2.3.17

Cuban Images

Past and Present!
         The photo above illustrated a long article this week by the online power Salon that is a bit unique, meaning it was written by a reporter who actually visited Cuba and then presented an unbiased report on the often maligned island. The article is entitled "Hustlers Are Going to Hustle: From East Baltimore to Cuba..." The young Cuban entrepreneur above hustled the writer as he tried to get a customer for his taxi service provided by his 1950s-era Oldsmobile. The Salon article is unique because its writer toured Cuba and fairly reported on day-to-day life on the island in a transition period that follows the Nov.-2016 death of 90-year-old revolutionary icon Fidel Castro and the Jan.-2017 replacement of the Cuba-friendly Obama presidency by the Republican-unfriendly Trump administration. Unlike the Salon article, the mainstream U. S. media is too intimidated or too politically correct to report fairly about Cuba and most...not all, but most...of the Internet blogs -- such as Breitbart, National Review, Capital Hill Cubans, etc. -- are fiercely and blatantly unfair in dispensing fake but lushly funded anti-Cuban diatribes to their right-wing choirs.
       In less than a year -- by early February of 2018 -- for the first time since 1959 -- Cuba will have as its leader someone not named Castro. The 56-year-old, non-revolutionary, mild-mannered, motorcycle-riding, Beatles-loving, education-advocate Miguel Diaz-Canel will be the next President of Cuba, succeeding Raul Castro. Raul will be 86-years-old on June 3rd and in 2016 both of his brothers -- the 91-year-old Ramon and the 90-year-old Fidel died. And Raul is very tired. While he has relished being in charge of the Cuban military since 1959, he did not relish assuming the mantle of President but did so shortly after Fidel's near-fatal intestinal illness that first befell him in July of 2006. Raul, even in his prime as Cuba's military leader and later even as President, insisted on being home for dinner with his family at 6:00 PM each evening.
    In 1959 Vilma Espin and Raul Castro were married.
        Beginning in 1959, the Big Four in Revolutionary Cuba -- left to right -- were Vilma Espin, Fidel Castro, Raul Castro and Celia Sanchez. The Castro brothers were the upfront leaders and in charge of defense but the two revolutionary women were unchallenged concerning all other domestic items, with the overall power structure aligned in this order: Celia, Fidel, Vilma, and Raul...an order championed by Fidel. If that ranking does not compute with your understanding of Cuban history, it's probably because the Cuban narrative since 1959 has been dictated in the U. S. by two generations of transplanted Batista-Mafia figures. {But the ranking computes with the major observers of the Batista-to-Castro transition, including still-living and highly respected Cuban journalists-authors such as Marta Rojas and Roberto Salas}
      Since 1952 Cuba has been fueled -- for better or worse and come hell or high water -- by the island's fierce female opposition to and remembrance of the vile U.S.-backed Batista-Mafia dictatorship, a fact the Western world ignores to facilitate its vilification of Revolutionary Cuba. Meanwhile, even as the Batistianos and Mafiosi regrouped in South Florida in January-1959, Vilma...as shown above...and Celia were solidifying revolutionary rule on the island with powerful institutions such as the still-viable-in 2017 Federation of Cuban Women, block-by-block Committees for the Defense of the Revolution, etc.
       The "Guerrillera" {female} dominance of both the Revolution and Revolutionary Cuba resulted in Vilma Espin having more decision-making power than guerrilla partner and future husband Raul Castro and Celia Sanchez having more decision-making power than her guerrilla partner and eternal soulmate Fidel Castro. Unbiased historians and insiders with such intimate details of the Revolution and Revolutionary Cuba -- from Carlos Franqui to Pedro Alvarez Tabio to the still-living Roberto Salas and Marta Rojas -- were/are abundantly aware of this fact. For example, in his book the respected Roberto Salas wrote: "Celia Sanchez made all the decisions for Cuba, the big ones and the small ones. When she died of cancer in 1959, we all knew no one could ever replace her." In the montage above, the photo in the upper-right shows the influential guerrilla fighters Celia Sanchez and Vilma Espin during a break in the Revolutionary War. After the war, Vilma's power rivaled that of Celia's and, except for defense factors, exceeded that of Fidel and Raul.
