First you get the money, and then you get the power, and then you get the women.
153
Laowai64Apr 4, 2026
+19
Say hello to my little friend!
19
Squirrel_Master82Apr 4, 2026
+8
Whenever I hear the scarface quote, I think of the L.O.X and DMX song.
See, I believe in money, power and respect.
First, you get the money, then you get the motherfuckin' power.
After you get the fuckin' power, motherfuckers will respect you.
Money, power, respect
8
worksnake6 days ago
+1
I prefer Lauryn Hill's lines in Final Hour.
1
Skele_again6 days ago
+50
The prisoner quoted in the article was serving 6 years for robbery. How is he a political prisoner?
50
1917he6 days ago
+22
I'm not sure of the details of Albis Gainza's charges or trial but I can make a guess at how robbery could be political. Other than completely fabricating the charges from nothing, perhaps Albis was receiving illicit kickbacks or payments while authorities looked the other way. Once he lost favor it was easy to flip the script.
22
Skele_again6 days ago
+4
Ahh thank you. Too little sleep to be critical thinking here lol.
4
GreenTheOlive6 days ago
+11
You do understand that he just made that up right? Quote from another article covering this: https://www.taipeitimes.com/News/world/archives/2026/04/05/2003855072
“Of half a dozen former prisoners interviewed by Agence France-Presse outside La Lima, none were jailed for political reasons.”
11
Guy_GuyGuy6 days ago
+3
Nothing that user said was said with confidence, he described two extremely common possible occurrences in highly corrupt countries like Cuba. I don't know why you felt the need to rush to the defense of the Cuban regime.
3
pl4876 days ago
+3
The Cuban government isn't going to let the political prisoners talk to the media. The foreign journalists in the country get to go only where their handlers let them go.
3
xmuskorx5 days ago
+6
Cuba denies having any political prisoners, they all have made up charges imposed by cangaroo courts.
6
non3type6 days ago
+3
Depends if the charges were fabricated or sentence inflated I guess. Sometimes it just requires enough attention, holding another countries citizen for years can make things complicated.
3
Fracture-Point-3 days ago
+1
Watergate was a burglary.
1
UnitSmall2200Apr 4, 2026
+74
when will the US free the victims of their prison industrial complex? And what about those imprisoned in Guantanamo Bay? And those incarcerated by ICE?
74
kagethemage6 days ago
+41
The United States has more prisoners than any other country in the world with an incarceration rate 5 times higher than China. The US has more prisoners than the populations of Wyoming, Vermont, and Alaska… combined.
41
The_Lapsed_Pacifist6 days ago
+19
1% of the adult population is the figure I’ve heard. Which is frankly insane.
19
kagethemage6 days ago
+25
And that’s at any given time. 5% serve time in prison. 1 in 4 black men have spent the one in prison. And that’s prison, not jail. I know people who have been arrested and were found innocent but spent 6 months in jail just waiting for their trial.
25
curiousbydesignApr 4, 2026
+15
Yeah, we don't do that. And won't do that. The system needs bodies.
15
pchlster6 days ago
+4
It's like the system is set up so some people can make money by exploiting the prison slave labour or something? And the amendment is pretty clear, so it's not like it's unintended or anything.
4
curiousbydesign6 days ago
+4
Yep. 'Murica. We still do slavery but with a few tricks and words so it don't appear too blatant.
4
elguntor6 days ago
-2
Look who they elect to represent who they are and you will have your answer
-2
sureal426 days ago
+8
Still don't know why we are f****** with cuba right now...
8
Jettx026 days ago
+11
Genuinely, it’s because if their society was left alone they would flourish and it would be too good of an example for Americans. Imagine a tiny, poor island country just 100 miles south of the most powerful country in the world but they have better social services and take better care of their people.
Cuba sends doctors all around the world to help during catastrophes, they have some of the best doctors in the world. When Hurricane Katrina hit the US, Cuba offered to send their team of emergency doctors, but the US declined https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuban_medical_internationalism#:~:text=In%20response%20to%20Hurricane%20Katrina,following%20the%202005%20Kashmir%20earthquake.
11
HUT2Moon5 days ago
+1
Trump wants regime change to be his legacy. Which we will spend the next century paying for in terms of world hating us.
