13.7.17

Cruising to Cuba Accelerates

But So Do Foreign Troubles!
      Cuba is only an island but its intrigue and importance in its region and on the world stage is far out of proportion to its size, population, and economy. Its close proximity and calamitous relations with the the world superpower, the United States, crowns the island's significance as well as its struggles for independence against powerful imperial forces. But on its own, Cuba is the largest island and arguably the most beautiful one in the Caribbean, which is a delicate and vital combination of island nations neighboring both the mighty U. S. and Latin America. From 1492 till today -- mid-July of 2017 -- Cuba has been spotlighted with an international gaze because of its own attributes and the covetous desires of foreign powers to dominate it. Both historically and topically, Cuba has been and still is a fascinating factor. Google will help you research its fascinating history while I update its topicality.
       Much is made of the fact that South Florida is and has been since 1959 fiercely anti-Cuba. That's because to kick-off 1959 the Cuban Revolution booted the U.S.-backed Batista-Mafia dictatorship off the island, but only as far as South Florida where Little Havana in Miami became the new capital for the Batistiano-Mafiosi exiles who still had the backing of the mighty U. S. in its still-very-viable efforts to recapture the island. But since 1959 much of the Cuban narrative has mostly been dictated out of Miami by the counter-revolutionary Batistianos. Thus, Americans are not supposed to realize that the majority of Cuban-Americans even in Miami favor normal relations with Cuba, not Batistiano-directed cruelty and hostilities. If you study the above map, note the red star in the upper-left corner. Port Canaveral in South Florida north of Miami and Fort Lauderdale, aligned with the Cuban-American majority in desiring normal Cuban relations, is now boldly promoting itself as "America's Gateway to Cuba."
      With strong encouragement from the plethora of Cuban-American business interests in South Florida, Port Canaveral is orchestrating more-and-more cruises to Cuba. The magnificent cruise ship depicted above is in the middle of the Florida Straits heading to Cuba from Port Canaveral. This week the audacious port and the Norwegian Cruise Lines announced a sharp increase in their cruises to Cuba.
     The photo above shows the Norwegian Sky arriving in Havana Harbor. This week the Orlando Sentinel and the Orlando television station WFTV had excellent reports entitled: "Norwegian Adds Cuba to More Destinations from Port Canaveral." After brave overtures from former President Obama, Cuban tourism exceeded four million in 2016 and is ahead of that pace in 2017. Thanks to Obama, nine U. S. airlines jumped at the chance to make the first commercial flights to Cuba since 1961. But restricted by the U. S. embargo that has existed since 1962, Cuba was not prepared for such an influx of visitors from the U. S., particularly when it came to hotel rooms. New hotels are being built, including some 5-Stars, and the U.S.-based AIRbnb is helping over 8,000 private Bed & Breakfast enterprises to sell out their accommodations. Meanwhile, the excessive air flights from the U. S. have been reduced and that has boosted the cruise lines because their ships have their own bedrooms for tourists.
     But Norwegian's newly ambitious cruises to Cuba from Florida are facing stiff competition from other lines. The graphic above shows the trajectory from Miami to Cuba for Carnival Cruise Line's Fathom ship, which circles the island with major stops in Havana, Cienfuegos, and Santiago de Cuba before returning to Miami, Florida.
      But each day, it seems, if positive headlines for Cuba are made in newspapers and television stations in Orlando, negative headlines abound elsewhere to overwhelm or balance them out. The photo above is a case-in-point. It shows American baseball superstar Miguel Cabrera playing back in March in the World Baseball Classic for his beloved native country -- Venezuela. Offsetting those good Cuban headlines in Orlando, here is the giant headline in USA Today yesterday -- July 12, 2017: "Venezuelan Mess Troubles Cabrera." That "Venezuelan Mess" also "Troubles" Cuba because, for the past two decades, Venezuela has been Cuba's very special friend.
