Yes, by all means, take your time. What's the hurry? After 50 years, why should Cuba rush to make any reforms?
The economic situation
in Cuba remains desperate. Popular sentiment for reform is widespread.
And the world has spent the past few months condemning the regime's
callous treatment of political prisoners.
In his July 26 speech,
however, Cuban Vice President Jose Ramon Machado Ventura made clear
neither he nor the Cuban leadership are in any hurry to make any
cambios . "We will proceed, step by step, at the rhythm we determine,
without improvisations or haste so as not to make mistakes," said
Machado Ventura, 79, echoing what we've repeatedly heard from the other
septugenarians and octogenarians running Cuba.
One wonders whether
the Cuban Revolution would have been victorious if it had been fought
with the same stale, risk-aversive and uninspired way the
revolutionaries govern today. It wouldn't have, but then again, the
Castro-led regime isn't interested in governing, just holding their grip
on power.
So don't look for any
meaningful changes from Havana, other than "freeing" political prisoners
by jettisoning them to other countries. Mind you, these are individuals
that should never have been jailed in the first place.
Faced with such
intransigence, it's clear to anyone no longer living in the mid-20th
century that a break in the Cuba logjam must come from the outside.
Fortunately, some U.S. lawmakers in Congress are pushing to end the
counterproductive ban on travel to Cuba. Lifting the prohibition on
travel to the island would do much to promote democratic efforts in
Cuba.
Why? For starters, it
would put more dollars directly into the hands of the Cuban population,
making them less dependent on the state. And it would allow a much
broader spectrum of people to go to Cuba, and not just those who are
generally sympathetic to the regime — and apologetic about its dismal
human rights record.
Those who oppose
lifting the travel ban say it will provide resources to the Castro
government, and effectively toss the regime a lifeboat. What they don't
understand is that the Titanic that is the Cuban economy sank decades
ago and no lifeboat can spare the regime the judgment of history.
BOTTOM LINE: Cuban regime promises more same-old — really old.
From: SunSentinel
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