15.7.16

Cuba Adjusts Its Government

 Coping With Financial Crisis 
       Cuba's Minister of Economy and Planning, Marino Murillo, has been fired although he remains on the powerful Council of Ministers. The 55-year-old Murillo had been Cuba's economic boss since 2011. Last week he reported that Cuba's economy will improve just 1% in 2016 as opposed to 4% in 2015. He partially blamed low oil and nickel prices as well as a sugar short-fall due to weather conditions. But he didn't deny that the dire political and economic problems in Venezuela and Brazil are roiling Cuba's economy and might lead to power blackouts in the second half of this year as Cuba's tourism reaches new heights.
       Marino Murillo's daughter, Glenda, made headlines in 2012. She showed up at the Mexican border in Laredo, Texas. When her foot touched U. S. soil she immediately became a legal resident with financial and political benefits not available to non-Cubans. Her boyfriend lived in Hialeah, Florida, and she also had Cuban relatives in Tampa. Murillo's daughter Glenda is reminiscent of Fidel Castro's daughter Alina.
     Marino Murillo's successor as Cuba's Economy Minister is Ricardo Cabrisas. He is a long-time power in Cuba and is one of the country's six Vice Presidents. The Cuban economy has always been his forte.
      This photo shows Ricardo Cabrisas, in the right-front, signing an economic agreement with Rudolf Scholten, the head of Austria's Central Bank. Cabrisas is a strong advocate for economic diversity.
       This photo shows Ricardo Cabrisas signing an economic agreement with Finland. The reason Cabrisas has replaced Murillo as the island's chief economic expert is because of what the above two photos reflect -- namely Mr. Cabrisas' urgent belief that Cuba needs to diversity its economy. The collapse of the Soviet Union in 1990 influenced Cabrisas and now the dire political and economic problems in Venezuela and Brazil alarms him. Moreover, as a catalyst of Cuba's revolutionary Old Guard, Cabrisas is not convinced that the U. S. will continue to embrace President Obama's historic efforts to normalize relations with Cuba. He believes the Miami-based anti-Castro contingent will overwhelm Obama's overtures.
        This photo is courtesy of REUTERS and Alexandre Meneghini. It was used to highlight a major Reuters article written by Sarah Marsh yesterday -- July 14, 2016. The article is entitled "Oxfam Urges U. S. to End Embargo on Struggling Cuba." Oxfam is an international confederation of 18 organizations working in 90 countries to alleviate poverty. The lady is Winnie Byanyima. She is Oxfam's director. The opening sentence of the aforementioned article is: "The director of Oxfam broke the global and agency's longtime silence on the U. S. trade embargo of Cuba, urging the American Congress to lift it 'sooner rather than later' given the island's mounting economic woes." Winnie Byanyima told Reuters, "Cuba needs to engage in the global economy and the embargo cuts them out." She also lauded Cuba's "very equal society," hinting such equality might be one reason the U. S. government so strongly opposes the Cuban government. Using the exact title listed above, you can easily access that entire article. Reuters is Britain's internationally respected news agency and, unlike the U. S. media, it covers Cuban stories such as the pertinent Winnie Byanyima comments.
Oxfam is in the fight against the U. S. embargo of Cuba.
       Cuba's very elusive but very necessary efforts to become "Good Friends" with its superpower neighbor just off its northern shores will always impact every aspect of Cuba's existence. The 1959 Cuban Revolution that ousted the U.S.-backed Batista-Mafia dictatorship finally gave the island sovereignty after five centuries of being under the yoke of imperialist powers -- especially Spain and, following the 1898 Spanish-American War, the United States. However, the victorious revolution in 1959 had one particular devastating effect: It chased the richest and most powerful Batistianos and Mafiosi to U. S. soil. That resulted in rampant tax-funded military and terrorist attacks against Cuba, assassination attempts against Cuban leaders, and a vast array of pro-Batistianos/anti-Cuba laws easily rammed through the U. S. Congress, especially since the 1980s when the Reagan-Bush administration anointed Jorge Mas Canosa the leader of the Cubans-in-Exile and, as documented by historian Julia E. Sweig, advised Canosa to study and replicate AIPAC, the Israeli lobby. As the haunted graphic above indicates, most Cubans and most Americans want to be "Good Friends." However, that would mitigate against the revenge, economic and political motives of a select and powerful few in Miami, New Jersey and Washington. And thus...it will not be allowed to happen, disappointing America's best friends but pleasing America's most virulent enemies around the world. 