    The political and social turmoil and violence in Venezuela deeply concerns Miguel Cabrera, Cuba and the entire region. The oil-rich nation of Venezuela is so broke and so massively dysfunctional that its citizens, at least those not engaged in overthrowing the Cuba-friendly Maduro government, are crossing the border into Colombia in droves trying to purchase badly needed food and medicine that is not available in Venezuela. Meanwhile, in the U. S. and in Venezuela Miguel is a superhero. Now 34, he has been one of Major League Baseball's greatest all-time hitters since he was a World Series star at age 20. His current salary with the Detroit Tigers averages $31 million a year based on the guaranteed $248 million contract he signed in 2016 that runs until 2023 when he will be 41-years-old. It is now known that Miguel is having to pay huge dollars in ransom and blackmail to keep his mother and other relatives safe amidst the violence that embroils his native Venezuela.
      Safe in America, Miguel Cabrera and his wife Rosengel are very protective of their immediate family...but extremely worried about their relatives in Venezuela, including Miguel's mother. Here are his key quotes in USA Today yesterday: "The first advice I was given was to not get involved in politics, and I never have. But right now we have to get involved, because they have kidnapped our country. I am tired of having to pay bribes. I am tired of hearing that they are going to kidnap my mother, and I don't know whether it is a policeman or a bad guy. I don't know who they are. All I know is if I don't pay, those people disappear. This is a greeting to the people of the resistance. You are not alone. We will continue to support you." Chillingly, Miguel is aware that his mother and others close to him in Venezuela would "disappear" if he did not pay huge ransom amounts and he is aware that he would be "killed" if he returned to his native country. Oil-rich Venezuela sits on the world's largest known oil reserves and yet turmoil and crime have ravaged the nation, which until recently had a trade deal that provided Cuba with 100,000 barrels of badly needed oil per day. The USA Today yesterday said "an estimated 2 million Venezuelans have fled the country...with a large number choosing the Miami area." But apparently Miguel's mother can't leave and Miguel can't visit her as he pays big money in bribes so she won't "disappear."
      As mentioned, there were two positive Cuban headlines emanating from Orlando yesterday. But, the same day, there were two off-setting negative headlines too. One concerned the news about Venezuela and Miguel Cabrera. The other relates to the Reuters photo above. The worried man is 71-year-old Lula da Silva who was President of Brazil from 2003 till 2011 and who was wildly popular enough to turn over the presidency to his top associate Dilma Rousseff who was then democratically elected President twice. But in 2016 she was impeached in what she and Lula call a coup. And then yesterday Lula was sentenced to nine and a half years in prison. To stress the importance of that sentencing, note that Brazil is the strongest, richest, biggest and most populated Latin American country. Lula was once called by President Obama "the most important leader in the world." Cuba concurred with that assessment because Lula, who idolized Fidel Castro, was Cuba's dear friend.
      The photo above shows Lula da Silva and Dilma Rousseff in happier days when his two-terms as President of Brazil was transferred to two more democratically elected terms for her. In mighty Brazil, how in the world could Dilma be impeached and Lula sentenced to almost ten years in prison when, to this day, most Brazilians support them because they raised millions of the poorest Brazilians out of abject poverty. It's that very reason, they say, that rich Brazilians, the powerful minority, induced people like Speaker of the House Eduardo Cunha and current President Michel Temer to mount the "coup" that ended what was to be the 16-year reign of Lula da Silva and Dilma Rousseff. Indeed, Cunha has since been sentenced to 15 years in prison and President Temer is also currently facing corruption charges.
      The Brazilian judge, Sergio Moro, who sentenced Lula to 9.5 years in prison didn't dare order Lula to prison because the majority poor in Brazil might have mounted a revolution if that had been done. Lula himself says he will run yet again for President in Brazil's 2018 elections and, if that important election is fair, the majority poor might give him a third term, making up for the truncation of Dilma Rousseff's 2nd term.
      The previous photo and the one above are courtesy of AFP/Getty Images. This one shows a Lula da Silva supporter berating what she calls Brazil's "coup-mongers." Brazil's democratic election in 2018 might return Lula to power, negating his long prison sentence. But regardless of what happens in Latin America's most important nation, the consequences for Cuba and Latin America are enormous.
