Cuba Plunged Into an Island Wide Blackout As Power Grid Fails (npr.org) 107
Cuba's power grid failed on Friday, leaving 10 million people without electricity. NPR reports: One of the country's largest power plants, the Antonio Guiteras power plant in the western province of Matanzas, failed shortly before midday on Friday. The failure prompted a total breakdown of Cuba's electrical system. The power outage comes after days of rolling blackouts. Cuba's prime minister, Manuel Marrero Cruz, blamed the problem on deteriorating infrastructure and fuel shortages exacerbated by Hurricane Milton, which has made it difficult for fuel deliveries to reach the island.
The prime minister made an address on state television on Thursday evening and said the government would prioritize providing electricity to residential areas and promised shipments of fuel would arrive on the island in the coming days. Cuban officials have not indicated a timeline for when the power grid will be operational again. The massive blackout is a new low in a country that has already been dealing with a deepening economic crisis and widespread food shortages.
The prime minister made an address on state television on Thursday evening and said the government would prioritize providing electricity to residential areas and promised shipments of fuel would arrive on the island in the coming days. Cuban officials have not indicated a timeline for when the power grid will be operational again. The massive blackout is a new low in a country that has already been dealing with a deepening economic crisis and widespread food shortages.
easy fix for Cuba's economy (Score:5, Insightful)
USA should lift sanctions, trade and tourism would fix Cuba's economy in a New York minute.
Some dinosaurs living in the past keep wailing every time the idea is floated, their ridiculous objections don't apply now in 21st century.
Re:easy fix for Cuba's economy (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes, I agree. But the GOP wants to keep control of Florida. That matters to them more.
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They can do that now, with or without Cubans.
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because USA never kept and tortured political prisoners? never put its own citizens in concentration camps?
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because USA never kept and tortured political prisoners?
Yes, but mostly in Cuba.
Extraordinary rendition (Score:4, Informative)
because USA never kept and tortured political prisoners?
Yes, but mostly in Cuba.
Actually we're mostly talking about Syria, Egypt, Afghanistan, Lithuania, Morocco, Poland, Romania, and Thailand [justiceinitiative.org], ...at least during recent times. Earlier than that, I have no citation. The practice is known as extraordinary rendition [wikipedia.org].
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I forgot to include Jordan on the list that supported the former US practice of extraordinary rendition.
I find Morocco especially interesting to be included, because Morocco has no extradition treaty with the US. I've been to Morocco and it's a nice, picturesque place with nice people and good food. Once for the hell of it I googled countries with no US extradition treaty and all those places suck except for Morocco which easily topped the list, along with the Maldives if my memory is accurate.
Would you rea
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Just wait until Trump gets back in power.
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Only an American could be such a complete, utter hypocrite as to comment on another country's need for political or economic reform, and returning stolen assets to the victims of the theft. Is American history no longer taught in American schools?
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Only an American could be such a complete, utter hypocrite as to comment on another country's need for political or economic reform, and returning stolen assets to the victims of the theft. Is American history no longer taught in American schools?
Considering all those illegal immigrants who came to this continent were from Europe, guess where this idea comes from?
Re:easy fix for Cuba's economy (Score:4, Insightful)
Exactly. Wonder when the USA will pay reparations to descendants of former slaves?
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Can you do Native Americans next?
Re: You want it to be even? (Score:2, Interesting)
Sure. Use those wonderful "indigenous ways of knowing" the DEI departments are always talking about, travel back in time, give your ancestors the means to defend their territory from foreign invaders, and change history so that it's the poor downtrodden ancestors of Eurepean refugees that are a perpetual underclass agitating for affirmative action protections in a contenti-straddling Iriquois Confederacy.
Then we can have a "serious" discussion about giving "back" things to individuals who incurred no crime
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Can you do Native Americans next?
What!!!
All those glass beads and it's still not enough?
Re:easy fix for Cuba's economy (Score:4, Informative)
Only an American could be such a complete, utter hypocrite as to comment on another country's need for political or economic reform, and returning stolen assets to the victims of the theft. Is American history no longer taught in American schools?
