Dark_Mark said:
Criminal justice does remain a problem in Cuba (in the sense of harsh punishments), but there are trials
Haha, I never denied that, I was talking about
fair trials with free chances of defending oneself.
Dark_Mark said:
She was planning on going back to Cuba, but her father refused to let her come back.
Mm, interesting, so she stayed in the US. Why did her father refuse to let her go back? And why did she accept?
Dark_Mark said:
She said she was a practicing Catholic while she lived there.
How old was she? She was referring to the late 90's.
Dark_Mark said:
It is much easier to get an exit visa in Cuba to go to any European, African, Asian, or South American country than the USA.
Why should a free man need an exit visa to leave his country in the first place?
Dark_Mark said:
That doesn't come as a surprise since it is almost impossible to travel to Cuba from the USA legally
Nah, you've already been proved wrong on this.
Dark_MArk said:
You are cracking me and the rest of the members up, dude. I was talking about fair and honest elections where people can choose between more than one party and more than one dictator, where the people can freely read and learn about different options and programs and freely oppose the government without being jailed. That election scheduled for October is laughable, Saddam Hussein used to hold elections too, but I thought you were smarter than believing those were free elections.
Dar_Mark said:
Notice how there were no murders or jailings of the 11,000 signatories. Indeed, most charges of the Cuban government arresting people for their ideas are in reality charges for accepting money from or working for the US interests section in Havana
Spies, spies, spies, saboteurs, here is Fidel Castro and its paranoid thugs speaking... lol.
You are a fun guy I tell you.