Lula da Silva worshiped Fidel Castro.
        As President and former president, Lula visited the ailing Fidel Castro multiple times, right up until the legendary Cuban died at age 90 on November 25th, 2016.
       As the powerful two-term President of Brazil, Dilma Rousseff repeatedly paid reverent respect to her idol, the terminally ill Fidel Castro, and to his island nation.
      This is Dilma Rousseff at the age when, inspired by the Cuban Revolution, she became a guerrilla fighter to help overthrow a vile U.S.-backed dictatorship.
      But the young Dilma Rousseff was captured. For two years in a military prison she was unmercifully tortured. As President of Brazil, she was asked by the Brazil Truth Commission to testify about her ordeal during the time, still ongoing, in which still-living former Latin American dictators were being brought to trial for their "crimes." The vile dictators Dilma opposed so vehemently ruled Brazil from 1964 till 1985.
        This photo on Dec. 10-2014 shows Dilma Rousseff, in her second term as the democratically elected President of Brazil, testifying tearfully before the Brazil Truth Commission about the two years she was unmercifully tortured in that prison.
       This photo from The Guardian captured a moment when President Dilma Rousseff broke down when testifying in 2014 about her torture in that Brazilian prison back in the early 1970s. The 2,000-word transcript of her statement is posted online.
      After twice being democratically elected President of mighty Brazil, Dilma Rousseff was one of the most powerful people in the world, just a notch or two below America's two-term President Barack Obama when the above photo was taken.
      This REUTERS photo shows Dilma Rousseff after she was impeached as President of Brazil in 2016. She believes to this day, as do millions of others, that the "coup" that ended her reign was engineered by rich Brazilians and rich Americans who resented how much money she and her mentor Lula da Silva devoted to improving the lives of Brazil's majority poor people. While Lula, also a former two-term President, was sentenced to 9.5 years in prison yesterday, the Brazilian elections in 2018 might redeem Lula and Dilma. Eleven million Cubans hope so.
And by the way:
       The two AP photos above show a young Donald Trump and a young Barack Obama, one in his prim-and-proper military-school uniform and the other just a carefree dude in Hawaii smoking a weed. As you ponder these photos, note that history will forever register what happened to these two rather different guys.
        On January 20th of 2017 Donald Trump became the 45th President of the United States, succeeding Barack Obama who had served two-terms and eight years as the 44th President of the United States.
       The photo above is courtesy of the London Telegraph and it shows America's lovely First Lady Melania Trump, attired all in red, and United States President Donald Trump departing Air Force One after their arrival in Paris this morning -- July 13th of 2017. The British newspapers and the superb BBC network lavishly and fairly cover major stories -- such as what's happening in Venezuela and Brazil that might lead to coups, revolutions or civil wars. And the Brits fairly cover things such as the new American President arriving in France THIS MORNING for very vital meetings with the new President of France.
   This Radio Free Europe photo shows First Lady Melania and President Trump getting off Air Force One today at Orly Airport south of Paris. On all three of his foreign trips, Melania has been a very classy, stylish and beautiful First Lady.
First Lady & President in Paris today.
    Meanwhile, in the U. S. the mainstream media, except for Fox News, is obsessed with only one thing -- impeaching President Trump, thereby showing zero respect not just for Trump but also for the office of President and the democratic election that put him in the White House. The photos above showing U. S. President Trump and Russian President Putin are topically side-by-side today because Trump's relations with Putin are currently the prime topic being used to dethrone Trump via a daily 24-hour coup being led by four powerful mainstream media sources -- CNN, NBC, The New York Times and The Washington Post. That coup conspiracy is as apparent as a bright sunrise because it is ongoing and will continue until or if Trump is dethroned. I am not a Trump supporter and agree that he was not qualified to be President. But Trump was elected because he was a non-politician and enough American voters were tired of incumbent, recycled, bought-and-paid-for establishment politicians running Washington. While I am not a Trump supporter, I respect his office and America's democracy, it seems, more than the unabashed and unapologetic coup-mongers listed above.