And by the way:
       Charles Blow was born 45-years-old ago in the Deep South -- a small town in Louisiana. He is now a very powerful Op-Ed columnist for the New York Times and he is ubiquitous on television news programs. In reference to America's police-civilian and civilian-police killings, Mr. Blow's column yesterday very bluntly accused Americans of sharing responsibility for such murders because they meekly, cowardly and callously allow the gross inequality between America's haves and have-nots -- such as billionaire black sports heroes being lavished with more billions of easy dollars in corporate endorsements while most blacks live in poverty without hope or jobs...or a dime from endorsements. Mr. Blow's column yesterday was entitled: "Blood On Your Hands, Too." He cogently wrote: "Interpersonal and systemic racism are only part of the equation. There is also class conflict between those who are better off and those who are not."
Mr. Blow is a black liberal; I'm a white conservative. We agree. 
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14.7.16

Unending Congressional Hypocrisy

Fuels Vast Cuban Industry 
Benefits A Few, Harms Everyone Else
"4 Lawmakers Move To Block U. S. Flights To Cuba" 
      That was the glaring headline in the Miami Herald yesterday. Since January of 1959, the self-serving minority that insists on dictating America's Cuban policy has always found it easy to align with their necessary sycophants in the U. S. Congress or in Republican presidential administrations.  That's what the above headline represents. As a significant part of President Obama's efforts to normalize relations with Cuba, ten major U. S. cities and 8 major U. S. airlines have been approved to schedule the historic first commercial air service to Havana in over half-a-century. Additionally, six other airlines have been approved to fly to nine other Cuban cities. The flights could start as early as September. But, like every positive gesture regarding Cuba from the Kennedy presidency to Obama's, a powerful handful of Cuban-Americans with their easily acquired congressional or Republican acolytes...please notice I didn't say conspirators...are anxious to block the commercial flights to Cuba. The "4" referenced by the Miami Herald:
         ***John Katko of New York.
          ***Michael McCaul of Texas.
         ***Henry Cuellar of Texas.
        ***Richard Hudson of North Carolina
         Of the Miami Herald's quartet, John M. Katko was named as the leader of the congressional bunch bent on stopping the commercial flights to Cuba. He alleges "safety" as his prime reason and, incredibly, he supported that liminal ragout excuse by stressing that Cuba was "only recently" removed from the State Sponsors of Terrorism list. Such statements are made, I believe, in the belief that Americans are too stupid or too intimidated to judge such things for themselves. Yes, President Obama recently removed Cuba from that list because it was the right thing to do and because the vast majority of people in the U. S. and worldwide didn't believe Cuba belonged on the list and was on it just to whet the appetites of the anti-Castro zealots, many of whom took advantage of the listing to sue unrepresented Cuba for whatever they wanted to sue it for in Miami courtrooms. As far as I know, Mr. Katko is not overly concerned about unquestioned U. S. commercial flights to China, Vietnam, Russia, Saudi Arabia, etc. Of course, none of those countries ever teamed with the Mafia to support a thieving, brutal, and cowardly dictatorship that was overthrown by the Cuban Revolution in 1959 and has, amazingly, been a sovereign nation since then with a 191-to-2 yearly vote in the UN denouncing the U. S. Cuban policy. Also, I assume Congressman Katko conveniently dis-remembers when a civilian Cuban airplane was blown into the ocean.
But the families of Cubana Flight 455 victims still remember.
Cubana Flight 455 was bombed by terrorists Oct. 8, 1976.
                For many years Mary Murray has been the excellent Caribbean and Latin American reporter for NBC News. Unlike most of the U. S. media, she has reported very fairly even on Cuban issues. One of her NBC News reports still online is entitled "Cubans Seek Justice for Alleged Airplane Bomber." She was, of course, referencing Luis Posada Carriles who to this very day is a heralded citizen of Miami, Florida.
