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Cubans struggle to enjoy new economic freedoms

Posted: Tuesday, April 01, 2008 3:05 PM
Filed Under:


Cubans can strike another complaint off their laundry list of grievances about life’s daily grind.

Sunday night, the Cuban government ended its decade-old ban against ordinary people staying at tourist hotels and renting cars. This is Raul Castro’s third edict in less than a month aimed at loosening government controls over consumer spending.

Previous rulings allowed any Cuban to buy a cell phone and pay for cell phone service and anyone with enough money in their pocket to walk into a government store and legally buy electronic items like computers, microwave ovens and DVD players.

Bellhop opens door to the Hotel Nacional de Cuba in Havana.
Roberto Leon / NBC News
Bellhop opens door to the Hotel Nacional de Cuba in Havana.

The old regime of Raul’s brother Fidel Castro strictly limited these luxury items to foreigners or the upper echelon of Cuban society holding privileged jobs. The only way regular consumers gained access had been through purchases on the black market.

Lucy Alvarez, a retired electrical engineer who learned to cut hair to supplement her pension, doesn’t expect to take advantage of her new economic freedoms anytime soon. "We live hand-to-mouth," she said.

Under Cuba’s dual economy, people receive their salaries in national pesos (NP) while nearly all imported goods are priced in a convertible peso (called the CUC) that is tied to the U.S. dollar – valued at 24 times stronger than the national peso (NP). In practical terms, foreign goods are well beyond the reach of most Cubans.

For example, a 26" Panasonic flat screen TV, which went on sale Tuesday for the first time in a Havana electronics store, sells for 1,961 CUC, equal to $2,120 – more than double its retail price in other countries. And a Chinese-made moped costs some 795 CUC, a little under $860.

Nora Alonso would like a cell phone, but the 400 national pesos she earns a month working as a physical therapist in a state hospital barely covers her everyday expenses like food and clothing. A cell phone and a year of service would cost Alonso the equivalent of approximately two years of her salary.

Still she welcomes the change. "It doesn’t cost anything to dream," she said.

Alonso hopes more reforms are in the works – she wants better wages and a national currency with real purchasing power.

Hoping for real economic reform
In fact, many working people in Cuba think their government should dump the convertible money and return the island to a one-currency economy.                       

Reforming the island’s economy demands structural changes, argues Dr. Jaime Suchlicki from the University of Miami, changes far beyond what currently is taking place -- everything up to now, he said, is "not important."

He believes the motive behind the new measures is an "aim to appease the Cubans and give them a little hope about more things to come. They are also for external consumption to show the world that there are some changes happening in Cuba."

Suchlicki also warned that this could backfire. Instead of bridging differences in access between Cubans and foreigners, the measures might lead to more economic and social disparity between Cubans.

One government source who asked not to be named does report that government planners are considering various ideas that would lead to a stronger Cuban peso – enhancing what it could buy.

Rapid change unlikely
But most local economists agree that an across-the-board wage adjustment at this time is just not in the cards.

A recent front-page editorial in Granma, the Communist Party daily, tried to dampen public expectation of seeing any considerable improvement in the standard of living. It stressed, instead, that the workforce concentrate on improving labor discipline.

Many people employed in government-run enterprises readily confess they have little incentive to put in an 8-hour day when their pay envelopes provide little purchasing power.

In fact, there’s even a joke here that ends with the punch line, "the state pretends to pay us, so we pretend to work."

Countless workers admit that their personal goal is to find some outside source of income that will either supplement their state salary or supplant it all together. It’s currently estimated that some 60 percent of the Cuban population has regular access to hard currency – some through family remittances and others through direct earnings.

One thing that is clear is that people resent being told how they can spend their money.

That complaint surfaced last year when Raul Castro encouraged people to publicly air their grievances in controlled official settings. Upon taking office this past February, he personally pledged that his government would respond to public demands and lift its "excessive" controls -- controls that not only irritated consumers but led to discrimination.

People complained that Cuba was the only nation on earth where foreigners enjoyed more rights than the local population.

With their uncanny ability to poke fun at the surreal, Cubans even turned the ugly truth into the butt of popular jokes:

A first grade teacher asks her student Pepe, "What do you want to be when you grow up?"

"A foreigner!" he replies.

But government critic and free speech advocate Manuel Cuesta Morua never found the subject funny: "Maybe now we can begin to erase our feelings of national inferiority."