       And if you understand the unique power that revolutionary icons Celia Sanchez and Vilma Espin had both during and after the victorious Cuban Revolutionary War, you need to update your knowledge of Cuba by understanding the above photo of Jennifer Bello Martinez. She is shown wearing her "I am Fidel" T-shirt while making a fiery speech in defense of Revolutionary Cuba. Jennifer, cast in the mold of Celia Sanchez and Vilma Espin, is President of the Federation of University Students that, for over nine decades, has been one of the fiercest fighters for Cuban independence. Jennifer's influence on the island extends beyond the FEU, which means she is more powerful on the island than the collective array of dissidents that Jennifer and her followers believe are supported and funded by "foreign elements that we Cubans -- like Jose Echeverria, Jose Marti and Antonio Maceo -- must wage do-or-die battles against." {Echeverria was one of the many FEU leaders murdered by Batista while Marti and Maceo died on Cuban soil fighting Spanish imperialism}. While Revolutionary Cuba needed Celia Sanchez and Vilma Espn to overcome Batista in the 1950s, it needs Celia-Vilma disciples like Jennifer Bello Martinez if it is to continue its revolutionary rule.
       This montage from left-to-right shows Vilma Espin the guerrilla fighter, Vilma Espin at the peak of her power in Revolutionary Cuba, and Vilma Espin in the twilight of her remarkable life. Born in 1930 like her husband Raul, Vilma died of cancer in 2007. She was the mother of Raul's four children -- Mariela, Alejandro, Deborah and Nilsa. The heterosexual Mariela, as an internationally known gay rights advocate, is the best-known of Vilma and Raul's four children while Nilsa is the least known and both Deborah and Alejandro are the most politically powerful, or at least influential, and also more powerful and influential than Fidel's 8 sons on the island {or Fidel's two daughters, both of whom defected to South Florida}.
       The book shown above -- "THE LONGEST ROMANCE: The Mainstream Media and Fidel Castro" -- may indeed have correctly depicted the long romance between Fidel and the liberal media but with the transplanted Batistianos dictating the Cuban and Fidel narrative in the United States, Americans need to do a lot of research and Googling to ascertain the truth. For example, the photo used on the cover of the Humberto Fontova book depicted above can easily be researched to ascertain its origin on U. S. soil.
       This is the photo that Fontana put on the cover of his book. Your Googling research of this photo would take you to a YouTube video in which Fidel Castro stood before this bank of microphones and...in English...talked about his desires for friendly democratic relations with the United States in the early days after the triumph of the Cuban Revolution. Those comments came at a time when Fidel, as a revolutionary hero, was wildly popular in Cuba, the United States and the world...popularity that was proven during his 12-day friendship visit to the United States in April of 1959, a mere three months after ousting the U.S.-backed Batista-Mafia dictatorship. But even by then, right-wingers in the Eisenhower White House had continued their alliance with the Batista-Mafia revenge-seekers who had regrouped in South Florida. 
       Cuba in 2017 is faced with analyzing and reacting to the transition in the United States from the Cuba-friendly Democratic presidency of Barack Obama to the unfriendly Republican presidency of Donald Trump.
     During his recently concluded two-term presidency, Barack Obama displayed far more guts and intelligence than all the previous American Presidents dating back to the Spanish-American War in 1898 and especially since the victorious Cuban Revolution in 1959. Confronted with a Batistiano-directed United States Congress, President Obama adroitly used a massive string of Executive Powers in a fervent attempt to normalize relations with Cuba, with his final such power stroke resulting in the end of the extremely discriminatory Wet Foot-Dry Foot law that massively encouraged and richly favored only Cuban immigrants.
          President Trump has yet to live up to his promises -- as stated above in Miami -- to use his own Executive Powers to erase President Obama's overtures toward Cuba. In this brand-new month of March-2017, it is assumed Trump still plans to keep those Miami promises but more pressing problems -- such as with the media, health care and Russia -- have pushed his Cuban plans aside -- at least momentarily.
      Organizations in the United States -- such as the James Williams-directed Engage Cuba Coalition -- are fighting tooth-and-nail, with some success, to continue Mr. Obama's friendly advances toward Cuba.
