CubaPoliceAbuse Profile picture
Feb 21 8 tweets 2 min read Read on X
🧵1/ Cuba’s hunger crisis started in 1959 when the Castro communist regime seized farms through Agrarian Reform. Land was confiscated, private agriculture dismantled, and food production centralized. Farmers no longer decided what to grow or sell. The regime did. When power controls food, food becomes control.
(2/7)
In 1962 the dictatorship introduced the ration book system because shortages had already begun. That booklet limited how much basic food each person could buy. It stayed in use for decades and still exists in reduced form today. Scarcity was not temporary. It became the structure of survival.
(3/7)
Children were affected early. For many years the system guaranteed milk only until about age 7. After that, access depended on connections or foreign currency. Nutrition was not based on need. It was based on status inside the system.
(4/7)
Food laws were strict and punishable. Killing a cow without state permission could bring years in prison because livestock legally belonged to the state. Beef became one of the most restricted foods in the country. A farmer could raise cattle and still be jailed for eating it.
(5/7)
Cubans were also restricted from producing or obtaining food on their own. Fishing was limited, private food sales were tightly controlled, and street vendors often had products confiscated. Many Cubans have witnessed police or military seizing food directly from sellers in markets or on sidewalks.
(6/7)
The system extended beyond food. For years citizens were barred from entering tourist hotels or stores reserved for foreigners with hard currency. Two economies existed side by side. One had abundance. The other had ration lines.
(7/7)
Today Cuba still imports roughly 70 to 80 percent of its food despite fertile land and a tropical climate. That dependence did not start recently. It is the long result of centralized control replacing private production. What happened in Cuba shows what happens when a communist dictatorship monopolizes food. Shortages become permanent and hunger becomes leverage.
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More from @CubaPoliceAbuse

Mar 20
1/10 🧵
Let’s set things straight here because I’m seeing a lot of BS. Blaming the US for Cuba’s blackouts is regime propaganda and anyone spreading it is either ignorant or lying. The communist dictatorship has had 67 years to build a functioning power grid. They chose not to. This thread is for every Cuban (including my family) living through it and for anyone done being lied to. 🇨🇺🕯️⬇️Image
2/10
I know this firsthand. I grew up in Cuba in the 1990s, in the countryside, with my family. Constant blackouts. No water. No food. That was 30 years ago. Long before anyone could blame Trump or the US for anything. This regime has always blamed America for every single failure for 67 years straight. And now in January 2026 people are suddenly acting like the blackouts started because of US policy. What happened in 2024? In 2022? In 2005? In 1993? Were those Trump’s fault too? It was a lie then and it is a lie in 2026.
3/10
The blackout timeline alone destroys the narrative. Major crisis in 1993 during the Special Period. Severe daily cuts in 2004 and 2005. Nationwide collapse in August 2022 after the Matanzas fire. At least five major grid failures in 2024 alone. A total nationwide blackout in October 2024 leaving all 10 million Cubans without power. The grid has been dying for decades. None of those years were Trump years. None of them.
(Source: Reuters, Associated Press, Cubanet, independent journalists, dissidents)
Read 10 tweets
Mar 19
🧵 #HelmsBurton 🇨🇺🇺🇸
Every major US law on Cuba exists because of something specific the Castro tyranny did. This thread breaks down the actions, the laws they produced, and exactly what it takes by law to end the embargo. Because most people arguing about this have no idea what the law actually says.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​ ⬇️
2/10 1959.. The Castro tyranny seizes American-owned oil refineries, sugar mills, hotels, telephone companies and manufacturing plants. No compensation. International law is clear. When you nationalize foreign property you owe compensation. The Foreign Claims Settlement Commission certified thousands of claims from US nationals. Not a cent was ever paid.

US response: The embargo. Executive order by Kennedy, 1962.
The Communist tyranny begins executing people by firing squad, jailing dissidents, banning political opposition and blocking the UN from investigating abuses on the island. Hundreds of thousands flee. Cuba Archive, which requires two independent sources per name, has documented over 10,700 deaths and disappearances attributed to the tyranny.

US response: The Cuban Adjustment Act of 1966. Cuban nationals in the US could obtain lawful permanent residency on an expedited basis. No other group received this. Because no other group was fleeing that disaster.
Read 10 tweets
Mar 18
1/9 🧵 Foreign investors have been losing everything in Cuba for decades. Their companies, their money, their freedom, and in some cases their health.
Here is what really happens when you do business with a dictatorship.
2/9 🧵 🇨🇦 Cy Tokmakjian, Canada, 2011. Built one of the biggest foreign owned companies in Cuba. Trucks, transport, equipment. Arrested without warning in October 2011. Convicted on bribery charges his lawyers called fabricated. Sentenced to 15 years. Canada fought diplomatically to get him out in 2015. His company and assets were never returned.
Sources: The Globe and Mail, CBC News, Amnesty International
3/9 🧵 🇺🇸 Alan Gross, United States, 2009 to 2014. A USAID contractor helping Cuban Jewish communities get internet access. Arrested in December 2009. Sentenced to 15 years for crimes against the state. When he walked out in 2014 he had lost 100 pounds and his teeth had fallen out from neglect and malnutrition. His wife barely recognized him. He did not get justice. He got traded in a diplomatic deal.
Sources: The New York Times, Washington Post, CNN
Read 9 tweets
Dec 25, 2025
1/ 🇨🇺Human cost of the Castro regime: Tens of thousands killed directly, over 100,000 dead including escapes and wars. Breakdown from documented sources. #Cuba #CastroCrimes 👇 Image
2/ Executions: 15,000–17,000 shot (1959–1990s, Black Book of Communism). Cuba Archive: 3,069 firing squads, 1,273 extrajudicial. Lago: 115,183 total executions, political prisoners, disappearances. Image
Image
3/ Che Guevara: 216 documented kills (Lago, Cuba Archive). He signed death warrants and oversaw mass executions.
(Who knows what else this criminal did)
Read 11 tweets
Dec 24, 2025
This is how Cuba is a prison in the Caribbean:
1/ Before the communist takeover in 1959, Cuba had only 14 prisons—for a population of around 7 million people.
That’s roughly one prison per 500,000 citizens. @ForesightCuba Image
2/ Today, the regime operates nearly 300 prisons and camps across an island whose population has shrunk below 10 million.That is 1 penal facility for roughly every 33,000 citizens,among the highest densities in the world. Most were built to suppress political dissent.
3/ More than 1,000 political prisoners remain behind bars simply for exercising freedom of thought and expression. The entire nation has become a prison.

Full report: foresightcuba.substack.com/p/department-o…
Read 4 tweets
Nov 27, 2025
2025 in a nutshell #Cuba
🧵🇨🇺 1/
Every Cuban knows it, but it needs to be said loud and clear:
2025 has been another year of suffering on the island.
More blackouts. More political prisoners. More hunger. More disease.
Same tyranny. Same disaster.
#SOSCuba Hotel Torre K well lit, while Cubans suffer blackouts. Source: Instagram user.
2/
Let’s stick to facts.
Prisoners Defenders reports 1,185 political prisoners this year.
One of the highest numbers in the Americas.
Cuba has become a Caribbean Alcatraz.
Source: @CubanDefenders
3/
Since July 11, 2021, 1,735 Cubans have passed through political prison.
Neighbors, workers, students, parents — punished for demanding basic rights.
Source: Prisoners Defenders
#LibertadParaLosPresosPoliticos
Read 13 tweets

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