Log in

View Full Version : Generacion Y, the Cuban Blogger.



BIG BROTHER
12th May 2008, 02:58
Well, I find it kinda surprising that nobody posted this, so even though is not as new, I'll do it.




Blogger says her travel ban speaks Cuban truthSunday, 11 May , 2008, 09:06
Last Updated: Sunday, 11 May , 2008, 09:08 Havana: When Cuban blogger Yoani Sanchez was awarded the Spanish journalism prize Ortega y Gasset, she had to celebrate it from her home in Havana. She could not travel to receive it in Madrid last month because she did not get the necessary exit permit from Cuban authorities.
In an interview, Sanchez said the travel ban was a more accurate reflection of life for Cubans than anything she could have written on her prize-winning blog, Generacion Y.
"I like to think that what has happened, about me not getting the permit to travel on time for the ceremony, is perhaps the most realistic, the most truthful post on the situation of the Cuban citizen in relation to the state that I have written over these 13 months," Sanchez said.

A small-built, 32-year-old philologist, Sanchez was recently listed as one of the world's 100 most influential people by Time magazine - a list that includes presidents, private industry and entertainment leaders.

Sanchez said her own case shows that "what has changed in Cuba in recent months, under new President Raul Castro, is not headed in the direction of citizens' rights."
"I do not doubt that they have implemented new measures, but how much that has improved the quality of life and the freedoms of the Cuban citizen ... well, I have my doubts, I think nothing," she said.
In this respect, Sanchez said there was still a lot to do in the communist island since long-time Cuban leader Fidel Castro formally stepped down earlier this year. She underlined that changes should come from the people.
"I think the main thing must come from us. We should not wait for the state to decide on it and vertically announce it to us but interconnect again, realise that the country belongs to us and act accordingly," Sanchez said.
Still, the Cuban blogger did acknowledge there had been an "awakening" on the country's streets in recent times, of which web-logs like hers are a consequence.
"This is a phenomenon that has coincided with the end of a cycle of silence that obviously has a lot to do with Fidel Castro no longer being physically present in the media, and also with an awakening of people which is still going very slowly, very cautiously," Sanchez said.
"It is clear that we Cubans are no longer the same as two years ago, that we are starting to be critical, to release publicly, and that release has to lead to something, has to put pressure in a clear direction: civil liberties," she said.
Devoted to those "born in the Cuba of the 1970s and the 1980s, marked by schools in the countryside, Russian dolls, illegal flights and frustration", the blog Generacion Y looks sharply at Cuban reality as seen from the perspective of a normal citizen, as Sanchez likes to call herself.
> She trusts that "the day will come" when she would be little known due to a large number of bloggers in Cuba. Until then, however, Sanchez said she took "as a prize" the fact that she could not travel to Spain.
"There are so many things that anchor me here, so many things to write for, so many experiences to live, that I do not feel a great desperation to travel," Sanchez explained.
"If the officials who have denied me the trip meant to punish me to stay in the country, well, they have not succeeded: I have great pleasure in staying here and writing my things about Havana," she said.
She added, with her typical smile, that there is a bright side to everything. The refusal of the travel permit was "the first answer" from official circles that she had received in her 13-month-old blogging career. "Until now the government's attitude was that the blog did not exist. But for the first time it is implicit that they know it exists," Sanchez said. DPA



In case you want to check it out yourself here's her blog.http://desdecuba.com/generaciony/

So reactions, opinions?

Comrade Krell
12th May 2008, 03:14
She sounds like a reactionary to me, Cuban government should crack down on her.

AGITprop
12th May 2008, 03:28
She sounds like a reactionary to me, Cuban government should crack down on her.

If anything, your solution is reactionary.

Comrade Krell
12th May 2008, 03:35
If anything, your solution is reactionary.
Class struggle is reactionary?
I think it's quite obvious that she represents a pro-imperialist, pro-bourgeois viewpoint and the State should imprison her.

AGITprop
12th May 2008, 03:49
Class struggle is reactionary?
I think it's quite obvious that she represents a pro-imperialist, pro-bourgeois viewpoint and the State should imprison her.

For expressing her opinion?

Do you believe her saying these things is grounds for her imprisonment?

Do you think the class-struggle, a struggle of the most oppressed is going to be affected by such petty slander?

Comrade Krell
12th May 2008, 03:55
For expressing her opinion?

Do you believe her saying these things is grounds for her imprisonment?

Do you think the class-struggle, a struggle of the most oppressed is going to be affected by such petty slander?
The slander itself isn't so dangerous as her wide bourgeois and imperialist audience is. Such dissent of the proletarial State is corrosive.

