11.11.15

Cuba Emerges From The Cold

Obama Thaws Paying Off
         Josefina Vidal, Cuba's unfathomably brilliant Minister of North American Affairs, returned to Washington this week for more talks with State Department officials. Yesterday -- November 10th -- she held a news conference at the new Cuban embassy and told reporters she is nearing agreements with the U. S. on...flights, environment protection, direct postal service, and the fight against drug trafficking.
Vidal's news conference in Washington, D. C.
  Yesterday -- November 10th -- Vacation Express launched its CUBA.VACATIONEXPRESS.COM website. It provides full booking capabilites for people who would like to travel to Cuba legally. It offers hotel line-ups in six vacation spots: Havana, Varadero, Cayo Coco, Cayo Santa Maria, Holguin, and Santiago de Cuba.
       Three imposing Chinese warships arrived in Cuba yesterday -- November 10th. China is now Cuba's #2 trade partner behind Venezuela but China is striving to be #1. Also, China desires closer ties with Cuba as tensions rise between Washington and Beijing in the South China Sea. China is truly refocusing on Cuba.
This photo shows Chinese warships docking in Havana yesterday.
         Rob Manfred is the Commissioner of Major League Baseball in the U. S. Yesterday -- November 10th -- Mr. Manfred said he is working hard so Major League teams can play exhibition games in Cuba beginning next year during spring training. He said, "It will be a good thing for baseball." Baseball scouts in the U. S., along with profiteering human traffickers, realize that Cuba is a gold-mine for baseball talent and fans. 
        This photo shows President Enrique Pena Nieto of Mexico hosting President Raul Castro of Cuba this past weekend at the Yucatan State Government Palace in Merida, Mexico. Both men wore Cuban-style white guayabera shirts. A few years ago Mexican President Vicente Fox mimicked the George W. Bush administration's antagonistic policy towards Cuba. But now Barack Obama is the U. S. President and Mexico's President Pena Nieto is replicating Obama's friendship regarding Cuba. Raul Castro and Pena Nieto released this statement: "We have set about creating conditions for more Mexican companies to invest in Cuba." Pena Nieto said that he wants Mexico, with its historic pre-Fox ties and proximity to Cuba directly across the Yucatan Peninsula, to jump past Spanish and Brazilian companies in investing in Cuba.
       It is known that Mexico's ultra-rich businessman Carlos Slim is a great admirer of Fidel Castro and the Cuban Revolution. In 2010 Mr. Slim read that the ailing Fidel loved to watch television news and documentary shows. So, Mr. Slim sent Fidel a nice television. Mr. Slim's flagship company, American Movil, already has a roaming deal with Cuba. It will be interesting to see if Carlos Slim invests more in Cuba.
       Mexico's richest man, Carlos Slim, is worth about $80 billion, up in the Bill Gates stratosphere and well ahead of Warren Buffett. He turned 75 last January 28th and many are wondering if, encouraged by his President Pena Nieto, he will invest more heavily in Cuba. Two Mexican companies have recently signed investment deals with Cuba's refurbished Mariel Port Economic Zone and it is known that other Mexican firms -- such as bottling company Femsa and cement maker Cemer -- have very exciting plans in Cuba.
         The United States {Estados Unidos} was represented at Cuba's International Trade Fair by companies such as Pepsi and Gatorade as well as American Airlines, Boeing, Cargil, Caterpillar, etc. Alabama-based Cleber LLC wants to build a tractor factory in Cuba. As things now stand, Cuba prefers doing business with more trusted friends -- such as Mexico, Venezuela, Spain, Canada, China, Russia, Brazil and Vietnam.
       The worst relations between Mexico and Cuba came when two rich cowboys were Presidents of Mexico and the United States. The two countries are contiguous and these two vaqueros were also contiguous. Vicente Fox was Mexico's President from 2000 till 2006; George W. Bush was American President from 2001 till 2009. Cubans on the island still dread just thinking about the Bush-Fox tandem. 
Fox looked to Bush for Mexico's Cuban policy.
Cuba thinks Bush-Fox tried to recapture the island.
Obama-Pena Nieto are treating Cuba decently.
          The demise of Revolutionary Cuba has been predicted on a daily basis since January of 1959 when the Batista-Mafia dictatorship hastily decided it would be safer to relocate in nearby Miami. As the Castro brothers have aged to 89 {Fidel} and 84 {Raul}, some eager would-be Batistianos savor a golden post-Castro opportunity. However, that might again be misjudging and underestimating the tenaciousness and resilience of the Caribbean's biggest island. It seems, at the moment at least, that the growing impetus for the post-Castro era in Cuba will be domestic {Cuban} and not foreign {American}, but that could change. In January of 2017 the colossus to the north gets a new Commander-in-Chief. Cuba is preparing for that.
And by the way:
       I love old movies on the Encore channels and my all-time favorite actress was/is Hedy Lamarr. She was born in Vienna, Austria, in 1914 and died in the USA in 2000. In Hollywood's heyday, she was often called the most beautiful woman on the planet. She was also very smart and discernible, as indicated by the above quote. Of course, Ms. Lamarr died before Viagra and Cialis emerged to allegedly elevate wimps to men.
     And did I say the uncommonly beautiful Hedy Lamar was smart? In 2014 she was posthumously inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame. Born in Vienna, Austria, Hedy hated Hitler's Nazis so much during World War II that she invented a technology -- described above -- that was designed to block the spread of Nazi propaganda. To this day her invention is a key component of modern technology.
Beauty, brains, talent...and a great lady!!  