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Close Guantanamo Military base and it hand over to the Cuban exiles. The time has come for the U.S. to give us something back in return to the Cubans here in the U.S.  For 50 yrs we have been denied and lied to by the U.S. government about the secret deals they made behind close doors with the Castro brothers.
I truly wish the best for Cuba, but I hope they don't adopt the libertarian "every person for him/herself - it's okay for me to have everything and you have nothing" mentality that Eric High (Laredo, TX) and other people to. If I remember correctly, that's why Cuba had the revolution in the first place.
Raul is just another monarch ruler hell-bent on staying in power for whatever time he has left in this world (where is he going to go while dragging his demented mommified brother: North Korea?), he is buying time with trinkets for the natives and expeculation on this cosmetic change or another, which is just enough for some romantic 1960s pot heads to take the line and sinker that changes are being made and maybe have a sympatizer like Obama socialist lift the Embargo and give him the same hand-outs the Russians gave Cuba for 30 years to showcase what a little country like that can never afford: so called free health care (of dubious quality) and free indoctrination (not education), mind you that nothing is free if one is slave owned by the Castro Nostra. If anyone has any doubts about real changes in Cuba just ask: If this is real change why don't they just let out all the political prisoners out of jail?
A sinkin ship, sending S.O.S. across the globe is entitled to receive help whatever it can from the Western hemisphere. Guns & tobacco ain't much help in the last 50-years. Another neo-con in decline.
Call it "Cuban Glasnost"...Rauls effort is commendable...just like "putting lipstick on a pig". It's gonna backfire on him. La "Revolucion" belongs where it started...the 50's...Welcome to the 21st century compay....the reality of todays world is going to pop up on the Cubans like a bitch slap on the face...and they're going to be pissed. Stand by for a major awakening...  
For all you liberals out there...

1.  If you admire the simple life of Cuba and complain about the materialism in the U.S., what is stopping you from living the simple life in the U.S.?  Many people do.  It's a choice and George Bush doesn't even have the power to say you can't.

2. Do you agree that we should give all our money to the government?  Right now you probably give about 10-25% of your money to George Bush... how would you like to give 100% of your money to him?  Would that be nice?

3. Don't get me wrong, I do love liberals.  The people are nice, Obama is nice, he has a great personality.  I've been to other countries, I love the people... I'm sure I'd love the Cubans, I would probably like their culture too.
Hmmm... Cuba's new economic liberalization seems very similar to China.  Why are we so damn hard on Cuba, when China has been far worse in terms of being a repressive government and human rights?  China is now a major powerhouse that basically controls the US Consumer Economy.  So if the sleeping Giant of Asia can make a "turnaround", why can't Cuba?  Are we THAT ignorant?
Yes, there are many intelligent young people in Cuba who are expressing their dissatisfaction with their current economic system. I hope that they will be able to come to the U.S. to share with us their opinions of Cuba's system and also to learn about the ways in which our system is also very flawed. If only we could realize that both Cuba and the U.S. need major transformations in order to make their citizens happier and healthier.
While I admit to being a conservative, I have never understood why we need an embargo. It seems to me the fastest road to democracy in Cuba is through trade and exposure to the US. We don't boycott China which aggressively "controls" its people (Like cutting off the internet switch so their citizens couldn't see the turmoil in Tibet) but an island in the Caribbean poses a threat - get real. The days of being a Soviet puppet and sending combat troops to Angola are over. Remember Krushchev's famous saying, "We will bury you"? Well the government conveniently hatcheted his true utterence which was "We will bury you in consumer goods". While that proved laughable the twisting of Krushchev's words remind me of this embargo. The Cuban people just want to be free and actually have fond memories of the "gringos". And this is from, again, a conservative who believes in establishing a hi-tech fence with Mexico. Comments most welcome.
"All those who have experienced the hijacking of their nations to communism - from Cubans, to Vietnamese, to Hungarians - know the archetype of the Communist Party member and activist: the failed professional who becomes the professional failure. They resent being bested by others who are more talented, industrious, or virtuous. So they nurture a malignant grudge against the world, or society, or 'the system.'" - (Humberto Fontova, Exposing the Real Che Guevara, p. 129)
the man asking about where the embargo went...the embargo is only from america..the chinese are sending the mopeds dvds and the electronics..and someone is making a whole lot of money... in china people are not complaining cuz the same moped is 1 or 200 dollars so workers are happy in china because of the pricing...

