4.9.16

By the Way, Cubaninsiders

Remember I Told You!!
        As I have said more than once in this forum, The Jamaica Observer consistently has the best Editorial Cartoons on the planet. This weekend -- on Sept. 3rd, 2016 -- the gem depicted above proves my point. Jamaica's Elaine Thompson is the world's best female sprinter. Last month in Rio she won both the 100-meter and 200-meter Gold Medals. This weekend she again defeated her competitors in the sprints in the world-class Diamond League event in Zurich, Switzerland, as indicated above. SO WHY, you ask, is Elaine crossing the finish line in Zurich mocking her top competitor, Dafne Schippers of the Netherlands? Well...it seems Elaine and The Jamaica Observer both believe she does not get the credit and accolades she deserves. And Elaine resents the acclaim accorded to Ms. Schippers, the 24-year-old statuesque Dutch beauty who is a talented sprinter but not as good as Elaine. So, study the image above and determine if it effectively makes the point that Jamaica's black beauty, Elaine, resents the Dutch white beauty, Dafne.
       In Zurich this weekend, the beautiful Dafne Schippers led much of this race but the beautiful Elaine Thompson, as usual, came from behind to win. Yet, Dafne...Elaine thinks...got more plaudits from the fans.
The beautiful Dafne is great.
But not quite as great as the beautiful Elaine.
Dafne Schippers, the Netherlands.
Elaine Thompson, Jamaica.
Elaine Thompson is miffed.
And now YOU KNOW why Elaine is miffed at Dafne.
       As you can see on this Caribbean map, Jamaica is due south of Cuba. If you wonder why this is Cubaninsider and not Jamaicaninsider, it's because I indeed have a passion for Cuba because my greatest passions are America and democracy. I happen to believe that Cuba says a lot more about America than it says about Cuba, and that belief starts with the 1898 Spanish-American War that gave America its long-craved dominion over Cuba and continued with the 1903 U. S. theft of Guantanamo Bay; 1952 when the U. S. teamed with the Mafia to support the vile Batista dictatorship in Cuba; the 1959 resettlement of the Batista-Mafia dictatorship on U. S. soil after the triumph of the Cuban Revolution; the cowardly and embarrassing {for America} attack at the Bay of Pigs in 1961; the U. S. embargo of Cuba that began in 1962 and extends to this day as the longest and cruelest embargo ever administered by a strong nation against a weak one; and a vast array of extremely discriminatory and undemocratic U. S. laws designed to hurt Cubans on the island while greatly enticing and enriching Cuban-Americans. SO, for those reasons, I am the sole contributor to Cubaninsider but I do not have a compelling reason to create Jamaicaninsider.
      But I like Jamaica too, especially Montego Bay in the northwest and Kingston in the southeast of the gorgeous island.

And, yes, I think Elaine Thompson...
deserves much more credit for her unique greatness.
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3.9.16

