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Bumper sticker realities: thinking locally
August 11, 2009 3 min. read

Over the years of the embargo, relationships between states/cities in the United States and counterparts in Cuba have sprung up. Now, as legislation to dismantle travel restrictions and embargo regulations makes its way through the halls of Congress, a number of state and local leaders are asserting themselves in favor of a more open relationship […]

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Adapting socialism… not adopting capitalism
August 8, 2009 2 min. read

Raúl Castro proclaimed last week that no one should expect Cuba to change its political and social system; Cuba will remain socialist/communist. But he and top economists do foresee a great overhaul of the system. NPR reported: Rafael Hernandez, editor of the quarterly journal Temas in Havana, says Raul Castro is attempting to transform the Cuban […]

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If Colombia is Latin America's Israel, does that make Venezuela the Region's Iran?
August 7, 2009 5 min. read

The yearly two month Cold War between Colombia and Venezuela has come this summer amidst talks between the US and Colombia to place approximately seven US bases in Colombian territory in order to aid US anti-drugs forces. A week ago as a response, Venezuela withdrew its ambassador from Colombia and is threatening to restrict trade […]

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Overblown rhetoric, but kernels of truth
August 7, 2009 1 min. read

Yesterday, the state-run Cuban newspaper (Granma) charged the United States with spending hundreds of millions of dollars to fund “subversion” in Cuba and elsewhere in the Americas, especially in those countries that are members of the Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas. The article noted, “U.S. investments meant to facilitate annexing Cuba not only have not […]

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On "failing" or "winning"
August 6, 2009 3 min. read

The “War on Drugs” and the “War on Terror” over the years have both contributed to wearing out a metaphor that was already nearly useless: how can one tell when the war against an abstract concept or an undefined enemy is won or lost? For years, U.S. administrations have employed a similarly troublesome concept in […]

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Dictionary of Thoughts
August 5, 2009 1 min. read

This Saturday will mark the launch of a puzzling (and oddly intriguing) book, El Diccionario de Pensamientos de Fidel Castro—that is, the “Dictionary of Thoughts of Fidel Castro.” How does one alphabetize thoughts? The Cuban state newspaper Granma reported that the volume alphabetizes “key criteria and concepts expressed by the Commander-in-Chief” and provides helpful detail on […]

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The latest from Raul
August 4, 2009 1 min. read

“We are ready to talk about everything, but not to negotiate our political and social system.” On Saturday, Raúl Castro spoke these words at a National Assembly meeting, and further explained, “It’s true there has been a diminution of the aggression and anti-Cuban rhetoric on the part of the [Obama] administration.” President Castro had previously indicated […]

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Edging out Canada
August 2, 2009 1 min. read

Archibald Ritter of the Canadian Foundation for the Americas speaks about Cuba-Canada relations in this video. He says that Canada’s policy toward the island has long been “correct” (presumably as opposed to U.S. policy and the policy of exclusion followed by most of the hemisphere for years). Ritter also pointed out that Canadian agricultural trade […]

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Planning for post-Castro Cuba postponed
August 1, 2009 1 min. read

Raúl Castro postponed on Friday what would be the first Communist Party congress in twelve years. The meeting was to take place by the end of this year, and Castro has not yet set a new date. His reason? The Party must still make a great many preparations—including analyzing current economic conditions to see, as Castro […]

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A few key headliners
July 31, 2009 2 min. read

Cuba to create agency to fight corruption “cancer” Cuba’s National Assembly will set up a powerful new agency on Saturday tasked with fighting corruption, which President Raul Castro has called a “deadly cancer” plaguing the communist-ruled island’s economy. Official information on corruption in Cuba is sparse but, in 2000, Attorney General Juan Escalona, testifying before […]

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Billboard wars: end of an era
July 30, 2009 2 min. read

Several years ago, the U.S. Interests Section in Havana—which functions as the American diplomatic mission in Cuba in the absence of formal relations—installed a “billboard” along the fifth floor of the building: an electronic news ticker running pro-democracy and anti-Castro regime messages in bright crimson letters. Fidel Castro at that time called it “a gross […]

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Upside for teachers in the midst of downturn
July 28, 2009 1 min. read

The Cuban economy is certainly suffering, so much so that Raúl Castro told citizens on Sunday to brace themselves for the tough times to get worse in the short-term, but the Cuban state is not letting such difficulties impede investment in one of its most highly-regarded assets—education. Teachers and other educational professionals will receive raises of […]

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