The CIA Director John Radcliffe's visit to Cuba on May 14, 2024, represented a significant diplomatic development where the United States delivered a direct message from President Donald Trump to the Cuban regime, offering economic and security cooperation only if fundamental democratic changes were made. This visit coincided with a severe fuel crisis causing massive power outages across Cuba, sparking widespread protests in Havana and other municipalities. The US administration also prepared to prosecute 94-year-old RaĂșl Castro for the 1996 downing of Hermanos al Rescate planes, while offering $100 million in humanitarian aid to be distributed through non-governmental organizations like the Catholic Church, bypassing the regime's control.
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đŽOperaciĂłn Cuba: La CIA aterriza en La Habana, RaĂșl Castro al banquillo y el combustible toca ceroAdded:
Friends, the CIA director lands in Cuba in a turn of political events he did not expect. Donald Trump sends John Radcliffe to Havana with a direct message to the Cuban regime. The United States is willing to talk seriously about economic and security issues only if the regime makes changes in the necessary direction.
And that's what we'll be talking about on this program. A day that grabbed headlines from a political point of view. The director of the CIA agency lands in Cuba, eh RaĂșl Castro, about to sit in the dock, directly accused of shooting down the planes, the Brothers to the Rescue planes. The electricity crisis at its peak.
Fuel. Another night of protest in the capital comes to an end, the regime cornered, and all of this happened in just 24 hours. Welcome to Mag Castro's social media. Welcome to this YouTube channel where you have all the information available at this time of the morning, very early in Cuba, just 8:17, a little later here in Spain, and I welcome you all to today's program. You'll see that we have a special broadcast, a program full of information, so if this is your first time watching us, I invite you to subscribe to our channel. If you 're watching from other social media platforms, I invite you to visit my YouTube channel and subscribe there. On the contrary, if you are watching from here, I ask you to give me a like, a comment, tell me how you have spent the last night, if you have electricity, if you have been able to communicate with your family in Cuba, how you have experienced these intense days for Cubans. My friends, I see several of you are already connected here. Without further ado, let's begin today's program because we've come loaded with a really intense day of information. Let's begin.
Friends, we Cubans never dreamed that yesterday, May 14th, the CIA director would land in Cuba for a discreet meeting where he met with high- ranking officials from the Ministry of the Interior, but also with the real power in Cuba.
The Cuban regime was the first to report this meeting, and it did so in its own way, without giving details in a brief note where it practically seemed that they had convinced the director of the Central Intelligence Agency that Cuba did not represent a threat to the national security of that country. Imagine if the CIA director had to travel to Havana to be informed by the dinosaur generals of Castroism that they are not a threat.
Clearly, this statement from the Castro regime lacked substance and the truth about what was discussed there. The CIA director traveled to Cuba with a purpose. It was sent directly by Donald Trump with a direct message to the regime, a message that reached the same power and the same circle of RaĂșl Castro because it was delivered to his grandson, RaĂșl Guillermo Castro. And I want to talk a little bit about what was happening and I want to start recounting what happened there, but for that I propose a short video of how the official press was reporting it and we'll start here because we're going to unravel what this official report doesn't say. This official statement presents as normality and as a step towards dialogue and concord that the Castro regime receives the CIA director in Havana. But there is much more to it than that.
There is obvious pressure, there is obvious weakness in the regime receiving the director of the agency it has demonized for many years.
Remember that according to the regime, I and others like me are this man's employees. Apparently yesterday was payday. But the regime forgot that the international press reported this in the real way, with everything that was behind this trip. But let's get to the information. That's how the pro-government press reported it. revolutionary government.
Following a request from the United States government to receive a delegation in Havana headed by CIA Director John Bradcleff, the leadership of the revolution approved the visit and the meeting with their counterpart from the Ministry of the Interior. The meeting took place this Thursday, May 14, in a context characterized by the complexity of bilateral relations, in order to contribute to the political dialogue between both nations as part of the efforts to address the current scenario. The evidence provided by the Cuban side and the exchanges held with the US delegation categorically demonstrated that Cuba does not constitute a threat to the national security of the United States, nor are there legitimate reasons to include it on the list of countries that supposedly sponsor terrorism. During the meeting, it was possible to confirm the consistency and congruence in the historical position of our country with the actions of the Cuban government and its competent authorities in confronting and unequivocally condemning terrorism in all its forms and manifestations.
