UN Cuba to recognize private property under new constitution - Creeping Capitalism

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https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-44836358

Cuba will officially recognise private property for the first time under a new constitution that features a number of far-reaching changes, state media say.

Property sales were banned after Fidel Castro came to power in 1959, but permitted after a law change in 2011.

The communist-run state's new constitution will reaffirm that central planning and state enterprise are key to the economy.

It is expected to be approved by a vote at the national assembly next week.

The draft constitution would then be put to a popular referendum for final approval later this year.

If it is passed it will replace the existing constitution which was approved by the Communist Party in 1976.

Under the proposed reforms the party will remain as Cuba's dominant political force, the Granma newspaper reports.

But presidents will be limited to serving two consecutive five-year terms and political power will be divided between the president and a prime minister.

It will ban discrimination based on gender, ethnic origin or disability. LGBT groups are hopeful it will also legalise same-sex marriage.

Since 2010, Cuba has undergone a series of market reforms aimed at boosting the island's economy.

The national assembly proposed a number of constitutional reforms last month - including presidential term limits and the legalisation of same-sex marriage - as the country moves to decide its political future.

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REUTERS
Former President Raúl Castro will see through the planned reforms

The last constitutional reform in 2002 decreed that the socialist character of the political system in Cuba was "irrevocable".

The intention of the proposed reforms is to constitutionally formalise the island's economic and social opening-up while maintaining this "irrevocable" socialist system.

President Miguel Díaz-Canel announced last month that former President Raúl Castro will lead the potential reforms.

Mr Díaz-Canel took over from Mr Castro as the country's leader in April.

The Castro brothers, first Fidel and them Raul, ruled the country between 1959 and 2018.
 
Property sales were banned after Fidel Castro came to power in 1959, but permitted after a law change in 2011.
So you could sell stuff between 2011 and 2018, but you couldn't own it? Or you could sorta own stuff, but the government just come in and say "yoink" at any point?
 
Hear that?

That's the sound of a million college kids in Che T-shirts and old army jackets shedding a single tear, in unison, like good commies.
 
I'm sure the Far Left will REEE about this being a win for the PATRIARCHY and the corrupt Drumpf (because reasons) and call for everyone to #resist the capitalistic change in Cuba until Real Communismtm can be implemented.

I hope these changes go through, not only because it will be a slap in the face to all the pro communist lefties in college campuses and Starbucks the world over, but because the cubans have lived under horrible oppression under communism for decades, and deserve to have freedom in their own country as opposed to having to come here for freedom.
 
I was gonna' crack a joke, but I'm just happy for them. Even if it doesn't go through, the fact that the Cuban government considered this as a possibility at all shows that Cuba is at least making some progress.

may cubans one day have the right to drink beer on their porches and watch as the bald eagle soars through the sky
 
I hope this works out. Despite despising Commie Bastards everywhere, I have a soft spot for Cuba and I'm glad they're stepping in the right direction and don't want to see them turn into Venezuela.
 
This is amazing.

More importantly though, there's a newspaper called "The Granma"?

Funny story there: it was the name of the yacht that was used to smuggle the Castro brothers (and some of their pals) into Cuba back in the day. Being humorless commies, they decided that it needed to be given the appropriate stature of such a HERO OF LA REVOLUCION and gave their official organ a ridiculous name.

And tankies wonder why we don't take them seriously.
 
The part about the term limits is big news. That means less power to the head of the state and makes Cuba more in line with the rest of the world
 
Does this mean a real Cuban Cuba Libre will now be made with Coca Cola?

Also, is the same sex marriage thing inspired by the US naming a street in San Francisco after Castro?

 
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Soooooo...I guess the soi disant communist revolutionaries in the US are pretty broken up now that it's been revealed time and time and time again that late-stage Communism just laps back around to capitalism. Eh comrades? Eh? Eh?
 
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