Letters to the Editor

Letters posted here are associated with the following article:
Yoani Sanchez, the voice of "Generación Y," uses the precious commodity of Internet access to describe her emotions at the "the unnamed one's" resignation.
The letters thread is now closed.
  • Its Corporate America to Cuba's Rescue!

    Corporate America is obviously thrilled at the demise of Fidel's leadership in Cuba.Not only that but native Cuban's apparently just can't wait to live the American via loco! They have dreams of designer clothes and endless merchandise plus all the other trappings of Americana like fast food conglomerates McDonalds,KFC,Pizza Hut and every other American franchise business from Holiday Inn to Safe Way to Roto Ruter! Of course Corporate America will be only too happy to help the Cubans out and give them all the American-type dreams they want plus a whole lot more! Cubans will get other businesses they hadn't even thought of like "McMedical Clinics" and along with Ft.Lauderdale-like Condo Complexes Cubans will also get Corporate "Apartment Buildings Ltd".If Cubans want to live like Americans,US Corporations will surely answer their call,introducing them to other slices of American life like "swing shifts","monthly bill payments","19 per cent credit cards","unemployment insurance","2 week annual vacations"...also income tax,sales tax,user fees,license fees and so very much more! In the future remember this you Castro_fatigued Cubans,you asked America to rescue you from your peaceful mediocrity and boy did America deliver!!!

  • Cuba Times

    Dear Editor

    When we were in Cuba late last year we walked along the Malecon towards a 1950's brutalist looking building. It was Hitchcock like. We were in culture shock at the dilapidated bomb site looking buildings that people were living in, at the 100's of people riding of old semi- trailers that served as buses and the lack of fresh food and electricity. Being Aussies we headed for the beach, where things seemed a little more familiar.

    We were drawn to the building at the other end of the Malecon. It was so looming, modern looking and grand, 20 stories high, so high that very large birds were nesting on it, they were circling around with big lazy swoops.

    They were vultures. The building, once the headquarters of a US bank was the hospital.

    Life in Cuba seems so simple because it is, it's an everyday battle to survive. That sounds cliched but the weariness that must accompany the lack of true basics must be a battle.

    Everyone it seems believes that once Fidel goes then Cuba will change. But it's just that as Yoani expresses - it's impossible to believe he'll ever really go, it's impossible to imagine life without him

    At the moment on the positive side there are street side markets, people trading fresh food and a small number of state licensed home run restaurants, where the food quality was fresher and more varied than the 5 star tourist hotels.

    The cool factor is high; the cars, architecture, music and rum just ripe for a massive influx of curious travelers and cash. But the electricity is highly erratic, the food rationed and the only way to buy fuel is with the convertible currency. Cuban pesos are not accepted. There were no internet cafes, ATM machines or supermarket malls ( or fast food chains either), but there was US television and sport playing in the bars

    People talked about Fidel and the US embargo on trade in the same sentence. It was the embargo that made life so hard. No ship that trades with the US can berth in Habana, no company ( we were told) that trades with the US is allowed to trade with Cuba.

    The embargo prevents medicines, machinery and everyday items from ever landing.

    When we returned to the US and told people that the food was still rationed in Cuba they were shocked and amazed - yet it's less than 200 miles away.

    If the embargo had loosened even a decade ago, trade started and US citizens allowed in, things would be much different. The Cubans would have some hard currency, the country would have some infrastructure; and the city hospital wouldn't be circled by vultures.