1
itcheyness6 days ago
Because conservatives don't feel like "real men" unless they're able to bully someone they perceive as weaker than them.
0
wewladendmylife6 days ago
-1
Because they had a better quality of life, access to healthcare, social services and work rights compared to the US. They have a higher life expediency than the US while spending much less. If we didn't meddle with them they would be an example of what's possible when a government isn't focused on the accumulation of capital at all costs.
Cuban doctors are some of the best trained in the world. They were used as a "trade" with Venezuela for oil and Cuba sent them to the US after Katrina.
-1
Dingleburps6 days ago
+9
Why don't all you wanna be socialists move to Cuba if its so great. The revolution destroyed that island. What a joke.
9
wewladendmylife6 days ago
+1
The revolution destroyed all those plantations and forced labor, what a tragedy.
650,000 medical debt bankruptcies per year in the US with a lower life expediency than Cuba. Nearly triple the number of doctors per 10,00 people. Lower homicide and malnutrition rate. Almost no homelessness. Gosh why would we want this in the US? You honestly think we're doing anything right here?
1
Dingleburps5 days ago
+4
We have the right to vote and elect our government officials. You have the right of creating your own political party if you'd like to. What good is a doctor when hospitals don't even have syringes or medication. Why have Cuban doctors been leaving the island for decades? Malnutrition rate? Lol, people have been starving in Cuba with rationed quotas. Kids can't drink milk after the age of 4. Get your ass to Cuba and stay there.
4
wewladendmylife5 days ago
+1
No we have the right to select either the blue or red neocons.
Do you think there is an outside force preventing medication and medical equipment from entering Cuba? Perhaps a much larger country very close to it? Do you think the 50+ year embargo and the recent total oil blockade has anything to do with their recently diminished QoL?
Doctors have to manually pump ventilators in Cuban NICUs. When they could no longer power their equipment anyone on life-sustaining medical equipment had the plug pulled by the US. It's a disgrace.
Cuban medical brigades are leaving. They're leaving the underdeveloped areas of South America due to US pressure. We got very, very upset that they were using their expertise to help others free of charge.
I was incorrect about the malnutrition rate, Cuba and the US both have a rate of 3%. Do you have any source showing a higher rate before the Trump blockade? [https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/SN.ITK.DEFC.ZS?end=2023&locations=US-CU&name\_desc=false&start=2001](https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/SN.ITK.DEFC.ZS?end=2023&locations=US-CU&name_desc=false&start=2001)
"Love it or leave it" you can't really think of anything better? We're set to close around 700 rural hospitals with our recent medicaid cuts. I'm not leaving, I'm staying to support socialist policies that actually help the working class.
1
sureal425 days ago
You have links proving this right...
0
Dingleburps5 days ago
You don't need links when you're Cuban.
0
sureal425 days ago
+3
Lol, yeah yeah you do...
Because random people on the internet make claims all the time, backing up those claims is what gives them credibility. No source, no credibility...
3
wewladendmylife5 days ago
+3
No Batista was so much better, just ask the dependent of a plantation owner under Batista. Ending forced labor ruined Cuba!
3
wewladendmylife5 days ago
+3
Were your family plantation owners?
Edit I will take that as a yes lol
3
Laowai64Apr 4, 2026
+9
Article text:
Cuban authorities have begun to free prisoners after announcing they would pardon 2,010 inmates, the second release in less than a month as the country faces heightened US pressure.
More than 20 inmates emerged from La Lima penitentiary in east Havana on Friday, holding their release papers, crying and hugging relatives who had been waiting for them all morning.
“Thank you for this opportunity that they gave us,” said Albis Gainza, 46, who had served half of a six-year sentence for robbery.
He said he could not sleep after learning he would be released.
“This needs to keep going ... [and] more are released,” Gainza told AFP.
The Cuban government announced late on Thursday plans to pardon 2,010 prisoners as a “humanitarian” gesture to mark Holy Week.
The announcement came days after Donald Trump eased a de facto oil blockade of Cuba by allowing a Russian tanker to deliver crude oil to the nation.
The Trump administration has called for change in communist-run Cuba’s system of government, and the US president has mused about “taking” the island.
Releasing political prisoners has long been a core US demand in Cuba, and the two sides have held talks recently, with Havana promising last month to release dozens of individuals.
