Identidades in English No 4, December 2014 | Page 27

Far from repudiating the revolutionary government’s earlier gaffe or demonstrating even the slightest interest in true reform, the contemporary migration policies - which are designed to return Havana migrants back to their regions of origin (forcefully and inhumanely) - confirm indolent illogical decision-making and reveal the project’s failure. The current situation confirms the inescapable tight spot the government has put itself in once again, thanks to its senseless way of doing things and manipulation of the people: the very orientales who were once cannon fodder for the revolutionary system are today a living denunciation, endangering the stability of its power. There is no doubt that this is just one more instance of the many governmental plans that have backfired. Paradoxically, the emigrants who are settled on Havana’s periphery are almost unanimously either against or indifferent to the current policies. Just as the poorest Cubans, they are fed up with the rhetoric they’ve been hearing for over fifty years - about a future woven in broad daylight, only to be unraveled in the shadows, like Penelope’s shroud. It seems the government has had no choice but to find sympathizers amongst the new (bastard) middle class formed by the sediment of money generated by military businessmen, foreign investment, and tourism, or from hypocritical, opportunistic intellectuals who love to pose as the saviors of socialism. This is the only social class that benefits from the dictatorship’s old fashioned, conservative way of the revolution, the leaders of which proclaimed that it was of the poor and for the poor. It is a shame that these issues are not being studied by historians and social scientists the way they should, and that it is only possible to find any sort discussion about them (al- ways brief and rapidly penned) in the independent press or perhaps presentations by a few scholars who work on their own and at their own risk. One consequence of this informational void, particularly given the increased regionalist discrimination - especially against the orientales - in present-day Havana today, is that most observers understand today’s social dynamics merely as the result of historical backwardness, yet another chapter in the age-old saga of our dis-encounters on account of geographic obsessions. I think this is too simplistic, 27