           This photo is used courtesy of the aforementioned NBC report by Mary Murray. It shows Carlos Cremata holding a photo of his father and mother when he was a little cowboy in Revolutionary Cuba. On Oct. 6-1976 his father was in the cockpit of Cubana Flight 455 along with pilot Wilfredo Perez and co-pilot Miguel Espinosa. The passengers included two dozen teenage Cuban athletes as well as some small children of their coaches. The heart-wrenching report by Mary Murray featured Carlos Cremata as a microcosm of the pain that still lingers from the terrorist bombing of historic Cubana Flight 455.
       When the nations of the world vote 191-to-2 each year against the U. S. embargo of Cuba, it is perhaps time for both the U. S. media and the U. S. people to have the courage, the compassion, and the competence to admit that the U.S.-Cuban conundrum is a two-sided, not one-sided, story. In other words...that UN vote should be factored into the equation...along with Batista, the Mafia, paramilitary units in Florida, the Bay of Pigs, Cubana Flight 455, the embargo, punishing everyday Cubans, etc.!!
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12.7.16

2 Major Cuban Problems

Low Birth Rates and... 
Pending Power Outages
       This photo was taken by Daniel Berehulak in Havana a few months ago. It illustrated a major article in the New York Times that blared this interesting and very ominous headline: "In Cuba, An Abundance of Love But A Lack of Babies." The caption said this pregnant young woman was waiting outside a hospital in Havana. The insightful article pointed out: "Since the 1970s the birthrate in Cuba has been in free fall, tilting population figures into decline. Cuba already has the oldest population in all of Latin America. In Cuba, women are free to choose as they wish, another legacy of the revolution, which prioritized women rights."  
       This photo -- taken by Daniel Berehulak for the aforementioned NY Times article -- shows a young Cuban couple planning to marry but not planning to have children because of the weak Cuban economy, which has been afflicted for the past half-century by the U. S. embargo. The caption said the young woman, Claudia Rodriguez, has had two abortions. Health care, including abortions, are totally free in Cuba and the article pointed out that "young couples speak openly about abortions and lines at clinics often wrap around the building." Cuba's population hovers around 11 million but it is dropping due to myriad reasons -- the weak economy that perpetuates abortions, U. S. laws that entice Cubans with financial and residency lures that are not available to non-Cuban immigrants, etc. Despite freely providing the abortions, the Cuban government, as reported by the NY Times, now strongly encourages Cuban women to have children.
          This New York Times photo was used -- on July 12th, 2016 -- to highlight a fine article written by Victoria Burnett and entitled: "Amid Grim Economic Forecasts, Cubans Fear a Return to Darker Times." Ms. Burnett wrote: "Addressing members of parliament last week, Cuba's economy minister, Marino Murillo, said the country would have to cut fuel consumption by nearly a third during the second half of the year and reduce state investments and imports." Cuba imports most of its food and also invests much of its economy in providing free education and health care as well as free or greatly subsidized food and shelter.
        Cuba's economic boss, 55-year-old Marino Murillo, says the island's economy grew by just 1 percent in the first half this year compared to 4 percent last year. He said, "Our export income and fuel supply has dropped and that has placed us in a tense economic situation." Mr. Murillo acknowledged that weak oil and nickel prices combined with a weak weather-related sugar harvest has "contributed to our woes." 
       The Deputy Director of Granma, Cuba's state-run newspaper, Karina Marron is always one of the best sources for insight and perspectives regarding issues in Cuba. Ms. Marron, addressing a journalism seminar recently, candidly warned that Cuba's economic problems are so serious that impending blackouts caused by power outages could result in street protests. She said, "We are facing a perfect storm. Sirs, this country cannot take another '93 or '94." She was referencing the early 1990s when the collapse of the Soviet Union created dire financial problems for Cuba, including some blackouts and street protests.
