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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 2.5 page paper which examines how successful the Cuban Revolution has been. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
2 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JR7_RAcubrev.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
disaster and oppression for the Cuban people. However, Americans are not people who have experienced even a bit of what the Cuban people have experienced in the past. As one
author notes, "Understanding Cuban society objectively is incredibly difficult, given 45 years of unremitting US propaganda against Fidel Castro, the Cuban government and Cuban society" (Bohmer, 2004). As such there
are many positive realities concerning that revolution and its success since the 60s. The following paper examines the successful nature of the Cuban Revolution and its aftermath. The
Cuban Revolution After the Revolution we note that many things changed for the better in Cuba. This is not to say that it was perfect, but it was far better
than it had, perhaps ever, been. Bohmer (2004) illustrates how "From the 1960s to the late 1980s, Cuba was one of the most economically equal countries in the world. Almost
all production was owned and organized by the state" (Bohmer, 2004). The nation had free health care, education offered on an equal free basis, and full employment (Bohmer, 2004). There
were many different apartment houses built so that people had a place to live and in the rural countryside "electrification, indoor plumbing, drinkable water and basic housing was provided for
almost all Cubans. Hunger and absolute poverty were overcome" (Bohmer, 2004). As mentioned, Cuba was not perfect. However, no nation is perfect,
nor does it do all that needs to be done for all people. Cuba had a problem, and perhaps still does, with gaining access to consumer goods, primarily because nations
would not do business. The United States put a trade embargo on Cuba and this clearly supported a sort of negative attitude towards doing business with Castro and Cuba (GlobalSecurity.org,
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