      For example, the image above is taken from an impressive Engage Cuba-produced video that gives voice to young Cuban entrepreneurs on the island who have benefited from the brave opening President Obama and a far-more-open Cuba is currently affording them. The video, readily available on YouTube if you care to see and hear what young Cubans think, is in both English and Spanish with the translated words crawled across the video in English when Spanish is spoken or in Spanish when English is spoken. Many decisions that directly concern Cubans in Cuba are routinely made in Miami and in Congress without consulting them, but they indeed do have opinions that Americans should respect. The young Cuban female entrepreneur above, and many others like her, are shown on the video literally begging the United States to follow "the Obama initiatives" and allow them to continue Obama's goal, which is to allow Cubans on the island to make decent entrepreneurial livings in defiance of Congressional and Miami hardliners.
       This is a CIA map of Cuba that was used by Voice of America during the Obama presidency when U. S. government organizations actually promoted Obama programs aimed at normalizing relations with Cuba.
      In 2017 -- the first year of the post-Obama Trump presidency -- there are many international efforts fighting the U. S. economic embargo/blockade of Cuba that has existed since 1962 and which the United Nations, by a vote of 191-to-0, considers the longest and cruelest embargo ever imposed by a powerful nation against a weak nation. The fact that many Americans don't seem to care how much that harms the worldwide image of both America and democracy continues to be a negative factor in the equation.
       As long as the U. S. embargo-blockade against Cuba remains in place, as long as the U. S. is unwilling to discuss the return of Guantanamo Bay to Cuba, and as long as a few Cuban-American hardliners can continue to dictate Cuban policy in the U. S. Congress and in Republican White Houses, there will be pro-Cuban and pro-Fidel demonstrations and promotions such as the one depicted above. This impressive poster promoted the massive pro-Cuban session in Vancouver that took place on February 17, 2017.
     The poster above heralds a two-day session sponsored by a normalization committee -- UCNC -- at the Fordham University School of Law and will take place on March 25th and 26th, 2017. It marks the start of a "National Conference to fight for the full normalization of relations between the United States and Cuba." 

      In less than a year, by February of 2018, Miguel Diaz-Canel at age 57 will take over as the next President of Cuba -- a non-Castro and a non-revolutionary. The photo is courtesy of Adalberto Roque/AFP/Getty Images. In the intervening months, no matter what America's President Donald Trump does or does not do regarding his predecessor's {Obama's} peaceful overtures to Cuba, it is believed that Diaz-Canel will strongly look eastward in the direction of China and Vietnam as opposed to taking a westward glance toward the nearby United States. That's because Diaz-Canel does not believe that either Trump or Congress will "adequately address" -- Diaz-Canel's words -- two lines in the sand he has drawn: {1} The end of the embargo; and {2} "sincere discussions" with Cuba related to the return of Guantanamo Bay to Cuba "without conditions." Thus, to counter the anticipated "continuation of American bellicosity towards Cuba," it is expected that Diaz-Canel's leadership of Cuba will, even more than the Castro leadership since 1959, deemphasize Cuba's relations with the U. S. as much as possible and instead focus on accentuating as much as possible Cuba's relations with friendly powers, especially China and Russia.  
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28.2.17

Cuba's Next Leader

The Impending Transition!
     Most unbiased observers who desire to know what is happening in Cuba rely on respected sources, especially Carlos Alzugaray, as opposed to pro-Cuban or anti-Cuban propaganda. Carlos was born in 1943 in Havana and he has degrees from the University of Havana as well as a respected Japanese university. He is acclaimed as a diplomat, educator and professor...and he has lectured at universities in the USA, UK, Canada, Mexico, Belgium, Luxembourg, Spain, Italy, Switzerland, and throughout Latin America. The George W. Bush administration once barred Carlos from speaking in the U. S. but that was simply because the Bush dynasty does not want Americans to know the truth about Cuba lest it depart from its anti-Cuban propaganda.
     But while most of the mainstream U. S. media is either too intimidated or incompetent to tell the truth about Cuba, there remain some brave, veteran U. S. journalists -- such as NBC's Andrea Mitchell as you can see above -- that actually want to tell the truth about Cuba. And, for example, Andrea Mitchell was seeking the truth when she interviewed Carlos Alzugaray in front of Havana's famed Malecon seawall, as this graphic shows.
