes under great pressure, to acquire its universal
meaning. All those wrongs that were considered “rights” at an
earlier time are now history, and our constitution and its provisions
continue to evolve.
For more than two centuries, the two forces that drove our
government and reflected our contemporary, collective conscience
were votes and capital. Every elected lawmaker and executive had to
respond to both or he would be out of business. The capital was
needed to promote the election of a candidate, and votes were needed
to secure the majority. Election reform has been the buzzword of late
and as a result, the influence of capital has been defined as evil and
corrupt. But before we start condemning capital, let’s not forget that
it is capital that provides the jobs that put the bread on the table of
those who vote. And it is America’s freedoms that allow anyone who
so chooses to accumulate as much capital as they please.
A candidate who ignored capital would not have the resources
to get his message out to the voters and a candidate who ignored the
desires of the people who elected him would be shunned at the
polls. No candidate could declare, “My conscience and my values
dictate this, regardless of what my voters and my contributors may
440
Afterword
think.” That candidate would not even get out of the starting gate.
In our current effort to promote self-determination for Puerto
Rico, we sparked initial interest in our cause by using capital, but
we had no votes. The only thing that has driven our idea as far as we
have advanced it is the limited integrity that our system allowed
those brave lawmakers to exercise who believed they were doing
the right thing – Republicans like Tom DeLay, Dan Burton, Don
Young and Democrats like Dick Gephardt, Bill Richardson, Patrick
Kennedy and others like them.
If slaves could vote, would they have voted themselves out of
slavery long before the civil war brought their liberation?
Eventually, the “right thing” prevailed. That was only because there
were people who dared exercise their integrity and in some
instances at a great personal cost.
In the end, the cause of self-determination for Puerto Rico will
prevail because the “right thing” always does under our democracy.
But unlike the favorite mantra of congress that chants the lie: “It
is up to the people of Puerto Rico to decide their future,” it is
congress that controls that decision. Just like it has for every territory
that ever became a state or was given its independence and it’s
the American voters and American capital that control congress.
So, when will American taxpaying voters (and American capital)
finally get fed up with spending over $20 billion a year to support a
welfare territory just to enrich a few select pharmaceuticals?
With the Navy’s exodus, America’s Department of Defense will
not have a significant presence in Puerto Rico. To most of us it signifies
that Puerto Rico no longer has strategic value to the U.S. So,
will Puerto Rico go the way of the Philippines or, will Puerto Rico
be asked to pay its fair share of Federal taxes and the 4 million U.S.
Citizens be allowed to participate fully in our democratic process?
Only time will determine the final outcome. But until then, both
American tax payers and the 4 million disenfranchised citizens who
live in Puerto Rico will continue to be shortchanged.
Alexander Odishelidze
San Juan, Puerto Rico
October 2003
441
Endnotes
Chapter 2
1. Bob Woodward, The Agenda: Inside the Clinton White House
(Simon & Schuster: New York, 1994), p. 175-176.
2. Ibid., p. 292-293.
3. National Geographic, March 2003, p. 40.
4. Ibid., p. 39.
5. Howard Hills, “The Saga of H.R. 856: The ‘United States-
Puerto Rico Political Status Act,” unpublished paper in the possession
of the authors.
Chapter 4
1. Office of National Drug Control Policy (2001), The
Economic Cost of Drug Abuse in the United States, 1992-1998.
Washington, D.C. Executive Office of the President (Publication
No. NCJ-190636). Accessible electronically at http://whitehousedrugpolicy.
gov.
2. Eldon R. Smith, “The Cost of Illness,” The Canadian Journal
of Cardiology, February 2003, Vol. 19, No. 2, available at
http://www.pulsus.com/CARDIOL/19_02/edie_ed.htm, visited
June 13, 2003.
3. Lorelei Albanese, “Uncle Sam’s Billions,” Caribbean
Business, August 14, 2003, in the Puerto Rico Herald at www.puertorico-
herald.org/issues/2003/vol7n33/CBUncle Sam-en.shtml.