and they work very hard and not only when they have a boss..they are very self motivated entrepreneurs
as are the cubans in miami..but the bitter comes with the sweet maybe somewhere in the middle would be good

keep socialized medicine and education but drop the army like costa rica...just what america could be without  all the military spending.
To the writer who commented that Cuba has a low mortality rate - do you know that's easy to achieve that if you terminate all pregnancies that seem problematic because then you only have to count healthy babies? Don't be so gullible. Do you know that you have to bring your own meds and sheets to the hospital in Cuba, do you realize that everyone doesn't have access to education once they get to a certain point, do you know that only the prettiest of Cuba's citizens get to work in the hospitality industry and you better not criticize the govt. I wouldn't trade the freedom we have here for one second. For those of you complaining about the US - have you ever wondered why we dont have people climbing into inner tubes and travelling through shark infested waters to get to Cuba? The human soul was created to be free and people are willing to risk everything to live in freedom. God bless America and a future free Cuba.
I thnk the american way of life is ruining the whole world!
I think cuba  is lucky to be communist and should hope to stay taht way for as long as it can.
Wow, This is great for the people of Cuba. I pray for them always, for there Freedom in the World. Do Not F E A R . Because it is only  False Evidence Appearing Real. Always think BIG. DREAM Big. YOUR DREAMS ARE COMING TRUE.   GOD BLESS THE PEOPLE OF CUBA.  YEAH  
Ordinary Cubans will remain 2nd class citizens for as long as they earn a 2nd class, double-standard, payroll of undervalued pesos.  Cuba, a supposedly egalitarian Socialist State, is the only place on earth where there are 2 currencies, one for the elites and Communist VIPs, and the devalued currency for the vast majority of the population.  A true reform would be to have a 1-currency system like the rest of the world, and for its citizen to earn what their labor is really worth.
Well said, Gerardo J. Franco, Miami, FL.
I have a lot of sympathy for the people of Cuba. They have had much of nothing, and it's time they start living a better life. Fair wages so they can buy what they want. I know when people from around the world start going to Cuba it will increase the ecomony, but the gov. needs to STOP taking so much money from them.
I believe when they have a democratic gov. and not a money hungary dictator, the country will start to do well. GOOD LUCK CUBA MAY YOU SUCCEED !!!!
Gerardo J. Franco, well said !!!
GOOD LUCK CUBA !
The world is wasting their time with Cuba. It is a dictatorship with very few natural resources that are pointless from a geopolitical point of view. Even if it were a democracy it would still be dependent on the outside world for tourism and hotel income. It has a few famous scientists, writers, athletes that
are proud of their nationality like any other nation, but what is the big deal? If it were so special the Europeans and Canadians would have moved their factories and headquarters there. The Cubans in the US are in sorrow and tears for their lost Ithaka but again...what is the big deal? They live in Florida, not very far from home, they have good jobs, high incomes..etc...who the hell cares if the island is under communism? From an economic point of view the island is insignificant.  
Perhaps service organizations, such as Lions Clubs, will again surface in the new Cuba! Service Clubs can do what no governments can ever hope - give people hope and vision.
this is for mr John Smith. Is your experience with the free world market and USA is so bad all you need to do is move to Cuba or North Korea, is they allow you to do so. Then, and only then you will know what is all about. But, please stay there at least for 1 year
Why do not people do their homewook well?  Read well about the mulatto demon, BEFORE FIDEL CASTRO, by the name of one, Fulgencio Battista who had Cuba in his grip, with the help and blessings of the "Great Shaytan" America. Read about the Mafioso Demons and the little BUG, by the name of Siegel. A Bugsy in the Siegel, that is... WHO PUT FORTH THE MAKINGS OF LAS VEGAS CASINOS, JUMPING OFF POINT WAS HABANA, CUBA.
Guess where the plan was catched by Bugsy and the his own "Knights Of The Glorious Roundtable".
Now, you are thinking. You got it, CUBA.
Guess who controlled all of the land in Cuba, before Fidel, Fidel, Fidel. Youn guessed right again..... They now reside in Miami
WHAT GOES AROUND, WILL EVENTUALLY COME AROUND. HAVE FUN READING ABOUT FULGENCIO BATTISTA. THE GUY WAS SO DUMB, THAT HIS HAND WAS BITTEN OFF BY AMERICA WHO TOLD HIM TO LET FIDEL OUT OF JAIL, AND HE DID. I JIVE YOU NOT, NOW, BLOKES, CAN YOU IMAGINE LETTING OUT YOUR SWORN ENEMY OUT OF JAIL? WHAT A DUMB BUM. IDIOT, IDIOTEN GALORE. AMERICA ALWAYS BACKS LOSER. FOR EXAMPLE, THE SHAH PAVLAVI OF IRAN, AND SO ON, AND SO ON, AND SO ON......
Read all, and you will see, why there are the Castros In beautiful Cuba.
I bid you piece and I bid you love.
From An African Born In Guyana, South America.
Hey Rick, you obviously have no clue what you're talking about.  What Embargo?  There hasn't been an embargo for a few years now.  It has swiss cheesed over the years; especially in the 90's.  Please, you're just upset b/c your flight down there is more expensive because of certain restrictions.  Glad to see you care so much about the people there that you take advantage of them.
Vice Dictator Raul
Just open the jails of political prisioners and let the Cubans speak openly without reprisals,don't entertain us with DVD players or cheap computers....FREEDOM is what Cuba needs..
I am a Cuban-American, a citizen of the USA and proud of this great Country.In my 48 years here I have heard so many non-sense news from  Castro and his maffia.There are two things I would like to see in the news:1)"all anti-american cuban were send back to Cuba" 2)two Balseros (Fidel and Raul)in jail in Miami"
My mother traveled with the Arthur Murray International dance team. She was one of the best. She visited Cuba twice. Once before the coup. She has pictures and postcards of an absolutely beautiful country! Then, again, she visited. I do not know if right before or after the coup. I know that the second time, military troops were taking gold off walls and other valuables while the dance ensemble was there. At one point, their Cuban guide had taken the team out one night to eat. Something went on- some guards came checking on people. They did get out of there but it was scary. The country was so different that second time. When she now speaks of Cuba, it is as if she is seeking a country that is no more in her eyes. I so very much hope that changes will come to pass to bring back this true jewel to the people of Cuba and to the world to its former beauty and to build up the people of Cuba who were described as such wonderful folk and who still are.
john smith - your comment belongs on a divorcee whiners forum.  while i understand your "misery" you can not direct that at your government for problems you and your ex created.

