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Author Topic: Cuba blog girl is back in action!!!! For your reading pleasure.  (Read 127347 times)

Offline Jammyisme

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Re: Cuba blog girl is back in action!!!! For your reading pleasure.
« Reply #30 on: September 17, 2008, 06:15:29 AM »
Generation Y is a Blog inspired by people like me, with names that begin with or contain a "Y." Born in Cuba in the 1970s and 1980s, marked by schools in the countryside, Russian cartoons, illegal emigration and frustration. So I invite especially Yanisleidi, Yoandri, Yusimí, Yuniesky and others who drag their "Y's" to read my Blog and to write to me.


Her fridge is empty
             
The original sin
Escrito por: yoanisanchez en Generation Y , Septiembre,17,2008


August and September have been a tough test for the long-awaited economic reforms, which appear to have been shipwrecked even before weighing anchor.  “You have to have confidence in the management of Raúl Castro” exhorted my friend on seeing my persistent distrust.  “Soon they are going to implement new measures,” the same lady assured me, almost three months ago.  She belongs to the group who hope the rulers can solve our current problems—a good part of which they created themselves with their absurd prohibitions.  Me, I’m on the picket line with the skeptics.

My doubt stems from “the original sin” of Raúl’s government: It was not elected by the people, rather it is the fruit of a dynastic, inherited succession.  He was not chosen instead of—at least—one opponent and, for me, designation without an alternative is not an election.

The current President did not propose a program, he did not commit himself before his voters, and that means he is not accountable to us.  The much needed measures can take one year or five years because he will not lose his post  He caught, without competitors, the tempting apple of power.  Now he can eat it without haste, because our votes have not been the path that led him to obtain it.

 

Offline Jammyisme

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Re: Cuba blog girl is back in action!!!! For your reading pleasure.
« Reply #31 on: September 19, 2008, 06:51:41 AM »
 :salute:
Uterus on strike
Escrito por: yoanisanchez en Generation Y , Septiembre,18,2008


She was going to be called Gea and she would come to relieve Teo of the burden of being the only child in the house. With her I might once again have prepared pureed malanga, boiled bottles in the night and washed loads of diapers.  But thinking better of it, Gea remained the desire of another child that I did not have.  I looked ahead twenty years, with the same housing problems of today and with two married children who would bring their spouses to live in our apartment. At first, with the three marriages, we would try to maintain harmony, but the fights would inevitably come.

Our house would be like so many, where several generations live and a suppressed battle takes place every day.  The refrigerator would be divided into three zones and the couples would make love quietly, faced with the proximity of the other beds.  The grandchildren would come to share the bedroom with the grandparents—in this case my husband and me—and make them feel like they were already a nuisance to the young people.  The children would spend a good part of the time in the corridor or in the street, because of the little space available at home.  They would become teenagers and look for partners, new potential occupants for the house already bursting at the seams.

If, before the hurricanes Gustav and Ike, my generation and that of Teo had to wait forty years or more to have a house, now the period has surpassed the span of a human life. Together with the roofing tiles and the windows that the winds took, they also sent flying our dreams of having our own roof.  Where there are no resources to replace what the victims had and lost, how long will the wait be for those who had nothing.

Without sentimentality Gea has vanished totally from my life, now I know that we will have no space for her.


Offline Milli

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Re: Cuba blog girl is back in action!!!! For your reading pleasure.
« Reply #32 on: September 19, 2008, 09:31:55 AM »
Sad! Today's entry sounds so hopeless.  I like the title!
Melia Las Americas  '05,'12,'12
Iberostar Varadero '06
Paradisius Rio de Oro '06
Sandals Royal Hicacos '07
Playa Pesquero '07 '11
R. Hideaway Ensenachos'08
GBP Ambar '08 '09
GBP El Portillo '10 
GBP Cayo Leventado'10

Offline Jammyisme

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Re: Cuba blog girl is back in action!!!! For your reading pleasure.
« Reply #33 on: September 19, 2008, 08:28:41 PM »
 :binkybaby:  It is truly amazing to read, I know.  Humbling .

