I'll take only one minute. This is a situation we have had for 50 years in Cuba. It's in television, radio, everywhere. I will give you one simple example.
I was doing my PhD in Cuba and was looking for data, for information. I went to every sugar factory in my province, Santiago de Cuba, and in all of the country. When you see the information from the factory, the information of the province, and the national information, it is totally different information. I don't believe in the statistics of the Cuban regime.
Also, the Economic Commission for Latin America, the CEPAL, rejected the information the Cuban regime gave them. They said, that's enough, that's it, because Fidel Castro wanted to change the whole methodology of how to look at economic improvements. For that reason I don't believe in all these statistics.
They say that Cuba is a very free country. My party is a socialist party. We don't want established capitalism in Cuba; we want a Cuba like Canada, with a market economy and social programs. My party, which is looking for a life such as in Canada, is not allowed to participate in elections like other parties in Cuba. There are approximately, at this moment, 450 organizations in Cuba. There are some big parties, such as my party, and there are others, such as the Christian Democratic party, or movement, in Cuba.
The problem is the embargo. The embargo really affected Cuba in the first three years, 1963, 1964, and 1965. It is finished. From that moment on, the system hasn't worked; the governmental property hasn't worked.
In Cuba there is a saying in Spanish: El ojo del amo engorda al caballo....