"Over time, these measures [instituted by Raúl Castro] will erode the myth that no Cubans have substantial disposable hard currency income." -- Phil Peters, "'Prohibitions" Biting the Dust," The Cuban Triangle, April 1, 2008
What the ever optimistic Phil Peters calls the "disposable" income of Cubans on the island is actually the disposable income of Cubans outside the island, whose remittances to their relatives will allow them to buy those hitherto prohibited "luxury" items which Raúl and his coterie of military-industrial robber barons will sell them at mark-ups of 100-5000%
This is like taking a homeless man from the Bowery (if there are any of those anymore), setting him down on Fifth Avenue with two-bits to his name and telling him that the world is his oyster.
What would his only choice be?
To beg.
The only difference is that George W. Bush won't come at the end of the day to cheat him of his quarters.
This interesting thread continues on The Cuban Triangle with more observations from Peters and me and even a cameo appearance from Longfellow at his most original, arguing that Cubans on the island are much prettier than those ugly exiles. Peters' reaction is the definition of "nonplussed."
While you're visiting the blog , please take note of the beautiful photographs of historic places in Cuba. Peters never takes pictures of the ruins. But, as I said, he is a great optimist.
POSTSCRIPT:
Answer to Phil Peters:
There is some pleasure to be derived from looking at Buckingham Palace even if one does not have the remotest chance of ever living there. I suppose a Cuban feels a comparable sensation when he gazes on a cellphone at the museum where it is kept. Because it is truly a museum and not a store. People go there to look at the future which is somebody else's past. To look and not touch.
This is not enough. It is not even anything at all. "Let them eat cake" is all that these measures (which you mercifully refrain from calling "reforms") amount to.
But those as you, Phil, who have awaited so patiently and long for even the dimmest most transitory flicker of anything, cannot help seeing in this mirage the dawning of a new age when it is no more than a sanctioned revival of an old instinct: the desire to consume, as natural and necessary as any other desire but repressed in Cuba for nearly a half-century.
But consumerism is not enough to break the chains of tyranny as we have seen in China. There, where luxuries are no longer unthinkable, their enjoyment has been conditioned on the acceptance of tyranny.
Even if this Consumer Age were as real in Cuba as it is in China, the assumption should be that it would usher-in no era of freedom but stregthen the repression by making tyranny self-sustaining or even profitable.
http://cubantriangle.blogspot.com/2008/04/canned-prohibitions-assessment.html
Anon said: Go to Cuba, you will see, average cubans living in Cuba (the Real ones) are much more attractive than the "historic exilio"= who are generally paler and fatter like that congresswoman - how ugly and scary looking
ReplyDeleteI never wrote that. However, i would have no doubt penned my name to it, as i totally agree. Certainly most Cuban exiles would also agree.
One has to look no further than the Miss. Universe beauty pageants. There are no comparisons in regards to the inner and outer beauty between a Miss. Cuba, and a Miss Miami Cuban exile. Miss. Cuba wins hands down in every category, especially attitude.
John:
ReplyDeleteCommunist Cuba does not participate in the Miss Universe pageant. There is no "Miss Cuba."
And will you kindly explain why you think the Cuban women in Cuba are more beautiful than the Cuban women in Miami?
phil peters=chivato
ReplyDeletehmmmm . . .maybe it's the soy burgers mixed with maggots that the make people in the island better lookin'?
ReplyDeleteThat was a good response, Manuel. (And I liked your using "coterie").
ReplyDeleteMAT,
ReplyDeleteMetaphorically speaking "if" there was a Miss. Cuba vs. a Miss Miami Cuban exile. Miss Cuba would be the clear choice. Having said that, i was unaware that Fidel did not allow Cuban women to compete. He probably suspects if the world saw the Cuban women. That there surely would be an invasion of hard-up American men.
As far as your question, why women on the island are more beautiful than in Miami!
First, one must judge beauty from within, then work your way out. Generally, "all" women in Miami, including Cubans tend to be very ugly on the inside. Driven more by money, and other superfiicial things. This in of itself makes them ugly.
Moving to the outer beauty. Much like the European women. Cuban women live closer to the land. Traveling to work, other than by vehicle. If an American woman has to go to CVS, she will jump her fat ass into a big SUV, and drive a half mile. A Cuban woman will more than likely walk there, showing an inner-toughness. Thereby also keeping herself in shape.
Finally, there is the mixture of races that is common in Cuba, but uncommon in Miami. Can a pasty Miss. England compare to a tanned Miss. Brazil, or a paleMiss. Sweeden compare to a darkened Miss Equador? That is why Latin American women generally fare better than European or American women in these pageants. And is why American and European women spends thousands of hours and dollars in attempt to obtain a similiar shade of skin color.
Pretty simple, when you break it down into components!!
John:
ReplyDeleteI refuse to take sides in this argument. Cuban women are Cuban women whether living here or in Cuba. Take them all or leave them all.
John:
ReplyDeleteActually both Brazil and Ecuador send the blondest women in their countries to these pageants, usually descendents of German immigrants. For them, it is blondeness that is desirable and exotic.
Ah, yes women in pageants...some topic. john longfellow...many of the most striking females in beauty contests have emerged from Venezuela, and most if not all of them have been blanquitas...not Germanic nor Slavic, but descendants of Latin Europe. These Latin beauties from Venezuela have done very well indeed in these silly contests, and, at least in terms of phenotype (I have no access to their genotypes) they have all been white, white like their ancestors in Spain, Portugal, Italy, and France, and decidedly not mixed-race. But this says more about the pageants than about beauty itself, as there are beautiful phenotypes everywhere, mixed or not.