Offline Jammyisme

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Re: Cuba blog girl is back in action!!!! For your reading pleasure.
« Reply #34 on: September 22, 2008, 03:42:19 PM »
Who’s afraid of books?
Escrito por: yoanisanchez en Generation Y , Septiembre,22,2008


Saturday night I’m yawning in front of a boring cops-and-robbers thriller on TV.  The phone rings and it’s Adolfo,* who is still behind bars since a tantrum of power condemned him in the Black Spring* of 2003.  He sounds upset.  Some quasi-literate jailers are preventing him from receiving the books and magazines brought by his wife on her last visit.  The list of the “dangerous” texts withheld includes the Catholic publications New Word, Secular Space, and the spiritual reflections of Saint Augustine.   His co-defendants and fellow inmates, Pedro Argüelles Morán and Antonio Ramón Díaz Sánchez, have been united in exerting pressure in the only way they can: Rejecting the meager sustenance put on their trays.  As long as they refuse to pass on the sustenance of words, they will refuse the tasteless ration that keeps them alive.

The distrust among the Canaleta* prison guards provoked by the books reminds me of the Columbian Jorge Zalamea and his poem-novel, “The Great Burundan Burundi has died.”  A dictator, fearful of articulate language, condemns his subjects to a world without communication and without literature.  To enforce his mandate of silence, he recruits all those offended by words.  He summons, to train his armies of censors, “those incapable of fervor, those lacking in imagination, those who never talk to themselves, (…) those who hit animals and children when they don’t understand their glances…”

The pawns who today withhold Adolfo’s books form a part of these same phalanxes of illiterate censors.  Jailers of expression, they understand—as the Great Burundan might understand—that the human condition and “the rebellion that follows it, have their foundation in the articulated word.”  They suspect that when Adolfo, Pedro and Antonio are engrossed in an essay or a story the bars disappear, the jail fades away, and they manage to shake off their lengthy sentences.  The “instruction” received by the guards in Cuban prisons ensures that they know that a book is something extremely dangerous.

Translator’s notes:

Adolfo Fernández Saínz: Previous entries that provide background include, An empty chair, and The stubborn empty chair.

Black Spring: In March 2003, coinciding with the U.S. invasion of Iraq, Cuba arrested about 75-90 people including about 25-35  journalists (reports vary).  The majority of these people remain in prison.

Canaleta:  A high security prison located in Ciego de Ávila, about 460 km (285 miles) east of Havana.


Offline Jammyisme

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Re: Cuba blog girl is back in action!!!! For your reading pleasure.
« Reply #35 on: September 24, 2008, 06:17:37 AM »
   I collect “denials”
Escrito por: yoanisanchez en Generation Y , Septiembre,24,2008


There are those who have a wall full of diplomas, or a shirt straining under the weight of medals.  Heroes who accumulate scars, and we citizens who stockpile frustrations.  Not to be left behind in this widespread mania for collecting, I attempt to have my own collection of something.  I collect denials of travel, slips of paper that repeat that I may not leave “for the moment” and airplane tickets postponed.  All this with the same compulsion that others amass soft drink labels or ceramic figurines.

Stubborn, like a can of condensed milk, I have resubmitted my papers to visit Europe.  Not acquiescent with the “no” they already gave me in May, I returned to the Plaza municipality’s Bureau of  Emigration and Immigration.  I waited several days, while the breaking of the machine that prints the stickers delayed an answer that I already intuited.  In the end, someone in olivegreen confirmed to me that the penalty still stands.  The corrective, being made to kneel on rice, is in my case a prohibition on leaving this Island.  Won’t the Daddy-State learn how irritating children become when they rarely leave the house?

* Here is a link to the second document, in less than a year, that tells of my condition: Captive Blogger.

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Offline Jammyisme

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Re: Cuba blog girl is back in action!!!! For your reading pleasure.
« Reply #36 on: September 25, 2008, 03:57:17 PM »
This is the captive blogger entry


As if that were not enough, yesterday they have given me a new award. The award I have received leads to a film titled on Saturday, “The Captive Blogger,” and involves not letting me travel to Madrid for the award ceremony for the Ortega y Gasset prize.  Those who have not given me what I wanted, have not given their names, but in this blog we call them, “them.”  They are those who, wearing a military uniform, control our rights as citizens and give orders but not explanations.

