By Rogelio Manuel Diaz Moreno
The images accompany this post are tiny signs of this reality, which had been banished from our country up until recently, but have now become a daily reality. They are the result of the progress that commercial ideology has made, while it has been encouraged. However, very few of us are getting upset by it, less than nobody, pro-government scribes, guardians of a contradictory faith to the extremes of the absurd.
Commercial advertising was validated by the unfortunate document known as the Conceptualization of the Cuban economic and social model. The tsar of the Cuban economic reforms, Marino Murillo, points out the key to this with a sincerity that is worthy of the best of causes. I heard him speak at one of those Cuban parliamentary sessions broadcast on TV.
The purpose of a company, Murillo said, “consists of producing a product – or a service – selling it and making a profit.” The local group of free market economists broke out in applause, euphoric. Intermediate level politicians and officials looked to the superior authorities to see what sign would come down. Proof on the street left no room for doubt. In this way, bright ads flourish, with their well-known invitations to consume beer, rum and cigarettes.
Do you remember when our media – government-owned, of course – used to criticize multinational cigarette companies because of their advertising? Is Cuban society going to reproduce this marketing method now, criminally indifferent to human life?
There is a war of symbols, there’s no doubt about it. Global imperialism makes use of it, parallel to that of rockets and bombs, to crush obstacles to its hegemony. Polychromed Malls, the aesthetic of so many movies and the majority of election mechanisms are just some of the weapons in its powerful armory.
The then US President Barack Obama came to our country, all arrogant, and gave us a sickly-sweet speech. He certainly made a masterful display of liberalism’s symbolic arsenal. Anyone who was caught off their guard would have had their foot chewed off [1]. Former Cuban president Fidel Castro didn’t like this, and the government’s claque opened fire. “Soft power” tactics as a trick of the US establishment to return Cuba to its back yard were denounced and condemned.
Nevertheless, capitalist mentalities have been able to take root and establish themselves in our country, despite the government upholding a, seemingly, opposite discourse. The advertising we see isn’t being put out by Ileana Ros [2] and are not funded by USAID.
The world of consumerism, idealized and appealing, is thrown into our faces. If, on top of this, the person seeing these ads is a humble, working person with a low income, the publicity compromises their self-esteem and value in society. And to make things worse, the ads aren’t for staple products, but for clearly harmful ones. However, disciples of the reigning ideology will remain selectively close-minded, until one of these ads is placed in the middle of their street.
In recent days, TV reports have been seen which exhibit the government’s concern about addictions becoming more widespread among Cuban teenagers. They stress the fact that families need to explain more to their youth that such habits are bad. That’s all fine, but they know that today’s youth are seeing these cigarette and alcoholic drinks ads, right?
Then why don’t they question these ads being put up in public spaces? Are we not as clever as the people in other capitalist countries, who have realized the problem and created laws against these poisonous messages? Could it be that the latter would attack the market and profits of some of us here who take advantage of selling this ill-fated merchandise?
At the end of the day, everything leads back to Marxism. The mode of property of economic drivers determines production relations, the mentality of society and the moral, ethical principles that are acceptable. As things currently stand, companies are administrated in an opaque manner; they are immune to workers’ control and are targets of systematic embezzlement which the Comptroller’s office denounces but doesn’t manage to reduce it. The working class is being alienated from an economy far from socialist.
This class will justify anything, and impose its criteria about what’s “right” and “wrong”. It doesn’t necessarily need to be linked to foreign capitalism in order to reproduce its shortcomings, but if it has the chance, it will speed up the overall downfall of society.
The influence of foreign multinational companies will lubricate and speed up the adjustment process to capitalist “standardization”. It’s no coincidence that such investments in alcoholic beverages and cigarettes have been taking place in Cuba for quite some time now. Post-reform Cuba, up-to-date with the modern world, “normal”, which the new class of capitalists conjure up, will be full of posters like these.
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