Cubans to Americans

From Rags to Riches!!
Meet Yoan Moncada
    As a teenager in the small Cuban town of Abreus, Yoan and all of his friends were extremely poor. They, and even their parents, had lived all their lives on an island unfairly shackled with history's all-time longest and cruelest economic embargo ever imposed by a strong nation against a weak one. That situation has existed since 1962, or shortly after Fidel Castro's Cuban Revolution in 1959 overthrew the vile U.S.-backed Batista-Mafia dictatorship -- only to have the Batistiano-Mafiosi leaders quickly resettle on U. S. soil, mostly in and around Miami, Florida. The most visceral anti-Castro zealots - - Jorge Mas Canosa, Felix Rodriguez, Luis Posada Carriles, etc. -- were quickly sent to the then secretive Army of the Americas at Fort Benning in Georgia to train for the quick recapture of Cuba, an expensive and very undemocratic process that resulted in one of America's greatest all-time embarrassments -- the colossal defeat at the Bay of Pigs in April of 1961. But from then until today {September of 2016}, remnants of the ousted Batista dictatorship, the losers to Castro in the Revolution and at the Bay of Pigs, aligned themselves with a few of America's self-serving right-wingers and...lo 'n behold...have easily dictated America's Cuban policy in the easily malleable U. S. Congress ever since. Therefore, even as President Obama finally tries to apply some decency and democracy to the U. S. Cuban policy, U. S. laws grossly discriminate against Cubans on the island while also grossly discriminating in favor of Cubans enticed to defect to the United States. And one of the most luminescent and picturesque ramifications of all that U.S.-Cuban entanglement is... Yoan Moncada.
      Cuba's Yoan Moncada is THE WORLD'S GREATEST BASEBALL PROSPECT. Even as a teenager in Cuba, Yoan was a switch-hitter with awesome power and blazing speed. He defected from Cuba in the summer of 2014. The Boston Red Sox gave him a $31.5 million bonus. Please note that I said bonus because it has nothing to do with his salary. Of course, if Yoan turns out to be one-half as good as the scouts predict, that initial $31.5 million dollars will be mere peanuts compared to what he'll make in Boston in the future.
And guess what?
      At age 21, on this first weekend of September, 2016, Yoan Moncada is making his debut with the young and powerful Boston Red Sox. Boston already has the best offense in baseball and arguably the best young players of all the 30 Major League teams. Therefore, I pick the Red Sox to beat the Chicago Cubs in the upcoming 2016 World Series. But neither Boston nor anyone else has anyone to match the talent of Yoan Moncada. Baseball aficionados will have to go back to 1951 to remember a young player reaching the Majors with the switch-hitting power and blazing speed that the young Cuban Yoan Moncada possesses.
       In 1951 a 19-year-old from a little dusty mining town in Oklahoma named Mickey Mantle joined the New York Yankees. No one had ever seen a young baseball player that possessed the combination of switch-hitting power and blazing speed that Mickey Mantle brought to the New York Yankees sixty-five years ago.
        But for the first time since 1951, a young Cuban named Yoan Moncada -- in this first weekend of September, 2016 -- makes his debut with the Boston Red Sox flashing Mickey Mantle-like talent. His combination of power and speed will soon vault him above the current unending string of Cuban-born Major League superstars such as Yoenis Cespedes of the Mets, Yasiel Puig of the Dodgers, Aroldis Chapman of the Cubs, etc. In fact, don't be surprised if Yoan Moncada belts a 105 miles-per-hour pitch from the feared Aroldis Chapman to give the Red Sox a World Series victory over the Cubs next month. In the money-crazed U. S. Major Leagues, the Red Sox now believe that the $31.5 million bonus they gave Yoan is about the best money they've ever spent. And, as baseball fans know, the rich New York Yankees confirmed last week that they made a "huge mistake" by not topping that piddling Boston offer.
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2.9.16

Flying to Cuba

Courtesy of Mr. Obama!!
        More and more Americans, and not just Cuban-Americans, can now fly easier and more normally to the Caribbean's largest and most intriguing island -- Cuba. That's because, as of this first week of September in the year 2016, commercial flights from the U. S. to Cuba have resumed for the first time since 1961, thanks to President Obama's bold and audacious efforts to normalize relations with the nearby island. For decades, after the U.S.-backed Batista-Mafia dictatorship was overthrown only to chase the leadership to U. S. soil, regular Americans have been the only people in the world without the freedom to travel to Cuba. Mr. Obama has courageously sliced into many of those undemocratic restrictions too. The photo above was taken by Mauricio Lima and shows a not uncommon passel of red 1950s-era convertibles taking tourists around Havana's Revolutionary Square. This image was used to highlight an informative article by Victoria Barnett of the New York Times that recapped Wednesday's historic flight by jetBlue Airlines from Fort Lauderdale to the central Cuban city of Santa Clara, erasing the 55-year-old ban of commercial flights from the U. S. to Cuba. The article was entitled: "How to Go to Cuba Now." The first two paragraphs said:
                    "Once off-limits to most Americans, Cuba became just another stop on JetBlue's international network on Wednesday when the airline began operating the first direct commercial service between the United States and the island since the early 1960s.
                         "In the next few months, several airlines will join JetBlue, offering service to a handful of Cuban provincial cities and, eventually, to Havana. American travelers will no longer rely on expensive, poorly serviced charter flights to reach the Caribbean's largest and, arguably, most intriguing island." 
               Victoria Barnett's article explained in detail the new Obama-related parameters for Americans to travel to Cuba. She mentioned that the U. S. embargo of Cuba -- dictated for many decades by Cuban-American hard-liners and their acolytes in the U. S. Congress -- still places strict restrictions on American travels to Cuba, except for the many special privileges allotted to Cuban-Americans, but President Obama has created some special avenues to circumvent or at least ease the bans. Ms. Barnett wondered who would be on the look-out in Cuba to make sure Americans had complied to all the bans, and the answer she got was, "No one." Meanwhile, the hard-liners are busy trying to plug the "loop-holes." 
       But it is now an historic American fact that this jetBlue commercial airplane has flown from the United States to Cuba. Even the rich and omnipotent Cuban-American hard-liners -- never seriously challenged prior to Obama -- cannot un-ring this bell. Heck, they can't even un-ring the 1959 triumph of the Cuban Revolution or the 1961 Cuban defense at the Bay of Pigs. Congress, sabotage, provocational backlash, etc., have worked in the past but this time too many Americans and too many Cuban-Americans will benefit personally, conveniently, economically, and otherwise from President Obama's courageous and sane -- and democratic -- overtures to Cuba. Therefore, it will not be easy to totally thwart the ongoing sanity and decency that President Obama has crafted into the long-entangled quagmire of U.S.-Cuban relations.
Varadero Beach east of Havana. {CNN photo}
Cubans honoring U. S. flags. {CNN Photo}
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1.9.16