I did not think I deserved so much attention but, if the officials insist, I accept this new honor.  They forget that in cyberspace my voice can travel without limits, coming and going without asking permission. It doesn’t matter if they keep my passport.  Since a year ago I have had another nationality in the space on my passport, the short word: “Blogger.”


Offline Jammyisme

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Re: Cuba blog girl is back in action!!!! For your reading pleasure.
« Reply #37 on: September 26, 2008, 06:24:02 AM »
Escrito por: yoanisanchez en Generation Y , Septiembre,26,2008


The accounting of the disaster is over and our news programs seem to have entered a rosy period where there is only room for reports of recovery and optimism. Neither regret nor doubt have a place among so many calls to confidence.  The opinions and faces shown on TV are carefully selected; they only show those who have something hopeful to say.  The phrase “back to normal” is repeated by Party general secretaries, by drivers of trucks loaded with roofing and even by the victims themselves.  They try to erase at all costs the “now” to return to the “before” of the two hurricanes.

The truth is that I do not believe that a month ago we had anything resembling “normal.”  Furthermore, in the three decades that I have under my belt I do not think I have lived in anything other than what is anomalous.  To those who trumpet the word, I would like to ask them if they believe the Special Period* is “normal,” the fear of the zero option,* the endless speeches, the Battle of Ideas, the rallies of repudiation, my friends arming a raft to take to the sea, the “it exists but it doesn’t touch you, or it touches you but it doesn’t exist,” the perennial lines, the promises of change that is not specified, the idle land, the idea of the public square where dissent is treason, speaking in a whisper, the paranoia that everyone could be part of the Apparatus,* travel restrictions, the privileges of a few, the dual currency, the indoctrination in schools, lack of expectations, billboards with slogans that nobody believes and the hope, the expectation, the dreams that sometime everything will arrive at a point close to “normal.”

Translator’s notes:

Special Period:  The period following the collapse of the Soviet Union and the loss of its support for Cuba.

Zero Option: A contingency plan from the post-Soviet period that envisioned Cuba surviving “alone” in the world, with its economy cut off from almost all other countries.

Apparatus: State security.


Offline Jammyisme

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Re: Cuba blog girl is back in action!!!! For your reading pleasure.
« Reply #38 on: September 29, 2008, 02:26:20 PM »
Wait
Escrito por: yoanisanchez en Generation Y , Septiembre,29,2008
I recover from a cold humming a tune by the Habanero singer-songwriter Erick Sánchez that he dedicated to me at his last concert and that today I want to share with you.  It’s a catchy tune about those who only know how to wait, with their arms crossed, white others do something.  The song has already been around for a while but Erick added a final improvisation about these times of supposed reforms and expectations.

With this video, filmed by me in the small theater at the Museum of Fine Arts, I want to add a multimedia component to this blog for the first time.  We have only had to “wait” seventeen months to post some music, so it hasn’t been too…

This Saturday I went back to Pinar del Rio and in the next post will include some images and anecdotes about what I saw over there.  Meanwhile, here are the lyrics of the improvisation by Erick Sánchez :

In Spanish:

Esperar, esperar, esperar
A sin permiso viajar afuera
Esperar, esperar, esperar
Que pongan una sola moneda
Esperar, esperar, esperar
Y que lo hagan sin que te duela
Esperar, esperar, esperar
Y sin tanta preguntadera

In English:

Wait, wait, wait
For freedom to travel abroad
Wait, wait, wait
For a single currency
Wait, wait, wait
And that they do it without causing you pain
Wait, wait, wait
And without so many questions

I dedicate this song to Adolfo Fernandez Saenz, who ended his hunger strike last week, in the Canaleta prison.  With your determination and the help of many who supported your complaint, you succeeded in getting the prison guards to return your books.

Adolfo, brother, this song is for you and hopefully you will not have to wait much longer.

ESPERAR.


Offline Jammyisme

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Re: Cuba blog girl is back in action!!!! For your reading pleasure.
« Reply #39 on: October 01, 2008, 09:40:16 AM »
The ghost of Pravda
Escrito por: yoanisanchez en Generation Y , Septiembre,29,2008


The most important news in the Cuban press does not come with titles that give away its contents.  Under the titles “Informing the population,” “Letter from the Ministry of the Interior,” or “Declaration of the State Council,” we learned of the most significant events.  This Monday it was the newspaper Granma which trumpeted in huge letters, “Information for our people.”  The elderly quickly bought all the newspapers from the kiosks and raised, to two pesos, the resale price for a copy of the official organ of the Cuban Communist Party.

