Fidel Castro was a born rebel.

I like Fidel Castro and his beard.

Fidel Castro for me is like a father.

I'm a staunch anti-Castro individual.

Fidel Castro was loved and hated passionately.

I just don't want to die the same day Castro dies

He [Castro] is a genius. We spoke about everything.

I am Fidel Castro and we have come to liberate Cuba.

The feeling is that Fidel Castro's much bigger than he actually is.

Castro branded Rigondeaux a 'traitor' and 'Judas' to the Cuban people.

Fidel Castro is loved down into the children. The Revolution won't die!

Sending $300 to your grandma in Cuba doesn't change the dynamic with Castro.

Castro has been a teacher for me. A master. Not on ideology but on strategy.

I got my job through the New York Times. [Written underneath:] So did Castro.

Castro, without question, is one of the smartest politicians that's ever walked.

Of course Castro was Cuba's longest serving president. After all, he was a dictator.

As his country crumbled around him, Fidel Castro's stature diminished abroad and at home.

Let's overwhelm the Castro regime with iPhones, iPads, American cars and American ingenuity.

Castro couldn't even go to the bathroom unless the Soviet Union put the nickel in the toilet.

Unfortunately, writing and reporting the truth is not allowed under Castro's tyrannical dictatorship.

There are examples of fraternal dictatorships, or one, anyway: the passing of power from Fidel to Raul Castro.

The last time the Diaz-Balarts were removed from power, it took a revolution, and we ended up with Fidel Castro.

Few living figures could contribute as much as Castro to our understanding of the second half of the 20th century.

Of course in Miami, not denouncing Fidel Castro at every turn is almost as bad as saying Gloria Estefan can't sing.

That first play I did in New York, Rogelio Martinez's 'When It's Cocktail Time in Cuba,' I played a young Fidel Castro.

I am no apologist for Fidel's [Castro] regime. It is, after all, a totalitarian regime. So I would like to see that change.

The first thing out of Fidel Castro's mouth to me, he looked me right in the eye and said, 'You're a man of great courage.'

Fidel Castro, whatever people may think of him, is a hero in Latin America, primarily because he stood up to the United States.

Castro always used the boxers as a symbolic war against American values to demonstrate that they fight for something more than money.

There is one source of injustice in Cuba: The Castro regime. It is not United States policies and it is not the United States embargo.

Fidel Castro had to sit there while he was given a speech on democracy, something the Cuban people have not been able to hear for 43 years.

I once dealt with a prima donna on a movie set. I won't say who, but his first name is a country. A communist country. Run by Fidel Castro.

I am sick and tired of an administration that treats Raul Castro and Ayatollah Khamenei better than it treats the prime minister of Israel.

My grandparents and my mom came from Cuba back in the '60s because they were fleeing from communism and Castro. I wouldn't be here otherwise.

When I was 14, in Cuba, I met Fidel Castro with my dad, and it was really impressive. And on a totally different level, I met Justin Timberlake!

Don't blame America for the thousands of Cubans who have been arrested, detained, and imprisoned by Castro for peacefully protesting the regime.

One of the achievements of which I am most proud was the codification, the writing into U.S. law, of the U.S. embargo on the Castro dictatorship.

I don't profess to have any religion, but if I did, my God would be Fidel Castro. He is like a ship that knew to take his crew on the right path.

Now we all know that Fidel Castro dressed up like Marilyn Monroe and gave JFK a case of syphilis so bad it eventually blew out the back of his head.

I know that Oswald killed Kennedy. Now, was he pushed? Encouraged to do it by outsiders? Possibly. Possibly. Was he sitting down with Fidel Castro? No.

I'm not Cuban and therefore don't have any family members who were oppressed by Castro's regime. But I do have a number of friends whose families were.

Fidel Castro gave it all to make his nation serviceable to all who desire real change. That's why I love Fidel Castro, and that's why he will never die.

What this man did, Fidel Castro, is he oppressed his people for nearly six decades. That legacy is firing squads. It's poverty. It's denying human rights.

Castro has lived almost his entire life as a clandestine revolutionary. To such figures, truth is always malleable, always subservient to political goals.

Particularly during the late 1960s, a large number of American skyjackers earnestly believed that Fidel Castro's Cuba was an egalitarian, post-racial utopia.

The Bay of Pigs was an operation the United States endorsed. That was a preventive operation. We were afraid that Castro was going to subvert the hemisphere.

I first came out against Castro in June 1968, fifteen months after my book had been published, and you cannot imagine how quickly a void was created around me.

Comandante Fidel Castro is a gifted communicator. He is a brilliant, brilliant mind. But the thing that struck me most about him was he was not a "nationalist."

It is unnecessary to say that Fidel Castro possesses the high qualities of a fighter and statesman: our path, our struggle, and our triumph we owed to his vision.

The consequence of the Bay of Pigs failure wasn't an acceptance of Castro and his control of Cuba but, rather, a renewed determination to bring him down by stealth.

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