Modded down to zero - wow. I guess this is a good time for a reminder that mod points are not for dragging down posts just because you disagree with them.
America's fortune was built on a foundation of stolen land, as well as stolen people forced into slavery. That's a simple and verifiable fact, and pointing it out in the context of this discussion is entirely on-point.
BTW, my country was built on stolen land and broken promises too, and I don't try to silence those who point it out.
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Thank you, my friend. The mod system here used to work better.
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So when is the US going to return the money that it's stolen from Venezuela and Russia recently? Or from Cuba, Haiti, China, and a slew of other countries over time? Maybe return Texas to Mexico? The US is one of the largest thieves around, and when we aren't thieving ourselves we're aiding other thieves to loot their countries (we even flew Marcos' tons of gold stolen from their reserve bank out of the Philippines on Air Force planes and delivered it to Hawaii for them no charge).
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Yes, let's forget that US's lapdog, Batista, stole those assets for the benefit of his 'boyfriend', USA: The behaviour was borderline sexual. It seems the USA likes homosexuals when they are doting, rich, criminals.
Yep, that's why the USA has true caller-Id., truth-in-advertising, and a lack of hidden fees in telephone, medical and insurance services: Wait a minute...
Exactly, what is this repression? I can't find any articles of that, possibly because, to throw you a bone, the truth about Cuba is censor
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There never were American owned assets.
It was MAFIA owned, stupid dumb ass.
The whole revolution and other things in Cuba happened because the MAFIA owned everything and was a dictatorship. Killing people every day.
And you think Communism is worse than being suppress/ruled by a MAFIA?
Get a damn brain check.
Re: easy fix for Cuba's economy (Score:2)
But they were AMERICAN Mafia...
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Re: easy fix for Cuba's economy (Score:3)
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they could get more votes with the electoral college system, by counting the slaves as part of the regular population when assigning electors).
Without changing the US Constitution, the National Popular Vote Compact [nationalpopularvote.com] promises a way to effectively nullify the Electoral College. It is only a matter of time before it happens and it can't happen soon enough.
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European countries lost a lot of assets when colonialism started to end. It was wrong to do it in the first place, so sanctions were not the right response.
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Wasn't part of the reason(at least) for the rebellion that the big companies/ US government was supporting Batista who made a coup to take power in Cuba?
It seems US has been meddling in Cuba one way or another for a very long time before Castro got into power.
Maybe US should pay Cuba for all the shit they created in Cuba, with many made poor and dead.
Or we can all call it even and start from scratch - by returning Guantanamo Bay back to Cuba first?
Wiki has a very nice summary.
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Nobody is going to get anything back.
The rich Cubans have abandoned their "assets" and are now just focused on destroying Cuba from their prosperity in Florida.
Re:easy fix for Cuba's economy (Score:4, Informative)
That or go to China and beg for renewable tech. Basically it looks like this is about their inability to keep their Fossil Fuel power plants running due to trade embargo. People in that part of the world are in peril when the summer heat comes with no AC. They need to be digging deep holes, getting the greenhouses climate controlled passively, getting the nano particle paint for cooling, etc. Same as people in the US southeast, but the Caribbean people are in greater present danger.
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Did you just say siestas have been eliminated, thanks to climate change?
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I truly don't understand how "Trump Havana Hotel and Casino" doesn't have more appeal to him than neocon saber rattling.
Maybe Musk will buy it to get the FAA and California Coastal Commission off his ass.
I once had a part in Guys and Dolls, and it never made sense to an 80's kid how 50's kids looked at Cuba.
What a damn shame.
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Lansky and Siegel tried that and then Castro just seized it. Why bother investing there when there's no rule of law?
Re: easy fix for Cuba's economy (Score:2)
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You can get Cuban cigars if you visit Canada or Mexico.
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I truly don't understand how "Trump Havana Hotel and Casino" doesn't have more appeal to him than neocon saber rattling.
If he can't get another failing casino built in Moscow with the help of his Russian handler, why bother with Cuba?
