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CREATED:20111031T215000Z
DESCRIPTION:A Presentation and Discussion of Ecosocialism and the Transformations in 
 Cuba Today\n\n- with Karen Wald and Steve Martinot\n\nNiebyl-Proctor 
 Library, 6501 Telegraph Ave.\n\nSaturday, Nov. 5, at 7 pm \n\nWhile masses 
 of people are attempting to change things here in the US, changes are also 
 happening in Cuba. Though US pundits claim that these changes are at the 
 hands of Castro, they are not. They are at thehands of the Cuban people. 
 Some of them look like they are retreats from socialism, when seen through 
 US eyes. \n\nBut there is a dimension to it that is hard for such eyes to 
 see, and which has to do with two critical factors. The first is the 
 aforementioned political participation of the Cuban people in these 
 changes. And the second involves a past process of overcoming the former 
 colonialism. There are ways in which the present transformations in Cuba 
 now reveal what it was that the Cuban revolutionary process was indeed 
 overcoming from that colonialist legacy, and the way it had touched all 
 things in the post-colonial period. \n\nBecause there is a transparency to 
 the way things are done in Cuba, and a humility in the way the leadership 
 critiques itself and its proposed projects, it allows us to see some of the 
 dynamics of these processes. They are fascinating, and in their 
 uncompromising insistence on Cuban sovereignty, highly innovative. Indeed, 
 it is in terms of that innovativeness, turned precisely against its 
 colonial legacy, that Cuba has taken the lead it has in ecological thinking 
 and environmental protection. \n\nRespectively writers, authors, and global 
 justice activists Karen Wald and Steve Martinot will be examining the 
 relation between two aspects of what is at present happening in Cuba. On 
 the one hand, there is Cuba's past care and in conserving and preserving 
 the ecological richness of the island, while at the same time developing 
 its economy. On the other, there are certain shifts or transformations in 
 Cuban society implied by the recent decisions in the 6th party conference. 
 \n\nWill Cuba's revised system likely continue to stress traditional 
 guarantees (some nearly free food under the ration system, job or income, 
 free health care for all, free education, etc.), or will they have to be 
 cut back due to the world wide current capitalist crisis? What effect is 
 envisioned that the planned lifting of restrictions on selling houses and 
 cars have in general, as well as ecologically? And will this introduce an 
 element of capitalism (exchange value over use value) that did not exist 
 before? How will this effect Cuba's previous focus on ecology and the 
 preservation and sustaining of its environment? \n\nBut we also want to add 
 a third factor to this discussion. Cuba has recently discovered oil in its 
 territorial waters of the Gulf. So the more general question is, what is 
 the mutual influence that these three facets of Cuba as a work in progress 
 have on each other?: the discovery of oil, the revamping of certain aspects 
 of the economy, and its past accomplishments in the domain of ecological 
 conservation.\n\nIt is to present some ideas about the inner processes in 
 the Cuban dynamic that Karen Wald and Steve Martinot will be speaking and 
 leading a discussion of what is happening in Cuba today, and what the 
 ongoing transformations mean, both pragmatically and 
 historico-politically.\n\n-------------------------------------------------------------------------------\n\n"We 
 are especially interested in Cuba because of the great advances ithas made 
 in terms of preserving its environment, and being ecologically conscious as 
 a society. Part of this has been its ability to think in terms of community 
 rather than business. So we feel the need to keep abreast of the economic 
 and political changes that have been proposed, and are now being 
 implemented, with respect to Cuba's environmentalism. \n\nI myself am 
 finding the process they are going through totally fascinating. There have 
 been over 100,000 meetings of people at the local level to discuss the 
 proposals. And these meetings have significantly transformed the original 
 proposals. What has fascinated me, and given me some new insights into the 
 post-colonial situation and processes of development is the different 
 between the original proposals, and those that came back transformed from 
 the popular assemblies that discussed them. So that insight is going to be 
 the main aspect of what we are going to discuss."\n\n-- Steve 
 Martinot\n_____________________________________________________\n\nKaren 
 Lee Wald, a writer, activist, educator, has been explaining, defending and 
 teaching everyone she could reach for over thirty years about the history 
 and reality of the Revolution in Cuba. She raised two children there, one 
 of whom is a medical doctor on the 
 island.\n\n_____________________________________________________\n\nSponsored 
 by the San Francisco Bay Area Ecosocialist Network.\n\nGenerous 
 Q&A/discussion to follow.\n\nFree and open to the public.\n\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2011/10/31/18696343.php
SUMMARY:A Presentation and Discussion of Ecosocialism and the Transformations in Cuba Today
LOCATION:Niebyl-Proctor Library\n6501 Telegraph Ave.\nOakland, CA\n\n(In north 
 Oakland, just 1 block north of the intersection of Telegraph & Alcatraz, at 
 Telegraph & 65th St.; a few blocks from Asby BART; or on the AC Transit # 
 40 bus line; or a few blocks from the #51 bus line down College Avenue, 
 stopping at Alcatraz; or from Hwy 24, east-/west-bound, take the Telegraph 
 Ave exit; plenty of nearby street parking available.)
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2011/10/31/18696343.php
DTSTART:20111106T020000Z
DTEND:20111106T043000Z
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