People
Michael Bustamante, the chair of Cuban studies at the University of Miami, said: “It seems not far-fetched to think that this is a sign that some of the conversation between both governments is advancing. Perhaps slowly, but advancing.
“To where? Unclear,” he added. “I think we will also have to see who is included in these releases to have a sense of their potential political significance.”
The Cuban government has not said who will be pardoned, what crimes they committed or when they will be set free. It said the choice was based on the nature of their crimes, good behaviour in prison, health reasons and time served.
It added that the “humanitarian and sovereign gesture” would include young people, women and prisoners over 60 years old who are scheduled for early release within the next six months to a year.
Cuba said on 12 March that it would free 51 prisoners as a sign of “good will” toward the Vatican, which has often acted as a mediator between Washington and Havana.
A day later, President Miguel Díaz-Canel confirmed that talks had taken place between US and Cuban officials.
Havana said on Thursday that its latest move would be the fifth time since 2011 that it had pardoned prisoners, amounting to more than 11,000 people.
It said its decision was “taking place within the context of the religious observances of Holy Week – a customary practice within our criminal justice system and a reflection of the humanitarian legacy of the revolution.”
It added that foreigners were among those being pardoned, as well as Cuban citizens living abroad and sentenced in absentia.
The government said the individuals being released from prison would not include people who committed murder, sexual assault, drug-related crimes, theft, illegal slaughter of livestock or crimes against authority.
Also on Thursday, Russia announced it would send a second oil tanker to Cuba, which Bustamante highlighted as potentially significant.
“One is tempted to draw the conclusion or wonder if the Trump administration’s decision to let in a Russian ship … and maybe another one, may or may not be related here,” he said.
Marco Rubio, the US secretary of state, is a Cuban-American and a vociferous critic of Havana’s government. He told Fox News on Tuesday that Cuba needed economic and political reforms.
“You cannot fix their economy if you don’t change their system of government,” Rubio said. “But they’re in a lot of trouble, there’s no doubt about it, and we’ll have more news on that fairly soon
9
FinngroveApr 4, 2026
+2
Thank you
2
MidnightTokrApr 4, 2026
+31
Cuba is a sovereign country, nobody should force them to release their own criminals.
31
Feeling_Hotel8096Apr 4, 2026
+37
Venezuela was forced to release many political prisoners like the former mayor of Caracas. Not 100% bad IMO.
37
Denbt_Nationale6 days ago
+10
"Nazi Germany is a sovereign country, nobody should force them to..."
10
sergiocamposnt4 days ago
+2
You know that the US is the villain here, right?
2
chemicalmacondo6 days ago
HAHAHA you are comparing nazi Germany to a country that has been harassed when not plain attacked by the US since the early 1960s. And I am operating from the principle that it is none of the US government's business how any other country operates, provided they cause no harm to the US or its representatives.
It took a black president to show that it was all BS meant for internal US electoral politics.
And then the American experiment pooped Trump out.
Twice.
The USA is waaaaaaay closer to look like Nazi Germany than Cuba has ever been. Only brainwashed Americans can't see that.
1
Dingleburps6 days ago
+3
Funny how in Cuba speaking against the government makes you a criminal. These are all political prisoners getting released.
3
Kendall_Raine6 days ago
+20
Oh really? These are ALL political prisoners?
>“Thank you for this opportunity that they gave us,” said Albis Gainza, 46, who had served half of a six-year sentence for robbery.
Per the article.
Can you explain to me how being in prison for robbery makes you a "politicial prisoner"? I'll wait.
20
Guy_GuyGuy6 days ago
I'm not going to tell you *all* of the prisoners or even *this* prisoner being released are political, but holy you don't understand how highly corrupt authoritarian countries work.
He could have committed robbery. He could have occupied a position where he accepted bribes or embezzled, as pretty much everyone does in poor and corrupt countries like Cuba, and other Cuban officials looked the other way until he said something they didn't like. They could have charged him with complete bullshit and no robbery occurred.
We don't know and you don't know because the only people talking in the room are the Cuban government, journalists invited by them, and the newly-freed prisoners who are talking to said invited journalists and are very keen to not draw the ire of the regime that is still active above them.