U.S. Gets Closer to Cuba

Even Geographically, It Seems!!
       The photo above depicts an electronic sign yesterday -- August 31st -- at the airport in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. It's an historic photo for Cuba, America and sanity. Notice the "Santa Clara, CU 387" reminder for passengers preparing to board JetBlue Flight 387 bound from Fort Lauderdale to Santa Clara in central Cuba. It marks the first time since 1961 that a U. S. commercial airplane has been permitted to fly to Cuba. MOREOVER, it reflects the monumental bravery of U. S. President Barack Obama in challenging a Cuban policy dictated for over a half-century by the remnants of the Batista-Mafia dictatorship in Cuba that fled the victorious Cuban Revolution and quickly resettled on U. S. soil, primarily Miami, in the first week of January, 1959. So, indeed, study that historic sign heralding yesterday's departure of Flight 387 from Fort Lauderdale, Miami's sister city, to Santa Clara -- the Cuban city most associated with Che Guevara because that's where he led the last decisive battle of the Cuban Revolution, the Revolutionary battle that convinced the Batista & Mafia leaders in Havana to dash for their getaway planes and ships. Unfortunately, most of those planes and ships ended up in the perpetually friendly confines of Florida.
      This photo shows airline workers in Fort Lauderdale yesterday joyously waving American and Cuban flags as they watch Flight 387 taxi down the runway prior to its very historic flight to Santa Clara, Cuba.
    Passengers departing Flight 387 in Santa Clara yesterday.
        America's excited Secretary of Transportation, Anthony Foxx, was aboard Flight 387. On behalf of the U. S., he made this official statement: "Today's actions are the result of months of work by airlines, cities, the U. S. government, and many others toward delivering on President Obama's promise to reengage with Cuba." Mr. Foxx confirmed that following the historic Flight 387, other major U. S. airlines -- American, Alaska, Delta, Frontier, Southwest, Spirit, United, etc. -- will soon begin making regular flights to ten Cuban cities from U. S. cities such as New York, Los Angeles, Atlanta, Charlotte, Fort Lauderdale, Miami, Orlando, Tampa, Houston, etc. Asked about the fact that "the U. S. Congress and Miami politicians are not about to let go of the U. S. embargo against Cuba," Mr Foxx said, "President Obama's ongoing re-engagement with Cuba has opened up 12 legal and authorized categories for Americans, and not just Cuban-Americans, to travel to Cuba."
      As this pertinent Editorial Cartoon points out, a mere handful of anti-Castro hardliners have fiercely braced & dictated the embargo against Cuba for over half-a-century -- hurting America far more than it has ever hurt the now 90-year-old Fidel Castro. And the title -- "The Ironic Curtain" -- for this appropriate statement graphically illustrates that, IRONICALLY in the world's most famed democracy, America's Cuban policy for over half-a-century has done more harm to the worldwide image of America and democracy than any other continuous topic in history. Americans who deny that basic fact will have trouble disputing it.
      Almost 8 years ago when he began his transformative two-term presidency replacing the Bush dynasty, Mr. Obama was shamefully forced, in the early going, to march to the congressionally mandated dictates of an American Cuban policy that he well knew hurt and grossly shamed the world's greatest democracy.
        But President Obama threw off those Batistiano shackles and in doing so has displayed far more courage, astuteness, dexterity, and patriotism than any American president since 1952 when the American people sat back and allowed some right-wingers to align the U. S. with the Mafia to support the vile Batista dictatorship in Cuba. That undemocratic debacle was exacerbated in 1959 when the overthrown Batista regime was immediately allowed to resettle on nearby U. S. soil and, incredibly, hide behind the skirts of the world superpower in its decades-old efforts to regain control of Cuba. Those sheer facts, as politically incorrect as they are, illuminate Mr. Obama's momentous initiatives on behalf of Cubans, Americans, Cuban-Americans and democracy. One of those ongoing initiatives was Flight 387 yesterday being added to the tempestuous history of U.S.-Cuban relations, a nexus that for far too long -- dating back to 1952 -- has catered to the greed and whims of an unsavory few to the detriment of the vastly more decent majority.
      These are happy passengers in Fort Lauderdale yesterday getting ready to board Flight 387 for the ground-breaking trip to Santa Clara, Cuba. Because of draconian Batistiano-style U. S. laws, everyone of these Americans was forced to sign an affidavit swearing their travel falls within the permitted categories that allow Americans to visit Cuba -- such as educational or research trips, etc. Tourism is not permitted {uh, supposedly or, uh, legally}. Such discriminatory, anti-democratic laws have for decades made everyday Americans the only people in the world without the freedom to fly to Cuba while, at the same time, discriminating grossly in favor of Cuban-Americans via travel, immigration, economic and political matters. Despite President Obama bravely slicing into key aspects of the still "legal" Congress-mandated embargo, such affronts as the affidavit swear-ins were meticulously adhered to yesterday in Fort Lauderdale.
Passengers departing Flight 387 in Santa Clara yesterday.
 The airport in Santa Clara, Cuba.
Che Guevara memorial in Santa Clara.
Historic listing of Flight 387 at Fort Lauderdale airport.
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31.8.16

