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  • JohnS changed the title to OPACITY AND GEOPOLITICS. THE MYSTERY OF HABANOS SA AND THE HABANO FESTIVAL IN CUBA
Posted

"The images of the Habano Festival demonstrate the increasingly growing difference between the country that is built for foreigners and magnates in closed spaces and the one that survives outside the walls of the fairgrounds." Well said. 

  • Like 1
Posted
9 hours ago, DharmaBum said:

"The images of the Habano Festival demonstrate the increasingly growing difference between the country that is built for foreigners and magnates in closed spaces and the one that survives outside the walls of the fairgrounds." Well said. 

This is a worldwide phenomenon IMO. It has played out in most Caribbean countries for decades. I even see it in places like Italy. I have family there and the #1 lament is how they (native born Italians) are being priced out of everything. It started with real estate with foreigners buying up old houses and villas from people desperate for money in dying towns. This in turn has driven up the cost of housing for locals. Many people in their 30's to 50's cannot earn enough to own their own home. If they're lucky, they will inherit their parents' place. This is happening in Canada too. Our real estate has been commoditized heavily as investment vehicles for foreigners. The end result? Canadian citizens cannot afford to buy a house and even rent is taking too much of people's monthly earnings at increasing rates. 

  • Like 3
Posted
On 3/8/2024 at 6:58 AM, El Presidente said:

This is how distant the propaganda and ideas of the bureaucracy are from Cuban reality.

The whole situation in Cuba is nonsensical and unsustainable . For the ordinary Cuban all that can be seen is existential angst and despair.

Posted
On 3/8/2024 at 7:34 AM, Puros Y Vino said:

This is a worldwide phenomenon IMO. It has played out in most Caribbean countries for decades. I even see it in places like Italy. I have family there and the #1 lament is how they (native born Italians) are being priced out of everything. It started with real estate with foreigners buying up old houses and villas from people desperate for money in dying towns. This in turn has driven up the cost of housing for locals. Many people in their 30's to 50's cannot earn enough to own their own home. If they're lucky, they will inherit their parents' place. This is happening in Canada too. Our real estate has been commoditized heavily as investment vehicles for foreigners. The end result? Canadian citizens cannot afford to buy a house and even rent is taking too much of people's monthly earnings at increasing rates. 

This is par for the course where I grew up on Cape Cod. Housing on Martha's Vineyard, Nantucket, and even Falmouth has pushed out life long residents. I do not believe anyone has a "right" to live in any particular locale, but the Cape is turning a bit "rich or poor". Not as much in-between as there use to be. If you do have housing, easy to make money is flowing. 

Summer job scooping ice cream can get $30 an hour plus tips (probably $15 an hour on that). Even at those rates it's hard to find someone.

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