From our Bureau of Socialist Social Justice with some assistance from our Bureau of Perfectly Acceptable and Laudable Apartheid
Hey, this is righteous apartheid. This is social justice at its finest. Foreigners who bring dollars and euros to a bankrupt failed state that happens to be socialist should receive special treatment, given the fact that their euros and dollars help keep socialism alive.
Besides, all those dark-skinned people down there in the Caribbean are inferior human beings to begin with. And this observation is not racist when it is made by any leftist. Socialism simply acknowledges the obvious, openly and courageously. Dark-skinned people are in fact inferior and if apartheid policies uphold the socialism that makes their naturally wretched lives tolerable, then apartheid is not only good, but praiseworthy. Given their limited intelligence, apartheid tourism is their best hope for survival.
Abridged and loosely translated from Diario de Cuba
While almost half a million Cubans lack running water, the regime has already finished the first 6.5 kilometers of the new Turiguanó-La Bandera drinking water pipeline, which will guarantee service in the Jardines del Rey tourist hub, reported the official Cuban News Agency (ACN).
Epifanio Núñez Arias, director of investments in the Provincial Delegation of Hydraulic Resources, specified to the ACN that since July 10 the water reaches Jardines del Rey through high-density polyethylene pipes 800 millimeters in diameter, unlike the previous one, made of fiberglass and 500 millimeters in diameter.
The official explained that the section enabled includes the new bypass (diversion in the pipe line), now 630 millimeters in diameter, when before it was 200 millimeters. This allows direct circulation of water from the Patria III and Los Satos pumping stations to La Bandera, south of Cayo Coco, in the Jardines del Rey beach area.
The Jardines del Rey tourist enclave welcomes 20% of foreign visitors who arrive in Cuba. This destination has the facility to combine the modalities of sun and beach, and ecological, both with great acceptance. There are 25 facilities with 10,000 rooms in Cayo Coco, Guillermo and Paredón Grande.
While the regime continues to invest in its hotel infrastructure, more than 475,000 people in Cuba lack regular access to running water, while another 156,000 do not have any water at all, Antonio Rodríguez Rodríguez, president of the National Institute of Hydraulic Resources (INRH), recently reported.
Whole story HERE in Spanish
Tell it to those Spanish influencers sent to Cuba to drum up tourism–if you want to waste your time.
I know EXACTLY what this man feels like. Many years ago one of the hurricanes that hit Florida knocked out our power and water supply (well pump). We had to take buckets of water out of our pool to flush the toilets for a couple of days. It was pure hell for those two days. We cheered when the power came back on. I’m sure this poor fellow was also relieved when power and water supply was restored.