capri - well said! that is what i think could possibly happen.

I would listen to those who lived prior in Cuba who know firsthand the conditions of the average person there.  And indeed, how can one buy a high tech ANYthing living on $20 a month?  What would be more important is to see job reformation. Not buying into false liberation.
as someone who has never been to cuba i would be more interested in reading an article by an actual cuban, if there is some side or news story written by a native please let me knwo
Bwaaahhh what a crock of #$%$ !  

= Freedom doesn't equate to materialism or buying useless $tuff you don't need.

You want to see what Capitalism leads to ... try the Calcutta slums ... or the moutanins of trash outside of Capitalist Mexico City where thousands of children, without shelter, dig through garbage for scraps to eat.

The Miami exiles are really going to ratchet up the propaganda as Raul and Fidel get near death.

US: "Hey Cubans .... give up your free health care, free education, free housing, higher test scores, lower infant mortality, non existant crime rates, no homelessness, no abject poverty, and genuine love for your fellow man ........ for a flat screen TV, gated communities, credit card debt, 70 hr work weeks in a cubicle, rampant drug use and crime, medical insurance premiums, billboards everywhere, Paris Hilton, McDonalds, and Reality TV."

"FREEDOM" is on the way .... to RUIN one of the last pristine places and people on Earth.
For all those that want to trade their place in the USA or Canada for the place of a Cuban, please do so, but first, think twice about it and voluntarily live like a Cuban at least for one month and:
- Buy your foods from the coupon book and survive 15 days
- Enjoy the freedom of having: no internet access, try to place an international telephone call, try to send a letter to the USA or Canda using the Cuban Postal Service, try to buy a pair of shoes, underwear, a water tap for your kitchen, a new sofa, a chair, a pound of any food: mangoes, avocado, whatever, try to take a shower with running water, try to read any book that is not censored by the regime, try to read TIME magazine for example, try to use toilet paper, try to create a political or apolitical party, for example The Party of The Friends of Animals and Everything Green, try to make a club: The Club of the Mosquito Loving Duds, for example, make a demmonstration against the policy of the regime on any issue that you don´t like,
- Go to the bathroom of any of the "free" hospitals and try to wash your hands or flush the toilets,
- Try to travel from point A to point B with a salary of 400 Cuban pesos,
I think the above is humulliating enough and it is not my intention. If your are from the left, the Cuban "left" that is in power in Cuba right now is nothing but a totalitarian regime disguised as a leftist and socialist society, is a betrayal to all of those that consider thenselves as liberals, is the enemy of mankind disguised as its friend. Please believe me and distantiate yourselves from them, and help denounce them.

