Uninformed or Poor? / Yusimi Rodriguez Lopez
Posted on August 29, 2013
A couple days ago two neighbors were talking outside my house about the 
notice published in the newspaper Granma, official organ of the 
Communist Party. I don't know what the news was, but one said to the 
other, "It came out in Granma, I read it," as proof of veracity. The 
other responded, "I don't believe what Granma says, I read the internet."
A year ago it would have been difficult to hear a conversation like this 
between neighbors, I don't think anyone would have talked out loud about 
the question of the credibility of the official national press. Nor do I 
know if my neighbor could connect to the internet a year ago, or just a 
few months ago, and by what route if he was able to do so.
Many Cubans connected before network access became widely available in a 
legal form for nationals. How? Some from their workplaces, legally and 
free, had access to the pages that the Government allowed. Others 
accessed from embassies, which is perfectly legal, but frowned upon by 
our authorities: many did not use this route for fear of stigma, for 
example that anyone could reproach them on seeing them enter the United 
States Interest Section.
Other compatriots accessed the internet "under the table." Someone 
whispered to you "so and so has internet, but you can't tell, it's under 
the table." Not the least bit strange in a country where illegality 
appears to be a prerequisite for things achieving the desired legal 
status. For example, people sold their homes and cars before it was 
legal to do so, not surprising in a country where you can go to jail for 
an illegality one day before it ceases to be one. This happened with 
holding currencies: one day made the difference between an "integrated 
and compliant citizen under the law" and a "criminal"; the next day the 
same difference was between "someone dying of hunger" and "a privileged 
citizen."
Because in the end, it's all about money. It's money that makes the 
difference. We don't want to have the right to enter the hotels in our 
own country, to travel, to buy a house or a car, unless we are high 
performance athletes and important cultural figures? Then there are our 
rights, let them. What's stopping us? Money.
The Government seems to be so aware that we do not have money, that, 
according to the vox populi (which almost always is right), when a Cuban 
citizen living in Cuba has stayed at hotels with a regularity outside 
what is considered normal, their names are noted in a list and the 
government then comes around to ask how they can afford it. But this may 
be a rumor. Many good and bad things are attributed to our Government. 
Not all are true (bad or good).
The truth is that money now not only divides us into Cubans can stay in 
a hotel and those who can't even dream of it; between Cubans who can 
dine at restaurants like Doña Eutimia, The Decameron or The Mimosa, and 
Cubans who can only afford a pizza for ten Cuban pesos (and barely 
that). Now money also divides us between Cubans who can access the 
Internet, and Cubans who never will nor care to, because first they need 
to think about eating. You can't think about having information, unless 
you have a full stomach and more or less decent clothes to dress and 
clothe the family.
I guess that's the difference between my two neighbors. One of them can 
afford to discard Granma in favor of the internet as an information 
source (I don't know if he's aware that not everything that is published 
on the Internet is reliable); the other goes along with the official 
national press that does not cost more than two Cuban pesos, even if you 
buy from resellers.
A year ago, I complained that Cubans only had access to official 
national information media, which contained information that the 
Party-Government's interest in our consuming, processed in the way that 
the Party-Government's interest wants us to have it. Now you can go into 
the rooms that have opened in the country, and pay for services to 
navigate the web (national and international) and email (national and 
international). It's not news that one hour of internet costs 4.50 CUC, 
just over $ 5 US and just under half the monthly salary of a worker. The 
cheapest is the using national email only, 1.50 CUC. Well, you decide, 
you aren't forced to access the internet.
I was told that these cyber rooms you could get access to the The Miami 
Herald, for instance, and it's true. I was able to check a couple of 
weeks ago, when I decided to commit harakiri and create myself an 
internet account. The connection is fast, at least compared to what I 
knew, and yes, you can access any publication even if it criticizes the 
government. This is freedom of information, I thought. I can no longer 
talk about uninformed Cubans; there are simply poor Cubans.
To be informed costs, in Cuba and in the world. It's only that we are 
entering the ring right now. In the world there are places where the 
information is free, and sites where you sign up to receive information, 
places where you read a piece of information, and pay for the rest, and 
places where you pay for quality information. Cubans are just entering 
the XXI century. What happens is that at this stage of the game, it 
still amazes us sometimes to discover that things are not as we were led 
to believe that they were; that in reality, we are not all equal, and in 
the future will be about the same.
That was my conclusion until I tried something as simple as accessing 
the blog Generation Y, by the blogger Yoani Sanchez, who, believe it or 
not, I had never read. I read a couple of her articles that were linked 
to or posted on other sites, but not her blog. The worst thing is that 
it took me a while to realize I could not access it. As I'm used to the 
internet being I slow, waited, waited and waited, watching the minutes 
that for me were money.
I tried the same with the blog Sin evasion, by Miriam Celaya, and that 
of Reinaldo Escobar. In all cases I access articles and interviews from 
elsewhere, but not their blogs. I repeated the operation with David 
Canela, a journalist at Cubanet. I couldn't even read his articles. I 
also could not access the publication.
I asked the workers staff the cybercafes, if Generation Y, for example, 
was blocked. They didn't know what Generation Y is, or who Yoani Sanchez 
is. No surprise, it happens to many people in Cuba. I explained, with 
some difficulty because I realized I do not know how to define Yoani: 
Dissident? Opposition?? Citizen? Highly embarrassing for the government? 
Finally I was told that such sites or blogs are blocked. Then I learned 
that the classified ad page Revolico is blocked too.
I could have saved money and time, if I had read the internet contract I 
signed: Article 9 of the generalities of the service states "ETECSA is 
exonerated from liability for the limited access to the content, 
accuracy, quality and accuracy of the information posted on sites …"
Now I'm not sure it is enough to have money. Things do not seem so 
simple. You can pay, but that does not guarantee that access to the 
information that interests you. You do not decide what information to 
consume. In the end will we be only poor? Or we also uninformed?
Yusimi Rodriguez Lopez
 From Diario de Cuba
19 August 2013
Source: "Uninformed or Poor? / Yusimi Rodriguez Lopez | Translating 
Cuba" - 
http://translatingcuba.com/uninformed-or-poor-yusimi-rodriguez-lopez/
 
 
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