The reasons why Cubans protest can be confusing for those that aren’t familiar with our story to understand but it was perfectly explained in this interview.
Thank you Iskra for this interview with Rayola Osanya.
Cuba. Some might believe they are supporting Cuban people instead of the dictatorship.
#AbajoLaDictadura #DownWithTheDictatorship #LibertadParaLosPresosPoliticos #FreedomForPoliticalPrisoners #Cuba #NYC #UnitedNations #🇨🇺
The sanctions don’t affect the wealth of GAESA tho???? 🤔 conglomerate for the Castro’s to steal everything left of Cuba.
You do not represent the Cuban American voice. @Cubans4Cuba do not represent us.
He blames the regime for blackouts in one breath and sanctions Cuba's entire fuel supply chain in the next.
Sanctioning a nation's gasoline during its worst energy crisis in decades has a name: collective punishment.
Havana Syndrome is the name given to a series of unexplained health incidents reported by U.S. diplomats, intelligence personnel, military members, and their families stationed around the world. Symptoms have included sudden headaches, dizziness, cognitive difficulties, hearing
disturbances, and other neurological issues.
Reports indicate Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard is working to declassify information related to Havana Syndrome, also known as Anomalous Health Incidents.
While no full document release has been confirmed,…
@pslnational He built his wealth and his wealth employs many others. Capitalism creates wealth and rewards those that put the effort to create vs communism that takes and creates nothing except feed corruption.
#Cuba “The regime is an illegal system that simply kidnapped and imprisoned me.” From prison, Cuban artist and prisoner of conscience Luis Manuel Otero Alcántara denounces a dictatorship that has kept him behind bars for five years without justice or due process.
“By virtue of its power, it has kept me behind bars for five years, and they could extend my confinement without justification.”
https://t.co/HJn9hlprlt
Meanwhile, The Wall Street Journal publishes lyrics sent from prison by fellow political prisoner Maykel Castillo “Osorbo”:
“I knew the dictatorship like no one else, I endured brutal beatings like no one else, I never asked why my warriors left, I simply stayed in my homeland to endure the blows.”
Two voices. Two prisoners. One reality: Cuba’s dictatorship continues to jail artists for speaking freely while the world listens to their words from behind bars.
✍️I invite you to read my op ed on Luis Manuel Otero https://t.co/4IcRFRhX1Q
#Canada #HumanRights @LMOAlcantara
Before anyone rushes to blame a new U.S. administrations, it is important to remember that these problems were already well underway. The long lines, shortages, blackouts, inflation, and mass migration are symptoms of a failed state and decades of economic mismanagement.
The scene in this photo did not begin in 2025 or 2026.
Cuba’s cash crisis is the result of years of economic decline, runaway inflation, currency distortions, shortages, and failed communist policies that have steadily weakened the country’s banking system….
The crisis became increasingly visible after the regime’s 2021 monetary reforms and has continued to worsen ever since.
Today, Cubans are waiting hours outside banks just to withdraw a maximum of 5,000 pesos—worth less than $10 on the informal market.