Eres bienvenido regreso manana.
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9.11.15

The Future of Cuba

Is Tied to Its Economic Survival
{Updated Tuesday, November 10th, 2015}
         Irina Bokova is a Bulgarian politician who is now Director General of UNESCO, which stands for: United Nations, Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization. At UNESCO's just concluded 38th General Conference in Paris, Ms. Bokova went out of her way to praise Cuba "for its achievements in education."
      This is a Cuban classroom. Prior to UNESCO's praise for Cuba's educational achievements, the World Bank and the World Health Organization had praised Cuba for the extraordinary percentage of its wealth devoted to education and health. It is generally verboten to mention Cuban positives in the U. S. media.
          Josefina Vidal, Cuba's Minister of North American Affairs, is back in Washington today to review topics with the U. S. State Department. This session was arranged during the last of the four diplomatic sessions Vidal had with Roberta Jacobson that led up to the re-opening of embassies in the two capitals. Vidal is pleased with such advances in the process of normalizing relations but she will today rehash three Cuban irritants that remain: the embargo, regime change programs, and the theft of Quantanamo Bay. 
        In the renewed U.S.-Cuban discussions today in Washington, Vidal will represent Cuba while Alex Lee will represent the U. S. He is the State Department's Deputy Assistant for Latin America. He will counter Vidal's three basic demands with some of his own, including asylum that Cuba provides for  U.S. fugitives.
       This photo is courtesy of REUTERS/ENRIQUE DE LA OSA. It was taken last week -- October 3rd, 2015 -- at the 33rd International Trade Fair in Havana, the first since the U. S. flag began flying at its new embassy in Cuba on August 15, 2015. Standing at the podium above was Rodrigo Malmierca, Cuba's Minister of Foreign Investment. What he said is important to those who love Cuba, those who hate Cuba, and those even moderately interested in U.S.-Cuban relations and how the Caribbean's biggest island will interact with the region and the world in the future. Mr. Malmierca said:
                  "Cuba has 326 projects {seeking foreign investmentranging from the production of rum to a venture that would create high-definition, pay-per-view television. As you can see from our portfolio, we expect about $8.2 billion in U. S. dollars in those international investments, with about $2 billion a year added additionally. We realize, I repeat, that the private sector co-operatives, private entrepreneurs, and other forms of property and management apart from the government, will have spaces within our future development. In the past year we have signed 36 deals, including six at the new Economic Zone built around the port of Mariel, which all of you are invited to visit 28 miles southwest of Havana to judge for yourselves if it is a state-of-the-art, deep-water economic zone. Under no circumstances do we want to go back to being dependent on one market."
       Of course, the most important sentence Rodrigo Malmierca uttered in Havana last week was this one: "Under no circumstances do we want to go back to being dependent on one market." In the 1960s Revolutionary Cuba, fearing that the ousted Batista-Mafia dictatorship, solidly and powerfully retrenched on U. S. soil, would use the awesome might of the U. S. military to recapture the island, turned to the Soviet Union as a counter-balance. After the fall of the Soviet Union to start the decade of the 1990s, Cuba depended mostly on Venezuela for its economic survival. Now Venezuela has its own problems. Cuba's resilience on what Malmierca referenced as "one market" -- first the Soviet Union and then Venezuela -- is now history. No, pugnacious little Cuba is not about to capitulate to a second generation of powerful Batistianos backed by the ultra-powerful U. S. government. Nor is it going to suddenly transition to a capitalist democracy. But what it is going to do, as outlined by Mr. Malmierca, is to incorporate a Chinese/Vietnamese-style economic machine -- one that welcomes local entrepreneurship and foreign investments -- to sustain Cuban sovereignty from the threat it has long perceived immediately to its north.
