Best wishes to the people of Cuba-


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Just got back from an SOSCubaNYC March. I had the bullhorn for a few minutes to tell my story and why I'm there to support. So many amazing Cubans marching as one. We walked from Times Square to Union

Message from Hamlet         

Yep it does - replace blockade with embargo and you get the drift ... 🙂 The Blockade does not prohibit fishermen in Cuba from fishing, the dictatorship does; 🇨🇺-The blockade does not confis

A good summary of the situation :

Mass protests spread from provincial towns to Havana

 
 
 
 
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CUBA STANDARD — A wave of protests mobilizing thousands of Cubans spread from provincial cities to Havana July 11, prompting President Miguel Díaz-Canel to walk the streets of San Antonio de los Baños, where the protests started, and declare an “order to combat” and that “the streets belongs to the revolutionaries”.

image-9-1024x662.png Díaz-Canel, walking the streets in San Antonio de los Baños

Protesters expressed anxiety over shortages, rising prices and blackouts, exploding COVID-19 contagion and slow mass vaccination, chanting “Libertad” and “Patria y Vida”, referring to a song that was recently produced in Miami by several Cuban artists. In Havana, protests and counterprotests began around the Capitolio Sunday afternoon, and thousands of anti-government protesters eventually walked down the Prado boulevard towards the seaside Malecón.

Police and special forces responded to the demonstrations in part with batons, pepper spray and arrests, blocking the way of marchers on Prado boulevard. Díaz-Canel called on supporters to take to the streets, which thousands did in the capital. Around the Capitolio, protesters confronted each other, chanting “Díaz-Canel step down” and “Fidel”. Due to the pandemic, there are nightly curfews practically in the entire island.

In a televised speech Sunday afternoon, Diaz-Canel recognized that many protesters were sincere, but added that the United States “wants to create an incident to justify intervention”, and that more “provocations” would not be tolerated.

“We are calling on all the revolutionaries in the country, all the Communists, to hit the streets wherever there is an effort to produce these provocations,” Diaz-Canel said.

“We are deeply concerned by ‘calls to combat’ in #Cuba,” tweeted acting Assistant Secretary of Western Hemispheric Affairs Julie Chung. “We stand by the Cuban people’s right for peaceful assembly. We call for calm and condemn any violence.”

“If you want to make a true gesture towards Cuba, if you want to be concerned about the people of Cuba, lift the blockade and we will see how things will go,” said Díaz-Canel in an apparent response. “Why don’t they do it? Why don’t they have the courage to lift the blockade?”

In many tweets, Cuban officials keep repeating that U.S. sanctions are to blame for the country’s economic problems.

Díaz-Canel and cabinet members will apear live on state TV Monday morning, state media announced.

San Antonio de los Baños and Havana aside, there were protests in Camagüey, Palma Soriano and Santiago.

COVID contagion and death have set new records almost every day in the past week. On July 10, there were 6,923 new cases and 48 deaths. Responding to an outbreak in Matanzas, 500 medical personnel were sent to that province July 9, plus 200 members of a medical brigade that is usually sent abroad. On July 10, 200 Cuban medics were recalled from Venezuela to be deployed in the island. Mass vaccination began in May with two Cuban-developed vaccines; as of Sunday, 15.5% of the total population was fully vaccinated.

Meanwhile, amid sweltering heat, Energy Minister Nicolás Liván Arronte Cruz asked for “understanding” for rolling blackouts since June 21, saying that efforts to repair breakdowns at several Soviet-era thermoelectric power plants continue uninterrupted. Cuba’s largest, the 300-mw Antonio Guiteras plant at Matanzas, has been offline for several days after a breakdown and is scheduled to go back online Tuesday morning. The 160-mw Felton power plant near Holguín is offline again, after maintenance in late June. State utility Unión Eléctrica postponed planned maintenance for 13 of 19 generators.

The minister blamed “tense limitations for spare parts and technology, fuel for power generation due to blockade-related problems, and fuel quality”. He said more frequent blackouts in the past three days were due to a “considerable rise” in demand for electricity during peak hours.

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The Regime supporters/revolutionaries in the population as I understand are mostly a much older brainwashed demographic. Should it comes down to a  fight they will be hard-pressed to control the streets for the regime . Cubans just aren't buying the embargo is to blame for the situation.  IMO.  

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9 hours ago, SmokyFontaine said:

Not to get too political, but what an amazing time to be alive. People living under dictatorial communism for 2 generations are willing to sacrifice their lives for freedom, while in the States we have people running for (and winning) political office as self-proclaimed communists. Maybe they should have to live under it before they try to impose it. Might change their views quite a bit.

You could make the exact same statement about theocracy.

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2 hours ago, Jackinkc said:

There was a quote I read that helps me understand why the young U.S. generation in my eyes is so weak and sensitive. 

I can’t believe I’m saying this, but…

image.jpeg.3cef15035fc0c5f059797ede84007f32.jpeg

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39 minutes ago, Fuzz said:

They're gonna defrost Fidel and roll him out.

If not that then it’ll be a Fidel hologram!

Oh wait, it’s Cuba…

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3 hours ago, Corylax18 said:

🤣 What Great Men have lead us to our current predicament?(not just in the US) The ones complaining about socialism while they collect Social Security and benefit from Medicare? Two programs that us "sensitive weaklings" Fund but will never benefit from, because the weak, spineless "men" who they themselves leach off the program refuse to fix it. Maybe jump off your soapbox and focus on the topic of the thread.

Hmmm… maybe do the same rather than parlay this into your version of U.S. politics? 🤔 🧐 🤨  It is quite irritating to see these trite U.S. political bombs dropped into a discussion unfettered. 


No word from our friends in Havana or Santiago de Cuba today. Very concerning on all fronts. 

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56 minutes ago, La_Tigre said:


No word from our friends in Havana or Santiago de Cuba today. Very concerning on all fronts. 

Nothing so far however it may be due to the internet being pulled. Will post up once I receive anything. 

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I'll also jump in and mention a bit of a selfish concern...

It might be a good time to stock up on CC's incase this really boils over and production and distribution tanks.

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4 minutes ago, NW_Oregon said:

I'll also jump in and mention a bit of a selfish concern...

It might be a good time to stock up on CC's incase this really boils over and production and distribution tanks.

Please don't. Not today. 👍

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1 hour ago, El Presidente said:

Nothing so far however it may be due to the internet being pulled. Will post up once I receive anything. 

I am getting messages via FB from HAV so far - not many but enough to see it must be sporadic/localized cut-offs.

According to a good friend all is quiet in the suburbs like La Lisa. But others have not responded ....

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