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Judi Lynn

(160,449 posts)
Tue Mar 22, 2016, 06:41 PM Mar 2016

Americans Often See Cuba Upside Down

March 22, 2016
Americans Often See Cuba Upside Down

by Jesse Jackson

President Obama’s historic trip to Havana, Cuba — the first American president to visit since Calvin Coolidge in 1928 — opens the door to a new era in relations not only with Cuba, but also with our neighbors across the hemisphere.

Extensive press coverage of the trip will feature the President’s meeting with Cuban leader Raul Castro, the Tuesday baseball game pitting the Cuban national team against Tampa Bay, the president’s meetings with business leaders and with Cuban dissidents. We’ll get pictures of aged Chevy’s held together by duct tape, of lovely but crumbling Havana mansions, of Cuba’s lively culture and its widespread poverty.

Cuba surely is a poor country. Its government, while still enjoying popular support, is a far remove from a democracy. Freedom of speech and assembly are greater than most realize, but still severely policed. But much of what we think about Cuba is upside down, and inside out.

First, in many ways, the president’s initiative to normalize relations with Cuba isn’t so much ending their isolation as ending ours. Cuba has enjoyed good and growing relations with our neighbors across the hemisphere for years. In recent years, those countries have threatened to exclude the U.S. from hemispheric meetings if we continued to demand that Cuba’s exclusion. We have sought to isolate Cuba for over 50 years; we ended up isolating ourselves.

More:
http://www.counterpunch.org/2016/03/22/americans-often-see-cuba-upside-down/

Good Reads:
http://www.democraticunderground.com/1016148527

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Americans Often See Cuba Upside Down (Original Post) Judi Lynn Mar 2016 OP
The bottom line is this--normalization will improve the lives of Cubans in very real fashion. MADem Mar 2016 #1

MADem

(135,425 posts)
1. The bottom line is this--normalization will improve the lives of Cubans in very real fashion.
Tue Mar 22, 2016, 07:24 PM
Mar 2016

The reason that stuff is "crumbling" is because, despite these warmed relations elsewhere, many countries aren't interested in doing the heavy lifting to help lift Cuba out of the economic muck.

We'll play the carrot (no stick) game with them too. The more open they get, the better life will be.

There is only as much "freedom of speech and assembly" as Raul is willing to tolerate. That's not "real" -- it's fronting.

They'll get there, though. Castros don't live forever.

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