AGITprop
12th May 2008, 03:57
The slander itself isn't so dangerous as her wide bourgeois and imperialist audience is. Such dissent of the proletarial State is corrosive.

Yes, as if there is none of that already being pushed from many bigger more powerful sources.

The Cuban State is hardly innocent anyway...

And from what I've read, I did not notice anything against class struggle. I can assure you, the Cuban State does not represent the class struggle.

PS About your signature, Trotsky was killed with an Ice Axe, and not an Ice Pick. I call you, Permanent Idiocy.

Qwerty Dvorak
12th May 2008, 04:06
She sounds like a reactionary to me, Cuban government should crack down on her.
I actually thought this was a joke before I read the rest of your posts, and I found it pretty funny. It's my kind of humour.

OrientalHado
12th May 2008, 05:09
For expressing her opinion?

Do you believe her saying these things is grounds for her imprisonment?

Do you think the class-struggle, a struggle of the most oppressed is going to be affected by such petty slander?

You do realise she's in the pay of the U.S elite..
She's very lucky the Cuban government is somewhat lenient on the matter..The Cuban workers mood on the whole is not that positive of her..

No she shouldn't be jailed for her opinion, but when someone is using it to forment counter-revolution, supported by a hostile country that is virtually waiting to overthrow the revolution, then i have less sympathy..

Theirs criticism, then theirs outright bollox...She is from the latter..

black magick hustla
12th May 2008, 08:19
She sounds like a reactionary to me, Cuban government should crack down on her.

you are such a big blubbering vagina/cock. whichever suits you better.

But yeah, lets crack down an internet blogger. :rolleyes:

RedAnarchist
12th May 2008, 09:41
I actually thought this was a joke before I read the rest of your posts, and I found it pretty funny. It's my kind of humour.

I think he may be a parody, or seriously needs help.:lol:

Raúl Duke
12th May 2008, 10:48
Devoted to those "born in the Cuba of the 1970s and the 1980s, marked by schools in the countryside, Russian dolls, illegal flights and frustration", the blog Generacion Y looks sharply at Cuban reality as seen from the perspective of a normal citizen, as Sanchez likes to call herself.

Unless I'm wrong most born in that range of year are mostly generation x.

metalero
12th May 2008, 11:13
who is delivering this "award"? the billionaire spanish PRISA group, a media conglomerate known as the lap dog of neoliberal policies in latinamerica and also for its constant misinformation and attacks on Cuba, Venezuela and other progressive governments in latinamerica. Many cuban scientists and journalists are frequently denied visas from U.S and aren't allowed to attend simple things such as science congress, music awards, academic events, even less political ones. Most of them are not "official" revolutionaries, and I don't see the PRISA group or any crusader blogger denouncing the repressive nature of U.S system for this.

Wanted Man
12th May 2008, 11:19
who is delivering this "award"? the billionaire spanish PRISA group, a media conglomerate known as the lap dog of neoliberal policies in latinamerica and also for its constant misinformation and attacks on Cuba, Venezuela and other progressive governments in latinamerica. Many cuban scientists and journalists are frequently denied visas from U.S and aren't allowed to attend simple things such as science congress, music awards, academic events, even less political ones. Most of them are not "official" revolutionaries, and I don't see the PRISA group or any crusader blogger denouncing the repressive nature of U.S system for this.
This. The award doesn't seem to be based on anything except politics. You might as well give the rabidly xenophobic Geenstijl (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geenstijl) an award for "being an influence in voicing the everyday reality of people living under the Dutch regime". It's utterly baseless, and it's rhetoric that only fools the naive.

black magick hustla
12th May 2008, 11:20
I think the fact that she is able to blog really dissenting opinions proves that Cuba isnt probably the "totalitarian hell" the gusanos and the right wing bourgeosie like to gawk about. I don't think Cuba is socialist or a workers' state, but its probably at most as bad as most bourgeois democracies.

Guerrilla22
12th May 2008, 19:12
Yeah no kidding, if Cuba was the totalitarian state the gusanos claim it is, then why hasn't this blog been shut down yet? If Cuba has strict travel restrictions, then why the hell do they have a state airline?

BIG BROTHER
13th May 2008, 04:34
I've read the blogg and its rather interesting, actually it does talk about a lot of aparently true problems that cuba faces. Sadly rather than seening the true enemy which is the growing bureocracy that alientes from the workers, and look for their own benefit, or seeing that its the U.S. imperialism what has isolated cuba, the girl hints that she wants a bourgeosie democracy.

That rather than advancing more towards socialism, giving more control to the proleriat, and helping other countries in latin-america start their own revolutions, in order to break the Cuba's isolation.

Comrade Krell
13th May 2008, 05:55
'Civil rights', 'freedom', all sounds like more bourgeois buzzwords to me.