Generally Cubans are prohibited from even stepping foot in a resort if they don’t carry foreign currency, which the vast majority of Cubans do not and those that do obviously don’t have the STETHOSCOPE LOVE MICHIGAN SHIRT amount of euros/dollars that any Canadian or European family would need to visit such places.My parents told me a story that in Havana they were denied access to a museum in the 90s because they didn’t have USD on them, only Cuban pesos, and were humiliated. Imagine being turned away from Disney World or something as an American because you didn’t have euros on you to pay with, it’s just as ridiculousThe Cuban state still directly controls most of the economy and employs the majority of the population: between about 60-75 per cent of the workforce…State salaries are abysmally low, roughly the equivalent of $25 USD per month…Many of the crumbling buildings that tourists like to gawk at are dangerous: collapses are especially frequent during heavy rains. Even in parts of Havana with its heavily touristed areas the sanitation is inadequate, leading to periodic outbreaks of dengue…And the employees in the tourism sector, they don’t get to enjoy the money tourists bring? Are we not allowed to visit places in the world that are poorer than where we’re from? Tourism raises their living standards
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Most of your tourist money goes tothe pocketa of rich people who might not even be natives. Your tourist bucks help a very small percentage of them, and often the STETHOSCOPE LOVE MICHIGAN SHIRT done to cater to your tourist end up harming those who lived there their whole livesThe safety thing is very true, after my family moved to Europe when I was 8, one of the things I missed the most about Cuba was playing hide and seek, tag and similar games at night with a group of 8-12 other kids age 6-9 from the same street or the ones close by, all with barely any adult supervision other than your parents calling you back home at 10-11pm for school the next day. From personal experience the biggest danger, for kids at least, were guard dogs and metal nails since a lot of kids liked to play without shoes as it made you more versatile when running, jumping over walls or climbing trees.Cuba is a paradise compared to other Caribbean countries, when it comes to human development. It’s also surprisingly safe, considering how countries in central America are, riddled with violence.Of course, pretending Cuba is a first world country is stupid, but pretending it’s a failed ruined state held back by their economic model is just as stupid. Considering the conditions it’s in, and comparing it to similar countries, I’d say it’s a pretty successful country. Which DOESN’T MEAN it’s a fine country or a country you’d want to live in, if you have the luck to live in Western Europe or similar.Last year a friend of mine went to her mother’s home village in Cuba and sent me some videos from there. It was a village in the middle of nowhere, they didn’t even have many paved streets – but their house was nice, and the village itself wasn’t the “poor ravaged wasteland of slums” you’d expect. It was closer to a normal village in the West, than any poor village in non-developed nations. From what I saw, I’d definitely prefer to live in Cuba than in any poor African or American country.