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Cuba: Miami's Conspiratorial Spin on New IT Minister

NY.Transfer.News

9/2/2006 2:36:00 AM

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Cuba: Miami's Conspiratorial Spin on New IT Minister

Via NY Transfer News Collective * All the News that Doesn't Fit

[The Miami Herald's Nancy San Martin's valliant effort to put a
conspiratorial spin on the appointment of Cuba's new IT minister,
complete with dark references to China and lots of gossipy bullshit
from the "experts" Stateside. Goodness, she makes it sound like
the night of the long knives. The last paragraph, however, states
that appointments so far indicate the Cuban government wants to show
"both hardliners and reformers have a stake in the future of the
country." How positively diabolical! -NY Transfer]

Miami Herald via The Tribune (San Luis Obispo) - Aug 31, 2006
http://www.sanluisobispo.com/mld/sanluisobispo/15...

Raul Castro appoints new communications minister

By Nancy San Martin
McClatchy Newspapers

MIAMI - In the first Cuban government change since Raul Castro began ruling
the island a month ago, a well-known hardliner and reputed rival was named
minister of communications and information science.

The appointment of Ramiro Valdes Thursday was viewed by most Cuba-watchers
as significant because of his perceived rivalry with Fidel Castro's brother,
and because it gives him control of the flow of information in and out of
the island.

"Better to keep your enemies closer than your friends," said Andy Gomez of
the University of Miami's Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies.

Raul Castro, 75, was made provisional leader on July 31 after his older
brother Fidel underwent surgery for a still undisclosed ailment.

Valdes, now about 74, was with the Castro brothers during the failed attack
on the Moncada army barracks in 1953 now marked as the start of the
revolution. He was jailed with them and later joined their guerrilla group
that toppled dictator Fulgencio Batista. But for more than two decades, Raul
Castro and Valdes ran rival power centers - Castro, the well-respected armed
forces and Valdes, the feared Interior Ministry, in charge of domestic
security.

The two are reported to have clashed often and in 1985, Valdes was dismissed
as minister and member of the Cuban Communist Party's ruling Political Buro,
and faded away from the public spotlight. No official reason for his
dismissal was ever given.

One brief biography says he was a founder of the Communist Party and member
of its Central Committee since 1965. He served in the legislative National
Assembly since 1976 and sat on its 31-member Council of State - its powerful
standing committee - until 1997 and was reelected in 2003.

During Cuba's opening to foreign investments in the mid-1990s, Valdes was
named head of the Grupo de Electronica, a government agency that deals in
computers and works closely with Italian and Chinese companies providing
Cuba with telecommunication and technology services.

Valdes' appointment came at a time when the government is cracking down on
illegal satellite TV antennas that receive foreign broadcasts, such as
Univision and the U.S.-funded TV Marti.

"Now Valdes can directly confront ideology. He can control and repress the
flow of information," said Eugenio Yanez, an economics professor who worked
closely with top military officials in the 1990s and now lives in Miami.

The appointment, experts said, also may point to a third and more subtle
significance: Cuba's increasing economic ties to China.

Valdes has made several trips to China, including one in which he
accompanied Raul Castro. The younger Castro is believed to look positively
on Beijing's system of an open economy with tight political controls.

On Aug. 25, Havana announced the appointment of a new ambassador to China,
Carlos Miguel Pereira, long viewed as the right-hand man to Foreign Minister
Felipe Perez Roque.

"Raul is trying to emphasize that both hardliners and reformers have a stake
in the future of the country," said Frank Mora, a professor at the National
War College in Washington.

© 2006, The Miami Herald.

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

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2 Answers

kym

1/11/2012 8:53:00 AM

0

In sci.skeptic Swampfox <noidea@whocares.com> wrote:
....
> Well I'll be fucked, snow in Alaska.
> What next, hot days in The Sahara?

In winter yet -- real "stop the presses" stuff. :)

--
Wind and precipitation, warming and cooling depend on how much energy is in the atmosphere and where that energy is located. Much more energy from the Sun reaches low latitudes (nearer the equator) than high latitudes (nearer the poles). These energy differences cause the winds, affect climate, and even drive ocean currents. Heat is held in the atmosphere by greenhouse gases.
-- High School Earth Science, "Energy in the Atmosphere", by Benner, Bethel, Desonie, Freudenrich, Karasov, Lusk, Ong, Rosenkrantz, Sandeen.