       When Karina Marron speaks, she is speaking for the Cuban government as well as to the Cuban people. The "perfect storm" she mentioned relates to her equating current economic and governmental problems in Venezuela and Brazil with the Soviet problems back in the 1990s. Brazil's Cuba-loving President Dilma Rousseff has been impeached and Venezuela's Cuba-loving President Nicolas Maduro is barely holding on. Rousseff, Maduro and Marron all believe that anti-Cuban right-wingers in Miami and Washington are fueling or at least exacerbating the dire political problems in Venezuela and Brazil, situations that deeply and purposely reverberate back to Cuba. And Karina Marron believes that, despite historic Cuba-friendly efforts by President Obama, the right-wingers in Miami and Washington "can and will" blunt much of the "lifelines and good-will" that Obama is trying to provide to Cuba. Karina Marron's comments were not meant for publication but the journalism students she spoke to have spread them far and wide via the social media. And Karina's assessment is Cuba's assessment: The current economic problems in Cuba, Brazil and Venezuela are at least partly due to the stranglehold that the small but powerful Anti-Cuba Cottage Industry in Miami and Washington has on America's Cuban policy, which is the quintessential Catch-22 dilemma. Many millions of good people, like Obama, have tried to correct it but even in the world's most famed democracy they have failed because of the self-serving power of a roguish right-wing minority. The Obama administration wants to improve Cuba's economy so as to prevent an even larger influx of Cubans to America's shores; but the right-wing benefactors in Miami and Washington want to destroy Cuba's economy for their own personal desires. The fact that the imbroglio is an endless standoff is in itself a Catch-22 classic that continually reminds the world of America's imperfections.
In other words:
        Cuba is still Cuba and this is so despite the historic-heroic efforts by President Obama to normalize relations with the island, which means he is trying in vain to loosen the iron grip that revengeful Cuban exiles, since the overthrow of the Batista-Mafia dictatorship in 1959, have had on America's Cuban policy. The New York Times reminds us of two currently overwhelming Cuban problems -- an alarmingly low Cuban birth rate and impending blackouts due to power outages. And an astute, well-informed Cuban -- Karina Marron Gonzalez -- reminds us that right-wingers in Miami and Washington are fully capable of continuing to dictate to Obama and to democracy a pernicious Cuban policy that has benefited them since 1959.
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11.7.16

Cuba-US Friendship Takes Off

     But Hardliners Might Stop It 
Updated: Tuesday, July 12th, 2016 
       The U. S. government has authorized eight American airlines to operate direct flights to Cuba beginning in the fall. Thanks to President Obama, these will be the first U.S.-to-Cuba commercial flights in over half-a-century, as opposed to special charter flights. The airlines include American, Delta, Jet Blue, United, Southwest, etc. The non-stop flights will take off from major U. S. cities from New York to Los Angeles. Four other airlines have requested permission for Cuban flights but those requests are still pending. The approved flights will be from many cities with large Cuban-American populations -- Miami, Fort Lauderdale, Tampa, Orlando, Houston, Los Angeles, New York and Newark, New Jersey. Fourteen of the 20 daily flights will be from Florida.
      Cuba's Minister of Tourism is Manuel Marrero. He says the island has been "challenged" by the avalanche of U. S. tourists since President Obama announced his plans to normalize relations with Cuba in December of 2014. Mr. Marrero said this week, "U. S. visitors to Cuba in the first half of 2016 has been 83.9 percent higher than in 2015." Cuba is adjusting to the human tsunami.
         Kathy Castor was born 49-years-ago in Miami but she has represented the Tampa area in the U. S. Congress since 2007. She has always been a bright, beautiful beacon as a politician in Florida brave enough to fight for decency and sanity when it comes to U.S.-Cuban relations. She says, "The newly announced commercial flights between Tampa and Havana will strengthen family ties and open our communities to greater engagement and progress." Of course, the six most visceral anti-Castro Cuban-Americans in the U. S. Congress, accustomed prior to Obama of dictating America's Cuban policy, are outraged about the impending commercial airplane flights that, among many other absurdities, they or their elders have long prohibited.
      U. S. Cuban-American Senator Robert Menendez of New Jersey is particularly outraged about United Airlines flights from Newark to Havana beginning as early as September. Perhaps the kindest sentence the AP quoted Menendez regarding the issue was: "Cuba remains a key ally of some of the world's most dangerous terrorist organizations and enemies of the United States..." Menendez says he worries about the safety of Americans on flights to Cuba. Of course, he was also outraged when President Obama removed Cuba from the Sponsors of Terrorism list that made Cuba, a victim of terrorism, quite susceptible to being easily sued in Miami courts for just about anything anyone wanted to sue the unrepresented nation for.
