Millions of shoppers passing up buying 'Made in USA' or an American brand name made in Vietnam, Thailand or Indonesia, when an item from Japan or China is just as acceptable, might just be a little unsettling with all the other troubles America seems to be having these days.
What the Hell! When all is said and done and everything settles down, ending the embargo might be the best thing for all sides in both countries.
- Cubans in Cuba could lead more enjoyable and normal lives with the latest modernities.
- The Communist Party of Cuba could focus on what is most important for the welfare of Cubans, rather than be focused and concerned about finances and providing food.
- Americans aware of the genocidal crimes of their government against Cuba and most all other Latin American peoples (and Asian, Middle Eastern and African nations), could applaud at least one improvement in US genocidal foreign policy and feel hopeful for more.
- The evil minds of the criminally insane Deep-State-Military-Industrial-Complex-Wall Street investors in war, for the flood of US tourists and visitors and money and consumer culture and indulgence into Cuba, could have a good chance of witnessing the demise of the intensity of Cuban revolutionary spirit for overthrowing (perhaps too precipitously), the neocolonial capitalist domination of society at home in the USA as well as abroad in the poor and still financially plundered captive Third World. After all 'they,' the bad guys of Wall Street, are still number one, though probably not for all that much longer. Imperialist White folks are losing their edge in weaponry, and though there are so so very many of those people of differing hues of skin color, they haven't yet gotten riled up enough to realize that they really don't have to put up with just a few White US billionaires owning more wealth than half of humanity collectively.) [3]
In any case, with all the changes now happening in the USA about 'Whose Lives Matter,' maybe this murderously long unfair Yankee embargo of Cuba and military occupation of Guantanamo will just logically peter out.
Your author won't prejudice such an expected felicitous outcome, by crowding it with the mention of more recent crimes against humanity by the United States of America in and on Nicaragua, Venezuela and Haiti. However, Nicaragua, Venezuela and Haiti's turn at rectification, if not renumeration, should follow on the heels of the end of the crimes against Cuba, whether or not hastened by the international boycott suggested in this brief article.
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