An HISTORIC Day TODAY

For Cubans & Americans!!
      Today -- Wednesday, August 31st, 2016 -- a JetBlue A320 airplane will make a Full Flight From Fort Lauderdale in Florida to Santa Clara in central Cuba. It will write a new chapter in the turbulent history of U.S.-Cuban relations. For over five decades, as punishment for the Cuban Revolution overthrowing the U.S.-backed Batista-Mafia dictatorship in January of 1959, the ongoing U. S. embargo against Cuba has prevented any commercial flights from the U. S. to Cuba. Today's JetBlue flight is a product of President Barack Obama's courageous efforts to normalize relations with the nearby island. The most visceral remnants of the ousted Batista-Mafia dictatorship still dictate U. S. Cuban policy via a stranglehold on the U. S. Congress that yearly gets a 191-to-2 denunciation in the United Nations. But incredibly, President Barack Obama has sliced into the self-serving and misguided congressional dictates regarding Cuba.
      But as a historic JetBlue A320 airliner like this one leaves Fort Lauderdale today and touches down in the central Cuban city of Santa Clara, proper perspectives are in order. As has been the case since 1959, any and all efforts in the United States to deal sanely with Cuba have, first of all, spawned massive resistance from the small but omnipotent and lucrative Anti-Castro Cottage Industry that flourishes on U. S. soil. Today's resumption of commercial flights to Cuba for the first time in over five decades will spawn predictable vitriol. And these forces are not accustomed to losing, and that's why even the historic JetBlue flight to Cuba today will not have many American passengers, just mostly Cuban-Americans. For decades Americans have been the only people in the world without the freedom to visit Cuba, but such discriminatory laws also discriminate strongly in favor of Cuban-Americans. After the JetBlue flight on this final day of August, in September American and Silver airlines will begin regular flights to Cuba from Miami. Soon, plans call for 110 daily flights from the U. S. to Cuba. The U. S. and Cuba are discussing 20 daily flights to Havana, the most coveted prize, but they have not been assigned yet because the capital city's Jose Marti Airport is already strained by a sharp uptick in tourism to Cuba. Several major U. S. airlines are willing to start flights to remote Cuban cities if they can compete for HAVANA!! 
       America's Secretary of Transportation, Anthony Foxx, will be aboard today's historic JetBlue flight to Santa Clara. Before joining the Obama administration, Mr. Foxx was the Mayor of Charlotte from 2009 till 2013. He says, "This flight to Cuba opens a new and positive chapter in the annals of United States and Cuban relationships. Commercial, as opposed to just charter flights between the two neighboring nations, will benefit most Americans and most Cubans, as will many other fresh overtures orchestrated by President Obama."  
      There is no Cuban-American more expert on U.S.-Cuban relations than Alberto Coll. He came to the U. S. from Cuba at age 12. He graduated with honors from Princeton University and then from the University of Virginia Law School. He taught law at Georgetown University, then was a top official at the Pentagon, and now is a renowned Law Professor at DePaul University. Today's USA Today quotes Mr. Coll regarding JetBlue's history-making flight to Cuba today. Mr. Coll said, "This is truly transformational." He knows that the resumption of commercial flights to Cuba will help Cubans and Americans, telling USA Today that "The money will go into the pockets of Cuban families that are going to use those resources to expand their small businesses and improve their lives, over time, that is going to transform Cuban society in a more open, more pluralistic manner." Most Americans, most Cuban-Americans and for sure most people all around the world wholeheartedly agree with Alberto Coll that punishing everyday Cubans for over half-a-century in the misguided, revengeful guise of hurting Castro has shamed the United States long enough. And yet, a visceral minority of Cuban-Americans based in Miami and/or the U. S. Congress stringently oppose the viewpoints of Cuban-Americans like Alberto Coll...to the detriment of Cubans, Americans, Cuban-Americans and especially the worldwide reputations of both the United States of America and its great democracy.