       Amazingly, there is a major news outlet in Miami that not only reports profusely about Cuba BUT ACTUALLY TELLS THE TRUTH ABOUT CUBA!! It's ABC Channel 10 Local News. It's bravery and integrity are astounding.
         Heck, ABC Channel 10 in Miami even covered the Nov. 25th-2016 death of Fidel Castro both accurately and fairly.
        Miami's ABC Channel 10 is the only news operation in South Florida that has a full-time bureau in Cuba and it is headed by an excellent and fair-minded journalist named Hatzel Vela, shown above reporting from Santa Clara.
      And that returns us to Carlos Alzugaray. This week Hatzel Vela's first report from Cuba for Channel 10 in Miami featured Dr. Alzugaray's insightful and astute observations on topical Cuban issues. Less than a year from now -- when Raul Castro steps down in February of 2018 -- Cuba will have its first non-Castro and non-revolutionary leader since 1959. Leading up to that significant development, the major changes in Cuba made possible by the bravery and intelligence of former U. S. President Barack Obama, even if current President Trump erases much of them, will greet Cuba's next President, 56-year-old Miguel Diaz-Canel. Carlos Alzugaray told Hatzel Vela this week: "There is an expansion of the private sector, and there is nothing the Cuban government can do to stop that from happening." In fact, Dr. Alzugaray believes that Diaz-Canel will readily advance such entrepreneurial opportunities in Cuba. He said, "He is a guy who is modern, goes around with a tablet taking notes, carries out a good conversation and he reads a lot." Under Diaz-Canel, Dr. Alzugaray said, "Cuba will look east, to China and Vietnam." 
      Shown above on the far right meeting with a high-level Vietnamese delegation, Miguel Diaz-Canel has also met with and been wined-and-dined by the #1 top leaders in China and Russia. Anticipating continuous U. S. roadblocks being put up by the Cuban hardliners working with the U. S. Congress and President Trump, Diaz-Canel is primed to depend on close associations with proven allies but it appears he wants Cuba's government to more closely resemble that of Vietnam. Like all U. S. presidents since North and South Vietnam were fused into one nation under Communist rule after its victory in the bloody Vietnam War, Diaz-Canel is duly impressed with Vietnam's economic recovery. Even President George W. Bush went to Hanoi to lavishly praise Vietnam's post-war economic and, I presume, political success.
Miguel Diaz-Canel and Chinese President Zi Jinping.
Diaz-Canel and Xi Jinping at a high-level conference.
Russian President Vladimir Putin and Miguel Diaz-Canel.
Diaz-Canel and Putin at a high-level conference.
        Miguel Diaz-Canel welcomes close ties to China and Russia but, truth be known, his political mind-set is more in line with Vietnam than with China, Russia or any other nation. As shown in this photo, Vietnam's powerful Nguyen Thi Kim Ngan is a particularly close friend of Cuba's next leader, Miguel Diaz-Canel. As Cuba reshapes its economy, Diaz-Canel wants it to most resemble Vietnam's, which means a dose of capitalism to enhance the recent entrepreneurial advances Cuba began because of the Obama-orchestrated detente with Raul Castro. Reportedly, Diaz-Canel once told Thi Kim, "Cuba's main enemy since the 1950s has been the Bush dynasty in America." To which Thi Kim reportedly replied, "That's interesting. Since our victorious war the United States has become one of our top five trade partners and the last Bush president came here to congratulate us." 
         It was on November 17, 2006 that President George W. Bush arrived in Hanoi to salute Vietnam and its President Nguyen Minh Triet, with a golden image of Ho Chi Minh looming over Bush's right shoulder. On the heels of the bloody Vietnam War, which reunited North and South Vietnam under Communist rule, the United States has become a major trade partner with Vietnam while, since 1962, the United States has imposed a massive and stifling economic boycott against Cuba. The difference in the Vietnam War and Cuba's Revolutionary War, both of which the U. S. lost, is -- as Miguel Diaz-Canel understands it -- the overthrown Batista dictatorship in Cuba uniquely, quickly, and permanently regrouped on U. S. soil and soon -- with the massive help of the Bush dynasty -- stretched its tentacles to Congress and Republican White Houses to amazingly dictate most U. S. laws related to Cuba, including the embargo. At least, according to a quote Miguel Diaz-Canel's friend Thi Kim made in the Vietnamese media, that's U.S.-Cuban history according to Miguel Diaz-Canel, Cuba's next leader.