0
Dingleburps6 days ago
-5
Had not seen that but tell me how this was pressured by the US? Pressure has been placed to release political prisoners not common criminals. Cuba has released criminals in the past with the goal of weaponizing them into the US. My comment of not having basic rights of expression and opinion still stand.
-5
Kendall_Raine6 days ago
+9
You literally said "these are all political prisoners." Don't go moving the goalposts now.
9
Dingleburps6 days ago
-3
Goal posts? I literally admitted to not seeing that. Doesn't change anything. They should release those imprisoned for trying to express themselves.
-3
roughtimes6 days ago
+11
It's funny if you've been ignoring the American justice system over the past year.
11
SnoopRion696 days ago
-3
You go tell a political prisoner in Cuba they have to stay locked up to make a point about the US prison system. This is good news
-3
Dingleburps6 days ago
-3
If this was cuba every single protestor as well as all democrats would be in prison or killed. Tens of thousands have been executed since the revolution. We're not at Cubas level just yet.
-3
roughtimes6 days ago
+1
It's Cuba, not Iran.
1
Dingleburps6 days ago
+2
No, it's Cuba. Are you Cuban? Because my family had to flee and I personally know poltical prisoners that served over 20 years as well as families whose sons were executed via firing squads. Cuba is not motivated by religion like Iran but they've been just as cruel and ruthless. They are murderers and hopefully all responsible will one day pay like the Nazis did.
2
roughtimes6 days ago
+2
Yeah... So, it's Cuba, not Iran.
You don't think other countries can't devolve into something similar? They all start somewhere.
2
roughtimes6 days ago
+3
Funny enough, i bet i've spent more time in Cuba more than you have.
3
Dingleburps5 days ago
+3
Good for you. You should stay there and continue to support the regime.
3
WorldlyAd30006 days ago
+2
People who committed "crimes against authority" were not released...
2
AstroBullivant6 days ago
America, Venezuela, etc are all sovereign countries as well. No one should force them to sell oil to Cuba. It sounds like you really want to exterminate a lot of dissidents.
0
Laowai64Apr 4, 2026
-77
No one “forced” them. The article says Cuba announced the pardons themselves and framed it as a humanitarian move tied to Holy Week and ongoing talks.
-77
EmergencyFun9106Apr 4, 2026
+70
Bro we literally have been blockading them for the last month. Yes we absolutely forced them to. They're trying to do anything they can to get the US to release the blockade so that the whole country can have power again.
70
angrysquirrel7776 days ago
+3
The US does not have a blockade against Cuba, it has an embargo
3
EmergencyFun91066 days ago
+2
An embargo being enforced by the US coast guard. The UN human rights high commissioner called it a "fuel blockade". The difference doesn't really matter when your country's infrastructure is collapsing from a lack of fuel.
2
angrysquirrel7776 days ago
+2
Is the Coast guard actully physically preventing ships from landing in Cuba?
2
EmergencyFun91066 days ago
+2
"The United States Navy and Coast Guard have been relentless in pursuing tankers Washington suspects of trying to bring oil to Cuba, boarding ships as far away as the Indian Ocean, and shadowing others around the Caribbean to ensure they can't make a dash for the Port of Havana."
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/cuba-canada-embargo-aid-9.7100202
2
angrysquirrel7776 days ago
+1
So it does seem like it is becoming a true blockade for oil at least but not any other supplies. Interesting
1
EmergencyFun91066 days ago
+1
Yes. The US is trying very hard to argue that this isn't a blockade since it's not a *full* blockade of goods. A blockade would be considered an act of war under international law and so they don't want it to bi l be officially considered one. But when you completely embargo a critical resource like fuel it has largely the same effect as a full embargo since fuel is needed for the transportation of other goods, keeping hospitals running, and even fueling other boats to import goods that aren't embargoed.
It's an absolutely humanitarian disaster on the ground there. While it's hard to get exact numbers, some estimates say that as many as 100,000 Cubans may be waiting for surgeries and the infant mortality rate may have doubled. We won't have accurate figures for a while (if ever) but it's clear that the US is willingly causing needless suffering of the Cubans without any real justification for it.