And please, don´t be so naive and blame the problems on the Embargo, the Embargo is stupid, it really helps the Castro´s in finding a culprit and a cause to their inneptitude to govern and build a prosperous country. And to those "Cubans" that support the Embargo: you are helping the Castros and killing your brethen. If tomorrow morning the USA lift the Embargo, the Castro´s will find something so the USA places it back. But the game has to end: Engagement, not confrontation, socavate, don´t destroy, follow what we did with the former Soviet Union...

Cuba will se a greater future, but sadly, it seems that biology has to take its course first and perhaps after the generation that is in power now passes away, we will not see it.
Freedom is a priceless thing, but it also means this: people making choices that empower them.  Forcing freedom down the throats of foreign governments is not a positive thing, because any type of government is better than chaos--like in former Soviet Republics, where rumors cited instances of people trying to sell nuclear warheads to the highest bidder.

What I do not understand is why our government can not take a positive stance, encouraging rather than bullying.  Sure, those countries opting for democratic changes still do not have freedom like we like to think of it, but isn't it the right of a people to choose their form of government? I thought somehow that that was one of the first steps on the road to freedom.

Before we start putting our fingers down our throats to gag out the words, "America, Love It Or Leave It!" how about we allow those around us to have their own opinions.  

Just when I think we learn from past mistakes, as a nation and as a citizenry, I read in the news how we make the same mistakes again and again and again.

In November, I hope that Americans will remember that the minds that introduced us to a quagmire in Iraq, an economic crisis at home, and a total disregard for ethics, responsibility and common sense, will never be the minds that will create solutions.  




Note to Eric High:
The curious thing is that even though Cuba's socialist philosophy embraces government intervention in daily life, and US individualist philosophy opposes it, there tend to be more rules affecting daily life in North America's society than in Cuba's. For example US littering laws are much more strict. US building codes are much more strict, thicker and more complicated. Cuban construction workers who take up their trades in North America face a culture shock of rules, regulations and inspectors. The US tax code is infinitely more complicated. The US banned smoking in public places many years before Cuba did. This is not because one society is better than the other. There are three main reasons. First America's system is much bigger and more complicated than Cuba's. North America's economy, technology and legal system are more complicated. Second, we have a federalist system with national laws and states laws. In Cuba provincial and local laws are more uniform and you do not have the multiple layers of laws to figure out. Third, in Cuba there are fewer economic entities. The vast complicated capitalist/free enterprise system has many more centers of power, companies, corporations, transit systems, sanitation systems, community college systems, etc. - contending in the legal framwork, making demands on it, highering lawyers, bankers, and accountants to press their legal cases. The US has many more lawyers per population. These lawyers pushing their cases create more legal interpretations and precedents - futher thickening the network of rules and regulations. Fourth, in the US we have more organized political voices, more lobbyists, parties, interest groups, and again corporations all pushing and pulling on the political process. This leads to the creation of many more bills, and laws, and compromises and amendments. The end result of so many voices jumping into the political process one law for the gun people, one for the mothers, another for animal rights, another for the doctors, etc. is that we have more rules, laws, regulations, law suites and precedents than Cuba. Fifth, North America's system has been around  longer than any other written constitutional government. Our rules snow ball on top of one another. A big systemic change (revolution, losing a war, a Napoleonic code) can throw out the old complicated rules and replace them with a new, simpler, more consistent system. The last big systemic change for the US was 1787 with the US constitution. We have had other big changes, but we never junked the entire old system after that. We just layered on top of it. The bottom line is that communism, capitalism, libertarianism, whatever, will not be the main creator of rules in everyday life. The main issue is the complexity of the society. The more complex you are, the more rules you tend to get.
A note on rights. These have, of course, been constested, but there are some key international statements of rights. The most important is the International Declaration of Human Rights of 1948. It was passed in the UN General Assembly by 48 votes for (including the US), none against and 8 absentions: (Saudi Arabia, apartheit-ruled South Africa, and several Soviet Bloc countries). The IDHR does give the right to employment, a decent standard of living, social security, education, food, clothing, housing, and medical care, along with the kinds of individual freedoms from the government mentioned in the US Bill of Rights. Franklin D. Roosevelt asserted the Four Freedoms which included Freedom from want. Many national constitutions have included human rights to various socia-economic standards. The US constitution's 14th Amendment guarantees equal protection of the laws, which has been interpreted by the Supreme Court to include equal access to education and other social services. To say that people only have the right to live free is a minority position in the world. It has never claimed more than a minority of political philosophers. For most of human history governments have assumed that citizens and subjects had other rights and that governments had more comprehensive obligations to their citizens. The "obvious" idea that individual rights do not include socio-economic rights is and always has been an unusual one, that, at very least, must carry the burden of proof.
There are no cansidate choices that can do what needs to be done except carry on the Bush plan in place , hes making all of his tools of power to be passed on unless there is an impeachment and congress gets to work with checks and balances ...
There are no cansidate choices that can do what needs to be done except carry on the Bush plan in place , hes making all of his tools of power to be passed on unless there is an impeachment and congress gets to work with checks and balances ...
shame on you john smith......you created what you have or don't have.......you can solve all your problems...move to cuba......just pack up and go since you have such a problem with the usa......see ya

