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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Broken_Clock who wrote (938312)6/5/2016 6:59:48 PM
From: Brumar89  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1574854
 
You yourself said Saddam used WMD's but you claim you would have known he didn't have any in 2002.



To: Broken_Clock who wrote (938312)6/5/2016 7:11:36 PM
From: Brumar89  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1574854
 
Fidel has bragged about Cuban prostitutes have college degrees .. which shows the poverty of the country. Tourism to Cuba TODAY is based on prostitution, including child prostitution.

“One of the greatest benefits of the revolution is that even our prostitutes are college graduates,” Castro told Oliver Stone.

Youth Prostitution Feeding Cuba;s Tourist Industry
  • Posted by Sandra M. Bueno on July 28, 2009 at 8:30pm
  • View Blog


  • On the eve of Art and Compassion Inc’s Ministry, Youth Outreach Trip to Cuba, (the ministry organization I have partnered with), I post this article I found and add a video that will shock, perturb, disgust and alter you, like i... Most especially if you have children and care for those who are abused because of their weakness and social conditioning. (Please have the video translated if you don’t understand Spanish).

    SEX TOURISM AND CHILD PROSTITUTION IN CUBA Arch Kielly, LtCol, USAF, Retired
    {posted from: http://tinyurl.com/hiltonhotelsban}

    Communist Cuba is attempting to right its economic problems by permitting the sexual trade of its children for badly needed monetary resources.

    A generation of young people may have been invested to make Cuba’s tourism more appealing to foreign tourists looking for more than beautiful beaches and soft trade breezes.

    Fidel Castro maintains his grip on the Cuban people as long as Cuba is able to produce funds to keep his regime afloat. Take away tourism dollars and Castro may self destruct and free a generation of Cuba’s children from sexual exploitation.

    Tourism is Cuba’s most important moneymaker, generating almost $2 billion last year. In Spain alone, twenty flights leave for Havana every week, carrying to the Caribbean island a yearly total of some 200,000 single male tourists, all in search of cut-price sex. (Tunku Varadarajan, “Time-bomb that Flies in From Havana,” The Times, July 10, 1996. Lexis-Nexis document.)

    Most tourists come from Canada, Spain and Italy. Tourism has recently replaced sugar as the single most important export in the economy. Much of this tourism, however, centers on travel for sex. Foreign tour companies use code words such as “Cuba Amor” to advertise package tours. At least one Spanish travel company offers a catalogue of Cuban women who would serve as companions during a tourist’s stay. (Adams, p. 1A).

    By 1995 the Italian travel magazine Viaggiare recognized Cuba as the “paradise of sexual tourism,” awarding it five stars for its “general erotic level.” According to the magazine, Cuba beat out such competitors as Brazil and Thailand. (Adams, p. 1A; Dalia Acosta, Culture Tourism: Cuba Brushes up its Tourist Image, Interpress Service, Sept. 19, 1997. Lexis-Nexis).

    Some reports suggest girls will sell sex acts for less than $10 and sometimes for as little as $3. Inexperienced women and girls can be persuaded and/or tricked into spending a whole night with a client for the cost of a meal, a few drinks or small gift. “Habitual sex tourists state that it costs them less to spend two weeks indulging themselves in Cuba than it does in other centers of sex tourism, such as the Philippines and Thailand. (O’Connell Davidson, p.41).

    Sex tourism is often a means to satisfy very specific sexual preferences. Many men choose to travel to particular destinations because they know that it is possible to pursue their tastes more cheaply and safely. Pedophiles are an obvious example of this type of sex tourist, but more common are men who have a preference for experiencing multiple, anonymous sexual encounters with teenagers and women in their early 20s.

    Sexual access to girls between the ages of 14 and 16 is not difficult to attain, and girls between the ages of 16 and 18 are very accessible. More disturbing still, such tourists are paying older Cuban women and men, often prostitutes themselves, to procure 14 and 15-year old boys and girls for them.

    Sex tourists are also frequently drawn to Cuba because of the prospect of exotic encounters that contain a racial component. This is especially the case for those consumers who find it difficult to satisfy racialized fantasies at home.