1
EmergencyFun91066 days ago
+1
It's also worth pointing out that just about everything that's going on right now with the US foreign policy is some kind of war crime. A blockade isn't a war crime in and of itself, but one that targets civilians, causes starvation, or is used as a form of collective punishment absolutely is. The strikes in Iran have also had horrifying numbers of civilian casualties. There was the strike on the girls middle school in Minab that killed 180 children which made a lot of news coverage, but there has also been a strike on a sports hall which was adjacent to an elementary school in Lamerd which killed at least 21 people including some teenage girls. The US also sank the Iranian frigate Dena and allegedly left without attempting to rescue survivors. Trump has also threatened to destroy all of Iran's energy and desalination plants, which would be a war crime that would least to a humanitarian disaster on a scale we haven't seen in decades. Then there were the Venezuelan boat strikes which appear to have, at least in several cases, targeted civilian fishing boats that showed no evidence of being either combatants or drug smugglers, as well as including at least one double tap strike on a sinking boat, which is about as clear cut of a war crime at it gets.
The US has definitely not always had a clean record when it comes to conduct in war, but what we're seeing this past year is unlike anything we've ever seen before from the US.
1
DivineArkandosApr 4, 2026
+14
The US killed a lot of cuban people in the last month. Maybe you should think before writing.
14
AstroBullivant6 days ago
-3
Many Cuban people here say the Cuban government has been trying to kill them. I don’t think it was the US government who was killing those people in Cuba.
-3
DivineArkandos6 days ago
+3
My guy, how many died in the hospitals and care facilities due to the power blackout? How many infants?
3
Bad_wolf426 days ago
I also have Cuban family who think that suggesting that the taxes should pay for education is somehow making me exactly the same as Fidel Castro, so maybe they have some trauma related to communism that makes them bad thinkers.
0
ChaiboiiiApr 4, 2026
+5
Yea just like how the US didnt "force" Hawaii to join them?
5
AstroBullivant6 days ago
-1
Why exactly do you want those 2,000 dissidents to be executed?
-1
Chaiboiii6 days ago
Who said that? If anything im giving the credit to the US for saving those 2000 dissidents! But they did it by force through illegal blockade.
0
Sufficient-Owl18266 days ago
+6
Feels like one of those situations where both sides are trying to spin it as a win.
On one hand, releasing that many people at once sounds huge and honestly kind of emotional just picturing families waiting outside like that.
On the other, tying it to US pressure and fuel policy makes it feel less humanitarian and more transactional.
Kinda messy overall. I just hope at least some of those people actually get a real second shot out of it instead of being part of a political chess move.
6
Shadowthron86 days ago
+3
I don’t think allowing a Russian tanker through is “easing the sanctions” as much as it is Trump being afraid of directly confronting Russia
3
sargonas6 days ago
+1
Did we “ease “ the blockade, or did Trump just forget he was doing one?
1
LobsterbibApr 4, 2026
-7
If you're wondering why the US is doing this, imagine you've got thousands of violent criminals who now owe their freedom to Trump. That's how you create your own private mercenary army in another country. Things are about to get much worse over there.
EDIT: Folks, please learn your history. We're falling for the same shit again.
[https://nsarchive.gwu.edu/sites/default/files/media\_mentions/sept-oct\_2015\_mother\_jones-\_how\_wild\_were\_secret\_negotiations.pdf](https://nsarchive.gwu.edu/sites/default/files/media_mentions/sept-oct_2015_mother_jones-_how_wild_were_secret_negotiations.pdf)
-7
Laowai64Apr 4, 2026
+11
That’s a stretch. The article says the releases are a “humanitarian” gesture tied to Holy Week and ongoing talks, not anything like building a proxy force.
Also, they’re not releasing violent offenders like murder or serious crimes, and this isn’t the first time Cuba has done mass pardons.
11
LobsterbibApr 4, 2026
-15
Now ask yourself why this administration, which is currently bombing an innocent country, has 70,000 innocent people suffering in camps, and has killed its own citizens, why they would care about releasing prisoners as a sign of goodwill. They 100% have prisoners in there they wanted out, either agents of their own or people they can count on. Don't be stupid.
-15
Laowai64Apr 4, 2026
+13
None of that is in the source. If you’ve got a credible link, post it.
13
LobsterbibApr 4, 2026
+2
The US did this exact same thing back in 2015. 3,000+ Cuban prisoners were released on the same "humanitarian" grounds but the whole thing was to cover the release of an American spy. Hell, even the Vatican is playing the same role now as it did then. But this time I imagine the blockade was used as a method of insuring this not be an exchange, but a one-way deal benefitting only the US.