      This North Jersey.com photo shows United Airline jets at Newark's Liberty International Airport. If President Obama has his way, they will start flying to Cuba; if Senate Menendez has his way, they won't.
      The United States Secretary of Transportation Anthony Foxx, the 45-year-old former mayor of Charlotte, is a strong advocate for normalizing relations with Cuba. Mr. Foxx said this week, "Restoring regular air service to Cuba after a half century builds tremendous potential to reunite Cuban-American families and foster education as well as opportunities for American businesses of all sizes." That viewpoint not only coincides with President Obama's but also connects with the vast majority of Americans and Cuban-Americans.
      Sarah Stephens, the dynamo at the Washington-based Center for Democracy in the Americas, remains one of America's most dynamic advocates for democracy and, therefore not coincidentally, for normalizing relations with Cuba. While the mainstream U. S. media -- especially since 1976 when Miami's top Cuban-American newsman, Emilio Milian, was car-bombed for denouncing such terrorism against Cuba as the bombing of Cubana Flight 455 -- has had neither the courage nor the integrity to report fairly on U.S.-Cuban relations, Sarah Stephens has never failed to do so. Her Cuba Central segment each Friday on her CDA website regularly and cogently contradicts what she feels are anti-democratic rhetoric or actions from the Cuban-American hardliners in the U. S. Congress or elsewhere. Regarding the historic flights to Cuba beginning in September, Ms. Stephens says: "This is great news. Congress must still act to restore the freedom to travel to Cuba for all Americans. Restoring all travel rights will be good for American travelers, good for U. S. airlines and good for increasing contact and economic opportunity for the Cuban people." Democracy and The Center for Democracy in the Americas has a superb advocate in Sarah Stephens.
       This AP photo shows this week's opening of the first so-called bulk store in Havana. It's called "Zona+" and Reuters says it "offers products in bulk at lower prices than in more expensive retail outlets."
         This is a Wikipedia photo that the Reuters News Agency used this week to illustrate an article that revealed a U. S. industry that is overflowing with sales and cash -- the weapons industry!! The photo shows a Goshawk assembly line at McDonnell Douglas. The U. S. Air Force admitted that the international demand for U. S. weapons is robust and growing...an increase of 36% in sales to $46.6 billion in 2015 alone. The sophisticated weapons include deadly unmanned systems, munitions and fighter jets. Nations like the U. S., Britain, France, Russia, etc., feast on the sales of weapons in a world already inundated with death, destruction and untold millions of helpless and pitiful refugees seeking but often not finding safe existences. But the weapons industry is booming!
      The U. S. Air Force Deputy Undersecretary is Heidi Grant. She told Reuters this week, "The appetite for weapons just keeps getting bigger and bigger." Rogue nations and even non-nations seem to be over-loaded with an unending supply of powerful weapons and munitions. Ms. Grant doesn't relish that situation but the world is what it is, which means it is very, very troubled.   
      The Secretary of the U. S. Air Force is Deborah Lee James, Heidi Grant's boss. It is a good sign that women in the Western world are increasingly holding powerful positions in both the military and political spheres. Women are as capable as men and, by their nature, are less greedy and less prone to warfare.
       A great American journalist named Anita Snow this week posted this photo on her Facebook page. She was referencing a Newsweek article that pointed out this fact: It has been ten years since the police in Norway have killed anyone. The article stated, "As in Britain, police in Norway typically patrol while unarmed and only bear arms in extenuating situations." That fact impressed Anita Snow and should resonate with all peace-loving Americans who seldom get to watch a newscast that doesn't feature constant reports about deadly police-civilian shootings or, as the events in Dallas reminded us, civilian-police shootings.
     And speaking of Anita Snow, I'm familiar with her Facebook page because I consider her a great journalist and one of America's top experts on U. S. relations with Cuba and Mexico. She is a key Latin American Editor for the Associated Press. For over a decade...1999 till 2009...Ms. Snow was the AP's excellent and fair-minded correspondent in Havana. I still have clippings of some of her articles, including one in 2007 when, for an entire month, she only used a Cuban ration card to buy her food so she could experience what it was like for everyday Cubans to do that. Also, I am pleased to learn that Ms. Snow will soon publish her memoir, which I'll pre-order from Amazon.