          Not only does the highly respected Carlos Alzugaray have high expectations for Miguel Diaz-Canel, but so does his mentor Raul Castro and most of the everyday Cubans on the island.
          Born in Santa Clara, Cuba on April 20th, 1960, Miguel is a highly trained engineer who climbed political ladders in Cuba as he rode his motorcycle, with tablet in hand, to visit and talk with everyday Cubans, truly showing a genuine interest in their welfare. He also remains a huge Beatles' fan, reflecting British and American influence as he grew up in the 1960s and 1970s.
         Raul will turn 86-years-old on June 3rd and he is tired. In 2016 both of his brothers -- 91-year-old Ramon and 90-year-old Fidel -- died. Raul relished being head of Cuba's military since 1959 but he reluctantly took over as Cuba's President soon after Fidel's near fatal intestinal illness in July of 2006. 
         Raul likes...almost insists...being surrounded by family members for dinner each evening at 6:00 PM. He also wants a Chinese or Vietnamese-style economy for Cuba but neither he nor Fidel wanted a dynastic succession, although two of Raul's four children -- Deborah and Alejandro -- are very politically minded. One of Raul's favorite grandchildren is shown in the middle in the above photo but he is his grandpa's bodyguard and has been trained to be a businessman, not a politician. 
         So, as things now stand as fast-changing Cuba enters March of 2017, Miguel Diaz-Canel -- a non-revolutionary and a non-Castro -- will be Cuba's next leader by this time next year. 
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26.2.17

Buzzards Targeting Cuba

Flying From Foreign Lands!
{Updated: Tuesday, February 28th, 2017}
       The Buzzard above is shown flying over Vinales Valley in Cuba. It apparently was on its way to join an expected feast in Havana. Such easy flights across the Florida Straits of foreign vultures reflect the vulnerability of the very pugnacious island.
And hey!! Here's another one.
       Once they land in Cuba, these buzzards are planning to feast on their prey, the Cuban Revolution. The Washington Post -- on the last weekend in February of 2017 -- had a major editorial delineating the latest assault on the Caribbean island since the Janunary 1-1959 revolution ousted the vile Batista-Mafia dictatorship, only to have the Batistiano-Mafiosi leaders flee on their getaway boats, ships and planes. In places like Miami and Newark, they hooked back up with their tons of loot, which in turn purchased tons of influence in Congress and with all Republican administrations. The Washington Post editorial this weekend was entitled: "A BRAVE ACT IN CUBA DESERVES AMERICAN SUPPORT." The Washington Post was a highly respected liberal giant prior to its purchase by multi-billionaire Jeff Bezos and since then it has emerged as a propaganda rag advocating Bezos' extreme views. The Post's aforementioned editorial "supported" the feasts of foreign buzzards in Cuba.
Now the Washington Post's PROPAGANDA-in-CHIEF.
      This photo was taken back in October of 2016 in Washington, D. C. and it shows Rosa Maria Paya and Luis Almagro signing anti-Cuban documents on very friendly U. S. soil. Miss Paya is the daughter of the late Cuban dissident Oswaldo Paya who died in a car wreck in 2012. Mr. Almagro is a Uruguayan who is Secretary-General of the Organization of American States {OAS}. Cuba considers Almagro and the OAS to be a powerful Washington-directed anti-Cuban tool and Cuba considers Paya to be a powerful Miami-directed counter-revolutionary. Last week she arranged for Almagro and other well-known anti-Cuban operatives -- including former Bush-aligned Mexican President Felipe Calderon, Chilean Mariana Aylwin and former Czech ambassador to the U. S. Martin Palous -- to attend a heralded counter-revolutionary session. Cuba denied entry to the island to Paya's chosen associates, a decision that angered the legions of foreign counter-revolutionaries as well as sycophants such as Jeff Bezos' Washington Post propaganda rag. In addition to suggesting that other Americans "SUPPORT" the counter-revolutionaries, the multi-multi-multi billionaire Jeff Bezos and his newly purchased propaganda toy cowardly and viciously attacked democracy-loving U. S. Senator Patrick Leahy for leading a friendly bipartisan group of Congressmen to Cuba last week.