“Granma is authorized to report,” the newspaper announced, just as they used to do, in their time, in the pages of the Soviet newspaper Pravda.  The expression made me think about how much news they have been ordered not to report in our largest circulation daily paper, and with what discipline they have complied with this direction to shut up.  I shook off the Stalinist reminders of the front page and continued reading.  After a few paragraphs it was already clear to me that not only did the design recall the worst of the Russian press before Glasnost, but that the tone and threats did as well.  With the warning that “any attempt to violate the law or the rules of social coexistence will be met with a swift and forceful response,” the editorial warns speculators, profiteers, or sellers in the informal market that punishment awaits them.

I was especially confused by a small paragraph in the center of a very “Pravda-like” composition that pointed out: “Thus it invariably will be enforced in the face of such actions and against all signs of privilege, corruption or theft…”  How could the General Prosecutor of the Republic cope with so many privileges, granted to the ideologically loyal, that proliferate on this Island.  Will the excesses that are going to be penalized include the beach house where the lieutenant colonel vacations with his family, the shopping bag with chicken and detergent given to the censor for filtering web pages, the access to preferential prices enjoyed by the whistleblowers and the “vultures” of State Security.  These are the privileges I see around me, but I don’t think that Granma has launched a crusade against them. That would be an act of self-cannibalism.

The title of this article should be “It threatens our people,” because we are all included in the harsh words that seem to be directed only at criminals.  I read it like this because who is this country doesn’t cross the line of illegality to buy something; what citizen doesn’t depend on the black market; how many families don’t survive through the diversion of resources against the indignity of their salaries; which are the mechanisms of distribution that aren’t plagued by corruption, so despicable but tolerated by the State itself because it is one of the safety valves that prevents a social explosion.  The ghost of Pravda is not the only ghost I have perceived through reading this article, but also that of radicalization, the strong hand, and the State of Emergency.  That situation of a constant battle against something within which our leaders seem to feel so comfortable.

« Last Edit: October 02, 2008, 02:38:50 PM by Jammyisme »

Offline Jammyisme

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Re: Cuba blog girl is back in action!!!! For your reading pleasure.
« Reply #40 on: October 03, 2008, 07:47:35 AM »
On Saturday, we took advantage of a friend heading for Pinar del Rio and traveled in his car with some donations for the victims.   Clothes and food given by people who have little, but with a desire to help those who have less.  That solidarity between citizens that, although it may seem insignificant compared to what governments and NGOs can give, mustn’t be left undone.  The final destination for the things we collected was the town of Consolación del Norte and the small adjoining villages, some of which still don’t have electricity.

On the highway we were surprised to see how quickly they had repaired all the political billboards.  These signs would be more practical as roofs for houses than in their current use as political propaganda.  One of these gigantic metal posters would be enough to cover some of the houses whose residents are still sleeping under the stars.  Can you imagine having a ceiling that reads, “Only by our work can we create resources”?  Living under such a platitude might not be very pleasant but at least it would protect you from the rain.

I returned and confirmed that the recovery will take years, that hope is scarce and that the worst may be yet to come when the enthusiasm for helping fades.  The police have tightened the checkpoints along the highway to prevent the movement of goods in the informal market.  Bad news for all of us who depend, in large measure, on the sellers who knock on our doors.  An intense campaign against the diversion of resources, against high prices in the farmers markets, and against all those who spread negative rumors, warns us of what’s to come.  We already know that these offensives start by attacking what’s illegal and evolve until they restrict the few spaces for opinion and continue even to the peanut sellers.  The condition of “public plaza under siege” is heightened, so it wouldn’t surprise me to see some examples of legal processes in order “to conserve socialism.”

These two hurricanes have left us trapped in a pattern we already know.  That of a State that tries to resolve through centralization, control, legal threats and a strong hand what should be solved with openness, space for private initiatives, freedoms and reforms.


