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June 17, 2023
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Answering Díaz-Canel and denying Granma

Díaz-Canel, Periódico Granma

LAS TUNAS, Cuba. – The newspaper Granmaofficial organ of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Cuba (PCC), in an editorial titled The revolutionary guard will never neglectpublished last Wednesday, quotes the first secretary of the PCC Miguel Díaz-Canel Bermúdez when, referring to the United States, the opposition and the independent press, he said: “the powerful neighbor continues to be generous with the ‘loans’ to destroy the revolution , and each year it allocates tens of millions of dollars to those who offer to subvert the internal order of Cuba, either in person or via the Internet.”

Answering Díaz-Canel, it would be necessary to say that those “borrowed” to destroy what he calls the “Revolution” are not what have maintained power in Cuba for more than 64 years, destroying the dream of social justice for which all Cubans , not only the Castroites, fought and gave their lives, and that was quickly transformed, through brainwashing, the manipulation of the crowds and personal ambitions, into the “dictatorship of the proletariat”, which is nothing more than a prosaic dictatorship of the elite .

The civil war against the Batista dictatorship, like the wars against Spanish colonialism, was waged by rich and poor Cubans, professionals and proletarians, and all alike, starved, slept on the ground and not infrequently treated their wounds and illnesses. with herbs from the mountain. But once the victory was achieved, a few became political and military hierarchies, owners of life and property, supposedly, by mandate of the “people.”

And since we are going to talk about criminality, denying Granma… Go to the prisons, Mr. Díaz-Canel, and see for yourself the origin of the Cuban prison population…! No! They are not like the prisoners of Batista and the political prisoners of Fidel Castro in the first years of the “Revolution”, who were businessmen or sons of businessmen, doctors, lawyers, engineers, workers, peasants.

No, Mr. Diaz-Canel! The prisoners of his government, common and political, those of 11J, the thieves, the rustlers, are not the sons of heads of the PCC or of the central administration of the State, and very few of them went to universities, and many of them they are black, and many are residents of slums. Haven’t you, the magistrates of the Supreme Court, the Attorney General of the Republic, the Ministry of the Interior, or the jurists dedicated to Criminal Sciences, wondered what the State should do based on the origin of the crime and the prison population? to, strategically, instead of prophylaxis against probable delinquents, clean up society as a whole? Well, I had to.

Mr. Díaz-Canel, the “borrowers”, those who have done the most damage to Cuba and Cubans, have not been paid with United States dollars, but with money and perks from the Cuban State led by the PCC, by Fidel Castro, by Raúl Castro, for yourself. The “borrowed” are the fans of speeches, those who embezzle, those who make the nation’s assets their private capital. And I’m not saying it, Fidel Castro himself said it: “This revolution can be destroyed. We, yes, we can destroy it, and it would be our fault.” The ones who can destroy what you call “Revolution” are yourselves. Don’t blame the United States or those of us who oppose communism as a single, dictatorial party.

As stated Granma, they say “dozens of daily lies or magnification of criminal acts wrapped in a grotesque crime report to offer the world and the millions of network users a destructive image of our society.” The PCC newspaper affirms that “slander and the attempt to sow distrust in the forces of order” crash every minute with each action carried out by “members of the National Revolutionary Police.” As if that were not enough, with negligent triumphalism, then criminal, its editorial affirms: “The revolutionary guard will never be neglected.”

denying GranmaIt is well known that neither in the fields nor in the cities of Cuba does such a “revolutionary guard” exist. Such a guard is pure lie. If there were citizen security in Cuba, people’s homes would not be fenced off like cells and the corrals for cows, oxen, horses and cattle in general, would not be fortified with hundreds of tons of steel throughout the country, like engineering works of armies, and I’m not saying it, it’s in sight.

And we do not try to slander, defame or undermine confidence in the forces of order, but to be objective seeking the public good. and come Granma to Puerto Padre and check these facts: in the article Cops and Robbers: Dr. Roger, One Lucky Man We said that “impunity is making crime jump to tragicomic levels”, and we gave the example of the theft of a horse in the pen in a sugarcane cooperative, and how, to steal the animal, the “thieves tied up and knocked down the horse, making it go lying down between the fences of the corral. It seems as if while police competitiveness declines, criminal talent increases.” Well then, making shepherds and field supervisors go on foot, with that same modus operandishortly after, the thieves stole from that same cooperative five more horses that, until this week, have not appeared either alive or dead.

Who denigrates the police is the government itself denying them the means to do their job. If the Revolutionary Armed Forces (FAR) and State Security have enough equipment to keep the regime in power, to take care of public safety, the Cuban police lack not only the essential air, naval, and mountain resources, but even of motorcycles, jeeps or horses for the heads of sectors and operational officers to carry out their work. If the authorities do not carry out an objective study of the operational situation, if those who carry it out take care of their positions and not the tranquility of the citizens, with triumphalisms such as those expressed in its editorial by the PCC newspaper, crime can reach alarming figures in Cuba. Let’s avoid it.

OPINION ARTICLE
The opinions expressed in this article are the sole responsibility of the person who issues them and do not necessarily represent the opinion of CubaNet.

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