@FakeTaxedBrass Not even the sanctions going on for decades could shake Cuba, but Hasan Piker's pure unadulterated coal made them embrace free-market reforms
Endeudarse en Venezuela se conjuga con esta app...
Una sociedad consumista es pantallera, mediocre, manipulable...
Yo me resisto a descargarla y usar esta trampa...🤨
Parece mentira que haya que aclarar que el nuevo CNE debe tener figuras ecuánimes y no partidistas, pero venimos de una época donde las negociaciones eran "tres rectores para el oficialismo y dos para la oposición".
Ojalá algún día latinoamerica deje de ser la carajita de 16 años con problemas de abandono paterno que se deja preñar de cualquier marginal que le promete el cielo y la tierra.
The notion of reform is not new to Cuba. In the mid 1990s, when Cuba was reeling from the loss of the USSR and Comecon, Castro decided to become a pragmatist and allowed citizens to hold bank accounts, open small businesses, and (de facto) employ others, before allowing farmers to sell their surplus at market prices (like Deng), hold private farmland and give more land-use rights. He then allowed people to sell—individually sell—handicrafts, light manufacturing and consumer goods in public markets; and even allowed foreign direct investment.
Companies like Sheritt International of Canada committed billions of dollars for oil exploration, sugarcane, nickel mining, tourism, etc. This was despite the Helms-Burton Act which was designed to keep other foreign companies from investing in Cuba. The overall effects of the reforms were highly positive, with a growth in output, a fall in the price of the dollar, and greater abundance of foodstuffs and electricity. However…