Castros’ successor, Miguel Diaz-Canel, takes over in Cuba, pledges ‘continuity’

As stated days ago in this blog, one communist scum-bag steps down and another communist scum-bag is there to take his place. 

These cockroaches claim to do a great deal of planning. Yet Cuba is in shambles! Their future ‘plans’ will produce little more than their almost 60 years of planning did.

When the Castros took over Cuba on January 1, 1959, Cuba produced over 40% of the sugar consumed in the entire planet. Today, it barely produces enough sugar to serve its own people.

In addition to sugar, Cuba was known for its cigars and rum. When the Castros took over, the cigar companies left for Santo Domingo, Nicaragua and Mexico; the Bacardi family took its rum to Puerto Rico.

For the record, Cuban cigars are mostly crap these days. Not only is the tobacco leaf itself of poorer quality, but the construction of the cigar (the rolling process) is generally quite bad. The result of which are cigars known as ‘plugs’ with an extremely bad draw as compared with those in the pre-Castro era which were known to have a silky-smooth draw.

Anyway, who really cares about Cuba? The bottom line is that thanks to Fidel, Raul and their band of ass-sniffers, Cuba is a sewage pit. As history has proven time and time again, socialism/communism doesn’t work, it’s a flawed ideology. TGO

Refer to story below. Source: The Washington Post 

The National Assembly’s procedure ended Castro rule after nearly 60 years. Yet everything about the transition Thursday suggested a path ahead of supremely cautious change with a heavy dose of continuity.

HAVANA — In his first hour as Cuba’s new head of state, Miguel Díaz-Canel sought to make one thing clear: Raúl Castro may no longer be president, but he is still the power to be reckoned with in this island nation.

“Raúl … will be key to the process of making the most important decisions on the future of the nation,” Díaz-Canel, 57, said Thursday on the floor of Cuba’s National Assembly after he was formally named the country’s new head of state.

The National Assembly’s procedure ended Castro rule here after nearly 60 years, shifting power toward a younger generation born after Cuba’s revolution. Yet everything about the transition Thursday suggested a path ahead of supremely cautious change with a heavy dose of continuity.

Raúl Castro, who took over from his older brother Fidel Castro in 2008, will remain the head of Cuba’s powerful Communist Party. Insiders say he may leave Havana, moving to the southeastern city of Santiago, not far from the family farm where he and his brother grew up, and which Fidel later nationalized. Fidel Castro died in 2016 at age 90.

But any move to the countryside should not be seen as Raúl Castro fading into the background.

On Thursday, Castro followed Díaz-Canel’s stiff, serious speech with a far longer, more animated and sometimes playful discourse that stole the thunder of the day. Seeming supremely comfortable, he often digressed, tackling issues from diversity to Cuban history to climate change.

He openly described the choice of Díaz-Canel as a hand-picked succession, calling him the only one of a group of politicians in their 50s who had risen to the occasion of top leadership

“His election is not by chance,” Castro said. “It was planned by us in group, and we decided that he’s the best option in our opinion.”

Castro vowed to stay on as head of the Communist Party until his term ends in 2021, a post he said he hoped Díaz-Canel would take afterward.

“When I’m gone, and that’s in the future,” Castro said, “he will assume as first secretary of the Communist Party, if he does a good job. That’s how it’s been planned.”

Signaling reforms to come, however, Castro said that in July, Cuba would create a new committee with the aim of revamping its constitution. The socialist character of Cuba, he said, would not change. But he acknowledged that “we thought, at this point, we would have advanced more” on the road toward greater economic reforms.

“We haven’t renounced the pursuit of private-sector work,” he said.

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Though highly symbolic for Cuba, the narrative of the end of the Castro era was largely played down here by state media, which sought to portray the transition as an exercise in continuity.

Díaz-Canel’s name was put forward Wednesday as the sole candidate to head Cuba’s Council of State, a post that effectively serves as the presidency. On Thursday, officials announced the results of the vote: 603 to 1 backing his nomination as Cuba’s new leader. Díaz-Canel, a consensus-builder, is almost sure to make decisions in concert with the country’s Communist brain trust.

At a time when a thaw in U.S.-Cuban relations under President Barack Obama has turned to winter under President Donald Trump, Díaz-Canel opened no immediate window in his speech for improved relations.

Instead, he paid homage to the Castro brothers, Raúl and Fidel, as well as “the historic generation” of older revolutionaries who have run Cuba for the decades. He vowed to bring “continuity to the Cuban revolution,” and talked of cautious change, but always in the context of Cuban socialism.

“There is no room for those who aspire to a capitalist restoration,” he said. “We will defend the revolution and continue to prefect socialism.”

Always the more reform-minded of the Castro brothers, Raúl Castro leaves the presidency having set in motion an important period of political and economic reforms to Cuba’s one-party state — including the introduction of term limits, the lifting of travel restrictions for Cubans and legalization of the sale of real estate.

But he left just as much undone, and Díaz-Canel is now poised to inherit a series of significant problems. He must confront the task of melding, for instance, Cuba’s outdated and cumbersome two-currency system into one.

Last year, Cuba also put the brakes on the issuing of new licenses for small private businesses, mostly restaurants, taxi companies and small Airbnb operations aimed at the tourism industry. Cuban officials argued that they needed to ensure that such businesses were paying taxes and obeying the law.

But some observers said rank-and-file party officials also resented that upstart entrepreneurs were obtaining a higher standard of living than they could. It will be up to Díaz-Canel to find a balance between those in Cuba who are reluctant to embrace economic change and those who are clamoring for it.

“My guess is that he will follow the path of economic reform, because he has to,” said John Caulfield, former chief of the U.S. Interests Section in Havana from 2011 to 2014. “If he doesn’t, he runs the risk of failure, of growing discontent. And he may have a honeymoon period where, if he wants to, he can get things done.”

About The Great One

Am interested in science and philosophy as well as sports; cycling and tennis. Enjoy reading, writing, playing chess, collecting Spyderco knives and fountain pens.
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