4. Bureau of the Census, “Federal Expenditures by State,” 1981-
1993, 1995-1997, Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census,
“Consolidated Federal Funds Report,” 1994, 1998-2001; Joint
Committee on Taxation, “Estimates of Federal Tax Expenditures,”
1986-2001; Department of the Treasury, “The Operations and Effect
of the Possessions Corporation System of Taxation,” March 1989;
General Accounting Office, “Puerto Rico and Section 936” Report
GAO/GGD-93-109; in Robert J. Shapiro et al., “The Costs of Puerto
443
Pay to the Order of Puerto Rico
Rico’s Status to American Taxpayers,” prepared for the American
Alliance for Tax Equity, April 2003., p. 8.
5. The federal government’s fiscal year and Puerto Rico’s fiscal
year do not coincide. The federal fiscal year begins on October 1 of
each year and ends on September 30 of the following year. Puerto
Rico’s fiscal year runs from July 1 of each year through June 30 of
the following year. This difference, and the use by Puerto Rico of
carry-overs from previous year’s grants, accounts for variations in
the numbers as reported by the federal Office of Management and
Budget and Puerto Rico’s Planning Board. Unless otherwise indicated,
the numbers in this chapter reflect the federal fiscal year.
6. Lorelei Albanese, op cit.
7. John Mueller and Marc Miles, “Section 936: No Loss to
Puerto Rico,” undated article, for Lehrman, Bell, Mueller and
Cannon consulting firm, Arlington, Va., circa August 1998, p. 3.
8. U.S. Census Bureau, The Statistical Abstract of the United
States, 2002 Edition, Washington, DC 2001, Table 1291, p. 806.
9. Lorelei Albanese, op. cit.
10. James Dietz, “The Impact of Commonwealth Status on
Puerto Rico’s Economic Development,” in The Costs of Puerto
Rico’s Commonwealth Status to American Taxpayers, prepared for
the American Alliance for Tax Reform, April 2003, p. 40.
11. Statistical Abstract of the United States, 2002 Edition, Table
1297, p. 809; Albanese, op. cit.
12. The Family Portrait, “A Compilation of Data, Research and
Public Opinion on the Family” (Family Research Council,
Washington, DC 2002). See especially pp. 18-20 and pp. 117-121.
13. Emilio Pantojas-Garcia, “The Social Costs of Puerto Rico’s
Commonwealth Status,” in The Costs of Puerto Rico’s
Commonwealth Status to American Taxpayers, prepared for the
American Alliance for Tax Equity, April 2003, p. 56.
14. “Puerto Rico Received More than $54 Million from Justice
Department Last Year,” press release, Office of Communications,
Office of Justice Programs, U.S. Department of Justice, April 22,
2003, p. 1.
15. Joanisabel Gonzalez-Velazquez, “Government Announces
New Measures to Halt Crime,” WOW News, September 4, 2003,
reprinted in the Puerto Rico Herald, at www.puertorico-herald.
444
Endnotes
org/issues/2003/vol7n36/Media1-en.shtml.
16. Idem.
17. Pantojas-Garcia, op. cit., p. 71.
18. Idem.
19. Idem., p.74.
20. J. Tomas Hexner and Glenn Jenkins, “Puerto Rico: The
Economic and Fiscal Dimensions,” prepared for the Citizens
Education Foundation, 1998, p. 13.
21. Idem.
22. John Mueller and Marc Miles, “Unemployment and
Government Policy in Puerto Rico,” Lehrman, Bell, Mueller and
Cannon, Arlington, Va., unpublished paper, July 30, 1998, p. 32.
23. Ibid., p. 35.
24. The major political parties do hold primaries in Puerto Rico
and voting delegates attend the national party conventions.
Republicans, for example, held their 2000 primary in Puerto Rico
on February 27. George W. Bush won the primary with 87,375
votes, 94 percent of the total cast. On an island with more than 3.9
million people and a history of higher than average voter participation,
the scant voter turnout reflects the cynicism with which the
Puerto Rican people greet the fact that they have no say at the finish
line.
Chapter 5
1. A Joseph Campbell Companion, Diane K. Osbon, editor
(Perennial Books, Reprint Edition, 1995), p. 18.
Chapter 6
1. Emilio Pantojas-Garcia, “The Social Costs of Puerto Rico’s
Commonwealth Status,” in The Costs of Puerto Rico’s Commonwealth
Status to American Taxpayers, prepared for the American
Alliance for Tax Equity, April 2003, p. 70.
