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Posts Tagged ‘travel

2830612461_5924b6eba9Last week we told you about an initiative among several U.S. Senators to lift the ban on U.S. tourism to Cuba. While some — both on the Cuban side and the U.S. side — might see this as a good thing for the island, Spain’s El País reports (and editorializes) that the Cuban government is proceeding with caution:

Authorities in Havana are looking anxiously at the possibility that the U.S. might lift the travel ban that impedes American tourists from visiting Cuba “too soon”. On the one hand this is desired and seen as a salvation in these times of crisis, but on the other, the end of the banning of U.S. tourism is perceived as a challenge, with a high potential for destabilizing the political and idealogical landscape, according to observers and diplomats.

To provide perspective on what this major change in U.S.-Cuba relations could mean to prolongation of Cuba as we know it today, El País points to statements made by Cuban politician Armando Hart, who warned against the effects of a lifting of the embargo on Cuban society:

If he [Obama] keeps his promise [of lifting the embargo], a new age of idealogical combat between the Cuban revolution and imperialism will be born. Within it, the design of a new theoretical and propagandistic concept around our ideas and their origin will be needed…a broad migration towards distinct objectives could come upon us and we need to culturally prepare ourselves for that.”

I think this pretty much sums up the overall point: this isn’t just about welcoming dollars into the Cuban economy via American tourism, but rather what that will actually mean to Cuba: an influx of everything the revolution has been trying to combat all these years. American tourism is a demonstration of rampant consumerism which is capitalism at its maximum expression, and that flies in the face of the Cuban way of life. Sure, it’s been filtering through for years now via European tourism, but this sudden aperture is bound to push communist leaders on the island to reconsider the way the reconcile the ideals they wish their people to live by and the fact that the enemy is coming in and leaving a piece of their culture of consumption on the island.

What do you think? Will U.S. tourism to Cuba radically change Cuban society? How will leaders deal with this? What will Cuba look like after, say, 20 years of U.S. tourism to the island? Share your thoughts in the comments below.

Via / El País

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189.jpgNext time you’re about to take a trip, you might want to think twice before you pick up a Lonely Planet guidebook. Apparently at least one guidebook author thought it was OK to write about countries he’d never visited, among them Colombia:

A former Lonely Planet travel writer who provoked controversy after he admitted he did not always visit the places he reviewed today played down the “hyperbole” surrounding his revelations.

Thomas Kohnstamm’s book Do Travel Writers Go to Hell? contains tales of living with a prostitute, dealing drugs and in one case, writing about Colombia, without actually visiting the country.

“They didn’t pay me enough to go to Colombia,” he told Australia’s Sunday Herald Sun newspaper.

“I wrote the book in San Francisco. I got the information from a chick I was dating who was in an intern in the Colombian consulate.”

Kohnstamm told the paper he had worked on more than a dozen books for Lonely Planet, including their titles on Brazil, Colombia, the Caribbean, South America, Venezuela and Chile.

The author claims that as a writer, it just isn’t possible to visit all the places you are asked to write about because you aren’t paid enough. Lonely Planet is denying that similar white lies are being told in any of their other guidebooks.

Via / Guardian

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Delta Has Expansion Plans for Mexico

8:38 am By Maegan La Mala · mexico|travel · Comments Off

5 Oct 2005

delta.jpg The recently bankrupt Delta Air Lines wants to increase service to Mexico by 126% in April of next year. Included in the plans will be the first non-stop flight from Atlanta to Acapulco. They also will add a new destination, Zihuatanejo/Ixtapa.

If all flights are approved by the Department of Transportation, Delta will have a total of 41 flights to 11 destinations in Mexico. They hope to begin all of the new schedules in February/March 2006.

Delta News Via / Yahoo!Finance

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All Aboard America pero Not Latin America

8:38 am By Maegan La Mala · Immigration|States · Comments Off

23 Sep 2005

guagua.jpg With rising airline prices, many communities, Latinos included, rely on other means of transportation for business and pleasure. Undocumented residents who face growing restrictions on driving often use bus services. However, soon they may be left with no other option but to stay put. A recently revealed Greyhound policy, sounds like racial profiling and could discriminate against Latinos. The policy, which prohibits under threat of termination and possible arrest, selling tickets to undocumented immigrants, was first made public by La Opinión.

But how exactly do you spot an undocumented immigrant? Well Greyhound is telling their employees to beware of people in large groups, moving in single file and traveling with little or no luggage. It says other telltale signs include people “trying to hide or stay out of plain view” or large groups led by a “guide” who holds everyone’s tickets. Hmmm, so does that mean that they won’t sell tickets to large groups of shy white people traveling with backpacks? Probably not.

It seems the policy was created to protect the bus company after another bus company was indicted in 2001 on immigrant smuggling charges. But what policy will protect nuestra gente?

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VivirLatino is a daily publication published by Mamita Mala Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse Latin@ diaspora.

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