Cuba’s government has spent the last days attempting to get the island’s national grid functioning after repeated island-wide blackouts. Without power, sleep becomes difficult in the heat, food spoils and the water supply fails.

Parts of Cuba’s communist system still function: the municipality sent Maria food. “We are three families here,” she said. “I live alone, the lady who lives next to me [does] also, and there are two children, the children’s mother, her aunt and an elderly man.”

A week after the blackout, the island has returned to the status quo ante with regular power cuts of up to 20 hours a day. But the crisis has left a deep, melancholy dread about the future.

  • InverseParallax@lemmy.world
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    26 days ago

    So, I’m just spitballing here, but maybe we could send a cvn down to help? Think 1 could power the island itself.

    Like, as a gesture of good will?

    • Varyk@sh.itjust.works
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      25 days ago

      are you serious? and I don’t mean that as an insult, I’m actually unsure if you are serious.

      a total collapse of Cuba is the whole reason the US has been blockading them for half a century.

      infrastructure collapse is happening specifically because the US won’t allow Cuba to make infrastructure deals and technology deals with other countries without facing explicit and implicit sanctions and severe material limits.

      desperate poverty is exactly what the US government has been working towards inflicting on Cuba for decades.