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9.7.16

How Much Will Cuba Change

After Obama's Detente
      President Barack Obama made history in December of 2014 when he bravely and astutely announced that he wanted his United States to "normalize" relations with Cuba. Then, after boldly defying the Miami hardliners and the U. S. Congress, he followed up historically on that vow. The photo above shows President Obama holding a 2016 news conference in Cuba, the first U. S. president to visit the island since 1928 when President Coolidge pulled into Havana Harbor aboard a warship. In Cuba, as noted above, Mr. Obama saliently told the Cuban people: "Cuba does not need to fear a threat from the United States." Since the Spanish-American War in 1898, when the U. S. finally gained dominance of Cuba from Spain, no American president prior to Obama had either the guts or the integrity to make such a statement. That especially has been true since 1959 when the Cuban Revolution overthrew the brutal U.S.-backed Batista-Mafia dictatorship. Since 1959, two generations of Cuban-exile hardliners from Miami have dictated America's Cuban policy with the considerable help of a pusillanimous and conniving U. S. Congress. Miami and Congress buttressed their Cuban policy during every Republican presidential administration -- Eisenhower, Nixon, Ford, Reagan, Bush #1 and Bush #2. But even Democratic administrations -- Kennedy, Carter, and Clinton -- all tried and miserably failed to alter a Cuban policy that the rest of the world has watched play out in disapproved amazement for over half-a-century, and that's a half-century too long.
       Of all the U. S. presidents since the 1950s, only Obama has had the guts, intelligence and patriotism to assuage an American Cuban policy that the rest of the world abhors, including America's best friends. Obama's gutsy assurance to Cuba that it will not have "to fear" the much stronger United States provides Revolutionary Cuba a window in which it can not only breathe easier but also make positive changes.
The Castro brothers have ruled Cuba since 1959.
Fidel turns 90 on August 12th; Raul is 85.
     From the U. S. standpoint, even in the land of the free and the home of the brave, the mainstream U. S. media has never been brave enough or free enough to tell the truth about U.S.-Cuban relations. That's why, during this critical Obama-orchestrated juncture, a free and brave journalist named Fernando Ravsberg is America's best source to get insightful and unbiased information regarding Cuba. His website -- Cartas Desde Cuba/Letters From Cuba -- is one of the many places where you can garner Ravsberg's journalism, which is widely republished by many venues. His article flashing around the world this second week in July-2016 is entitled "The Collimated Journalists" and it's a must-read for anyone interested in judging Cuba's reaction to Obama's sane and decent overtures. The word collimate is a verb that Merriam-Webster defines as "to make {as light rays} parallel." So, Ravsberg's title references the similarities, the parallels, of Cuban and U. S. journalism. And, yes, when it comes to Cuba, there are many.