    As is the case elsewhere in Latin America, sex tourists view Cuban women as caliente–hot. In addition Davidson reports than many sex tourists are either openly racist and/or fascinated with Black sexuality, which they imagine to be untamed and uninhibited. (O’Connell Davidson, p. 46) Interestingly, the government of Cuba uses racial stereotypes “showcasing ‘traditional’ Afro-Cuban religious rituals and art, ‘traditional’ Afro-Cuban music, and of course, Afro-Cuban women (Fusco, p. 67). in conjunction with other images of Cuba as tropical, exotic and full of scantily clad native women.

    These same stereotypes carry over to the sex tourism industry and feed into the sexual fantasies of the male tourist. As Davidson notes, many more jineteras are Afro-Cuban as opposed to mixed race or white. (O’Connell Davidson, p. 45. See also Fusco, p. 64).

    The explosive growth of sex tourism in Cuba in the 1990s has coincided with the island becoming a major destination for international tourists. The Cuban government began to emphasize foreign tourism as a development tool in the 1980s, in part as a response to a stagnant economy. (Espino, p. 153; 158). Said one foreign diplomat of the boom in prostitution, “the decline and fall of Cuba’s economy and the turn to attracting foreigners has made it inevitable. The only way for most of these kids to survive is to sell themselves. (Freed, p 1).

    The Fourth Party Congress in 1991 declared tourism to be “an important source of revenue for economic development. (Quoted in Espino, p. 147). The government has, particularly through government agency INTUR and state-run corporations Cubanacán and Gaviota, built up tourism infrastructure and welcomed foreign investment through joint ventures in hotels. It has also aggressively marketed Cuba as a tourist destination abroad, especially in Europe and Canada. To at least some degree the government has used sexuality to promote tourism.

    The government has been aware of the explosion of sex tourism for some time and officially has distinguished prostitution under socialism from that of earlier periods: “this prostitution was different from that prostitution: that prostitution was what women did to buy food for their starving infants; this prostitution reflected a malaise born of boredom and frustration rather than economic desperation. (Gordon, p. 20).

    Reflecting the official line, Fidel Castro remarked in 1993 that thanks to socialism Cuban girls must make the cleanest and best-educated prostitutes in the world. (Thomas Von Mouillard, Sex Tourism Arrives in Cuba, The Ottawa Citizen, March 13, 1993, p. K5. (Lexis-Nexis); Adams, p. A1) Castro said in 1992 in a speech to the Cuban National Assembly: “There are no women forced to sell themselves to a man, to a foreigner, to a tourist. Those who do so do it on their own, voluntarily, and without any need for it. We can say that they are highly educated hookers and quite healthy, because we in the country with the lowest numbers of AIDS cases… Therefore, there is truly no prostitution healthier that Cuba’s. He also said in 1992 that: “Cuban women become jineteras (prostitutes) because they like sex.”

    Cuba, which traditionally has had one of the world’s lowest levels of positive HIV cases, has seen an increase there and in other sexually transmitted diseases. (Adams, p. 1A). The number of international tourist arrivals to Cuba has continued to rise. The Cuban economy, while recovering somewhat compared to the early and mid-1990s, is still struggling and most ordinary Cubans continue to scramble for scarce dollars. With no new large-scale crackdowns having taken place, thousands of sex workers continue to work openly at Varadero, Havana, and other tourist centers on the island.

    The New Republic, June 2000 claimed, “The government referred to the women as “promoters of tourism.” Travel Intelligence, AA Gil 2001 reported that “The sex, of course, is what most of the tourist come to Havana for. Have no doubts about this. They’re not here to show solidarity with 40 years of continuous revolution, or to study architecture, and they certainly aren’t for the food”. Received on Wed Feb 07 2007 – 23:35:36 PST

    http://network.nshp.org/profiles/blogs/youth-prostitution-feeding



    To: Broken_Clock who wrote (938312)6/5/2016 7:21:01 PM
    From: Brumar891 Recommendation

    Recommended By
    FJB

      Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1574854
     
    Before socialism, Cuba was one of most advanced Latin American countries:

    .... Cuba, the "Pearl of the Antilles," though by no means a paradise, was not, as many believe, an economically backward country. Castro himself admitted that while there was poverty, there was no economic crisis and no hunger in Cuba before the Revolution. (See Maurice Halperin: The Rise and Fall of Fidel Castro, University of California, 1972, pgs. 24, 25, 37) Armando Hart, a member of Castro's innermost ruling group, made the extremely significant observation that:
    . . . it is certain that capitalism had attained high levels of organization, efficiency and production that declined after the Revolution. . . (Juventud Rebelde, November 2, 1969; quoted by Rene Dumont, Is Cuba Socialist?, p. 85)
    Paul A. Baran, an ardent pro-Castroite in the equally ardent Monthly Review pamphlet, Reflections on the Cuban Revolution (1961) substantiates what every economist, as well as amateurs like Castro, has been saying:
    ...the Cuban Revolution was born with a silver spoon in its mouth. . .the world renowned French agronomist, Rene Dumont, has estimated that if properly cultivated as intensively as South China, Cuba could feed fifty million people. . . the Cuban Revolution is spared the painful, but ineluctable compulsion that has beset preceding socialist revolutions: the necessity to force tightening of people's belts in order to lay the foundations for a better tomorrow. . .(p. 23)
    Theodore Draper quotes Anial Escalante, (before he was purged by Castro) one of the leading communists, who admitted that:
    ...in reality, Cuba was not one of the countries with the lowest standard of living of the masses in America, but on the contrary, one of the highest standards of living, and it was here where the first great . . . democratic social revolution of the continent burst forth. . . If the historical development had been dictated by the false axiom [revolutions come first in poorest countries] the revolution should have been first produced in Haiti, Colombia or even Chile, countries of greater poverty for the masses than the Cuba of 1958. . . (quoted in Draper's Castro's Revolution: Myths and Realities; New York, 1962, p. 22)

    ..........

    ...before Castro, Cuba was one of the richest underdeveloped countries in the world, with Gross National Product, per-capita income in the mid 1950s of $360, Cuba was well ahead of Japan ($254 per-capita) and Spain ($254 per-capita)... (Robert Blackburn, quoted in the anthology Fidel Castro's Personal Revolution: 1953-1973; New York, 1975, p. 134)
    • Cuba had one automobile for every 39 inhabitants, compared with Argentina's one for every 60 and Mexico's one for every 91 people.
    • Cuba had one radio for every 5 people, second in Latin America only to Argentina with one for every 3 inhabitants.
    • the wage rate for industrial workers in Cuba was the highest in Latin America (as of 1957) and 9th highest in the world.
    • agricultural wages were the highest in Latin America
    • Cuba's mortality rate of 7 per thousand was the lowest in Latin America. Its infant mortality rate was by far the lowest.
    • Cuba had one doctor for every 1,000 inhabitants, exceeded only by Uruguay with one for every 800, and Argentina for every 760 people.
    • Cuba ranked fifth in Latin American manufacturing.
    • Though living standards were much lower than in the U.S., Canada and Western Europe, Cuba's was the third highest in Latin America, and almost as high as Italy's.
    • Cuba had more railroads per square mile than any other country in the world.
    • Its one telephone for 38 persons was exceeded only by the U.S. with one for every 3 and Argentina with one for every 13; way ahead of Russia's with one for every 580 people.
    ...........

    http://dwardmac.pitzer.edu/anarchist_archives/bright/dolgoff/cubanrevolution/chapter7.html

    Socio-Economic Conditions in Pre-Castro Cuba*


    Introduction



    • In the 1950's Cuba was, socially and economically, a relatively advanced country, certainly by Latin American standards and, in some areas, by world standards.

    • Cuba's infant mortality rate was the best in Latin America -- and the 13th lowest in the world.

    • Cuba also had an excellent educational system and impressive literacy rates in the 1950's.

    • Pre-Castro Cuba ranked third in Latin America in per capita food consumption.

    • Cuba ranked first in Latin America and fifth in the world in television sets per capita.

    • Pre-Castro Cuba had 58 daily newspapers of differing political hues and ranked eighth in the world in number of radio stations.



    Health



    • Cuba's infant mortality rate of 32 per 1,000 live births in 1957 was the lowest in Latin America and the 13th lowest in the world, according to UN data. Cuba ranked ahead of France, Belgium, West Germany, Japan, Austria, Italy, and Spain.
    • In 1955, life expectancy in Cuba was among the highest at 63 years of age; compared to 52 in other Latin American countries, 43 in Asia, and 37 in Africa.

