By SJ Otto
This is a continuation of the articles I have been working
on since my return to the US 
As it was explained to me, at the top of the Cuban socialist
structure, the government owns the large corporate companies. Some of these
government companies combine with foreign investment, so technically the
foreign parts of these corporations are privately owned. There are farm coops.
We visited one of those while I was in Cuba 
So we went to a cooperative farm in the province  of Cienfuegos 
We were told that the government tells the cooperative how
much they want the coop to plant. The leaders of the coop have a lot of
autonomy to decide what they want to plant.
The coop presented us with noon day meal. We had roasted
pig, all kinds of fruit that was grown locally. We each got a piece of coconut
that had plenty of coconut milk in it that we could drink. It was an
overwhelming good feast.
Rock music
As we traveled through Havana 
I did some research and from Wikipedia, I
was able to see that “Fidel
Castro banned rock music in
1961, for being a corrupt North American influence that didn’t belong in the
new communist Cuba; a position
that ironically was in contradiction with the own liberal vision of Karl Marx with respect to the arts and culture; not to mention that
the international rock groups had embraced in general a leftist ideology by
then.” 
There are those who claim that revolution without rock music
just “aint a good thing.”
Not to worry. That ban was never really enforced and today
there is no ban on rock music at all. People can listen to oldies rock music at
that restaurant and they can listen to any rock music they want. There are
local groups of rock musicians. I was not able to make such connections. If I
ever return I will focus on that. There have been smart ass conservative
pundits who laughed when the Cuban government honored the band Santana, which
was originally headed by Carlos Santana.
Some obnoxious right-wing pundit joked that that group was banned from the
Cuban public. Of course he was full of shit. Santana’s
music was available to the Cuban public. And Santana was a Hispanic group
with roots in Mexico  and with
styles from Cuba 
Last, but not least- The
Cult of personality
While Cuba Cuba South America . After his death he became a
symbol of revolution through-out Latin America, Europe and the US Cuba 
From my own political point of view, I do not favor “the
cult of personality.” In the case of Cuba 
In many ways it can be dismissed in Cuba Cuba 
There is more to come folks!
To be continued=>


 
 
1 comment:
Cooperative training institute in delhi
Cooperative training institute in Noida
Cooperative training institute in Gurgaon
Cooperative training institute in West Delhi
Post a Comment