In response to John Smith's comment above, if you think that living under the opression of a communist government is paradise then why don't you move to the island of paradise?  You, Michael Moore, and the rest of the people that praise Cuban government are free to make Cuba home.
Julie - and there are no unicorns either
In response to "John Smith (Sent Tuesday, April 01, 2008 5:15 PM)" Those rubber rafts float both way Amigo!
It's very sad that this is not happening as a result of natural changes but because one person has decided to do so. This means that all these changes can go back to the way they were any time. Cuba is in fact not a democratic country and the main reason I left ten years ago was precisely because of this and because I hated the way our own government treated us. We were in the eyes of all a second class citizen but curiously my people are wise enough to understand the reasons behind it and always opened our hearts to any human being. By comparison, here in the USA, where you tend to confuse money by liberty or free society as some call it, there is a huge solitude. There is no acceptance of other types of people. I think that USA as a developed country has a great deal of things to teaches us (Cubans) such as political maturity, consistency at work, civic behavior, etc, but we have a great deal to teach USA about humanity and kindness to others.
I want to thank the country for taking me and giving me the opportunity to work, things I did not have in my own country but to be honest any time I hear that an insurance company denied a treatment because “a pre-existing condition” it does not make any sense to me why somebody or something put a stop to this, where are the taxes we are paying going? Why in reality nothing happened with the corruption on ENRON? Why the money always win in a trial (“…justice and liberty for all…”) and I would like to add: “… for all that have money…”
My point here is that there is so much more behind the signs of democracy. Cuba as someone said above should not by any means follow after USA. We need to indeed kick out those dictators, hopefully without blood being shed, and find the way to keep all those good things we have and start building a society that takes care of its child, elderly, women and in general of all those that need help. We must not loose our soul, it is what made us withstand so many struggles, and it is our most powerful weapon.
Having been to Cuba myself, I can speak from experience.  The country is indeed a paradise, a  paradise in crisis.  A paradise that lives on through the spirit of the people who truly know how to appreciate "the little things in life" and be grateful for what they do have.  Cuba is not a "throw-away society."  What they have, they care for meticulously.  Cubans are survivors, living by wit and trade.  More than anything, what they have is heart and soul.  One might think of them as a macrocosm of Gilligan's Island.  They are all stuck on this beautiful little island together in the midst of a dying dream (Castro regime) finding unique ways to enjoy the little they have together.  Their circumstances were brought on by mutiny of a preceding regime that had robbed the island of it's treasures and left many starving and abused.  The scales of justice have a way of balancing themselves in a way that the human mind has difficulty comprehending.  When the dust finally settles on the dream, at least the "little folks" on this island might actually have a chance to enjoy life, which, after all, is what the revolution was all about.  We as Americans, a country founded on it's on revolution, have a lot to learn from Cubans as do they from us.  
Agree, the only thing CUBA needs is free elections and the ability to join the democracies of the world.  Para Cuba: Eleciones libres y eligir su gobierno.  
I agree with Sheila i too have been to Cuba and the people there certainly would give you the shirt off their backs. Fidel was an evil dictator who watched his people go with just the bare necessity's. I think Raul just might make Cuba a good , safe place for the people. Dont be so negative, and John Smith from what i see on here , i see why your wife left you stop whining like a  girl,get a life .



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