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Judi Lynn

(160,545 posts)
Tue Jan 6, 2015, 04:13 AM Jan 2015

They risked everything to open a door to Cuba. They were shunned for it.

They risked everything to open a door to Cuba. They were shunned for it.

Tina Griego • January 5, 2015

In the complicated, sometimes violent, always emotional history of relations between the United States and Cuba, resides an obscure chapter about 55 young exiles. All were still children when they left Cuba in the early 1960s, after Fidel Castro took power. In 1977, they returned.

“Los Cincuenta y Cinco Hermanos.” The 55 brothers and sisters. Better known as the Antonio Maceo Brigade, named for a revered general in the Cuban war for independence against the Spanish. Decades before President Obama and Cuban leader Raul Castro announced the restoration of diplomatic relations, the brigade was the standard bearer of an equal relationship between the two countries. Its youth risked everything to become a post-revolution bridge between Cuba and its exiles, shattering the persistent myth that all exiles were of the same mind, bent on the destruction of the Castro regime.

In Cuba, they would come to be welcomed as the brave heart of the revolutionary movement among youth throughout the world.

In the United States, they were called traitors, and one of their founders would be assassinated.

The young men and women of the Antonio Maceo Brigade brimmed with the zeal of the politically awakened and the anguish of childhoods interrupted. And they wanted to judge the results of the Cuban revolution for themselves. You could say they have been working and waiting 37 years for this new chapter to be written. And, true to their roots, you also could say they will believe its authenticity only when they see it.

More:
http://progresoweekly.us/risked-everything-open-door-cuba-shunned/

5 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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They risked everything to open a door to Cuba. They were shunned for it. (Original Post) Judi Lynn Jan 2015 OP
I am so ready to go there. easychoice Jan 2015 #1
I fear this "raproachment" is not opening a window Demeter Jan 2015 #2
That is the US intent. They openly state that their purpose is to change the form of gov't in Cuba. Mika Jan 2015 #3
From 2013: Cuban government announces acceleration of privatization and austerity measures FrodosPet Jan 2015 #5
Would it be better to -maintain- the embargo then? FrodosPet Jan 2015 #4

easychoice

(1,043 posts)
1. I am so ready to go there.
Tue Jan 6, 2015, 04:26 AM
Jan 2015

I want to lay around on their beaches without a hassle from my own government.

 

Mika

(17,751 posts)
3. That is the US intent. They openly state that their purpose is to change the form of gov't in Cuba.
Tue Jan 6, 2015, 05:49 PM
Jan 2015

That is why the Cuban gov't stated that socialism is there to stay.

The anti Cuba US congresscritters will throw monkey wrenches into the works at any point that this rapprochement might do some good for anyone other than their US paid "dissident" stooges.


FrodosPet

(5,169 posts)
5. From 2013: Cuban government announces acceleration of privatization and austerity measures
Wed Jan 7, 2015, 10:03 AM
Jan 2015
http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2013/07/30/cuba-j30.html

By Alexander Fangmann
30 July 2013
World Socialist Web Site

Earlier this month, Marino Murillo, vice president of the Cuban Council of Ministers, announced that during the rest of this year and through the next the state would enact and carry through the next phase of its privatization and austerity measures, creating “the most profound transformations.”

The measures, which were first announced in 2010 by Cuban President Raul Castro as part of a 300-point plan, represent the deepest changes to the Cuban economy since the taking of power by the Castro regime in 1959. Like austerity plans being carried out elsewhere in the world, the aim of these measures is to make the working class pay for the world capitalist crisis through mass layoffs, privatization, speed-ups, and the elimination of social welfare measures.

Murillo contrasted the upcoming changes with the first phase of reforms that “entailed eliminating the prohibitions in society.” The previous round, a centerpiece of which was the announcement of layoffs of 500,000 state workers, was accompanied by the relaxation of prohibitions on petty business activity, the hiring of labor by individuals, and property transfers as the government cynically encouraged the newly unemployed to go into business for themselves selling candy, cutting hair, or raising rabbits. Politically, however, the encouragement and even adulation of “entrepreneurship” and the use of unemployment as a disciplinary tool represents a shift in the orientation of the Cuban elite toward openly capitalist relations.

The next phase of changes to the economy will deal substantially with the privatization of state-owned companies. Murillo put forward the perspective of the Cuban elite, which is now no longer even interested in maintaining the fiction that Cuba is a socialist society. He indicated that state-owned companies will no longer play even a nominal social role in regard to maintaining employment levels, but will be held to performance measures typical of the market, and said: “We must eliminate all the hurdles that are holding them back.”

~ snip ~


Cuba will continue to call their increasingly mixed economy socialist, but they have began to realize that a pure socialist economy doesn't work. SOMEBODY has to pay the taxes.
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