Bob Casanova

1/11/2012 4:37:00 PM

0

On Wed, 11 Jan 2012 18:49:10 +1100, the following appeared
in sci.skeptic, posted by Swampfox <noidea@whocares.com>:

>On 11/01/2012 10:55 AM, _ _GLO_BALWARMING _H_O_A_X wrote:
>> CNN:
>>
>> 10 January 2012 Last updated at 14:27 ET
>> Alaska snow and ice cuts off Cordova and Nome
>>
>> Extreme winter weather has left one Alaskan town battling huge
>> snowdrifts and forced another to seek fuel supplies from a Russian
>> tanker.
>>
>> The Alaskan National Guard has arrived to dig out the town of Cordova,
>> which has seen 10ft (3m) of snow in a week.
>>
>> Drifts in the town of 2,000 trapped some residents in their homes.
>>
>> Further north, US Coast Guard and Russian vessels are attempting to
>> reach Nome, which has been cut off by ice and is facing a fuel
>> shortage.
>>
>> The US ship, the Healy, is attempting to cut a path through thick ice
>> in the Bering Sea, ahead of a Russian tanker called Renda which is
>> carrying 1.3 million gallons (4.9 million litres) of oil.
>>
>> But shifting ice up to 3ft thick in the area is hindering the process,
>> forcing the ice-breaker to double back to recut a path.
>>
>> The scale of the mission is unprecedented for the US Coast Guard in
>> the Arctic, Commander Greg Tlapa told the Associated Press.
>>
>> Flying in the fuel would be possible but extremely expensive, Nome
>> officials say.
>>
>> A severe autumn storm prevented a usual pre-winter delivery of fuel
>> and cut off the town where temperatures regularly drop below zero
>> Fahrenheit (-18 C) in January.
>>
>> But the resupply effort also needed to clear bureaucratic hurdles - a
>> waiver was needed to allow a non-US ship to deliver the goods
>> Cordova cave-in
>>
>> In Cordova, a fishing town only accessible by air and water, heavy
>> falls of snow were followed over the weekend by rain that weighed down
>> the snow, creating dangerous conditions.
>>
>> Some roofs in the town have collapsed or caved-in under the weight of
>> up to 7ft of snow.
>>
>> John Madden, the director of Alaska's division of homeland security
>> and emergency management, told the BBC that after a full day of work
>> on Monday, another storm on Tuesday is expected to bring an additional
>> 10in to 16in of snow.
>>
>> Crews will are unlikely to be able to get back to work until the
>> weekend, Mr Madden said.
>>
>> Drifts from the pitched roof of one restaurant slid off and broke the
>> roof of a back shed. A bank building also suffered a interior buckled
>> wall.
>>
>> No injuries have been reported so far in the town, but Alaska
>> officials state of emergency was declared on Friday. National Guard
>> troops arrived on Sunday to begin digging out.
>>
>> Sunday's arrival also included a snow-melting machine, and equipment
>> to help dig out the most at-risk buildings.
>>
>> Cordova is estimated to have received 18ft to 20ft of snow in the past
>> 60 days, Mr Madden said.
>>
>> "It's the right time of the year for storms, but we have had so many",
>> he said, adding that the town has been hit by three separate storms
>> within the past seven days.
>>
>> The town is "well-prepared" for storms, but needs help getting ahead
>> of the storms, Mr Madden said.
>>
>> Additional snow in the forecast and potential winds of 70 to 80mph
>> will increase the risk of avalanches cutting off the main road to the
>> airport. Cordova itself is not in high danger from avalanches.
>>
>> "The only thing we're really lacking is - there's not a snow shovel
>> left in town," Allen Marquette, a city spokesman told the Alaska
>> Dispatch newspaper.
>
>Well I'll be fucked, snow in Alaska.

Apparently the fact that increased average temperatures
result in increased evaporation, and thus in increased
precipitation in all forms, is still eluding these morons,
who think(?) "more snow in winter" equates to "colder".

>What next, hot days in The Sahara?
--

Bob C.

"Evidence confirming an observation is
evidence that the observation is wrong."
- McNameless