I witnessed the entrance of neoliberal capitalism in a post-communist country, so I can imagine what would happen in Cuba if neoliberalism seizes it. (Tho, I expect it would be much wilder & nasty than what I have seen in Middle Europe.)
BUT I have my petty personal reasons for NOT to wear a tee with Che (unless combined with a MAGA hat) and those are as follows:
As opposed to the teens in "The Cucumber Hero", I was not reading poems by František Hrubín while coming-of-age.
Instead, I had a teen episode of obsessing about plays by Jean-Paul Sartre.
It was still during the reign of the local commie regime (in 1980s).
Those translations I was reading were usually from 1960s.
In 1970s and 1980s Jean-Paul Sartre (an alike) has not been translated anymore.
And besides all those plays which I liked, I also grabbed to read Jean-Paul Sartre's account of his visit to Cuba called "Hurricane Over Sugar" (published in Czech in 1961).
I remember reading that book (being surrounded by Soviet satellite absurdities of the 1980s) was quite a bizarre experience.
I thought (at that time) Jean-Paul is a bit off in this issue.
Maybe it might be interesting to re-read the book now with my "seize of neoliberalism in post-communist country" experience.
(Maybe my perception of "Hurricane Over Sugar" would be different.)
(Tho, I watched Agnes Varda's "Salut les Cubains" with already the neoliberal experience but I still perceived that film with quite mixed feelings — it is certainly not my fav Agnes' film — tho "Lion's Love" is even worse — anyway).
So, as a teen (under the influence of Jean-Paul Satre plays) I started (together with my teen best friend) to write existential plays too.
(Tho, they were rather dada & surreal than existential.)
In one of my plays, I needed to enter the plot with my alter ego persona, and maybe under the influence of "Hurricane Over Sugar" I got the idea I will call the character impersonating me as "Chairman of FCFC".
Here the "FCFC" was an abbreviation for the "Fidel Castro Fan Club".
There was not such a club existing in those days, it was just virtual reality (a product of teen imagination).
My best friend opted for himself a character called "Vice-chairman of FCFC".
HOWEVER, about half a year later my best friend informed me that he and some other boys and girls from the town really founded the (mock) Fidel Castro Fan Club and that the part of the founding meeting (besides loud reading of "Hurricane Over Sugar") was the expulsion (in absence) of the past FCFC Chairman (me) from the Club and electing the new leadership (in the best tradition of the show trials and Stalinist purges of the 1950s).
He told me all the details of my show-trial-in-absence and we had a lot of FCFC teen fun (in our 1980s Soviet satellite millieu).
Now, I guess it is clear that I (with my bitter history of deposed FCFC Chairman) can't wear Che tee (without MAGA hat or alike).
In any case, to think Che is for f*gs is even more deluded than writing with a great deal of naivety the "Hurricane Over Sugar" (Uragán nad cukrem).
https://youtu.be/5-HkPLFjQc8
my true object of admiration related to revolutionary Cuba is Ricardo Porro's, Vittorio Garatti's, and Roberto Gottardi's national art school buildings (displayed in "Salut les Cubains" too)...
https://www.archdaily.com/427268/ad-cla ... t-gattardi
In 1961, Fidel Castro said: “Cuba will count as having the most beautiful academy of arts in the world."