           This Reuters photo was taken on August 15, 2015. It shows the U. S. flag being raised in front of the reopened U. S. embassy in Havana -- reopened for the first time since 1961. The Cuban flag, a few weeks earlier, had been raised in front of its reopened embassy in Washington for the first time since 1961.
    Pope Francis and the entire world support President Obama's Cuban sanity.
         Each October for the past 24 years the nations of the world, via their vote in the United Nations, have resoundingly denounced the U. S. embargo of Cuba, which was first imposed in 1962 for the stated purpose, according to declassified U. S. documents, of starving and depriving Cubans on the island to entice them to overthrow the still un-thrown Fidel Castro. The Reuters/Getty Images photo above shows the UN vote last month: 191-to-2 with no abstentions. Only Israel, very dependent on billions of dollars each year in military and economic aid from the U. S., voted to support America's flawed Cuban policy.
          Yet there remains a vast, well-funded propaganda apparatus in the United States that is determined to keep the huge and lucrative Castro Industry going strong. That well-funded and well-heeled propaganda machine, for example, controls the easily purchased U. S. Congress regarding Cuba and only the U. S. Congress can end the embargo against Cuba. Therefore, as undemocratic as it may be, it won't be ended. The photo above shows anti-Castro zealot Mauricio Claver-Carone. As a superstar lobbyist in Washington he has a vast array of assets as an anti-Castro zealot. Mr. Claver-Carone, in my opinion, is synonymous with the very lucrative Castro Industry in the United States that was spawned at about the time {1959the Cuban Revolution chased the Batista-Mafia dictatorship off the island, all the way to South Florida.
       Mauricio Claver-Carone was born in Florida, raised in Madrid, became a Law Professor at George Washington University in Washington, has his own national radio program, writes regularly for such media giants as The Huffington Post and The Wall Street Journal, is a former adviser to the U. S. Treasury Department, has a powerful U.S.-Cuba Democracy PAC, and edits the well-funded and well-heeled Capital Hill Cubans blog, which gets less than half the daily hits as this Cubaninsider, which is a lone-wolf blog that has only one participant -- me, a democracy lover not pleased with how the U. S. Cuban policy so severely harms the U. S. and democracy. It appears to me that Claver-Carone and others like him want to either recapture Cuba or just continue the lucrative Castro Industry in the U. S. for another half-century or more. {You are invited to Google the above information and to sample the Capital Hill Cubans blog. I believe Americans should be free to research and then judge for themselves in order to render opinions regarding U.S.-Cuban relations. I further believe self-serving Castro Industry lobbyists/propagandists demand that they alone control the Cuban narrative in the U. S. That apparently is why everyday Americans are the only people in the world without the freedom to travel to Cuba. Should Mr. Claver-Carone be asked, "Should Americans endlessly be denied the freedom to visit Cuba and should Americans endlessly allow Congress to pass laws such as Wet Foot/Dry Foot and The Cuban Adjustment Act that are designed to enrich and empower Cuban-Americans while discriminating against everyone else?" The rest of the world seems to be asking such questions but, when it comes to Cuba, Mr. Claver-Carone and the vast lobbying mechanism that he epitomizes has cowered most Americans into not asking such questions.
          The plush Radio-TV Marti studios in Miami since the 1980s have received an ungodly amount of tax dollars flowing freely and steadily in a plush pipeline from Washington. As far as I know, there is not a single unbiased expert who considers it nothing but a vast anti-Castro propaganda machine that supposedly penetrates Cuban airspace but is easily blocked by the Cuban government. So, it seems since the 1980s the prime purpose of Radio-TV Marti is to serve as one of countless methods to provide tax dollars to selected Cuban-Americans in Miami. {You are invited and encouraged to ask your Congressman if that is so}. The above photo shows Yoani Sanchez, the most internationally famed anti-Castro zealot on the island, broadcasting from those lush Radio-TV Marti studios in Miami. Some may consider this an extreme paradox because Cuba allows her to fly to the U. S. and around the world promoting her views, and then fly back to Cuba to more effectively produce her anti-Cuban blog and online newspaper. By contrast, everyday Americans are not allowed to visit Cuba to make judgments for themselves.