      This photo shows Senator Patrick Leahy talking civilly to Cuban President Raul Castro whose retirement in less than a year will mark the first time since 1959 that a "Castro" has not been the leader of Cuba. Mr. Leahy and millions of other democracy-loving Americans -- as well as a 191-to-0 unanimity in the United Nations -- deplore a failed U. S. Cuban policy that has mightily harmed totally innocent Cubans on the island for over half-a-century. Meanwhile, the revengeful and self-serving counter-revolutionaries are always willing to promote cruel Congressional laws and even bloody acts...other people's blood...to bring the Cuban Revolution to its knees. {And for what purpose...to reinstall the Batistianos, the Mafiosi and greedy U. S. businessmen?}.
        Revolutionary heroine Celia Sanchez -- as the prime recruiter of rebels and supplies -- was the main reason the Batistianos were defeated on January 1, 1959. Her roles as a guerrilla fighter and leader were also nonpareil, as was her decision-making in Revolutionary Cuba. In April of 1959 -- a mere three months after removing her guerrilla uniform -- she took #1 rebel hero Fidel Castro to the U. S. on a 12-day visit trying to make peace with the Eisenhower administration. When that effort was rebuffed by Vice President Nixon and the Dulles brothers -- CIA Director Allen and Secretary of State John -- Celia returned to Cuba and laid down a proclamation: "The Batistianos will never regain control of Cuba as long as I live or as long as Fidel lives." She died of cancer at age 59 on Jan. 11, 1980. Fidel died of old age at 90 on Nov. 25, 2016. So, her proclamation has stood the test of time, and then some.
       Cast in the mold of Celia Sanchez, Josefina Vidal is today Cuba's determined Minister of North American Affairs and the primary defender of Revolutionary Cuba against buzzards flying from foreign countries to feast on the island. Vidal powerfully defended Cuba's rationale for denying entry to the island last week for the counter-revolutionaries to celebrate, plan and feast there. She said: "I don't want anyone to shoot Cuba in the foot and I don't want Cuba to shoot itself in the foot." Of course, Jeff Bezos and other anti-Cuban propagandists will claim that...HEY!!...if China or Russia or Iran wanted to hold highly financed and publicized anti-American sessions in the United States, the U. S. wouldn't object so why should Cuba? Well, Mr. Bezos, study Vidal's astute quotation and you will understand why Cuba objected.
       While Celia Sanchez predicated the success of the Cuban Revolution and Josefina Vidal is now its primary defender, Jennifer Bello Martinez is the leader of the island's pivotal twentysomething generation equally determined to do "whatever must be done to maintain the Cuban sovereignty that so many great Cubans were willing to fight and die for." Jennifer is head of Cuba's Federation of University Students {FEU}. The FEU was formed over nine decades ago and has fiercely supported every effort to obtain and to maintain Cuban independence, including the Cuban Revolution and Revolutionary Cuba.
        Wearing a "I am Fidel" T-shirt, Jennifer Bello Martinez issued this fiery warning to would-be counter-revolutionaries: "Backed by billionaires and a superpower, you foreign devils may one day recapture Cuba but just know that ours will not be the only blood that will be shed by your cowardly attack."  
Jennifer organizes FEU demonstrations like this.
      As a journalist and as a Cuban, the increasingly influential Cristina Escobar is also determined that twentysomethings like her and Jennifer Bello Martinez chart the upcoming course for post-Castro Cuba. As a University of Havana student and FEU member, Cristina wrote her thesis predicting 7 years ago the impact that President Barack Obama's presidency would have on the island, and her uncanny accuracy was stunning. Cristina and Jennifer are also abundantly aware that Batista thugs murdered Jose Echeverria and many other FEU members before Batista actually closed the University of Havana.
