Opinion

Real Socialism and “Coloniality” in Cuba

Havana Times blogger Isbel Diaz’ recent experiences with Cuban State Security agents at the airport prompts me to introduce a concept that I believe describes current social oppression in Cuba precisely: coloniality. This concept appears to be absent from debates among “unconventional Cuban dissidents.”

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Cuba’s Anti-Corruption Effort Turns Five

Cuba’s Comptroller’s office turns five years old and the anniversary is celebrated with the most important corruption trial in recent years, with heavy prison sentences requested for prominent foreign businessmen and top Cuban officials.

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The Debate over the Cuba Embargo and Adjustment Act

Cuba Poll 2014, a survey conducted by the Florida International University, has led different factions within the Cuban community to vent their passions as they set out to ratify or challenge the results. Some of the most significant upshots include the fact that, in Miami-Dade county, 52% of Cuban-born residents are against the US blockade and 86% in favor of maintaining the Cuban Adjustment Act.

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Havana: A City of Invisible Nags

Located in the municipality of Arroyo Naranjo, Reparto Electrico is one of Havana’s many commuter suburbs. Most of its residents earn very low incomes and must travel many miles to get their places of work. Public transportation services are very limited there, and neighborhood residents rely on horse-driven carriages to get to the bus-stop.

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“Looking for a Handout” Between Miami and Cuba

Last week, a campaign calling for lower Internet rates began on the island and Radio and TV Marti – US government stations that broadcast propaganda to Cuba – announced they would use the web to send their messages to the population. People say extremes meet and complement one another. The news must have made those looking for arguments to restrict Internet access in Cuba very happy.

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Cuban Singer Silvio Rodriguez’ “Discoveries”

A few days ago, singer-songwriter Silvio Rodriguez angered that very small part of Cuba’s population with access to the Internet. This happened when, following a concert held at a small town in Cuba’s eastern end, the musician was interviewed by an official government web-site.

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The New Scuba Recruit for Cuban Tourism

That time, someone had actually knocked at the door of my fifth-floor apartment. It wasn’t like I imagined it happening every morning, when I woke up, took a trip to the bathroom and returned to bed. It was an official summons instructing me to meet with those responsible for my case at the Council of State.

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Saved by the Goal in Cuba

In the spring of 1990, the world as I knew it was falling to bits. I didn’t exactly know this, even though I was a good, primary school student who read the newspaper Granma and Zunzun and Sputnik magazines. I don’t think even my parents realized that “real socialism” was falling to bits.

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