[https://nsarchive.gwu.edu/sites/default/files/media\_mentions/sept-oct\_2015\_mother\_jones-\_how\_wild\_were\_secret\_negotiations.pdf](https://nsarchive.gwu.edu/sites/default/files/media_mentions/sept-oct_2015_mother_jones-_how_wild_were_secret_negotiations.pdf)
2
MoodayTVApr 4, 2026
-1
Yes of course the US government isn't going to come out and say they are attempting to build good will with a potential Cuban insurgency. Obviously. What we do know is that once Iran is wrapped up, they are looking at Cuba next as they've said such.
-1
Laowai64Apr 4, 2026
+9
That’s a lot of speculation. The article ties the releases to Holy Week and ongoing talks, not any kind of insurgency plan.
9
MoodayTVApr 4, 2026
+6
Who do you think ongoing talks are with, the Holy Father?
6
911JosieApr 4, 2026
-6
We've unfortunately had a lot of people develop severe paranoia due to the distrust Trump and his cronies have caused, which was intended.
I obviously hate this regime as much as anyone with a shred of empathy in this country, but I feel like we've reached COVID conspiracy levels with people thinking everything is a ruse, scheme, or ploy.
-6
GentleGerbilApr 4, 2026
+3
Well it really doesn’t help when people within the administration are clearly making millions on Polymarket and Kalshi inside-betting on war. Can you really call it paranoia?
3
911JosieApr 4, 2026
Yes, I can easily say not everything happening all the time is one massive manipulation plot. There's a lot of documented, provable things that the administration is doing that can be focused on without falling into the exact same traps that people accuse MAGA of doing.
I know that ruffles feathers, but it is what it is. People need to remember we're not above falling into traps of misinformation, conspiracy, or propaganda.
Especially with the ever increasing narratives that somehow this admin is the most bumbling, idiotic group there is, but that every event is also carefully orchestrated by them.
0
Jettx026 days ago
+1
Brother just look at history. The USA LOVES to f*** up Latin and South American countries and especially ones that claim and/or are painted as communist countries. If a country doesn’t fall in line we either invade, do a military coup, or support insurgents. It’s happened so many times and we have a very long history specifically f****** with Cuba, I think it’s more of a conspiracy theory to NOT think we’re trying to develop things on the ground there. Marco Rubio clearly is gunning for Cuba and Trump seems to be really excited to use the military before he’s out of office and life for good. He just asked for a 1.5 trillion dollar military budget, but I’m sure we’ll be very diplomatic from this moment forward when it comes to Cuba
1
xmuskorxApr 4, 2026
+4
These were political dissidents.
4
Jettx02Apr 4, 2026
+9
The literal first person they mention in the article is a guy who only served half his term for robbery, but nice try
9
xmuskorxApr 4, 2026
+4
Political opponents in totalitarian regimes get stuck with all kinds of "crimes" by cangaroo courts.
But nice try.
4
mstrbwl6 days ago
+1
Crime happens in Cuba like it does everywhere else.
1
xmuskorx6 days ago
+1
If sure does, but that is not who is getting pardoned
1
mstrbwl6 days ago
+1
It literally is who is being pardoned. This has nothing to do with political dissidents.
>The government said the individuals being released from prison would not include people who committed murder, sexual assault, drug-related crimes, theft, illegal slaughter of livestock or **crimes against authority**.
1
xmuskorx6 days ago
+2
Again. Cuba officially denies holding any political prisoners. They all have made up charges
2
mstrbwl6 days ago
+1
So then how exactly did you conclude the guy in the article did not commit a robbery and is in fact a political prisoner?
1
xmuskorx6 days ago
+2
Because that's who Cuba was pressured to release.
2
Jettx02Apr 4, 2026
+3
You’re correct, there’s no way this admin is going to go soft on Cuba. Attacking other countries is the only thing they have going for them, they don’t know what else to do
3
AtheismTooStronkApr 4, 2026
+2
F*** you, I want to tell you you’re wrong, but we did that in Honduras. F***. Don’t make me think these thoughts.
2
Ok-Progress-7447Apr 4, 2026
+1
Some of these motherfuckers have never seen Demolition Man.
104 Comments