       Cuba even allows its most famed dissident, Yoani Sanchez, to fly to Washington and confer with the two most powerful anti-Castro Cuban-American politicians in the United States -- Senators Marco Rubio and Robert Menendez. And then, with that impetus, she flies back to Cuba and commences her internationally famed and Congress-blessed anti-Castro diatribes. {P. S.: Democracy is still the best government on the planet, even when it often resembles Batista's 1950s-era Banana Republic}.
       When she is in the United States, every rich and powerful right-wing organization covets Yoani Sanchez on its anti-Castro or pro-Batistiano panels. She obliges. During her introduction, one of them mentioned "Yoani's world tour funded by unknown patrons." Uh, yeah -- unknown patrons, ha-ha!
          Since 1959, one way to get rich, powerful, and famous is to be Cuban or Cuban-American and rise to the forefront of the Castro Industry in the United States. A spot at the top awaited Yoani Sanchez's first trip to the U. S. in 2013. To this day, Cuba allows her to fly back-and-forth between the U. S. and Cuba but everyday Americans are restricted by the U. S. from flying to Cuba, a freedom that all non-Americans have. Meanwhile, propagandized Americans are not supposed to question that paradoxical dichotomy. Ask the Cato Institute, the Heritage Foundation, Capital Hill Cubans, Fox News, the Tea Party, etc. But, tuh, ask it carefully. 
        For the benefit of most Americans, most Cubans, and most Cuban-Americans, the U. S. and Cuba should be as close as the 50-star and one-star flags depicted above are. That's what President Obama, Pope Francis, and most of the world desires. But it won't happen because, like a cancer deeply embedded within the bowels of the world's greatest democracy, the Castro Industry in the U. S. is too profitable.
       Pope Francis, the first Latin-American pope, played a huge role in ameliorating much of the animus that has existed between the U. S. and Cuba since the triumph of Fidel Castro's Cuban Revolution on January 1, 1959. Pope Francis this year {above} also fulfilled a wish by getting to visit Fidel Castro in his Havana home. Back in Rome after visiting both Cuba and the U. S., according to the respected El Pais website, Pope Francis pondered the state of the 89-year-old Fidel Castro's health. Then he reportedly predicted: "After Fidel Castro dies, those in America who have profited from their portrayal of his life will want to continue to profit from their portrayal of his legacy. And I believe they will succeed."
The above quotation, I think......
...........confirms that Pope Francis............
.........is a very smart and decent man.
      Fidel Castro is now 89-years-old. To his reckoning, his Cuban Revolution is now 62-years-old as of July 26th, 2015. On July 26, 1953, Fidel barely survived his ill-advised attack on Batista's powerful Moncada Army Barracks in Santiago de Cuba on the island's southeastern tip. For most of the next two years, Fidel was imprisoned on the Isle of Pines, which he later re-named the Isle of Youth, a separate island just southwest of the main island. The above photo is courtesy of Toraya/Newscom. It shows this year's remembrance on the 62nd anniversary of the start of Fidel Castro's Cuban Revolution. As remarkable as was its victory on January 1, 1959, its longevity is even more remarkable.
And by the way:
      This map shows the 14 provinces of Cuba. I mentioned that Fidel Castro was in a Batista prison from July of 1953 till May of 1955. The prison was on the Isle of Pines, named for its pine trees. After the Cuban Revolution ousted Batista, in 1959 Fidel Castro named it "Isla de la Juventud," or "The Isle of Youth." Notice that The Isla de la Juventud is due southwest of Havana and is an important island in its own right. It is home to 86,420 Cubans and it has one of Cuba's top baseball teams, a major newspaper, etc. Cuba, the largest island in the Caribbean, has 4,195 keys and islets on or near its alligator-shaped coastlines. 
 ********************** 