Offline Jammyisme

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Re: Cuba blog girl is back in action!!!! For your reading pleasure.
« Reply #41 on: October 07, 2008, 06:11:00 AM »
Eliécer’s motives
Escrito por: yoanisanchez en Generation Y , Octubre,6,2008


With a muffled struggle, the animal spoke,
mouth foaming and eye terrible,
“Brother Francis, don’t come too close…”

Rubén Darío*

The interviews given by Eliécer Ávila, a UCI [University of Information Sciences] student, to Cubaencuentro and Kaos en la Red [Chaos on the Web] were sent to me by email.  Reading both of them, I knew that they would not be published in any of the mainstream media on the Island because they express opinions—shared by the majority—that our newspapers prefer to ignore.  The young man from Las Tunas has been relegated to the Internet, with the video of his run-in with the President of the National Assembly circulated only through alternative means.   However, we Cubans rely on a kind of Web 4.0 that doesn’t need cables, nor modems and can even dispense with the computer.  Hence, this week all of Havana already knows about Eliécer ‘s conversation with an independent journalist.  Information, every day, is finer and finer sand slipping through the censors’ fingers.

Some see this Las Tunas boy of precise speech as the tip of a conspiracy to “abduct” the most critical young people.  I confess that I am tired of these manias to see in each action a perfectly calculated plot.  I don’t believe that our leaders can organize everything, nor play that political chess they are believed capable of.  Much less in these times when the squares on the board have been erased and at least three of the table legs are lame.  I refuse to see, in every event, the strings inevitably being pulled by the hands of State Security.  To believe this would be to think that they are omnipresent, that they know everything and, fortunately, this is a quality held only by God.

I prefer to speculate that yes, Eliécer is sincere in his approach.  That he is a young man, like many, dissatisfied with the dual currency, with the abuses of power, with the gerontocracy that governs us.  One who with a peasant’s straightforwardness calls things by their names and believes in the power to change, from within, the system that will end up devouring it.  What is not healthy, candid or honest is the reality surrounding this computer science student.  A society where the boys of Porno para Ricardo can’t appear in concert, where several blogs and web pages are blocked and where someone with a different opinion is accused of being an agent of the CIA; it has the design of a long thought-out conspiracy—and it’s here, yes, that I show my paranoia—to deprive us of the right to dissent.

The anxious young man presented himself, before Ricardo Alarcón, as part of “Operation Truth” which monitors the Internet and counters opinions antagonistic to the Cuban way.  Which makes him both a victim and an executioner of the lack of space for plurality and debate. Forgive me Eliécer Ávila, but to enter the Web from an institutional PC with the direction to neutralize divergent ideas, is to act—using your own metaphor—like those “who drive a large truck believing they own the road, without respect for the rights of others, because they know that if you mix it up with them, you’ll come out of it very badly.”

Translator’s notes:

Early this year a video started circulating on the internet of Eliécer Ávila, a student at the University of Information Sciences in Havana, standing at a microphone at a student assembly and respectfully questioning Ricardo Alarcon, President of Cuba’s National Assembly.  Readers can find a wealth of information, and the video, through a google search.  The questions Eliécer asked ranged from why access to Google is restricted when there is no Cuban equivalent, to why a toothbrush costs three days’ pay.  Last week, an interview with Eliécer, published on the Web, covered events since the video was released.

Rubén Darío: Nicaraguan poet, 1867-1916.   This quote is a fragment from the poem “Los motivos del lobo” [The wolf’s motives].  “Brother Francis” is Saint Francis of Assisi.


Offline Jammyisme

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Re: Cuba blog girl is back in action!!!! For your reading pleasure.
« Reply #42 on: October 07, 2008, 05:21:05 PM »
To Gandhi on the 139th anniversary of his birth

He prepared. He polished his explanations. All the proposals he had been accumulating over years of looking at his reality and wanting to change things, he honed for a verbal contest. He had calculated that his debate opponent would remind him of the benefits and would warn him against certain “spots on the sun,” those small imperfections that only the hard-to-please notice.  He was especially equipped to avoid comparisons with other countries—a common tactic of those who want to silence criticism. He was ready to refute the insult that his words were favorable to the North, or that his shoes didn’t appear to have been bought with the salary of a worker.

