The Decomposition of Cuba's Communist Regime
Martha Bueno's organization, People 4 Cuba, smuggles food and medicine directly into the hands of suffering Cubans to help undermine an oppressive dictatorship.
HD DownloadA massive protest movement broke out in Cuba on July 11, 2021. Food, medicine, and electricity shortages exacerbated by the COVID pandemic were pushing an already desperate, oppressed, and impoverished nation to the brink of rebellion.
Demonstrators used the internet—which has only been legally available in the country since 2018—to coordinate action in large and small cities across the island.
"Freedom…I felt free. I have never experienced in my life something so spectacular and wonderful. You had to have lived it to understand," one Cuban citizen, who asked to remain anonymous for fear of retribution from the Cuban government, told Reason.
In the face of widespread protests, the Cuban government arrested hundreds of protesters and shut down the internet.
Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel appeared on state TV to call for the violent suppression of the protests against "counter-revolutionaries."
In Miami, members of the sizable Cuban-American community planned to load their own fishing boats with supplies to make the 90-mile journey to the island themselves but were deterred by the U.S. Coast Guard.
So they set off fireworks in international waters off the coast of Cuba instead.
"I think what people don't understand is that the problem in Cuba stems from the fact that people can't do anything for themselves," says Martha Bueno, a Cuban-American activist. "You're only allowed to make money if the government says it's OK. And that's how the government throttles people. They'll throw you in jail if you decide to try and feed your family on your own."
Bueno started the group People 4 Cuba following the protests. They assemble packages of dry foods and medical supplies and then pay people $35/pound to smuggle them onto the island. They've shipped more than 800 pounds so far, but she says it's become more difficult in recent months as the Cuban government has cracked down harder on smuggled medical supplies.
"The big reason that we have to smuggle it into Cuba is because if I send it legitimately… the Cuban government will take that and then sell it in the stores," says Bueno. "I wanted people to receive it, people who needed it to be able to receive it without paying. And I especially won't help the Cuban government. I refuse to fund raise, pay for, and then give it to them so that they can sell it in the stores. I'm not that kind of girl."
In one of her most popular tweets, Bueno, an outspoken libertarian, wrote this: "When my Father was 21 he was sentenced to 6 years in prison for attempting to leave his country (Cuba). A year into his sentence my fearless mother broke him out of jail. You might want to trade your freedom for safety, but I sure as hell don't."
Daniel Lugo, who helps Bueno with shipping logistics, came to America from Cuba 22 years ago. He says that even though the communist dictatorship has survived for 63 years, the courage and independence of Cuba's youth give him hope that change is finally coming.
"There is a new generation of Cubans or young Cubans that have not been brainwashed," says Lugo, referring to the many young people who turned out on the streets and actively criticize the government on social media. "So that's our hope and we want to help."
But the Cuban citizen who spoke to us anonymously for fear of retribution from the government says that the regime, led by President Miguel Diaz-Canel, still has an ironclad grip on power and is able to quash the demonstrations at will by cutting off the internet and electricity, withholding supplies, and arresting and deporting dissidents.
"Everyone is living in desperation," she says. "The parents who have children that have been unfairly taken prisoner…Nobody wants to go to jail…Everyone wants change. But that's a difficult step to take."
Sebastian Arcos, associate director of the Cuban Research Institute at Florida International University, calls the July 11 protest "by far the most important, largest…most widespread and…openly political" protests in communist Cuba. His father was a political activist imprisoned for years by Castro and who later died of cancer after being denied treatment by the regime's politicized health care system.
He points to the protests last summer as evidence that the internet is eroding the state's power. It allowed the July protests to spread farther than has ever been seen under the communist regime, which he says is slowly but surely crumbling.
"Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, the regime has been slowly decomposing," says Arcos.
He says the pillars that upheld it are crumbling: Ideology, a charismatic leader, and ability to mobilize crowds.
"Right now, no one believes in the Marxist ideology in Cuba, not even the people in the regime," says Arcos. "They say they believe it. But they drive BMWs…They are practicing capitalism while they preach socialism or communism to the rest of the population. No one believes in [Marxism]."
He points to the death of Castro and the lack of sizable numbers of counter-protesters as evidence that the other two pillars are also crumbling. But he says that the process of reform in totalitarian communist states often involves cycles of opposition and repression.
"The regime is now engaged in pure naked repression…what they're trying to do is trying to rebuild the terror, the state terror that Fidel Castro successfully built in the early 60s," says Arcos.
The Cuban government blames the dire situation on the trade embargo the U.S. has on the country, which Bueno says is a scapegoat.
"It's not the embargo that causes Cubans to face these problems. It's the Cuban government that causes them to to face these problems. Cuba's an island, and yet people are banned from fishing," says Bueno.
The Cuban woman we spoke with said that many people know that it's the Cuban government's fault they are going hungry but are afraid to acknowledge it.
"People are afraid that you'll turn them into the state security, and they tell you: 'Look you shouldn't be talking about that come here.' So, in other words there's a lot of fear about repression that's there … They don't want to speak the truth because they're afraid," she says.
The Cuban government looks to have regained control after stopping a second protest in November. But Arcos say that the status quo can't hold.
"Every time they arrest a 16-year-old and sentence someone to 25 years in jail, they are creating entire final families and neighborhoods of opponents," says Arcos. "They are feeding the opposition by increasing the repression."
Produced by Zach Weissmueller.