ReplyDeleteMamey
Maria Conchita Alonso (a Cuban) won Ms. Venezuela but kept her real place of birth pretty quiet for years.
ReplyDeleteWell Today where I sit and write I'm 57 years old, still at my age I'm a damn good looking woman, I'm not bragging, I left Cuba when I was eleven years old, in my teen years, my 20's my 30's and yes even my 40's I could have broken your heart, except I was never promiscuous, have been happily married for 38 years to a Cuban of course. Ugly please, give me a break, oh and my daughter, wow wee
ReplyDeleteYeah, John, Celia Cruz was very white.
ReplyDeleteOr was she the exception to your rule that "white is right" in the Cuban exile community?
Did you ever notice that 99% of those in charge in Cuba are white?
Since all officials on the island are appointed or approved by Castro, is it a coincidence that almost all of them are white?
The only Cuban racist that I have ever known in my life was Fidel Castro. He introduced "Jim Crow," segregation and apartheid to Cuba while claiming that he has improved the lot of those whom he has doubly victimized: first as Cubans and then as blacks.
BTW, the late Roberto Goizueta, CEO of Coca Cola, was as white as white can be. In the end his "homeland" was Coca Cola, not Cuba, since his dream was reopening Cuba to Coke (or should that be, opening a Coke in Cuba?) and getting one into the hand of Fidel Castro. Goizueta was by no means unique, of course. All great capitalists are "internationalists." They have that in common with the Communists.
ReplyDelete"Over time, these measures [instituted by Raúl Castro] will erode the myth that no Cubans have substantial disposable hard currency income." -- Phil Peters...
ReplyDeleteAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
What a moronic f*cking a*sh*le! Who is Phil Peters?! Can we ship him to Cuba on a Clik Mexicana flight from Cancun with $15USD in his pocket and see how much disposable income he has left after trying to survive a lo Cubano for a month in San Miguel del Padrón?
joep:
ReplyDeleteIt's those rose-colored glasses that he wears.
Manuel, I hate to change the subject here, but if you look at what I wrote, it was not that Cubans in general have hard currency income.
ReplyDeleteIt was that some do, and not only from remittances -- entrepreneurs, people in the tourism sector or who work for foreign companies, people in various Cuban companies who earn some part of their income in chavitos, etc. Not to mention people in the black market. I was not arguing that all these incomes are high, and I didn't make any claim about the proportion of Cubans who earn hard currency income.
But if you think that the only Cubans who have hard currency to spend are those who get help from abroad, you are missing something.
I don't know what motivated these measures but I'm sure that they took into account that they might result in an increased flow of remittances. On that score I agree with you, and it's not the first time they would figure a way for Miami to pay for something.
Phil:
ReplyDeleteThere is some pleasure to be derived from looking at Buckingham Palace even if one does not have the remotest chance of ever living there. I suppose a Cuban feels a comparable sensation when he gazes on a cellphone at the museum where it is kept. Because it is truly a museum and not a store. People go there to look at the future which is somebody else's past. To look and not touch.
This is not enough. It is not even anything at all. "Let them eat cake" is all that these measures (which you mercifully refrain from calling "reforms") amount to.
But those as you, Phil, who have awaited so patiently and long for even the dimmest most transitory flicker of anything, cannot help seeing in this mirage the dawning of a new age when it is no more than a sanctioned revival of an old instinct: the desire to consume, as natural and necessary as any other desire but repressed in Cuba for nearly a half-century.
But consumerism is not enough to break the chains of tyranny as we have seen in China. There, where luxuries are no longer unthinkable, their enjoyment has been conditioned on the acceptance of tyranny.
Even if this Consumer Age were as real in Cuba as it is in China, the assumption should be that it would usher-in no era of freedom but stregthen the repression by making tyranny self-sustaining or even profitable.
I'm a Cuban woman and actually the idea expounded by the gentleman who said that Cuban women on the island are generally more beautiful because they tend to be darker is in fact true to Cuban culture - our ideal of beauty is the mulatto, a fusion of our Spanish and African culture, it's our cafe con leche. In Cuba neither extreme, being extremely White or being extremely Black (colonization has especially moved us to viciously despise the latter) is considered attractive. I'm of mixed race myself and would have it no other way :). Therefore, to decry or denounce the gentleman's comment is faulty and reflects a lack of acknowledgement of Cuban standards of beauty or recognition of what we consider the epitome of our culture. But to say that all Miami Cuban women are ugly is mean- goodness, that's a mean thing to say!
ReplyDeleteAnd, to add a personal opinion I would agree that a great majority of the Cuban women who are predominantly of more Spanish origins (as Hispano-Cubans were the ones who first began to migrate and had the means to do so, that is a discussion for another time however) are not as attractive as their olive, tanned and brown skinned counterparts whether in Miami, Union City/West New York or on the island - pero soy mulata...so I'm biased hahahaha.
And yes I would agree that the average Cuban woman (in Cuba) has a smaller build. That's Latin America though- when you're food isn't injected with a billion hormones you tend to be a normal weight and size. I can honestly say that compared to my cousins, and I was born in Cuba, I'm practically an amazon lol, and I'm 5'6'' weighing 135lbs, that's slim or svelte in the US, lol- it's the food because we all have the same genes, and according to thsoe genes I shouldn't be over 5'3'' lol
However women in Miami have more access to beauty products and accessories. This is one of the things taht makes me sad about the embargo and certain Cuban policies - it's denying women the right and tools they need to exude femininity. There are no beauty supply stores - so I'm always a favorite when I go every year because I bring them :)