Also:
        A group that includes Michael Jordan and Derek Jeter is about to purchase the Major League Miami Marlins baseball team with a bid of about $1.2 billion. Jordan himself is a billionaire who owns the NBA Charlotte Hornets, is now married to a Cuban wife, and still earns over $100 million a year from endorsement deals, primarily an ultra-lucrative Nike shoe contract, almost two decades after his NBA career ended. Jeter, the recently retired New York Yankees shortstop, also still rakes in enormous endorsement dollars and he will be the primary front-office boss of the Marlins. Jeter's group out-bid offers from the son of politician Mitt Romney as well as the $1.17 billion bid from Miami billionaire Jorge Mas, who is the son of the late Jorge Mas Canosa, the all-time richest and most powerful anti-Castro Cuban-born counter-revolutionary in Miami. The Miami Marlins are the poorest of the 30 Major League teams and are projected to lose $80 million this season despite huge television contracts and other residual connections that benefit all Major League teams.
        The city of Miami and the Miami Marlins are still shaken by the tragic death of super pitcher Jose Fernandez from a boating accident on September 25, 2016. He was born in 1992 in Santa Clara, Cuba, and in his early 20s had been well-established as one of the greatest and most valuable baseball properties in the entire world.
  *&***********************&* 

11.7.17

Latin America and Baseball

Last Night's All-Star Spotlight!!
{Updated: Wednesday, July 11th, 2017}
       America's 88th All-Star Baseball Game is now history. Hosted last night by the Miami Marlins, the American League squeaked out a 2-to-1 win over the National League in 10 innings. It reaffirmed the emerging dominance of Latin America in the multi-billion-dollar sport invented in the U. S. and still with a strong U. S. identity.
        A solo home-run in the 10th inning by Robinson Cano gave the American League the 2-to-1 win over the National League in Miami last night. Cano was born 34 years ago in the Dominican Republic's most famed baseball town -- San Pedro de Macoris. From age 22 till age 30, from 2005 till 2013, Cano was the star second baseman for the New York Yankees. But he shocked the baseball world when he left the Yankees entering his 30s to accept a whopping $240 million guaranteed contract with the Seattle Mariners and that is the 5th all-time largest guaranteed baseball contract, trailing only the $325 million deal 27-year-old Giancarlo Stanton has with the Miami Marlins, two contracts Alex Rodriguez signed with the Texas Rangers and the New York Yankees, and the current $248 million deal Miguel Cabrera has with the Detroit Tigers. Robinson Cano, with the 5th largest all-time contract, was the MVP of the 2017 All-Star Game, which was an extra-inning, crowd-pleasing nail-biter.
     
     A solo home run by Javier Molina had enabled the National League to take a 1-1 tie into extra innings setting the stage for Cano's 10th inning game-winning blast. Javier turns 35-years-old tomorrow, July 13th, 2017. He was born in Puerto Rico. His parents, Gladys and Benjamin Molino, taught Javier and his two older brothers -- Bengie and Jose -- how to play and to love baseball. Incredibly, all three Puerto Rican brothers have had long and lucrative careers in the Major Leagues. Bengie and Jose are now retired but at one point all three were starting catchers in the Major Leagues at the same time. When he retires, Javier will be elected to Major League Baseball's Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, NY.
       As his key homer in last night's All-Star game proved, Javier Molina remains a great clutch hitter prior to his 35th birthday tomorrow. But his Hall of Fame credentials are enshrined more because he is perhaps the all-time best all-around catcher in baseball history, meaning his defense and the way he handles his pitchers.
       Baseball's Hall of Fame is now well-stocked with former Puerto Rican stars like Roberto Clemente, Ivan Rodriguez, etc. In addition to Yadier Molina, the proliferation of new superstar Puerto Ricans in the U. S. Major Leagues is just beginning to explode, as evidenced by the montage above that depicts three new superstars aged 23, 22, and 24 -- Francisco Lindor, Carlos Correa, and Javier Baez.
