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In Reply to: Re: Cuba is jail - plain and simple. posted by Rod M on April 24, 2000 at 19:50:43:
***Honestly, Victor, I think that the father just has to eventually pull the asylum card. Has he got his family with him?
There is no speak of a chance for him. You remember, he didn't travel here like a *normal* human being, he was brought on a charter US-owned private jet, put in the armored limo right away, and sped away to the closed Cuban compound. With Cuban security personnel around him full time there is no chance, and he knows it.It is impossible for a free individual to comprehand the limitations that people in totalitarian countries live under. You can't even imagine what people had to go through to travel abroad, even to the super-communist countries like Bulgaria or ah, Cuba. You would have to go through humiliation hell and you would not go unless you were leaving hostages behind - your close family. People were screened and then screened, and then you would still have defectors. Most of them had to plan their escape for months - it was not just walking across some line.
Imagine that father running to a cop and asking for asylum? Why, our brave government would turn him back in a heart beat - in the best interest of his child, I am sure.
No, not gonna happen, no escape.
***But I saw something on TV (I know realiable statistics there), but while ball players bail in a heart beat, Cuban musicians seem to want to stay. I don't get that.
I can't speak for Cuban musicians, but in many American Symphony orchestras Russian names are the norm (much like in the hockey teams). However, that market is small and the supply is large. Most musicians don't make all that much, with only few exceptions. I have no idea how good the Cuban musicians are, but I am sure the competition is stiff.
There was a joke at one time regarding the Russian immigrants to Israel: If a man is getting off the Moscow plane in Tel Aviv, and he has no violin case with him, that means he is a pianist.
Great majority of them had to find some other occupation.
Sure, it's impossible for anyone here to fully understand what it takes to escape from these countries. But my Assyrian friend has told me about escaping from Iraq at 16 and leaving his parents and family behind. And there was a Chek partner of mine that did the same without his family, so I thnk I have some glimpse of how bad it must be to make these decisions and take such great risks.There's no doubt that we agree on one point: the incompentency and lack of guts in the Clinton administration is astounding. Even if Juan did make a plea for asylum, Clinton wouldn't stand up to Castro. The man has no principles and no morals.
Russian immigrants? Our housekeeper was a college instructor in Moscow. She isn't going back and she'll do any work she can get. It's sad to see those skills wasted, but she's far happier doing whatever she can here than the alternative there. Her parents tell her that it's gotten worse than ever, but I'm sure you know that.
Q: How much does a college instructor makes in Moscow today?A: In the $20 to $40 per month range.
That is what our cleaning lady makes for about 90 minutes of blowing dust around.
And she doesn't give one rusty f..., either. For about two months the bag was missing from the vacuum cleaner. She would still dutifully run it over the floor - as long as it left the proper brush marks on the carpet it was allright in her mind. As they say in high end: garbage in - garbage out.
lol, I didn't know that Alexandria did your house too ;)
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