    • In terms of physicians and dentists per capita, Cuba in 1957 ranked third in Latin America, behind only Uruguay and Argentina -- both of which were more advanced than the United States in this measure. Cuba's 128 physicians and dentists per 100,000 people in 1957 was the same as the Netherlands, and ahead of the United Kingdom (122 per 100,000 people) and Finland.


    Education

    Cuba has been among the most literate countries in Latin America since well before the Castro revolution, when it ranked fourth.

    Table 1. Latin American Literacy Rates


    Country

    Latest Data Available
    for 1950-53
    (Percent)


    2000
    (Percent)


    % Increase

    Argentina

    87

    97

    11.5%

    Cuba

    76

    96

    26.3%

    Chile

    81

    96

    18.5%

    Costa Rica

    79

    96

    21.5%

    Paraguay

    68

    93

    36.8%

    Colombia

    62

    92

    48.4%

    Panama

    72

    92

    27.8%

    Ecuador

    56

    92

    64.3%

    Brazil

    49

    85

    73.5%

    Dominican Republic

    43

    84

    95.3%

    El Salvador

    42

    79

    88.1%

    Guatemala

    30

    69

    130%

    Haiti

    11

    49

    345.5%
    Source: UN Statistical Yearbook 1957, pp. 600-602; UN Statistical Yearbook 2000, pp. 76-82.
    a. Data for 1950-53 are age 10 and over. Data for 1995 are age 15 and over, reflecting a change in common usage over this period.
    b. Data for Argentina 1950-53 is current as 1947 data, the latest available, and reflects ages 14 and over.
    c. Data for 2000 are age 15 and over.


    ..............
    The number of automobiles in Cuba per capita has actually fallen since the 1950's, the only country in the hemisphere for which this is the case. (Unfortunately, due to Castro’s unwillingness to publish unfavorable data, the latest available data for Cuba are from 1988.) UN data show that the number of automobiles per capita in Cuba declined slightly between 1958 and 1988, whereas virtually every other country in the region -- with the possible exception of Nicaragua -- experienced very significant increases in this indicator. Within Latin America, Cuba ranked second only to Venezuela in 1958, but by 1988, had dropped to ninth.

    Table 3. Latin America: Passenger Cars per Capita (a)


    Country

    1958
    (Cars per 1,000 inhabitants)


    1988
    (Cars per 1,000 inhabitants)


    Annual Average
    Growth (Percent)


    Argentina

    19

    129

    6.6

    Uruguay

    22

    114

    5.3

    Venezuela

    27

    94

    4.3

    Brazil

    7

    73

    8.1

    Mexico

    11

    70

    6.4

    Panama

    16

    56

    4.3

    Chile

    7

    52

    6.9

    Costa Rica

    13

    47

    4.4

    Cuba

    24

    23

    -0.1

    Dominican Republic

    3

    23

    7.3

    Colombia

    6

    21

    4.3

    Paraguay

    3

    20

    6.5

    Peru

    7

    18

    3.1

    Ecuador

    2

    15

    7

    Bolivia

    3

    12

    4.7

    Guatemala

    6

    11

    2

    El Salvador

    7

    10

    1.2

    Nicaragua

    7

    8

    0.5

    Honduras

    3

    6

    2.3
    (a)-For most countries, excludes police and military cars. (b)-Excludes all government cars. (c)- Includes police cars. (d)-Includes cars no longer in use. (e)-1957 (f)-1956 (g)-1987.



    • Telephones are another case in point. While every other country in the region has seen its teledensity increase at least two fold -- and most have seen even greater improvements. Cuba has remained frozen at 1958 levels. In 1995, Cuba had only 3 telephone lines per 100 people, placing it 16th out of 20 Latin American countries surveyed and far behind countries that were less advanced than Cuba in this measure in 1958, such as Argentina (today 16 lines per 100 inhabitants), Costa Rica (16), Panama (11), Chile (13), and Venezuela (11). More recently, as a result of a joint venture with an Italian firm, there has been considerable investment, but current data is still unavailable from standard sources.


    • Cuba also has not kept pace with the rest of Latin America in terms of radios per capita. During the late 1950's, Cuba ranked second only to Uruguay in Latin America, with 169 radios per 1,000 people. (Worldwide, this put Cuba just ahead of Japan.) At that time, Argentina and Cuba were very similar in terms of this measure. Since then, the number of radios per capita for Argentina has grown three times as fast as for Cuba. Cuba also has been surpassed by Bolivia, Venezuela, El Salvador, Honduras, and Brazil in this indicator.