      Today's USA Today article about today's historic JetBlue flight to Cuba also lavishly quoted anti-Castro zealots like Dr. Jaime Suchlicki, the head of the Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies at the University of Miami. Dr. Suchlicki has long been one of the most powerful anti-Castro zealots in the United States and thus he opposes anything President Obama or anyone else tries to do to normalize relations with the island. Concerning the start of commercial air traffic to Cuba, he told USA Today today, "Even well-intentioned travelers to Cuba will enrich the struggling Castro regime." That mantra has been shoved down the throats of Americans everyday since January of 1959, at least till President Obama intervened.
       For many decades, Americans have been told that the only opinions regarding Cuba must come from anti-Castro zealots like Dr. Jamie Suchlicki, who indeed is one of America's most notable consultants about Cuba in both the private and public sectors. Americans are not supposed to realize that most Cuban-Americans even in Miami agree with President Obama's sane Cuban approach. The aforementioned Alberto Coll certainly disagrees with Dr. Suchlicki, as do most Cuban-Americans whose opinions you are not supposed to know about. For example, in this age of Google you can easily dial up pertinent and unbiased contrasting views. Punch in a long article written by Alvaro Fernandez entitled: "Fog of Lies About Cuba Damage University of Miami's Reputation." If you do so, you will discover that the recent article starts out by excoriating the Miami Herald because of its standard policy to "dare not delve into the web of deception created by one university professor and his staff of liars, of what some call an important educational and research center." The "university professor" Alvaro Fernandez referenced is Dr. Suchlicki. But all Americans are supposed to never challenge anything he says about Cuba, including his quote in today's USA Today.
       In contrast to Dr. Jamie Suchlicki's quote, please remember Alberto Coll's beneficent words today in USA Today revealing his hope and belief that such overtures as the resumption of commercial flights to Cuba will help everyday Cubans on the island, the ones who have suffered so much for so long because of what essentially was the transfer of the Batista-Mafia dictatorship from Cuba to the U. S. in January of 1959. In fact, to comprehend the Batistiano-Bush dictation of America's Cuban policy, you should study Mr. Coll's bio. As mentioned, he came to the U. S. from Cuba at age 12, graduated from Princeton and then UVA Law School, and has taught law at Georgetown and now DePaul universities. But to understand Mr. Coll's background, you need to do a little Googling. Dial up a comprehensive article entitled "The Assassination of Alberto Coll" written by the incomparable Ann Louise Bardach, the all-time greatest expert on U.S.-Cuban relations. Ms. Bardach explains that while there have "literally" been killings, Alberto Coll was only assassinated politically, not physically, for opposing the Cuban hardliners and their sycophants in the Bush dynasty starting with, as she stated, "George H. W. Bush," and continuing on to George W. Bush anti-Castro zealots such as "John Bolton" and "Otto Reich." Ms. Bardach states that the most powerful anti-Castro Cuban-American, "Jorge Mas Canosa," once offered the brilliant Cuba-American lawyer Alberto Coll a powerful position. The Pentagon had made young Alberto Coll the Deputy Secretary of Defense during the George H. W. Bush administration. But...lo 'n behold...when the Cuban hardliners and the Bush dynasty discovered that Alberto Coll had a sane and decent concern for the innocent Cubans on the island, he was "assassinated" -- politically but not physically. As Ann Louise Bardach, the greatest of America's Cuban experts, explains, what happened to Alberto Coll was not pretty, not at all. But at least he survived...and his comment in today's "USA Today" shows that he still has dire concern for innocent Cubans on the island.
And speaking of Ms. Bardach:
       If you haven't read her seminal books, essays, and articles about Cuba, I assume you don't know much about either Miami or Havana. Start, of course, with her classic book: "CUBA CONFIDENTIAL: Love and Vengeance in Miami and Havana." And to learn about a great Cuban-American who actually cares about Cubans on the island, be sure to Google "The Assassination of Alberto Coll" by Ann Louise Bardach.
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30.8.16