       Not surprisingly, Cuba was well-represented at last night's All-Star game in Miami. Yonder Alonso, for example, had two hits and a stolen base. He spent his first ten years in Cuba and then his last 20 years in Miami-Coral Gables and, after being a first-round draft pick out of the University of Miami, Yonder, now 30, has been in the Majors the past ten years and, so far, 2017 is his best year in baseball.
     And, of course, the Dominican Republic was well represented at last night's All-Star in Miami. Jose Ramirez started at Third Base for the American League and slammed base hits his first two at bats. He entered the game with a .332 batting average and 49 extra-base hits during the regular season. Last year at age 23 the switch-hitting Jose led the Cleveland Indians to the 7th game of the World Series where they barely lost 8-7 in 10 innings to the now reigning-champ Chicago Cubs.
       The All-Star Game in Miami last night spotlighted anew how Latin American nations -- especially the Dominican Republic, Cuba, Puerto Rico and Venezuela -- are beginning to dominate American baseball, the truly great American pastime. 
       Born 30 years ago in Havana, Cuba, Yonder Alonso last night in Miami made his first All-Star appearance, collecting two hits and a stolen base. Yonder, who played baseball at the University of Miami, is now the First Baseman for the Oakland A's but his Major League career started with the Cincinnati Reds in 2010 and he's been a Big Leaguer ever since...with stints in Cincinnati, San Diego and now Oakland. At the All-Star break this year he is hitting .275 with 20 homers. To illustrate how United States baseball has changed the lives of so many Cubans and other Latin American families, the Cuban-born Yonder Alonso has a sister with far more baseball All-Star connections than Yonder himself has, which is interesting to contemplate.
       The beautiful Yainee Alonso Machado, the sister of Havana-born Yonder Alonso, is married to Manny Machado, the young SUPERSTAR Third Baseman for the Baltimore Orioles. At age 25, Manny is already a 3-time All-Star although, unlike Yonder, he didn't make it this year. But he and his wife Yainee cheered for Yonder.
     Manny was only 20 when he got engaged to Yainee. She followed her brother Yonder to the University of Miami. He had left as a Junior as a first-round draft choice but she stayed from 2008 till 2012 to earn her bachelor's degree in psychology.
  Manny & Yainee got married in Paris in 2014.
Yainee & Manny are now proud parents.
      Like dozens of other multi-millionaire young baseball families, Yainee and Manny are celebrities in Miami and throughout the Major Leagues. 
       Born in Hialeah, Florida, Manny Machado turned 25 a few days ago -- on July 6th. Despite serious knee injuries that ended two of his seasons, he has already been an All-Star for three seasons. He became a multi-millionaire in 2010 when he was the First Round draft choice for the Baltimore Orioles. Manny in 2017 is making a very modest 11.5 million dollars but by 2019 he will be a Free Agent, meaning all 30 Major League teams can bid for him. That's when his very next contract and those of Mike Trout and Bryce Harper are expected to soar way above 400-million-dollars each!!
       A Dominican-American, Manny Machado this year chose to play for the Dominican Republic, not the U. S., in the World Baseball Classic. He is shown above in his Dominican Republic hat. The Dominican Republic, a poor Caribbean nation, has more Major Leaguers than any foreign nation and it is gaining fast on the United States itself. Every one of the 30 Major League teams now have ostentatious state-of-the-art year-around stadiums and practice facilities in the Dominican Republic staffed with Major League coaches and trainers. That, of course, is in stark contrast to the way Cuba, also a baseball goldmine, is treated by the United States, which always induces Cuban-produced stars to defect before they can sign Major League contracts.
