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I've been reviewing the US and Canadian reportage on the 6th Congress of the Communist Party of Cuba. And it get's worse the further one is from Miami.
Here's an example
They (the media) are talking about more opportunities, leadership transition, right to sell homes and cars, free markets, some are even saying that the ration books  are being eliminated and bringing in young people.
What all these stories miss is that every single change that is being committed to has one collective purpose; to sustain the status quo.
The Castros haven't gone soft, but they know that their economy is a disaster and that the only thing that keeps millions of people from starving is the black market (which of course doesn't pay taxes to sustain the bureaucracy and politburo). People haven't lived on their "public-sector" jobs since at least 1994 - every family has survived on the black market and the pittance they have gotten paid is of no account. So they are making changes to reduce the money they waste in feeding people with ration books and to dip their beak into the work that people do on the side to actually feed themselves.
Here are some of the big truths:
THEY ARE NOT CREATING PRIVATE JOBS
They are cutting payroll. People that now are getting a stipend will no longer get one. But this is no big deal because no one lived on their stipend anyway, but on their black market activity. NOW their black market activity will be reported on and taxed. 
Generating entrepreneurism? In the form we know this, where someone puts a sign up and sells bobble-head Blue Jays or cuts hair - is impossible in Cuba. There are no customers, no one has extra money.
The government will do what they have done with Casas and Paladares - heavily tax them. 
The good news is that, by being fired from their jobs, Cubans will have another 40 hours/week to hustle, buy/sell/trade (but most likely 100% of this extra income will be taxed).
THE OLD FARTS WILL NOT GO QUIETLY
Cuba is run by 80 year olds and will continue to be run by 80 year olds. As evidence, the Castros' appointment of 80 year old Jose Ramon Machado as Raul's successor. (Lest we forget, they had a couple of terrific young guys in Felipe Perez Rogue and Carlos Lage - but they were deemed not communist enough and were fired).
RIGHT TO SELL HOMES AND CARS
People have traditionally earned the right to buy cars through exceptional service to the Revolucion - maybe shooting peasants in Angola. And, on return to Cuba, they have sold or rented these cars to people who can afford them - illegal taxis. People who have nice assigned homes are known to rent them out to people with more money. So long as the CDR doesn't find out it's cool.
TERM LIMITS
Raul and Jose Ramon both get another ten years. They will be ninety. Will they remember that their terms are up?
MORE OPPORTUNITIES FOR BLACKS, INDIO/SPANISH, WOMEN
Sure. The Spanish in Cuba have been enormously fair in promoting equality to all. But, as in the farm yard, pigs are more equal than others. we will see blacks given equal opportunity in getting tourist jobs, and real incomes, when pigs fly.

Cuba is one big lie. Old people lie because they have always had to to survive. Young people lie because it's the only thing they know. It will not be different as long as a single person over sixty, who grew up with Fidel, is in a position of control.
 
 

About the only place to get real facts about Cuba is on a number of blogs (I have a page with links to the most important ones here).

And now the Castros are clamping down on this, by banning Cuban citizens from accessing the web in tourist hotels to update their blogs. This is as anti-freedom as, say, the Canadian Government banning the Star or Globe and one more sign that there is no prospect of human rights in Cuba as long as the Fidel gang are in control. It's not believed, but may be so, that the timing of this restriction next to the Press Freedom Day was not an accident.

Here's Yoani's post

I have gone a couple of days without connecting to the Internet, because a new complication has appeared in the road of alternative bloggers.  Several hotels in the country demand, in order to connect to the web, that you prove a life in a place outside the Cuban archipelago.  The desk clerks tell me—even though they are just as native as I am—that that blue card will not allow me to dive into the vast World Wide Web.  “It’s a decision that comes from above,” a woman says to me, as if a decision of this type could be taken at a level other than the offices of the government. I see it will be hard to change myself into a foreigner overnight.  So the only thing left is to protest against such a ban and to make public the existence of a new apartheid.  I will have to go back in the guise of a tourist, although this time I will have to learn a language as complicated as Hungarian to fool those who sell the access cards.  Maybe I can prowl around the hotels, ready to ask the foreigners to buy—for me—this forbidden entrance key, this safe conduct I need “to not be Cuban.”Link to Yoani's Blog

 
 

I got a comment from a guy I know , "Isn't it amazing that Cuba us opening up even faster than we thought."
I replied that he got it wrong - Cuba isn't opening up, the USA is. Obama is allowing Americans who have Cuban relatives to visit the place when they want and to send more money back.
So he's basically rolling back restrictions put in place by G.W. Bush.
Hardly a big concession.
I can imagine that the Castro's would be a little perturbed to get a taste of what they say they want.
Tens of thousands of Cubans will notice the difference, out of 11 million - one or two tenths of one percent.
There is no half way with the Castros - like a  cockcroach infestation - you have to get rid of every trace of them to be clear of them.
Substantial changes in the well being of Cubans will only come with a complete opening of doors to investors and a complete release of all the people from enslavement and with a complete elimination of the Castro regime.
They cannot, ever, while they draw a breath, to be fair dealers.
They are corrupt and cannot be trusted to follow through with a business deal as agreed to; regardless of what is promised. They will simply not hold up their end.
It will be a long time coming.

 

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