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Re:easy fix for Cuba's economy (Score:5, Insightful)
I just love how that little island that trades with every other country on this planet, but still is a 3rd-world shit-show. However, if they started trading with us, that people believe it will turn back into that magical paradise. The only way that island will return is if the citizens suffer enough to realize they need to physically get rid of the Communists and nothing short means they will eventually return to the shit-show they have now. Sorry for being a hard-ass, but that is the reality.
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Where is this modeled in mainstream economics, where arbitrage is assumed to minimize the cross-currency basis, and whole important equations like the fair pricing model of derivatives depend on this Covered Interest Parity assumption?
But if that multiplier you mention exists, then their formulas show derivative prices can go negative and that makes their assumptions about the rationality of prices very, very suspect?
In short why do we listen to economists any more than we listen to theologists?
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Like happened in China, right? Economic leverage from US money forced change in that communist country, didn't it?
Cuba is a shit-show, because that part of the world doesn't have a lot of resources. When the rest of world rushed to buy China's goods or Vietnam's good, the USA dropped its principles, with haste and silence. No-one helps Cuba, allowing the USA to continue a 65 year-long tantrum.
While the Caribbean was settled for the farming of sugar, islands are not suitable for mechanized agriculture
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Didn't Masanobu Fukuoka prove you could use natural farming techniques to produce yields that matched his industrial-farmer neighbors?
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No-one helps Cuba, allowing the USA to continue a 65 year-long tantrum.
Venezuela basically gives Cuba a ton of oil [reuters.com].
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I just love how that little island that trades with every other country on this planet, but still is a 3rd-world shit-show. However, if they started trading with us, that people believe it will turn back into that magical paradise.
There is a pretty big effect based on location in how trading helps stimulate economic growth. Who near the USA is a rich western trading partner? The closest is on the other side of the Atlantic. You see the same thing with Brexit, everyone promised a global Britain able to trade with whomever, but the reality is your closest customers are a stones throw across the channel and that has resulted in a massive decline across many industries in the UK. You don't just interlink a complex supply chain with Green
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American sanctions reach far. Look at that Huawei exec who was arrested in Canada for crimes that were alleged by the US to have happened in other countries, simply because the transaction involved USD.
But hey, if the sanctions aren't what is causing Cuba's problems, why not lift them? Then everyone can see that socialism doesn't work, even when given every opportunity. Ignore Europe, you could cite Cuba every time it comes up!
Re: easy fix for Cuba's economy (Score:2)
The U.S. embargo on Cuba is limited solely to the export of U.S. products into Cuba and the export of Cuban goods into the U.S. It also prevents any U.S. aid money to be given to Cuba. The U.S. does not force any allies to honor our embargo.
The entire embargo act is one page long, have a look:
https://www.presidency.ucsb.ed... [ucsb.edu]
The issue is Cuba has no money to buy any goods from anyone else, and Cuba has no exportable product that would sell in sufficient quantities to improve the Cuban economy.
Cuba used to g
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Being good communists they should shoot the grid for counter-revolutionary activities. That will fix it.
I'm sure the Party elite have all the electrical power they want. The Proletariat is doubtlessly enjoying their equity.
Re:easy fix for Cuba's economy (Score:5, Informative)
My ex's grandparents were survivors of the Cuban revolution. Their parents, brothers, and sisters were not.
You can imagine that they had some strong feelings about making nice with the Cuban government. Their children and grandchildren may not care as much, but they did grow up listening to horror stories. There are also a lot of Cuban refugees who have escaped to the USA. They have opinions that are less than favorable to the Cuban government.
You will not convince them that we should all just let bygones be bygones and get along. You need to present a compelling benefit to the USA that outweighs the negative feelings of those harmed by Cuba's government.
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that would be dinosaurs view, wanting those there now to suffer for sins of those gone. Are you willing to suffer for injustices done to native americans, slaves, the u.s. native born Japanese put into U.S. concentration camps, those making tge mutilated by agent orange, etc?