     Check the profile above of Yoan Moncada. He was born on May 27, 1995 in Abreus, Cuba. As a teenager he played for Cienfuegos in Cuba's top league. In February of 2015, after defecting Cuba, he signed with the Boston Red Sox for a signing bonus of $31.5 million. Boston later traded him to the Chicago White Sox so they could get ace lefty pitcher Chris Sale. Now playing for the top 3-A White Sox minor league team, Yoan will soon be called to the Majors and, as noted above, he is listed as Major League baseball's "#1 overall prospect." He, of course, got to keep that $31.5 million signing bonus but, uh, his big paydays lie ahead of him. Not bad for a poor boy from Abreus but many Cubans before him and many Cubans after him have or will become instant millionaire U. S. players...and not only the MLB teams, Miami Cubans, and the U. S. government but also a vast and greedy pipeline of human traffickers help them to defect. Yoan will soon be a speedy power-hitting switch-hitter for the White Sox. 
    Born 27 years ago in Los Angeles, Giancarlo Stanton was a Right Fielder for the Miami Dolphins the last night's All-Star game. Giancarlo grew up in LA idolizing two Puerto Rican Hall of Fame Major League superstars -- Roberto Clemente and Ivan Rodriguez. He played for Puerto Rico, not the U. S., in this year's World Baseball Classic. The Caribbean island of Puerto Rico is a U. S. Territory but it is now famously bankrupt and unable to pay its bills. But Puerto Rico, as a baseball mecca, is still churning out multi-millionaire baseball stars; 22-year-old Houston Shortstop Carlos Correa and 23-year-old Cleveland shortstop Francisco Lindor were in Miami as All-Stars and both, for example, are expected to soon sign contracts worth up to a half-billion-dollars each and, if so, that would top Giancarlo Stanton's current guaranteed contract with the Miami Marlins. In 2015 Stanton signed a 13-year contract with the Marlins that guarantees him $325 million. From 2015 till 2027 Stanton is guaranteed exactly $154,320.99 PER GAME. And remember that he was already a millionaire many times over when he signed that contract. Every penny is guaranteed even if the oft-injured Stanton is unable to play. In addition, like other superstars, Stanton makes millions more from endorsements and investments. Now ponder Giancarlo Stanton's extreme personal wealth with that of his beloved and totally bankrupt Puerto Rico.
       The two photos above are reminders that Latin American players are now beginning to dominate the best U. S. Major League teams. Both these young superstars were in last night's All-Star Game in Miami. Both were First Round draft choices and thus became teenage multi-millionaires. On the left is Carlos Correa. At the tender age of 22 he is the shortstop and leader of the best U. S. Major League team, the Houston Astros. He was born in Ponce, Puerto Rico. On the right is Francisco Lindor. At the tender age of 22 last year he led the Cleveland Indians to within an eyelash of winning the World Series. He was born in Caguas, Puerto Rico. A powerful switch-hitter, Lindor is the reigning AL Gold Glove shortstop and Platinum Glove winner as the best defensive player regardless of position. This season the Indians offered him $100 million if he would allow them to extend his contract another five years, but he turned down the offer well knowing, once he hits free agency, his next contract will be worth a lot more than a measly $100 million. Correa at age 22 probably has a financial future that will exceed Lindor's. Now consider their wealth in the U. S. with their native country of Puerto Rico, a U. S. Territory that is so poor it is begging the United States Congress to bail it out so it doesn't have to close more social necessities such as schools.
          Born 34-years-ago in Venezuela, Miguel Cabrera is the First Baseman for the Detroit Tigers. He signed with the then-Florida Marlins {now the Miami Marlins} in 2003 and at age 20 starred for the Marlins in the 2003 World Series. With the Tigers he has now won two MVP awards and four Batting Titles.
        In 2012 as indicated above, Miguel Cabrera became the first Major Leaguer in 45 years to win the Triple Crown with his .330 batting average, 44 homers and 139 runs-batted-in. He is making $31 million this year and that is based on a $248 million guaranteed contract he signed with Detroit, a contract that runs through 2023 when he will be 41-years-old. Now 34 and slowed by injuries, the Tigers, if they cannot trade Miguel, still owe him a guaranteed $192 million. Meanwhile, his native oil-rich Venezuela is famously in such dire financial and political shape that food, medicine and other essentials are so scarce that many Venezuelans are flocking across the border to Colombia to purchase what they can while thousands more are joining many other Venezuelans in the Latin American capital of Miami. Miguel Cabrera is currently one of 77 Venezuelans on the rosters of U. S. Major League teams, meaning 77 very rich Venezuelans.
