Identidades in English No 2, May 2014 | Page 27

as they are the most historically disadvantaged for this sort of situation. Political mucky mucks talk about prostitution in a very soft voice. They deny it is a scourge that sacrifices more and more young people daily in search of economic solutions. This reality situates parents at a dead end when it comes to trying to combat the demoralization their children are succumbing to. This scourge even affects young men, who engage in homosexual practices as an economic out, and not as a sexual preference, something many of them openly confess. A great many of these young people have been penalized, fined or warned by the police, but nothing is done to confront the problems that create these attitudes and behaviors. We should recall that the women’s prison built in Havana to house only prostitutes is now essentially a way of expelling from the city young people from other provinces who come to the capital to improve their economic situation by selling their bodies. This generalized corruption eats away at these new generations’ ethical references. They have grown up at a time when all this has become normal and these attitudes are accepted. It is no longer only about a few politicians who thrived from the public coffer nor about citizens deprived of any possibility of satisfying their needs by doing honest work and that have to steal anything they can from a State that demands everything and offers less and less. Today, even the police have been won over by corruption. Agents sell influence and benefits without any shame whatsoever. The hustle bustle of interests regarding prostitution is so hurtful. Cubans with economic means have a competitive advantage. Attorneys, prosecutors and judges conspire to sell prisoners even their own rights. The latter know nearly nothing about the damage this does to their own dignity, and that of their families. Other entities, like the Immigration Authority (MININT) and the Cuban General Customs, are equally discredited. Life in poor neighborhoods worsens, slums increase in number, and inequalities and despair are greater than official indolence and the blindness of important international personalities. It is incredibly lamentable to see how the educational system has gotten caught in this infamous, corrupt, spiraling quagmire. Teachers and professors survive by commercializing exams and grades. This has become an everyday tragedy about which only Cuba’s leaders seem not to know. What can be said about the future of a nation where a partial qualifying exam grade costs 5 dollars and the course’s completion costs $50? Another scourge we cannot rid ourselves of, because it constitutes the very essence of how those with power hold on to it, is the permanent terror to which everyday citizens are subjected. In a country where everything is mandatory or prohibited, the only thing that works with certain efficacy is mechanisms of surveillance/control/coercion/repression. The well-oiled machine that sets Cubans against Cubans, and eventually divides them into repressors and victims, is one of the trump cards this regime—with its inability to fulfill plans, promises or responsibilities—holds in its hand. It is expert at keeping up and using the panic it induces, and bewilders and paralyzes people’s spirits and thoughts. The criminal impunity of a regime capable of keeping a valiant human rights activist like Sonia Garro imprisoned “provisionally” for two years, and fabricate an absurd accusation against Manuel Cuesta Morúa, a very prestigious, humble and dignified leader, is as bad as the legal aberration known as “dangerousness index.” The latter has sent thousands of citizens—men and women of all ages, mostly black, without them having 2