       At age 28, Cristina Escobar is a brilliant broadcast journalist on Cuban and regional television in Spanish or English. In the above video during a Tracey Eaton interview in Havana, she said, "Cuban journalists have more freedom to tell the truth about the U. S. than U. S. journalists have to tell the truth about Cuba." She also sternly said, "I don't want the U. S. to bring me democracy. That is a project for Cubans on the island." As an expert on U.S.-Cuban history, Cristina Escobar remembers what Jeff Bezos and other American counter-revolutionaries like to forget, which is the fact that in 1952 the U. S. brought Cuba the Batistianos, the Mafiosi and greedy U. S. businessmen who feasted like greedy buzzards on Cuba. The image above is taken from YouTube where you can see and hear pertinent Cristina Escobar comments.
     Now as she ponders the Trump presidency and the fate of a post-Fidel Cuba, Cristina Escobar agrees wholeheartedly with...Celia, Josefina and Jennifer. She says, "Cuba's fate should be up to Cubans on the island, not Cubans in Miami and in the U. S. Congress. It will be that way or the fight-to-the death sacrifices on Cuban soil of Cubans like Jose Marti and Antonio Maceo will have all been in vain." Cristina Escobar's journalism career took her to California in 2014 and to Washington in 2016 where she made history and headlines asking six pertinent questions at a White House news conference hosted by President Obama's chief spokesman Josh Earnest. But she always returns to her beloved Cuba. If Josefina Vidal, Jennifer Bello Martinez or Cristina Escobar ever defect to Miami, it would mean Cuba had lost and the counter-revolutionaries had won. But such defections won't happen, and therein lies the major problem for the wealthy counter-revolutionaries.
Marti & Maceo died on Cuban battlefields.
    A blistering February 24th editorial in Jeff Bezos' Washington Post strongly "supported" a FEAST OF THE foreign BUZZARDS on the island of Cuba. Note that the vulture has his knife, fork and kerchief all ready as he savors the island, which he considers a tasty morsel. But it's been that way everyday since January of 1959 and the buzzards are still awaiting their feast.
 But foreign buzzards keep trying to land in Cuba!
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24.2.17

Cuba's +- Week

One PlusOne Minus!!
{Updated: Saturday, February 25th, 2016}
       In this next-to-last week in February of 2017, Cuba got some good press, even in the United States. The photo above shows a bipartisan delegation from the U. S. Congress meeting in Havana with Cuban President Raul Castro. Speaking to Castro is Democratic Senator Pat Leahy of Vermont with the white-haired Republican Senator Thad Cochran of Mississippi right behind Leahy awaiting his turn. The Congressmen spent four days this week in Cuba and concluded that Cuba is trying to preserve its detente with the United States begun by former U. S. President Obama, but it remains a precarious process.
        In the hopes that President Donald Trump will not scuttle Obama's peaceful overtures to Cuba, the bipartisan group of United States Congressmen this week witnessed the above signing in which Senator Thad Cochran's state of Mississippi and two of its major ports agreed to future commerce with Cuba.
Meanwhile, as represented by this quartet of Miami counter-revolutionaries, any advances in trying to normalize relations with Cuba are always met with highly publicized heightened efforts to reverse them.
The next five photos are courtesy of Reuters.
       Cuba is being lambasted this week for not allowing Luis Almagro to fly to the island to participate in an anti-Cuba rally organized by Cuban dissidents on the island in conjunction with anti-Cuba elements off the island, namely the Latin American Network of Youth for Democracy. In addition to Almagro, Cuba denied entry to former Mexican President Felipe Calderon and to Mariana Aylwin, the daughter of former Chilean President Patricio Aylwin. But it's the Almagro denial that most rankles Cuba's enemies in the Western World. He is the head of the Organization of American States {OAS}. Cuba's Foreign Ministry released a formal statement explaining in detail its decision to deny Almagro, Calderon, and Aylwin to participate in Havana in what it considered a "a foreign-funded-and-organized regime-change spectacle." Cuba's official statement said: "The plan, plotted on several trips between Washington and other capitals of the region, was to mount in Havana an open and serious provocation against the Cuban government..." Cuba also detailed how it has tied Almagro, Calderon, and Aylwin to "several Bush-era regime-change schemes." Cuba has maintained since its 1959 revolution ousted the U.S.-backed Batista dictatorship that the OAS has been a tool of U. S. regime-change right-wingers, and Cuba has vowed "never" to have anything to do with it.