A baseball fanatic, he warmed the arm of his debate, like the fourth batter who hopes to hit a home run before an adversary incapable of pitching new arguments. He had spent years waiting for the debate and finally the opportunity to talk back was upon him.  Except that he came to the platform thinking they wanted to listen to him.  Big mistake.  In reality, his opponent intended only to muzzle him.  So, the strong edifice of explanations he had constructed did not stand up against his opponent’s shouts and aggression.  Every opinion met swollen veins, closed fists and a torrent of insults.  He tried to explain that he was only thinking about the good of his country, but the insult of “mercenary” didn’t allow him to finish his sentence.

Because he didn’t know how to respond to the punches, he preferred to shut up and his rival thought he had crushed him.  But there he was, a man armed for debate, reduced to protecting himself from stones.  He went home and one by one ruled out the analyses, rejected the explanations about the economic unviability of the system and condemned, to the worst possible place, his extensive diatribe against a Revolution where changes never happen.  He went to the kitchen and looked for the thick iron bar that he used to protect against thieves.  His opponent had achieved his purpose: he had been transformed into someone who needs violence in order to be heard.


Offline Jammyisme

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Re: Cuba blog girl is back in action!!!! For your reading pleasure.
« Reply #43 on: October 12, 2008, 05:27:25 PM »
The longest war
Escrito por: yoanisanchez en Generation Y , Octubre,11,2008


On Thursday, a movie about the Cuban war in Angola was released across the island. Outside the movie theaters couples chose to change course and head to someplace dark because the Cuban campaign in Africa holds little interest for them. The film suffers from a couple decades delay and tackles a story, parts of which still have not been declassified. Kangamba would have generated long lines and impassioned comments at the end of the ‘80s but at this point very few want to remember what happened.

The Cuban contest in Angolan territory had been the longest war in Cuban history. Fifteen long years of fighting in another land, killing or being killed by people who barely knew where this Island was. Those were the times when the Kremlin was casting its shadow over Cuba and so strongly did we depend on them that our leaders did not hesitate to join in their campaign against UNITA. Geopolitics devises these difficult tests for the small countries that orbit great empires.

I notice that during the decade and a half conflict, no Cuban mothers staged protests in any public plaza against sending their sons to the front. No one launched, in the media, the question that we all whispered, “What are we doing in Angola?” or much less a peace movement filled with white doves in front of each recruiting station. We were more docile as citizens than we are today and they took us to perish and to kill without knowing what we did.

Today, we are informed about every loss suffered by the American army in Iraq but I remember the secrecy about the number of Cuban soldiers who fell during the Angolan War. We were told that a neighbor had lost a son, or that a colleague had returned without a leg, but the press only trumpeted the horn of victory. The dead were mourned in the privacy of their families, who did not understand very well what their children were doing on the other side of the Atlantic. The niches in the cemetery remained, the framed photos in the family rooms, the full vases of flowers on every anniversary and the long speeches of those who had seen the war from afar, but nobody knew how to respond with clarity to the question, “What were Cubans doing in Angola?”


Offline Jammyisme

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Re: Cuba blog girl is back in action!!!! For your reading pleasure.
« Reply #44 on: October 14, 2008, 06:20:39 AM »
Which came first?
Escrito por: yoanisanchez en Generation Y , Octubre,13,2008


The informal market is experiencing sharply rising prices these days. An egg now costs the high price of four Cuban pesos, one-third the average wage for a day’s labor. But the pockets of the buyers have not been the hardest hit; for those who illegally sell this product, conviction can lead to two years in prison. This measure seeks to eliminate the swindles of these sellers, after the carnage in the poultry farms caused by hurricanes Gustav and Ike. Reckless traders in the black market are processed in summary trials as a lesson to those who illegally market food, construction materials or medicines.

Our police—long-trained in detecting beef, cheese, shrimp and powdered milk—now also track down eggs. The most immediate effect of these new raids is the disappearance of certain products that used to come to us only through vendors knocking on our doors. These days, chanting “Eeee-eeeggs” may be more dangerous than chanting anti-government slogans. OK, let’s not exaggerate, opinion has always been punished more.

The new wave against the informal market has helped us to resolve the riddle, “Which came first?” We now know that the egg was first, then they arrested those who sold home-made sweets, later they prosecuted those who were protesting the price increase for fuel, and finally they punished those who reported the scarcity of products in the agricultural markets. When it’s the turn of those who traffic in chicken, the prison term will exceed the length of a human life.

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