Cuba Looks to "The Future"

 U.S. Right-wingers Bask in the Past 
       This REUTERS/Enrique de la Osa photo shows a major news conference in Havana yesterday -- Monday, August 29th. The poster says: "With a firm step towards the Future." Conducting the news conference left to right are Mayda Molina, Eduardo Rodriguez and Alfredo Cordero. They are top officials in Cuba's Aviation & Transport industry. The session addressed an historic and epic event in U.S.-Cuban history. On Wednesday August 31st jetBlue Airlines will fly a commercial passenger jet from Fort Lauderdale to Santa Clara, Cuba. It will be the first commercial airplane flight from the U. S. to Cuba in over five decades because of the U. S. embargo instituted in 1962 to appease Cuban exiles booted off the island, primarily to South Florida, by the Cuban Revolution in the first week of January, 1959. Ms. Molina yesterday said, "As Cuba looks to a brighter future for our people, we hope the obstacles against us in the U. S. Congress, a relatively few people I understand, will also recognize how many Americans are hurt by decades of hostility aimed at overthrowing our government. Our hard-earned sovereignty is precious to us and we hope to live peacefully with everyone. Our only enemy is a small but apparently powerful element in the U.S. Congress."   
       Wednesday's historic  jetBlue flight from Fort Lauderdale to Santa Clara will soon evolve into about 25 daily commercial flights from the U. S. to Cuba. There are now 17 U.S. charter flights that land in Cuba daily to accommodate Cuban-Americans. All U. S. laws related to Cuba since 1959 have had a dual purpose: {#1} To hurt Cubans on the island; and {#2} to help Cubans in the U. S. economically and politically via gross discrimination not available to non-Cuban immigrants. Of course, Americans since 1959 are supposed to be too intimidated or too stupid to oppose such things, and those two assumptions have worked wonderfully for over five decades on behalf of a handful of Cuban-American hard-liners and their sycophants.
       The jetBlue commercial flight to Cuba Wednesday will usher in another key element of President Obama's brave normalization plans but provocations, intimidations and other tactics have squelched such efforts in the past...and might do so this time. However, Obama is the first U. S. President since the 1950s to have seriously challenged a Cuban policy that, from an image standpoint, far more drastically hurts the U. S. than it hurts Cuba, an island whose pugnaciousness has actually gained it considerable international respect and out-sized influence. Safety wise, Cuba is ready for the influx of air traffic from the U. S. but otherwise it is not. Because of Obama, a record 3.3 million tourists have visited Cuba in the past 12 months. Cuba's hotels, private home rentals, transportation services and amenities are already stretched to the limits. The U. S. Batistiano laws mandate that Americans are the only people in the world without the freedom to travel to Cuba. In defiance of a Batistiano-aligned Congress, Obama has created 12 categories of exceptions to the travel ban but most everyday Americans are still restricted...meaning that the commercial airplane travel to Cuba starting this week will mostly cater to Cuban-Americans, which all U. S. laws related to Cuba have done since 1959. Yet, as Cuban aviation official Mayda Molina said yesterday, "As Cuba looks to a brighter future for our people, we hope the obstacles against us in the U. S. Congress, a relatively few people I understand, will also recognize how many Americans are hurt by decades of hostility aimed at overthrowing our government. Our hard-earned sovereignty is precious to us and we hope to live peacefully with everyone. Our only enemy is a small but apparently powerful element in the United States." 
      If you detected skepticism in Ms. Molina's words yesterday in Havana, you would be correct. Even within the bowels of the world's greatest democracy, Ms. Molina is astute enough to understand that, when it comes to Cuba, democracy takes a back-seat to the self-serving and/or revengeful bellicosity of a few hard-liners. Of course, that might change if the once-proud U. S. democracy could ever get a moderate Cuban-American elected to the U. S. Congress -- you know, to reflect the views of the majority of Cuban-Americans who are indeed moderate and who support President Obama's sane approaches to Cuba.
       A notable Cuban-American in Miami, Hugo Cancio, wonders, "When will Cuban-Americans elected to Congress reflect the opinions of moderate Cuban-Americans like me?" Millions of democracy-loving Americans, as well as Cuban-Cubans like Mayda Molina in Havana, have been wondering the same thing.
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29.8.16

