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<blockquote>It is nearly three decades since Cuba’s liberation, and Cuba is still a one-crop economy. But the primary market for its sugar is now the Soviet Union instead of the United States. Along with this have come other economic differences as well. Cuba’s external debt is now ''200 times'' what it was when Fidel took power. And it would be far greater if the Communist ''caudillo'' had not mortgaged his country to his Soviet patron. So bankrupt is the economy Castro has created that it requires a Soviet subsidy of over $4 billion a year, one-quarter of the entire national income, to keep it afloat. Before the revolution, Cubans enjoyed the highest per-capita income in Latin America. Now they are economic prisoners of permanent rationing and chronic shortages in even the most basic necessities. The allotted rations tell a story in themselves: two pounds of meat per citizen per month; 20 percent less clothing than the allotment a decade earlier; and in rice, a basic staple of Cuba’s poor, ''half'' the yearly consumption under the old Batista regime.</blockquote> | <blockquote>It is nearly three decades since Cuba’s liberation, and Cuba is still a one-crop economy. But the primary market for its sugar is now the Soviet Union instead of the United States. Along with this have come other economic differences as well. Cuba’s external debt is now ''200 times'' what it was when Fidel took power. And it would be far greater if the Communist ''caudillo'' had not mortgaged his country to his Soviet patron. So bankrupt is the economy Castro has created that it requires a Soviet subsidy of over $4 billion a year, one-quarter of the entire national income, to keep it afloat. Before the revolution, Cubans enjoyed the highest per-capita income in Latin America. Now they are economic prisoners of permanent rationing and chronic shortages in even the most basic necessities. The allotted rations tell a story in themselves: two pounds of meat per citizen per month; 20 percent less clothing than the allotment a decade earlier; and in rice, a basic staple of Cuba’s poor, ''half'' the yearly consumption under the old Batista regime.</blockquote> | ||
<blockquote>The idea that Marxist revolution will mean economic benefit for the poor has proved to be the most deadly illusion of all. It is ''because'' Marxist economies ''cannot'' satisfy economic needs—not even at the levels of the miserably corrupt capitalisms of Batista and Somoza—that Marxist states require permanent repression to stifle unrest and permanent enemies to saddle with the blame.<ref>David Horowitz, “Nicaragua: A Speech to My Former Comrades on the Left,” Commentary, June 1, 1986. [https://www.commentarymagazine.com/articles/nicaragua-a-speech-to-my-former-comrades-on-the-left/ https://www.commentarymagazine.com/articles/nicaragua-a-speech-to-my-former-comrades-on-the-left/]</ref></blockquote> | <blockquote>The idea that Marxist revolution will mean economic benefit for the poor has proved to be the most deadly illusion of all. It is ''because'' Marxist economies ''cannot'' satisfy economic needs—not even at the levels of the miserably corrupt capitalisms of Batista and Somoza—that Marxist states require permanent repression to stifle unrest and permanent enemies to saddle with the blame.<ref>David Horowitz, “Nicaragua: A Speech to My Former Comrades on the Left,” ''Commentary'', June 1, 1986. [https://www.commentarymagazine.com/articles/nicaragua-a-speech-to-my-former-comrades-on-the-left/ https://www.commentarymagazine.com/articles/nicaragua-a-speech-to-my-former-comrades-on-the-left/]</ref></blockquote> | ||
== Legacy == | == Legacy == | ||