An uncertain summer awaits us, where they announce power cuts, higher 
prices and where there is even a prediction of an emigration stampede. 
Many Cubans, however, faced with the dilemma of solving their daily 
problems or trying to change something, prefer to concentrate on 
personal survival. They organize an escape from the national borders, 
evade the laws or, what amounts to the same thing, turn to crime. There 
are not only those who climb through the window of a warehouse at night 
or grab the backpack of an innocent tourist, but also the warehouseman 
who alters invoices or the custodian who breaks the seal of the 
container he is protecting. There is a socially accepted way of breaking 
the law that consists of stealing from the State. It includes the waiter 
who adds to the prices or introduces goods into the restaurant the he 
purchased to sell as if they were "of the house" and the shopkeeper who 
changes the list of customers at the ration market so he will have 
leftover goods.
The line of illegality also extends to the hotel desk clerk who, in 
cahoots with the manager, rents a room off the register, the taxi driver 
who makes a trip without turning on the meter, or the lathe operator who 
produces a piece "outside" the production plan. The customs officer who 
lets prohibited objects through, the police who don't impose a fine, the 
housing official who speeds up an application, the teacher who raises a 
grade, and the inspector who becomes blind to the violations he should 
report.
The walls of the bubble that protect the speeches are strengthened by 
the profits from these "misdeeds," but they also discourage public 
protest. The fruits of so many illegalities end up on the counters of 
foreign currency shops, they are exchanged for the rechargeable lamps 
that will light some houses this summer. Meanwhile, outside, who cares 
that the blackout reigns.
Yoani's blog, Generation Y, can be read here in English translation.
Follow Yoani Sanchez on Twitter: www.twitter.com/yoanisanchez
Yoani Sanchez: Elsewhere It's Called "Stealing," but in Cuba We Call It 
"Resolving" (22 June 2009)
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/yoani-sanchez/elsewhere-its-called-stea_b_218626.html
 
 
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