7.11.15

A Little Girl Was Born In Cuba

And Americans Should Know About It
{Updated: Sunday, November 8th, 2015}
        This little Cuban girl was born in Cuba on November 3rd, 2015. Her name is Lucia. She is shown here lying on her mother's stomach just moments after she was born. Americans, I believe, need to know the details about the birth of this healthy little girl. Those details will explain why the World Bank recently praised Cuba for devoting an extraordinary percentage of its wealth to the health and education of its people. And those details will explain why the World Health Organization and the United Nations rave about Cuba's low infant-mortality rate, which is lower than in the United States. And those details will explain why the U. S. is currently studying why the infant-mortality rate in Cuba is so low. Therefore, permit me to direct you to the details of Lucia's birth, a cherished event that explains the interesting, aforementioned facts.
       Fernando Ravsberg is, I believe, the best and most informed journalist regarding Cuba. He is the BBC's correspondent on the island and he has also worked for major networks in Spain, Sweden, Mexico, and the United States {Telemundo}. His blog -- Cartas desde Cuba {Letters from Cuba} -- is an absolute must for anyone interested in Cuba, its people, or how the island relates to the U. S., the region, and the world.
        Fernando Ravsberg knows more about Cuba than anyone because he spends more time with everyday Cubans than any notable journalist. His article this week about the birth of the little girl Lucia originated on his blog but, as with many of his gems, was picked up by many media outlets thirsty for honest and fair portrayals of the everyday lives of the Cuban people, as opposed to frequently slanted views from either pro-Cuban or anti-Cuban sources. Here are some engrossing highlights of his article about Lucia's birth on November 3rd, 2015:

                      "Letters from Cuba has a new member. Lucia, the daughter of our Webmaster, was born yesterday at the Gonzalez Cora hospital. We could see Cuba's Public Health system in action and understand why its Child Mortality Rate is so low. During the nine months of the pregnancy, the mother was provided about two consultations a week -- ultra-sound 3D tests, HIV blood tests to determine RH factors, etc."


        Fernando Ravsberg then explains in detail why Cuba's health system has such a low mortality rate for newborns. Then he concluded with this paragraph:

                         "It is worth reporting that Lucia's mother is Cuban and she received the same attention as the other 14 Cuban mothers, of different skin colors and social classes, which were put into labor at the same time. We thank the doctors and nurses and welcome Lucia into the world."
        Fernando Ravsberg was born in Uruguay but for the last twenty years he has been the best journalist providing insights on the lives of Cubans on the island. In the above photo Fernando is getting a scolding form none other than Fidel Castro pertaining to one of his articles from Cuba. But Fernando is neither a dissident nor a pro-government patsy. He loves the Cuban people and his reporting is both accurate and fair. That's interesting because the mainstream media in the U. S. is not capable of being as accurate or fair about Cuba as Fernando Ravsberg is, a fact recognized by England's BBC and other major international media outlets and a fact regularly demonstrated on Fernando's incomparable Letters from Cuba blog.
        The American journalist with the most knowledge and fairness in regards to Cuba is Sarah Stephens. She is the Founder and Director of the Washington-based Center for Democracy in the Americas. Each Friday on that website she writes the Cuba Central blog that, each week, is the best weekly summary of U.S.-Cuban relations. This week -- Friday, November 6th -- she began that informative blog by excoriating two Cuban-Americans in the U. S. Senate -- Marco Rubio from Florida and Robert Menendez from New Jersey -- for blocking Roberta Jacobson's nomination as the U. S. Ambassador to Mexico. Everyone except the two narrow-minded Senators, it seems, understands that Ms. Jacobson's position in Mexico City is badly needed because of her superb qualifications and because of the vast pluses and minuses of America's relations with Mexico. Ms. Stephens, in this week's Cuba Central posting, explains that Rubio and Menendez have past histories of fuming pettiness in blocking qualified nominations and legislation if such things differ with their Batistiano-obsessed Cuban views. Roberta Jacobson is being punished because of her brilliant representation of the U. S. in the recent very successful diplomatic sessions with Cuba's Josefina Vidal. Sarah Stephens, the democracy-loving leader at the Center for Democracy in the Americas, astutely explains the anti-democracy bias of Senators Rubio and Menendez and how it is allowed, by both the U. S. media and U. S. citizens, to hurt most Cubans and most Americans, as well as the image of the U. S. and democracy around the world. Not to know Ms. Stephens is to not know Cuba.
         Above is an insightful book that bears the imprint of The Center for Democracy in the Americas. It is entitled: "21st Century Cuba: Women's Work, Gender Equality in Cuba and the Role of Women Building Cuba's Future." As the title and sub-titles indicate, anyone interested in Cuba and its role in the region and the world in 2015 and beyond should read and study this book. The documented facts include many that Americans are not suppose to know, especially when it contrasts the differences between the U.S.-backed Batista-Mafia dictatorship in Cuba from 1952 till 1959 with Revolutionary Cuba since 1959. For example, Sarah Stephens points out this undeniable fact: "In 1953, only 1% of Cuba's college educated students were women, according to the CDA's 'Women's Work: Gender Equality in Cuba and the Role of Women Building Cuba's Future.' In 2011, the American Association of University Women noted that 'Cuban women make up more than 80% of all university students and nearly 68 percent of university graduates in Cuba.'"
      TRUTH BE KNOWN, brave Cuban women like these had more to do with starting the Cuban Revolution than the Castro brothers. The murders of Cuban children and other atrocities in Batista's Cuba outraged the female population that bravely took to the streets to denounce Batista, sparking the Cuban Revolution.
        TRUTH BE KNOWN, these three Cuban women had more to do with the victory of the Cuban Revolution than the Castro brothers. From left to right, that's Vilma Espin, Celia Sanchez, and Haydee Santamaria. As guerrilla fighters, as recruiters of vital rebels and supplies, and as the most inspired and motivated leaders, these three women were much more important than the Castro brothers and Che Guevara.
        TRUTH BE KNOWN, this was the Big Four of the Cuban hierarchy after the triumph of the Cuban Revolution in 1959. Flanking the Castro brothers, that's Vilma Espin on the left and Celia Sanchez on the right. Vilma married Raul Castro in 1959 and is the mother of his four children. Celia to this day remains the person that Fidel Castro has worshiped from the 1950s till this very day when Fidel is 89-years-old. {Celia died of cancer in 1980 and Vilma died of cancer in 2007}. Beginning in 1959, as a direct consequence of their power and their remembrance of the Batista brutality against women and children, Vilma Espin and Celia Sanchez devised such gigantic revolutionary laws as the block-by-block Committees for the Defense of the Revolution and the Federation of Cuban Women. To this day, such creations of Vilma and Celia constitute the prime reason that Cuba, against overwhelming odds, remains a viable and sovereign nation.
        TRUTH BE KNOWN, in today's Cuba women like Josefina Vidal -- Minister of North American Affairs -- make most of the day-to-day decisions on the island. That is so even though the 84-year-old Raul Castro is President and the 89-year-old Fidel Castro is and will always be Cuba's greatest revolutionary legend.
       AND TRUTH BE KNOWN, the next generation of Cuban leaders will look like...Cristina Escobar. At age 27 she is already Cuba's most influential journalist and an absolutely brilliant television anchor. Awesomely smart, well educated, fluent in Spanish and English, she is also fiercely pro-Cuban. People in California discovered those virtues at journalism seminars in 2014. In 2015 she awed veteran American journalists, as well as White House spokesman Josh Earnest, when she covered the 4th and final Vidal-Jacobson diplomatic session. For 14 minutes she dominated a crowded news conference hosted by Mr. Earnest when she fired a blistering series of questions at him, wanting to know: If the new U. S. embassy in Havana will "respect" Cuba; if the unending "regime change" programs lavishly funded by the U. S. Congress will continue forever; will President Obama visit Cuba in 2016, etc. After the news conference rendered her, at least briefly, a Washington celebrity, Cristina -- in speeches around town and in numerous interviews -- blisteringly made this salient point: "Lies by the U. S. media about Cuba harm everyday Cubans the most."  
          IN OTHER WORDS: {1} Outraged Cuban women like William Soler's mother started the Cuban Revolution {she blamed Batista for the murder of her son}; {2} Cuban women like Celia Sanchez, Vilma Espin, and Haydee Santamaria were most influential in winning the Cuban Revolution; {3} Cuban women like Celia and Vilma set the parameters that have sustained Revolutionary Cuba all these decades; {4} Cuban women like Josefina Vidal today make most of the day-to-day Cuban decisions; and {5} Cuban women now in their twenties like Cristina Escobar will be the future leaders on the island of Cuba.
If you disagree with the above summations.....
         ........I believe it might be because you are too susceptible to the dictates of The Miami Cuban Mafia, which hastily exited Revolutionary Cuba on January 1, 1959.
Thus:
This misogynistic hombre no longer rules Cuba.
**********************