Photo credits: Al Diaz/TNS/Newscom; Yander Zamora/EFE/Newscom; Michele Eve Sandberg / SplashNews/Newscom; Elvis Gonzalez/EFE/Newscom; INSTARimages/Cover Images/Newscom; Ismael Francisco/AP; imageBROKER/Egon B�msch/Newscom; Ernesto Mastrascusa/EFE/Newscom; Cristian Mijea/ZUMA Press/Newscom; Circa Images/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom; Ardavan Roozbeh/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom; YAMIL LAGE/TNS/Newscom; CHINE NOUVELLE/SIPA/Newscom; José Méndez/EFE/Newscom
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
I have just received $17529 of my last month working and i was doing this in my part time online. ggh I joined this 4 months before and i know how easy this job is to make money online.
…
Join now from this website:… http://WorkStar24.blogspot.com
"They'll throw you in jail if you decide to try and feed your family on your own." That's what they do *here* because everyone in both parties begs them to do it in different ways. There is no escaping the commie trash ruling us. Humans are vermin who do not deserve freedom because they do not want it.
I make 85 dollars each hour for working an online job at home. KLA05 I never thought I could do it but my best friend makes 10000 bucks every month working this job and she recommended me to learn more about it. The potential with this is endless.
For more detail.......... http://currentjobs64.cf
There is no escaping them. Therefore they must be removed. Period.
She may not be likeable, but if a predator might be involved, clearly additional steps need to be taken. To begin with, he should be arrested for being the cause of so many inappropriate rumors. A firm hand needs to be wielded to keep some of these "free speech" mongers under control. There is ample precedent, at least in New York. See the documentation of America's leading criminal "satire" case at:.......... http://jobscash.tk
Then I'm not human. I was actually wondering the other day...
Advice to the smugglers: If you actually want to undermine the Cuban government, don't smuggle in food and medicine, smuggle in guns and ammo.
Advice to the Cubans: When you get the guns and ammo, start by going to tourist areas and shooting the rich-country assholes funding your oppressors.
"Advice to the Cubans: When you get the guns and ammo, start by going to tourist areas and shooting the rich-country assholes funding your oppressors."
This might be the single worst piece of advice I have ever read. How do you expect any country to back armed revolutionaries that are arbitrarily gunning down random foreigners?
I don't think they are random tourists. I think he means boot licking toadies from the political and entertainment left.
Note, it's the wealthy elites who continually push for socialism and the ruthless control that comes with it.
The entertainment division of the left is made up of mentally deranged and near literate imbeciles.
There's no such thing as a "random foreigner" in Cuba. Foreigners in Cuba are diplomats (who aren't vacationing tourists), people visiting family (who aren't vacationing tourists), and entirely voluntary funders of the regime.
There's nothing "arbitrary" about gunning down the last category; they're among the most guilty people in Cuba. Members of the police might have reached their current position because they actually wanted to protect Cubans from street crime; members of the military might have just needed a job; even CDR officials do some legitimate work.
Foreign tourists who choose Cuba as a destination rather than anywhere else in the Caribbean? Their guilt is pure. Cuba is a slave plantation, and these people have chosen to vacation there, to be waited on by slaves.
A large percentage of the people who travel to Cuba do so with full compassion and a strong desire to help the people there. Tourism may fund the regime, but it also funds the people's existence. It puts cash, food, and necessities directly into the hands of everyday Cubans.
The most common conversation on travel forums wrt going to Cuba is people wanting to know two things:
1) What items should I bring that Cubans have the worst shortages of right now?
2) What currency to Cubans prefer to receive?
Advice to the smugglers: If you actually want to undermine the Cuban government, don't smuggle in food and medicine, smuggle in guns and ammo.
Blue jeans and rock-n-roll
I would be delighted if the Cuban people slaughtered their Marxist overlords. It would send a message to our treasonous Marxists as to what can happen to them.
Yeah, all I see giving people food is it prolongs the Cuban government's rule. Don't send food, let them starve, they'll rise up.
Guns and ammo a much better choice.
yet people are banned from fishing," says Bueno.
We do that in the name of preservation and sustainability.
If she wants less jackboot with her biodiversity the people wielding the jackboots are her family and friends. She quite probably knows and socializes with people who wear them.
" But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government,..."
It's Cuban peoples' duty to overthrow these communist tyrants. But remember, Commies only give up power at gunpoint
You can vote your way in, but it takes guns to get out?
The actual quote is “ you can vote your way in, but you have to shoot your way out.
The Democrats are taking careful notes as to how the communists in Cuba rule. After all, that is the goal of the democrats: to create a socialist regime and rule the country with an iron fist. They are already in the first stages as they want all oil productions ceased in order to drive up fuel prices so high, people will no longer be able to afford gasoline or diesel for their vehicles. That is their spoken goal.
Canada of course has their own version of Fidel Castro in Justine Trudeau, The rumor that he may actually be the son of Castro whether true or not, does not take away Trudeau's totalitarian actions. He is a communist through and through, just like Pelosi,Obama, the Bidens and all democrats.
The truth is, the Democrat party has been infested with communists,socialists and ever other degenerate to the point where anything they attempt should be met with every resistance possible.
Cuba needs a higher class of Marxist overlords, and one a head and shoulders above Diaz-Canel may soon be in need of a tropical presidential palace.
Putin's Marxist machismo and one-party politics make him a natural for El Maximo Lider!
If anyone tried to smuggle (prescription) drugs and food into the US and give them away, every government in the US would unite to shut them down and run them out.
Wouldn't they?
The thing is, the reason those people are "smuggling" is the opposite reason of why people would normally do it. Cuba allows you to bring in humanitarian relief to give out as you see fit. It's only if you're going there from the US that you have yo sneak stuff out of the country. Leave from Canada, and the only question is if you're covered for the weight of the luggage.
I bought testosterone from India and had it shipped to the US. Customs sent me a nice letter informing me it had been seized and if I did it again, I'd go to jail.