Yesterday, 10:51 PM
This post was last modified: Today, 12:09 AM by worldstarcountry. 
Hey alright looks like we are finally seeing some results here with regard to tactics against the regime. Due to prolonged energy blackouts it seems the regime may, MAY be crying uncle. Rubio has been in talks with them for months so maybe this is just the arranged theatrics after things have been settled in the background.
![[Image: cc757cc84bf7ae866c6c538bed655046.webp]](https://denyignorance.com/uploader/images/cc757cc84bf7ae866c6c538bed655046.webp)
![[Image: 86090f05386bbcf5b846de956906d830.webp]](https://denyignorance.com/uploader/images/86090f05386bbcf5b846de956906d830.webp)
Well it will be pretty simple. Renounce Communism, allow citizens to own private enterprises in all industries, and perhaps no more funding radical NGO's who visit the island and then come back to the states spewing radical Marxism. I would say those are fairly simple requests for those who want to see their people prosper. I also believe the people would prefer it too.
Its looking like good news could soon be hitting Cuba if things go well!
Quote:USA Today
Rodríguez Castro is unknown to many outside Cuba. He holds no formal government office and rarely appears in Cuba’s state media. He had never before spoken to a U.S. media outlet. He is a back-channel operator who has undeniable status, authority and clout – much of it derived from his last name.
Now the younger Castro is the one in a position to negotiate for the future of his country. The former bodyguard to his grandfather wants to deal directly with President Donald Trump.
“I can negotiate with anyone designated by the U.S.," Rodríguez Castro said. "If given the opportunity, claro que con Trump." Of course, with Trump.
There’s no time to waste. Cuba faces a cratered economy, a humanitarian crisis and an oil blockade from the Trump administration. It wants to avoid being the next Venezuela as the United States levels sanctions and raises a military threat unseen between the countries since the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis.
Rodríguez Castro could be the bridge between both sides.
USA TODAY spoke to more than a dozen people who have had personal dealings with Rodríguez Castro. Many of them spoke on the condition of anonymity because their exchanges were private or they are not authorized to speak on the record.
Sitting in his grandfather’s old office atop Havana’s Convention Center, home to Cuba’s parliament, Rodríguez Castro discussed his vision for the future of Cuba and why he believes he is the one to achieve it.
![[Image: cc757cc84bf7ae866c6c538bed655046.webp]](https://denyignorance.com/uploader/images/cc757cc84bf7ae866c6c538bed655046.webp)
![[Image: 86090f05386bbcf5b846de956906d830.webp]](https://denyignorance.com/uploader/images/86090f05386bbcf5b846de956906d830.webp)
Well it will be pretty simple. Renounce Communism, allow citizens to own private enterprises in all industries, and perhaps no more funding radical NGO's who visit the island and then come back to the states spewing radical Marxism. I would say those are fairly simple requests for those who want to see their people prosper. I also believe the people would prefer it too.
Its looking like good news could soon be hitting Cuba if things go well!



