March 22, 2024
Havana Syndrome: How the Biden Administration Is Driving Cubans Into Misery
Mind Map
Summary
Chapters
Transcript
- SSPEAKER_06
This season, Instacart has your back to school.
- SSPEAKER_06
As in, they've got your back to school lunch favorites like snack packs and fresh fruit.
- SSPEAKER_06
And they've got your back to school supplies like backpacks, binders, and pencils.
Shownotes
Chanting “power and food,” demonstrators have filled Cuba’s streets in recent days. This week on Deconstructed, Ryan Grim delves into the complexities of Cuba’s current economic crisis with Andrés Pertierra, a historian of Latin America and the Caribbean. They discuss the various factors deepening the crisis and driving people to the streets, from the half-century-long U.S. embargo on the island, its own economic policies, pandemic-related destabilization, and sanctions the Trump administration imposed and the Biden administration kept in place. Pertierra is in the fifth year of his Ph.D. program at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and hosts “Orígenes: A Cuban History Podcast.”
If you’d like to support our work, go to theintercept.com/give, where your donation, no matter what the amount, makes a real difference.
And if you haven’t already, please subscribe to the show so you can hear it every week. And please go and leave us a rating or a review — it helps people find the show. If you want to give us additional feedback, email us at Podcasts@theintercept.com.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Introducing Master Plan: Legalizing Corruption
August 31, 2024 · 04min
Project 2025 Roots Date Back Half a Century
August 31, 2024 · 35min
REBROADCAST PLUS Price Controls: An Inflation Solution That Doesn’t Screw Workers
August 16, 2024 · 46min
Honduras, 15 Years After the Coup: An Interview With Ousted President Manuel Zelaya
July 26, 2024 · 1hr 17min
Trump, Vance, and the New Right at the RNC
July 19, 2024 · 36min