The Cuban people will still suffer. Probably some of them would suffer more. But then it won´t be the new regimes fault, like it is Castros now. It will be their own.
i don't think we really "fear" cuba. there is not much to fear when an island has people dying to get away from it and when there are threats by its leader to release hordes of illegal immigrants to screw with the US.
For the record I don't particularly like Castro. I support his intial revolt against the corrupt dictator. However,he became one himself, though perhaps a somewhat more just one. He should resign or call an election which he will lose, but do surprisingly well. His advancements in medical and education for the Cuban people are sisgnificant but don't outweigh his lack of demcoracy. His lack of democracy doesn't justify all the evil done to the Cuban people by American boycotts, assassination attempts and other shenanigans. Fortunately I think things will soon turn out well for the Cuban people. Castro has provided the infrastructure, a healthy and literate population. Once there is change, the huge amount of money flowing into Cuba will rival that which W. Germany put into E. Germany. This is provided we can keep the neocons from breaking up the health and education systems in order to return to the system that benefits the wealthy few.
L21, Just want to helpful here. Please don't quote an entire long article just to make a small comment. Please make the small comment (well, not too small, actually), but maybe just quote the title or some such. Local BBS etiquette, as I understand it.
The most balanced and lucid points I have EVER seen from Glynch. I tip my hat to you, sir. BTW: No article from the Guardian is EVER balanced and unbiased. If you think it is you are living in another universe. I lived in London and read the it everyday (mainly because its a big paper and has a decent sport section (Go Arsenal!), and its just isn't anything but far left garbage.
<a HREF="http://www.state.gov/p/wha/ci/14776.htm">Zenith and Eclipse: A Comparative Look at Socio-Economic Conditions in Pre-Castro and Present Day Cuba</a>