2 James Dietz, “The Impact of Commonwealth Status on Puerto
Rico’s Economic Development,” in The Costs of Puerto Rico’s
Commonwealth Status to American Taxpayers, p. 22; a footnote
appearing with this chart cites “Rivera-Batiz and Santiago, 1996,
45; U.S. Bureau of the Census, International database.
3. Vazquez Calzada, La poblacion de Puerto Rico, p. 286;
445
Pay to the Order of Puerto Rico
Whalen, From Puerto Rico to Philadelphia, Chap. 3; in Pantojas-
Garcia, op. cit., p. 62.
4. Pantojas-Garcia, op cit., p. 62.
5. J. Tomas Hexner and Glenn Jenkins, “Puerto Rico: The
Economic and Fiscal Dimensions,” prepared for the Citizens
Education Foundation, 1998, p. 7. Hexner is the chairman of Hex,
Inc. and Jenkins is the Director of the International Tax Program at
Harvard Law School and Fellow of the Harvard Institute for
International Development.
6. Dr. Joseph Pelzman, “Imported Capital Dependency as an
Economic Development Strategy: The Failure of Distortionary Tax
Policies in Puerto Rico,” Occasional Paper Series No. 50, The
European Union Research Center, The George Washington
University, Washington, D.C., December 17, 2002, p. vi.
7. John Mueller and Marc Miles, “Section 936: No Loss to
Puerto Rico,” Lehrman, Bell, Mueller and Cannon, Arlington, Va.,
undated, circa August 1997.
8. Dietz, op. cit., p. 47.
9. Pantojas-Garcia, op. cit., p. 75.
10. Ibid., p. 77.
11. Shapiro, R., et al., “The Costs of Puerto Rico’s Status to
American Taxpayers,” prepared for the American Alliance for Tax
Equity, April 2003. Not to paint too rosy a portrait, real average
weekly wages have been on the decline in Puerto Rico since 1986,
and this trend has continued its steady stair-step downward.
12. Marialba Martinez, “Manufacturing Industry Hopeful of
Economic Recovery in FY 2004,” Caribbean Business, reprinted in
The Puerto Rico Herald, September 11, 2003 at www.puertoricoherald.
org/issues/2003/vol7n37/CBManuflndus-en.shtml.
13. Mueller, J. and Miles, M., “Unemployment and Government
Policy in Puerto Rico,” Unpublished paper, July 30, 1998,
Arlington, Va., p. 2.
14. Hexner and Jenkins, op. cit., pp. 15-16.
15. Hexner and Jenkins, op. cit., p. 46.
16. Pantojas-Garcia, op. cit., p. 69.
17. Hexner and Jenkins, op. cit., p. 17.
18. Pelzman, op. cit., p. 81.
19. Bryan Hiscox, “Princeton U.: Puerto Rico Governor Speaks
446
Endnotes
at Princeton on U.S. Relations, History,” Copyright 2002 U-Wire,
reprinted in the Puerto Rico Herald, at http://www.puertoricoherald.
org/issues/2002/vol6n16/CalderonPrinceton-en.shtml.
20. Hexner and Jenkins, op. cit., p. 35.
21. Lawrence A. Hunter, “Leave No State or Territory Behind:
Formulating a Pro-Growth Economic Strategy for Puerto Rico,”
Institute for Policy Innovation, Washington, D.C., July 28, 2003, at
www.ipi.org/IPIPublications.nsf/PublicationLookupFullText/
OADAB458A7FFB375.
22. Marialba Martinez, “Local Shipping Industry Moves Into
21st Century,” Caribbean Business, reprinted in The Puerto Rico
Herald, November 23, 2000, at www.puertorico-herald.org/issues/
2003/vol4n47/CBShipping-en.shtml.
23. Idem.
24. Jose Martinez, “Puerto Rico Telephone: A New Way of
Doing Business,” Caribbean Business, July 6, 2000, in the Puerto
Rico Herald, at www.puertorico-herald.org/issues/2003/vol4n27/
CBPRT-en.shtml.
25. Idem.
26. Evelyn Guadalupe-Fajardo, “Paying the High Price of
Crime,” Caribbean Business, October 12, 2000, reprinted in The
Puerto Rico Herald, at www.puertorico-herald.org/issues/2003/
vol4n41/CBCrime-en.shtml.