       The caption to the above journalistic photo reads: "Funnily enough, the Cuban press now seems to be in sync with the Miami press." As a democracy-loving American, I don't think that is very "funny" but I understand the relevance as, I believe, Fernando Ravsberg would. The U. S. democracy changed dramatically in 1952 when right-wingers in the Eisenhower administration -- VP Nixon, the Dulles brothers, etc. -- aligned the U. S. government with the Mafia to support the thieving and brutal Batista dictatorship in Cuba. When it was overthrown on January 1, 1959, the Batistianos and the Mafiosi merely restructured their dictatorship on U. S. soil, mostly in South Florida with Miami, called "Little Havana," as their new capital. Continually backed by the U. S. government, the U. S. Congress, and billions of U. S. tax dollars, the Cuban Mafia, based in Miami but with branches in New Jersey and Washington, have dictated America's Cuban policy from 1959 till...well...till Obama. The Bay of Pigs attack in 1961, an economic embargo since 1962, numerous assassination attempts against Castro, etc., have amazingly failed to recapture Cuba. In 1976 well-known Cuban-exile terrorists blew up a civilian Cuban airplane, killing all 73 on board. When Miami's top Cuban newsman-journalist, Emilio Milian, complained about such things, he was car-bombed. Later when Jim DeFede was the top columnist at the Miami Herald, he wrote a blistering column excoriating Miami members of Congress for using the U. S. government to get a female President of Panama, who had close Miami ties, to free four famed anti-Castro zealots -- including the legendary Luis Posada Carriles who will forever be tied to the Cubana Flight 445 bombing -- from a Panamanian prison where they were ensconced because of an assassination attempt against Fidel Castro on Panama soil. DeFede didn't last long at the Miami Herald after that column and today Carriles is a heralded free man in Miami and anti-Castro zealots control the editorial processes of the Miami Herald. Yes, since 1959 the Cuban press has been controlled by the dictates of the Castro brothers; and since 1959 the U. S. media in regards to Cuba has been largely controlled by anti-Castro zealotry. That's why the caption above resonates when it equates Cuban journalism to U. S. journalism. To deny that is to deny the historic existence of, say, Cubana Flight 455, Luis Posada Carriles, Emilio Milian, Jim DeFede, etc. And, of course, since the invention of the ubiquitous and easily accessed Google search engine, denying such historic and topical events is impossible unless one is simply lazy or uninterested, which also means unpatriotic.
      And that circuitous route takes us back around to the internationally respected Cuban journalist Fernando Ravsberg. The photo above shows him being scolded face-to-face by...Fidel Castro. Yes, Fernando is brave enough and fair enough to criticize Fidel. But, distinguishing Fernando from the mainstream Miami and U. S. media, Fernando also has the guts and integrity to praise Castro, especially in contrast to the Batista-Mafia dictatorship and in such areas as Revolutionary Cuba's free and excellent educational system, its free and excellent health care, its largest medical school in the world that provides free educations to poor foreign students including Americans, its Operation Miracle program that has provided totally free eye operations that have restored or improved eyesight for thousands of poor people in the region, etc. While Ravsberg has sharply criticized Revolutionary Cuba, he has also sharply contrasted it with the Batista-Mafia dictatorship that preceded it, and that's something that, with few exceptions, had not been permitted in the Land of the Free and the Home of the Brave prior to Obama.
      While as a journalist Fernando Ravsberg has reported directly on and freely about Castro's Cuba, the good and the bad, he also has repeatedly aired the views of everyday Cubans and anti-Castro Cubans on the island, as in the above photo. On the other hand, unlike the mainstream U. S. media, Fernando is not afraid to challenge the lucrative, vast, one-sided and self-serving Castro Cottage Industry in the U. S.
      In his aforementioned article this week, Fernando Ravsberg used the above photo of young Cuban journalists and journalism students during an important session taking place in Santa Clara, Cuba. These young, well-educated Cubans campaigned bravely and righteously to improve journalism, an improvement that would be beneficial to their chosen profession as well as to the lives of all Cubans on the island.
      And Fernando Ravsberg used this graphic to point out that journalists should not be restricted from doing their jobs, which are vital functions for any free society -- in Cuba, the U. S., and around the world.
       The photos Fernando Ravsberg used this week to illustrate his journalism-themed article were taken by Raquel Perez Diaz. This one simply shows journalists covering an event and trying to do their jobs.
      Fernando Ravsberg used the unambiguous editorial cartoon above to illustrate his article entitled "The Collimated Journalists" that cogently drew parallels between Cuban and U. S. journalism when it comes to reporting on Cuba. The Spanish word "basta" used here means "enough" and conveys the message that censorship of journalists is evil and has existed long enough. The little girl reading the billboard...she could be Cuban or American...wants to be told the truth about U.S.-Cuban relations. As a Cuban or as an American, she deserves that. And that's the message that Fernando Ravsberg was conveying this week.
       A new era in U.S.-Cuba relations is upon us, thanks to President Obama's brave and historic efforts to curb and normalize America's long-standing covetous, bullying and undemocratic involvement with the nearby, very important island nation. Thus, I believe we all should join great journalists such as Fernando Ravsberg in insisting that journalism in both Cuba and the United States should be afforded the freedom to tell the truth about Cuba, the United States and the interactions between the neighboring countries.
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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 ...