    • In terms of television sets per capita, 1950's Cuba was far ahead of the rest of Latin America and was among the world's leaders. Cuba had 45 television sets per 1,000 inhabitants in 1957, by far the most in Latin America and fifth in the world, behind only Monaco, the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom. In fact, its closest competitor in Latin America was Venezuela, which had only 16 television sets per 1,000 people. By 1997, Cuba had increased from 170 televisions to 239 per thousand, behind Mexico (272 per capita) and tying Uruguay for second place. Of these two countries, Uruguay in 1957 had fewer than one television per 1,000 people.
      .........................
      http://ctp.iccas.miami.edu/FACTS_Web/Cuba%20Facts%20Issue%2043%20December.htm

      Released by the Bureau of Inter-American Affairs, February 9, 1998. Revised June 2002

      SUMMARY AND INTRODUCTION

      An enduring myth is that 1950's Cuba was a socially and economically backward country whose development was jump-started by the Castro government. In fact, according to readily available historical data, Cuba was a relatively advanced country in 1958, certainly by Latin American standards and, in some areas, by world standards. The data show that Cuba has at best maintained what were already high levels of development in health and education, but at an extraordinary cost to the overall welfare of the Cuban people. These include access to "basics" such as adequate levels of food and electricity, but also access to consumer goods, the availability of which have increased significantly in other Latin American countries in recent decades.

      In this study, the most recent data available has been used. Castro does not allow regular surveys on certain Cuban topics that would ultimately reflect the continuing steady decline of the Cuban economy. Therefore, the data provided is not as current as that which would be used in ideal circumstances.

      It is true that Cuba's infant mortality rate is the second best in Latin America today, but it was the best in Latin America -- and the 13th lowest in the world -- in pre-Castro Cuba. Cuba also has improved the literacy of its people, but Cuba had an excellent educational system and impressive literacy rates in the 1950's.

      ..............
      http://www.state.gov/p/wha/ci/cu/14776.htm

      ..... In fact, pre-Castro Cuba enjoyed a higher standard of living than most of Europe, from which it attracted a flood of immigrants–to say nothing of next door Haiti, whose residents often jumped on rafts desperate to enter pre-Castro Cuba.

    Think about that for a second, amigos: people used to jump on rafts and take to the high seas trying to enter Cuba. Yet NPR would have us believe Cuba was as poor as Haiti!

    “One feature of the Cuban social structure is a large middle class,” found a report from the Geneva-based International Labor Organization in 1957. “44 percent of Cubans (a higher percentage than Americans at the time) are covered by social legislation. Cuban workers are more unionized (proportional to the population) than U.S. workers. The average wage for an 8-hour day in Cuba in 1957 is higher than for workers in Belgium, Denmark, France, and Germany. According to the report, the average daily wage for an agricultural worker was also among the highest in the world, higher than in France, Belgium, Denmark, or West Germany. Cuban labor receives 66.6 percent of gross national income. In the U.S. the figure is 70 percent, in Switzerland 64 per cent.”

    When no NPR “reporters” are within hearing range, Commies can be extremely frank with each other. Early in the Cuban revolution, for instance, Czech economist Radoslav Selucky visited Cuba and gaped: “We thought Cuba was underdeveloped except for a few sugar refineries?!” he wrote upon returning to Prague. “This is false. Almost a quarter of Cuba’s labor force was employed in industry where the salaries were equal to those in the U.S.!”

    The Castro brothers and Che Guevara converted a nation with a higher per capita income than half of Europe, the lowest inflation rate in the Western hemisphere, a huge influx of immigrants, and whose unionized workers enjoyed the 8th-highest industrial wages in the world into one that repels Haitians. And this after being lavished with Soviet subsidies that totaled almost ten Marshall Plans (into a nation of 6.4 million). This economic feat defies not only the laws of economics but seemingly the very laws of physics. One place where Cuban exiles agree wholeheartedly with Castro and Che is regarding their exalted posts as third world icons. Castro and Che certainly converted Cuba into a third world nation.

    ........http://humanevents.com/2014/06/27/npr-shills-for-socialism/