The World We Live In

Why Are the Bad Guys Winning?
         It didn't get much international coverage last week or this week but the photo above depicted a truly gigantic event in one of the world's most important capitals -- Bogota, Colombia. It shows thousands of young Colombians wildly celebrating in the streets as they watched a giant television screen that was depicting the signing of an omnipotent peace treaty in Havana, Cuba. It, at least for a time, marks the end of the world's longest and one of the world's bloodiest wars, a Civil War that has raged for five decades pitting the Colombian government against FARC rebels. Hundreds of thousands of innocent Colombians have been killed or maimed. These young Colombians prayerfully wanted it to end, and so did the government of Cuba. For the last four years Cuba has painstakingly brokered peace negotiations that brought the decent President of Colombia, Juan Santos, face-to-face with the leading FARC terrorist guerrillas. Finally, last week in Havana a peace treaty was signed. As always, many powerful people -- including the former Colombian President Alvaro Uribe known for his Bush-dynasty ties -- vigorously oppose this peace treaty, so maintaining it will be difficult. BUT MOST COLOMBIANS, like the young people above, prayerfully applaud it. You see, they want to live out their lives, if possible, in peace...not fear.
      Anne Frank, the legendary and precious little Dutch girl, also wanted to live out her life in peace and become an author. Her famed diary, as she and her family tried to hide from the Nazis, revealed she likely would have become both a great author and a great mother. But Anne Frank, her sister and over six million other Jewish citizens were gruesomely murdered before the Holocaust was ended in 1945 by World War II. Now fast-forward from the haunting photo of Anne Frank to today's color photo on the right. This bloodied and traumatized little girl is actually considered lucky by today's insane and ongoing metrics. She's alive while most of her schoolmates were killed by the sophisticated bomb that merely bloodied and terrorized her. The twin photos above are courtesy of the New York Times and also courtesy of the insanity of the world Anne Frank lived in back in the 1940s and the world in which the little girl on the right is trying so desperately to live in today. But like with her dead classmates and millions of other little children, the odds are stacked very high against her. And that's because...it seems...the bad people...in today's world...are either...more powerful...or more motivated...than the good people. That sheer fact includes self-proclaimed good people like me who cry when we study photos of Anne Frank from the 1940s OR when in 2016 we see daily photos or television images like the one of the terrified and bloodied {BUT LUCKY} little girl shown above on the right. And then we wipe the tears away and sit for a few moments in awed silence staring aimlessly and helplessly into a brief and empty space. We wonder why? WHY? But we have no answers. My only hope...and my only miniscule contribution...is that Anne Frank knew as she died that I cared about her AND that the little girl in the color photo as she tries to live knows that I care...about her too. That's not much, I know, but at least it's something. Just caring...is something...isn't it? Isn't it? Isn't itISN'T IT...?
 I love you, Anne Frank. 
And for many years, I believed your most famous quotation.
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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 ...