Cuban Government Toughens Internet Restrictions 53
edibleplastic writes "The BBC is reporting that the Cuban government is cutting off much of its citizens' access to the internet. 'The move clamps down on the thousands of Cubans who illegally access the internet from their homes.
From now on, it will not be possible to dial up the main government server from most domestic phone lines.
Only lines which are paid for in dollars will have direct access. These are usually restricted to foreigners.
Amnesty International says this is an attempt to shield Cubans from alternative views.'" This is a good time to revisit two earlier stories about Cuba's attitude toward modern communications.
Re:RTFA (Score:1)
Re:RTFA (Score:1)
Re:RTFA (Score:1)
Cool. I just found my new sig!
Don't worry! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Don't worry! (Score:2)
Cuba is on the leading edge (Score:3, Funny)
what's cuba like? (Score:4, Interesting)
And then you hear about Cubans trying to get to the US on crappy rafts etc.
Maybe some want to leave because they see American TV shows or movies and they think the whole continent is safe, nice, accepting, etc. Maybe if the Cuban govt. let the population see what the rest of the world is really like, they'd be less enthusiastic to leave Cuba.
I'm not suggesting that Cuba is heaven, but from only looking at TV it would be easy for Cubans to have a romantic grass-is-much-greener vision of what the US is like.
Re:what's cuba like? (Score:2, Insightful)
I agree. But the Internet is available in schools and workplaces, from the article:
Then all surfing, download
Re:what's cuba like? (Score:4, Interesting)
The funny thing is though, the general vibe I got from the two weeks I spent there was that people really just didn't care. They didn't care about America, they didn't care what Castro was doing. Not that they're apathetic... I mean, it was all very relaxed. Sure, their country was communist. Who cares? They get free healthcare, free education, free food (limited, of course). Yay Castro! Yeah, he's a control freak. Big deal. They get everything they need, so whats the problem? The Cubans pretty much just live their lives, regardless of politics. I really liked that. Its kind of humbling to see when you're used to reading about a new lawsuit every three days. Honestly, we could learn a lot from their attitudes and lifestyle.
Re:what's cuba like? (Score:2, Insightful)
It may be good that people are able to get basic living necessities for free, but why does a tremendously oppressive society have to go along with it? In Cuba there is no freedom of speech or the press, no freedom to move within and leave the country, no freedom
Re:what's cuba like? (Score:4, Insightful)
That's what I would say describes the majority of Americans. Americans don't want to be bothered. The typical says I don't care about ozone, children in sweatshops making my disney t-shirts, special interest bombs going off in cities where I can't pronounce the names. Bush is cool. He wants to stop baseball players from using steroids. And I like MARS--let's go to MARS!
So, arguably, the average American, Cuban, whoever, may equally not care as their rights are taken away. I guess what marks Americans is that Americans feel they have to impose their values on others... and they have a long history of doing so. Manefist Destiny spirit.
I mean, if Fidel were to suddenly wage an all out war against a country who didn't attack Cuba because Fidel wanted better control of its resources and was afraid, wetting his pants with fear... would Cubans care then? Would they?
Re:what's cuba like? (Score:1, Informative)
No, what marks is Americans is that Americans feel that the people should have their own values. This is part of why the U.S. is so anti-imperialist. Cuba to this day lives under a Soviet colonial system that was imposed by the now-departed USSR. The Cubans are not a
Re:what's cuba like? (Score:1)
Re:what's cuba like? (Score:1)
He did. As a Soviet client, Cuba provided large numbers of mercenaries to conflicts in southern Africa, mostly Angola. It was a very, very unpopular project with the Cuban public.
Re:what's cuba like? (Score:2)
(I will now be modded down by communists - and slavery will still exist on this planet)
Give me a fucking break (Score:2)
They can't.
Re:what's cuba like? (Score:1)
The socialist aspects of the Cuban state are a definite plus, but the Cuban government overall is extraordinarily anti-liberal: There is no reason why a democratic society can't have a better social welfare system as exists in Western Europe.
Re:what's cuba like? (Score:2)
Maybe some want to leave because they see American TV shows or movies and they think the whole continent is safe, nice, accepting, etc. Maybe if the Cuban govt. let the population see what the rest of the world is really like, they'd be less enthusiastic to leave Cuba.
You know, there's a hell of a lot of Cuban refugees living in America, why don't you ask them for their opinion?
Re:what's cuba like? (Score:4, Insightful)
Of course foreigners are treated great there; that's their meal ticket. Tourism and prostitution are the only real growth industries in Cuba.
A brilliant medical system which is government funded, the streets are absolutely safe at night,
This sounds exactly like the old "Mussolini made the trains run on time" excuse. This sure must make up for the lack of political and economic freedoms.
Maybe if the Cuban govt. let the population see what the rest of the world is really like they'd be less enthusiastic to leave Cuba.
Or maybe if they did, more people would demand change in Cuba and threaten Castro's 50 year iron-fisted rule.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:what's cuba like? (Score:1)
Cuba really is a great place but we have to remember that there are two Cuba's: one for the people and one for the tourists.
Cuba indeed have the best medical system and assistance in the world and an astonishing education system as well, of course there are restrictions and some citizens don't like to live with those restrictions, but I see the benefits as the 'payment' for those restrictions. Don't we (who live in the fully ca
Re:what's cuba like? (Score:3, Interesting)
The weather's perfect. The environment's gorgeous. The fact that buildings are ready to collapse all around you is simply a frisson that makes life in Cuba more dramatic.
The people are friendly and inviting. The women are beautiful and, well, inviting.
But there's a reason they're inviting - the average salary is 200 pesos a month, which is about US$20. About half of this goes to a ration book of basic supplies. The other half can buy, well, about what $10 would b
Re:what's cuba like? (Score:1)
The one thing that sticks with me about government-funded medical systems is in Tom Clancy's Patriot Games (I think) where Cathy Ryan complains that in the UK (yeah, good old modern UK) two doctors went out for lunch while leaving a patient anesthezised. (That wasn't spelled right, was it?) Now, this may be fiction, but I be
Re:what's cuba like? (Score:1)
Re:what's cuba like? (Score:1)
Why they need dollars (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Why they need dollars (Score:3, Informative)
Just because certain events occurred without certain "amenities" in the past does not mean that those "amenities" would not have helped.
Just because some people cannot find a better u
Re:Why they need dollars (Score:1)
Re:Sad. (Score:1)
the path to Freedom (Score:3, Insightful)
1) Declare that they have Weapons of Mass Destruction. Invade. Cause massive damage and destruction and death. Set up a puppet government. Leave. Watch as the government fails within 50 years, just like every single time we do this.
2) Stop the trade restrictions. Let captitalism eat them away from the inside. Maybe fund a show on the WB about a wacky Cuban group of friends.
Re:Keep trade restrictions (Score:1)
Re:Keep trade restrictions (Score:1)
And capitalist America had nothing to do with this war, right?