                         

6.11.15

Mexico Beckons Cuba

Important Meeting Today
         Cuba's 84-year-old President Raul Castro will arrive in Mexico this morning -- Friday, November 6th -- after receiving a special invitation from his Mexican counterpart Enrique Pena Nieto. Mexico, which conducts over $500 billion worth of trade yearly with the United States, wants to sharply increase last year's $374 million worth of commerce with Cuba. Mr. Castro feels much more comfortable doing business with Mexico than with the United States. The Mariel Port, 28 miles southwest of Havana, has received a splendid billion-dollar upgrade largely financed by Brazil and is now a key Economic Zone for Cuba. Seven foreign companies, two of them Mexican, have already signed key investment deals at the Mariel Zone.
        Socorro Flores is Mexico's Deputy Foreign Minister for Latin American Affairs. She released this statement: "We believe we are in a privileged position to have more presence on the beautiful island of Cuba because it's close, we share the Caribbean Sea, and because of many things, including language, that unify us."
     Claudia Ruiz Massieu is Mexico's Minister of Foreign Affairs. She released this statement on the eve of Castro's arrival in Mexico today: "We are very happy this is his first state visit to our country amid the existing new, revitalized relations."
      Enrique Pena Nieto, the President of Mexico since 2012, personally requested today's visit from Cuban President Raul Castro. Taking advantage of a thawing in U.S.-Cuban relations engineered by U. S. President Barack Obama, President Nieto wants to sharply increas trade between Mexico and Cuba. The two prior Mexican Presidents -- especially Vincente Fox but also Felipe Calderon -- were conservatives who were antagonistic towards Cuba at the behest of the George W. Bush presidency. But Nieto is different from Fox much like Obama is different from Bush. Nieto says, "Except for Fox and Calderon following the Bush policy, Mexico had a history of being Cuba's best friend, or at least one of them. I want to reestablish that relationship." New trade agreements will help, but Nieto will also discuss with President Castro today a topic that irks him. He says human traffickers who make money enticing Cubans to defect to the U. S. through Mexico are worried that improved U.S.-Cuban relations will end U. S. laws that greatly favor Cuban exiles, such as the Wet Foot/Dry Foot law that allows Cubans, and only Cubans, to remain in the U. S. with welfare assistance merely if they touch U. S. soil. Fearing such laws may finally end, President Nieto says Mexico is having to deal with an influx of Cubans being told by traffickers that special U. S. privileges for Cubans will end soon. Some traffickers using the Mexican route for Cubans to reach the U. S., have upped their price from $5,000 to $10,000, says Nieto.
       Mexican President Pena Nieto is a great admirer of Cuba's revolutionary legend Fidel Castro, and he has visited the 89-year-old Fidel in his Havana home. Today marks Raul Castro's first visit to Mexico as Cuba's President but Fidel last visited Mexico as President in 2002 when Bush's ally, Vincente Fox, treated him rudely. 
      While in Havana, Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto asked Fidel Castro, "In December of 1956 you, Raul, Che, Camilo, and 78 other rebels left Mexico to go to Cuba and overthrow Batista. How much of that hazardous voyage aboard the old leaky yacht Granma do you still remember?" Fidel's son Alex, a professional photographer, takes the photos inside the family home. Alex later said {as reflected by the above photo}, "Mr. Nieto got more than he bargained for with that question because Papa eagerly spent at least fifteen minutes, gesturing and all, answering that question."
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cubaninsider: "The Country That Raped Me" (A True Story)

cubaninsider: "The Country That Raped Me" (A True Story) : Note : This particular essay on  Ana Margarita Martinez  was first ...