       While getting bad press this week related to the OAS, Mexico and Chile, Cuba is also concerned with what's happening elsewhere in Latin American, such as with its friend President Rafael Correa of Ecuador. The 53-year-old Correa has been elected President of Ecuador three times since 2007 and in those ten years he has been Cuba's ally and has been credited with helping the poorest Ecuadorians. His education includes a degree from the University of Illinois-Urbana. He is not eligible to run in the current presidential election in Ecuador and he believes the man he is supporting is being unfairly maligned "from abroad" by elements who do not like his "two toxic friendships -- with Cuba and with my own poorest people." Thus, Cuba and America both have much more than a passing interest in who succeeds President Correa.
      Sixty-one-year-old banker Guillermo Lasso is strongly backed by business interests and, presumably, by the United States in the tense presidential election in Ecuador. But he would not be Cuba's top choice.
       President Correa as well as Cuba would like to see Lenin Moreno elected as the next President of Ecuador. Moreno has been a paraplegic since he was shot in the back in 1998. Like Rafael Correa, Lenin Moreno believes his friendly views on Cuba and poor people have created "well-funded opponents." 
        Recent polls showed that 51-year-old lawyer Cynthia Viteri had made sharp gains in the race to become Ecuador's next President and she indeed amassed enough votes to cause a run-off election.
       Reuters announced last night that leftist Lenin Moreno, on the left, got 39.3 percent of the votes, barely missing the 40% threshold, and banker Guillermo Lasso, on the right, got 28.1 percent. Thus, the run-off election between these two men will be held on April 3rd to determine Ecuador's next President.
       Ecuadorean President Rafael Correa once thought the Obama administration was friendly turf. U. S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is shown here warmly embracing and even kissing President Correa.
A friendly Clinton and Correa news conference.
       BUT THEN, an unhappy President Correa got to see some of Secretary Clinton's secretive emails exposed by Wikileaks. From that point on President Correa reached the conclusion that any Cuba-friendly government in Latin America was being targeted by Washington -- his in Ecuador, Dilma Rousseff's in Brazil, Cristina Kirchner's in Argentina, Danny Ortega's in Nicaragua, Evo Morales' in Bolivia, etc. By the time the two-photo montage depicted above was made, President Correa and Secretary Clinton were, to put it mildly, not on kissing terms as he moped and she was busy blaming Wikileaks for leaking her emails. 
       Since being educated by the Hillary Clinton emails, President Rafael Correa in Ecuador has turned away from the U. S. and toward China, as indicated by the photo above. From Cuba to Ecuador and all the Cuba-friendly stops in between, China is displaying an eagerness to capitalize on either real or perceived Latin American distrust of the United States. China, according to Correa, exudes friendship to Latin America's "minority poor" while the U. S. is interested in "alliances with Latin America's minority elite, with America's perennial target, Cuba, always just caught in the middle." And that's why Cuba for sure and both the U. S. and China most likely will be keeping a close eye on April 3rd's presidential election in Ecuador.
The population of Ecuador is 15.7 million South Americans.
And by the way:
       This is the most painful and shameful photo that flashed across America Friday, February 24th, 2017. It was featured in USA Today and many other newspapers. It was taken by Mike McCleary of the Bismarck Tribune. It shows an elderly, handcuffed Indian woman being forcefully led away by four strong policeman. For a year this Indian woman and many like her have been protesting the Dakota Access Pipeline that will enrich rich Americans and Canadians but SHE sincerely believes it will harm the environment and illegally soil and desecrate her sacred fatherland. The photo is a reminder that the American government has never lived up to a treaty with Indians and seldom has the U. S. government even shown compassion for the most native of Native Americans. But I would like to say...I have compassion and respect for this old Indian woman. She, like many others of her race, is a genuine American heroine.
{NOTE: I am a democracy-loving conservative Republican.
 {Unfortunately, it's a democracy not immune to thugs.
{The thugs are the decision-makers, not the policemen.}
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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 ...