No? You're just vindictive hypocrite
Re: easy fix for Cuba's economy (Score:1)
But none of those things are still happening, in Cuba THEY ARE, the same family that seized power in the 70s because JFKâ(TM)s mishandling is still in power, talk about dinosaurs, they had 2 leaders in the last 65 years and the current one is the brother of the first one.
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You will not convince them that we should all just let bygones be bygones and get along.
Dude. Everyone who was responsible for what happened back then is dead dead dead. It is ALL bygone at this point. WTF? Holding grudges against the children and grandchildren? Really? Time has passed, the world has changed. That particular abomination is part of the past. Let it stay there and focus on the future (but never forget the past or else it will happen again).
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Dude. WTF? Holding grudges against the children and grandchildren?
Dude. Learn to read.
The children and grandchildren are the ones holding the grudge against the government that harmed their families.
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We're not going to subsidize the Communist Party of Cuba.
Re: easy fix for Cuba's economy (Score:2)
The entire world, except the U.S., is free to travel to Cuba, sell their goods into Cuba, and buy all the Cuban goods they want. They are free to buy Korean automobiles, French wines, German chocolates, and all the Ukrainian produce/wheat/grain/etc they want... but they have no money to pay for it.
Cuban tourism won't rescue the country - they already have a huge tourism industry, there's nothing stopping any non-American from taking their euros, yen, pesos, etc to Cuba when they travel.
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The problem is all of the Cubans living in Florida who want to destroy the country they left.
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- Pork production plummeted by 91% from 149,400 tons in 2018 to just 13,300 tons in 2023
- Rice production dropped by 90%, from 273,800 tons to a mere 27,900 tons in the same period
- Cuba was the worlds largest sugar producer in the 1950s, but in 2023 only produced 350,000 tons
Cuba was the strangest vacation of my life. (Score:5, Informative)
A great deal of the rural poor in cuba don't have electricity at all.
>but anon, I just googled it and a website says their population has 100% electrical coverage!
Yeah that's bullshit.
I went on vacation to a resort in cuba and holy fuck is that place POOR outside of the resort. Like, the kind of poor that makes rural mexico look wealthy. I make more in an hour than their normal workers make in a month. I was so much more extravagantly wealthy than their hotel workers that I felt bad having them serve me. How Canadian of me.
I had a conversation with other Canadians on my flight who were bringing in miscellaneous goods and medical supplies(!!) (sorry, Michael Moore!) in their luggage to donate as charity. Apparently that's a common request, even for simple things like batteries.
Every company is a government company. There is virtually zero private enterprise allowed there except for things like cafes and restaurants, which means there are no ads or billboards, except for a few billboards with images of Guevara and Chavez I happened to see. Income from tourists' tips is enormous compared to what Cubans make from normal jobs. There was a time you could go to jail for carrying USD, a Cuban told us, but that restriction has been lifted.
The bookstores had tons of prominent socialist literature. Every store we went to told us their credit card machine was down, and I'm certain that's how they prefer it, hoping to get paper CAD/USD in their hands. Oh and weirdly we couldn't change pesos for US nor Canadian dollars.
Random Cuban airport workers would shamelessly ask us for stuff we had, like diapers or our travel mug.
Food wasn't good.
What else... oh ya. They have government housing, and a ration of food staples allowed each month. Some hotel workers mentioned how they raise meat animals like goats because otherwise meat is unaffordable.
Wifi was virtually unusable at our resort, and I saw that a lot of websites block cuban ip addresses, so I had to use an ssh tunnel through work to do banking. Lot of dot matrix printers and CRTs.
Gorgeous beaches though. Wouldn't go again I don't think.
Re: Cuba was the strangest vacation of my life. (Score:2)
But, somehow, if we open up US markets to sell our goods into Cuba it will all get better? I don't think that's how economics work -
Oh wait, the issue is we need to allow the importation of Cuban-made products and goods, certainly that will improve their situation, right?
No, they have nothing that the outside world needs, and they can't pay for the things they need.
Ok, so wait... (Score:3)
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You're not supposed to know the existence of the Inner Party. Off to the memory hole you go.