       Giancarlo Stanton's current $325 million contract with the Miami Dolphins is the biggest in baseball history while Miguel Cabrera's current $248 million deal with the Detroit Tigers is the fourth biggest. The sometimes controversial Alex Rodriguez garnered the second and third biggest contracts ever. A-Rod signed a $252 million deal with the Texas Rangers in 2001 and later signed a $275 million dollar contract with the New York Yankees. Though he is retired from baseball now, the Yankees are still having to pay A-Rod $21 million this year. He is also a high-priced network sports announcer and still garners millions in endorsements. He is interested in purchasing his own Major League team, especially the for-sale Miami Marlins in his hometown where the University of Miami baseball stadium bears his name.
      This photo shows Alex Rodriguez with his girlfriend Jennifer Lopez. {I suspect you have heard of both of them}He is a Dominican-American born in New York City 41-years-ago; she is a Puerto Rican-American born in New York City 47-years-ago. Three-times married, she is not after A-Rod's money. In 2014 Forbes listed Jennifer's worth at $320 million and it since has exceeded $500 million with her ownership and production of hit shows in addition to her ultra-superstar status in the entertainment stratosphere.
  A-Rod & Jennifer -- superstar couple.
      This Neilson Barnard/Getty Images photo shows Jennifer Lopez and Alex Rodriguez as headliners anywhere they jet to. They buzzed from New York to Miami for the All-Star game. Here's how the INQUISITR website depicted their arrival: "Jennifer Lopez partied it up with her boyfriend Alex Rodriguez in a tight, nude dress for an MLB All-Star event in Miami. The 47-year-old singer, actress and producer held her boyfriend very close as they posed for photos together at the party. Rodriguez, 41, looked stylish in an olive brown suit with a crisp white shirt underneath." The website supported its report with some photo proofs.
      This photo is courtesy of Jennifer Lopez/Instagram so it's obvious she is proud of it. Before flying to Miami for the All-Star Game, it shows Jennifer flanked by Aaron Judge and Alex Rodriguez at Yankee Stadium earlier this week. Judge is the Right Fielder for the Yankees and this year's most sensational rookie, which means he may soon be as rich as Jennifer and A-Rod. Judge already has an amazing 30 home runs this year, breaking the rookie FULL SEASON homer record set by the all-time great New York Yankee Joe DiMaggio. And then, televised live all across America and Latin America, Judge lived up to his rookie reputation by winning the coveted All-Star Home Run Derby. Could the Yankees conceivably make Judge a billionaire? Sure, the multi-billion-dollar Yankees, playing in New York as baseball's richest and most fabled team and the owners of their own YES TV network, don't mind paying A-Rod $21 million this year not to play so they won't quibble about paying Judge, their young slugger, perhaps a billion to play.
         So that brings me back around to this magnificent family photo, the one I used to illustrate my point that every Cuban boy wants to play Major League baseball and every Cuban girl wants to marry a Major League player. I don't think many on the island will dispute that premise. On the left above is Havana-born Yonder Alonso, the First Baseman for the Oakland A's. He was on the American League All-Star team in Miami. In the middle is Yonder's Cuban sister Yainee Alonso. She is married to Manny Machado, the young Dominican-American Third Baseman for the Baltimore Orioles and already a 3-time All-Star although he just turned 25 this month. Yes, indeed. If you are born poor in Cuba, Dominican Republic, Venezuela or Puerto Rico, I bet your dream is to play baseball in the U. S. Major Leagues OR MARRY A U. S. MAJOR LEAGUER.
 *&***********************&* 




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 ...