27. Joanisabel Gonzalez-Velazquez, “Calderon Reaffirms
Policy Against Privatization,” WOW News, August 22, 2003, in the
Puerto Rico Herald, at www.puertorico-herald.org/issues/2003/
vol7n35/Media3-en.shtml.
28 Hunter, op. cit.
29. Joanisabel Gonzalez-Velazquez, “Calderon: Slight
Improvement in Economic Development,” WOW News, June 2,
2003, in the Puerto Rico Herald, at www.puertorico-herald.org/
issues/2003/vol7n26/Media3-en.shtml.
30. John Mueller, and Marc Miles, “Unemployment and
Government Policy in Puerto Rico,” p. 21.
31. Ibid., p. 5.
32. Hunter, op. cit.
33. Jose L. Carmona, “The Little Engine That Can,” Caribbean
Business, July 13, 2000, in The Puerto Rico Herald, at www.puer-
447
Pay to the Order of Puerto Rico
torico-herald.org/issues/vol4n28/CBSmallBus-en.shtml.
34. Hunter, op. cit.
35. Jude Wanniski, The Way the World Works, Gateway
Contemporary, 4th Edition (September 1998), p. 299.
36. Ibid., citing Irene Philippi de Soto, “Is There Life After 936
in Puerto Rico?”, The Wall Street Journal, April 2, 1993.
37. Hexner and Jenkins, op. cit., p. 47.
Chapter 8
1. This discussion owes a great deal to an unpublished dissertation
by Sandra Suarez-Lasa, “The Domestic Political Mobilization
by U.S. Multinational Corporations; The Protection of the
Possessions Corporations System of Taxation, 1976-1986” (Yale
University, 1994), UMI Dissertation Services, Ann Arbor,
Michigan. The early activity of U.S. business enterprises in Puerto
Rico after the Spanish-American War is described in Gordon K.
Lewis, Puerto Rico: Freedom and Power in the Caribbean (New
York: Monthly Review Press, 1963).
2. Arturo Morales Carrion, Puerto Rico: A Political and
Cultural History (W. W. Norton & Co, New York: 1983), p. 212.
3. Ibid., p. 162, citing Luis Muñoz Rivera, Campanias Politicas
(Madrid, 1925) 2:136. Muñoz was a leader of a party that became
known as the Federalists. They were pro-American in outlook and
favored a system of U.S. citizenship with real local autonomy of
government for the island. Many aspects of their worldview
continue to characterize mainstream Puerto Rican political thought
today, even as the use of the island as a factory has continued.
4. Ibid., p. 226.
5 Detroit Free Press, May 10, 1953, p. 7 as quoted in Milton
Taylor, “Industrial Tax Exemption of Puerto Rico, National Tax
Journal, December 1954, p. 163.
6. Suarez-Lasa, op. cit., p. 88.
7. Congressional Record, July 21, 1982, p. 17235.
8. Suarez-Lasa, op. cit., p. 167.
9. Ibid., p. 192.
10. Public Law 103-66, signed into law by President Clinton on
August 10, 1993.
11. Lawrence A. Hunter, “Leave No State or Territory Behind:
448
Endnotes
Formulating a Pro-Growth Economic Strategy for Puerto Rico,”
Institute for Policy Innovation, Washington, D.C., July 28, 2003, at
www.ipi.org/IPIPublications.nsf/PublicationLookupFullText/
OADAB458A7FFB375
12. Statement of Sen. John Breaux (D-La.), on the introduction
of S. 1475, Congressional Record, September 26, 2001, S 9882.
13. Robert J. Shapiro, “Federal Spending and Tax Benefits for
Puerto Rico Financed by U.S. Taxpayers,” in The Costs of Puerto
Rico’s Commonwealth Status to America’s Taxpayers, prepared for
the American Alliance for Tax Equity, April 2003, p. 9.
14. John Marino, “Section 956: Dead on Arrival,” “Puerto Rico
Report,” The Puerto Rican Herald, March 15, 2002, at http://puertorico-
herald.org/issues/2002/vol6n11/ PRR0611-en.shtml.
15. Ceci Connolly, “An Unlikely Pair Fights for Cheaper
Medications,” The Washington Post, September 1, 2003, A3.
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