this post was submitted on 23 May 2026
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[–] arrow74@lemmy.zip 6 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (1 children)

That's a rather weak argument. Rich people travel to plenty of dangerous places. Those places typically then develop high class resorts with security to attend to them

Don't mistake my comment to be saying the US is right about Cuba. It absolutely isn't. I just don't think "people travel there" is much of an indicator of anything

In fact; is committing a fallacy of intransitivity, that's a type of non sequitur fallacy.

And that's how it is in Cuba and in my country too, and that's why I'm able to believe that about Cuba in the first place.

The Cuban and Venezuelan governments are the same: the vast majority of the population is below the global thresholds of extreme poverty, in a very precarious situation, where basic services do not work most of the time (in my country we are privileged compared to Cuba; here at least water can reach us from time to time, even if it takes a long time [normally more than a month; although the duty is that it is always present], and the electricity is cut off 8 hours a day [at least that is how it is in the state] where alive], but there is almost no drinking water service and the normal thing is that there is no electricity; they can be without electricity service for more than 18 hours); but obviously they are not going to demonstrate that just as in Brazil they are not going to show you the Favelas, they directly create tourist areas that are a bubble isolated from the reality of the country. It is simply a political ploy to pretend that everything is fine, a facade.