Parliamentary Karaoke
14ymedio, Generation y, Yoani Sanchez, 14 July 2017 — Wednesday 
night. The neighborhood of Nuevo Vedado is sliding into the 
darkness. Catchy music resonates in the Hotel Tulipán where 
parliamentarians are staying during the current regular session. They 
dance, drink under the sparkling lights of the disco ball and sing 
karaoke. They add their voices to a programmed score, the exercise they 
know how to do best.
With only two sessions a year, the Cuban legislative body gathers to 
stuff the population full of dates, figures, promises to keep, and 
critiques of the mismanagement of bureaucrats and administrators. A 
monotonous clamor, where every speaker tries to show themselves more 
"revolutionary" than the last, launching proposals with an exhausting 
generality or a frightening lack of vision.
Those assembled for this eighth legislature, like their colleagues 
before them, have as little ability to make decisions as does any 
ordinary Cuban waiting at the bus stop. They can raise their voice and 
"talk until they're blue in the face," and enumerate the inefficiencies 
that limit development in their respective districts, but from there to 
concrete solutions is a long stretch.
On this occasion, the National Assembly has turned its back on pressures 
that, from different sectors, demand new legislation regarding the 
electoral system, audiovisual productions, management of the press, same 
sex marriage and religious freedoms, among others. With so many urgent 
issues, the deputies have only managed to draft the "Terrestrial Waters 
Bill."
Does this mean that they need to meet more often to fix the country's 
enormous problems? The question is not only one of the frequency or 
intensity in the exercise of their functions, but also one of freedom 
and power. A parliament is not a park bench where you go to find 
catharsis, nor a showcase to demonstrate ideological fidelity. It should 
represent the diversity of a society, propose solutions and turn them 
into laws. Without this, it is just a boring social chinwag.
The parliamentarians will arrive on Friday, the final day of their 
regular session, in front of the microphones in the Palace of 
Conventions with the same meekness that they approached the karaoke 
party to repeat previously scripted choruses. They are going to sing to 
music chosen by others, move their lips to that voice of real power that 
emerges from their throats.
Source: Parliamentary Karaoke – Translating Cuba - 
http://translatingcuba.com/parliamentary-karaoke/
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