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I imagine people have backup generators, or battery powered devices etc...
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Unfortunately, there are people who wore their ignorance as a badge of achievement.
Re: Ok, so wait... (Score:2)
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The other part is that most everyone is too poor to 'just have a backup generator'. Even if they had one, why would you waste any precious fuel you may still have to power a tv?
I guess it was broadcast on radio too, but for some reason it was stated as national television.
Re:Ok, so wait... (Score:4, Informative)
The address was broadcast Thursday night, power went out on Friday. Reading is fundamental.
Re: Ok, so wait... (Score:2)
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Re: Ok, so wait... (Score:2)
Have visted cuba.. (Score:3)
Visted cuba in 2018 as part of a cruise...
Yes the government is stupid.
But the sanctions are only hurting the people who live there, who incidentally are fucking amazing people.
Life the sanctions now.
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the people who live there, who incidentally are fucking amazing people.
Did you use that f-word as a verb or as a noun? It changes the meaning of that clause drastically.
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I think you meant, as an adjective. "Fucking" can be used as a noun, as "got a good fucking", although it's out-of-date English.
It means there are two reasons for visiting Cuba, although one of them might not be accurate. Or, you might get lucky and experience both meanings.
Re: Have visted cuba.. (Score:2)
> I think you meant, as an adjective
Adverb, actually.
Re: Have visted cuba.. (Score:1)
It is a communist paradise, anyone voting for Kamala can go there and get their free healthcare.
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if Florida turns into authoritarian state, democrats might just stop caring about getting votes there. Then Cuba might get its sanctions lifted.
So climate change? (Score:3)
Cuba's prime minister, Manuel Marrero Cruz, blamed the problem on deteriorating infrastructure and fuel shortages exacerbated by Hurricane Milton, which has made it difficult for fuel deliveries to reach the island.
So what's the plan? The current situation is caused by a lack of fuel to generate electricity, period. The deteriorating infrastructure is worth fixing, but that will just be money down a rat hole until Cuba finds a way to generate electricity without relying on shipments of Oil, Natural Gas or Coal - I hear that solar is so much cheaper than the alternative, they should just go solar - oh, wait, solar is cheap when the Govt subsidizes the research, manufacturing, installation, and purchase of solar cells...
Maybe they could go with wind turbines?
Or maybe hydro power?
But, of course, the argument will likely devolve into climate change as their problem, because the climate is making it hard to import sufficient coal, oil, or natural gas to burn in Cuba to generate electricity and greenhouse gases at the same time!
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Amazing Ignorance of History (Score:2)
A bit part of Marx's original tenets of communism is that such a system wouldn't work unless it was worldwide. If you implement communism in part of the world, people with a means to go somewhere else would do so and you'd end up with nothing but a wasteland left behind. When the Soviets took over Russia, they were quite keen to ensure the success of their regime by spreading c
NextGen Nuclear Testbed (Score:2)
It is extremely difficult to license a new reactor design. Consequently we are still (maybe) building derivatives of the AP1000 and CE System 80 in 2024. Toshiba wanted to deploy their tiny 10MW 4S reactor in Galena, Alaska, literally the middle of nowhere.and the pushback (not from people who lived there) from the the anti nuclear lobby stopped it "cold" and Toshiba never even submitted the design for regulatory approval.. I think the Toshiba exited the business and IP was sold to the Chinese. Game over.
Re:Not surprised (Score:5, Funny)
The quality of troll that Putin can buy has degraded as much as Cuba's electrical grid.
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Communist electric grid is best electric grid.
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In all seriousness one massive blackout is still doing better than Texas.
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With 10 million hectares of farmland, one per inhabitant, how can there be food shortages?
What if they are hardy enough to live and thrive without dependence on electricity?
Don't feed the trolls (Score:2)
By propagating their vacuous Subjects. Even when the AC is sort of making a joke. It was an attempted joke, wasn't it?
But I think the joke I was looking for would have involved some kind of comparison to Texas or California. Perhaps even going back to the Enron days?