Once again it became evident that the island does not harbor. Not very well. It was a fragment, friends, of how national television presented it, a brief note where apparently the CIA director was going to be briefed by the Ministry of the Interior about the threats that the regime represents in matters of national security. Imagine, more than almost 30 surveillance flights around Cuba combing the south coast and the north coast. And the Castro regime wants us to believe that the CIA director was going to consult with officers from the Ministry of the Interior. But I'm going with what the official statement doesn't tell you, and I'm going from the beginning. Look, early on, around, it was close to the afternoon, strange movements of a United States government plane began to be reported on the internet, followed by radar from these accounts that are dedicated to monitoring the journeys of aircraft and also ships. Very good. This plane was landing in Havana and was captured by Routers' lens in the vicinity of José Martà Airport. I have the images because this is also important. Just look at this.
There you have it. The United States government plane. It's the second plane in a very short time, the third, because remember that on April 10th there was also a meeting, one of these conversations that don't lead anywhere. There you can see the area around the airport, and this plane that transported the CIA director. But okay, what's the truth behind this visit? I have the information from the American press. The CIA director, far from going to listen to the paraphernalia of the Castro regime's military, right? The director went to deliver a direct message from Donald Trump. The US administration is committed to making progress on economic and security issues as long as the Cuban regime makes changes in the necessary direction. direction you know, democratize the country. Furthermore, the US administration made it clear that it would not allow Cuba to be a gateway for regimes antagonistic to the United States and that it knew it had a red line and was prepared to go to the furthest extent to fulfill these issues.
Look, I'll go into the details and in the meantime I'll show you these images that began to be released yesterday by the agency itself. Look at the American counterpart, John Radcliff, who is the director meeting with senior officials from the Ministry of the Interior. I'll tell you who they are shortly, who these people are who met, but I'll go with what the press is saying. According to a Fox News report, Radcliff met with RaĂșl Guillermo Castro, a meeting where DĂaz Canel was neither present nor expected.
once again ignored, not only by the United States, but also by his own people. He met with RaĂșl's grandson, who is evidently the one leading these negotiations with the United States. He also met with LĂĄzaro Alberto Ălvarez Casas, who is the Minister of the Interior. What was discussed in those meetings?
US officials assured the CIA chief that the CIA chief relayed a message from President Trump. Several topics were discussed during the meeting, but the main message is as follows. The United States is willing to seriously address economic and security issues, but only if Cuba makes fundamental changes. This is how the press reports it. During the meeting, topics such as cooperation in intelligence, economic stability, and regional security were discussed. According to the sources consulted, Radcl made it clear that Cuba cannot continue to function as a safe haven for adversaries of the United States in the hemisphere. Fox also reported that Washington sees the regime as facing a unique opportunity to stabilize its economy and reduce international isolation, although it cautioned that this window was not open indefinitely.
The sources added that although Trump prioritizes dialogue, the US administration has drawn a red line if the Cuban regime does not respond to the demands made.
This is the truth about this meeting where an ultimatum was practically sent to the Cuban regime, and it was not by chance that this ultimatum was led by the director of the CIA, who arrived personally as an envoy of the US administration. But I'll get into the details because, look, these images you're seeing on screen were released by the agency itself and started causing speculation yesterday. There were obviously several meetings; they met with RaĂșl Guillermo Castro, they met with the Minister of the Interior, and they also met with these high-ranking officials of the Cuban regime. You are seeing it on screen. Some people asked me, "Who are they?" Who are these people? Because the images began to be circulated. And in an opaque regime, in a regime where absolute secrecy reigns, these faces were not very well known. But anyway, we started to investigate. I have to tell you that as soon as I saw the photographs I started wondering who these people were. Well, there we see the agency director arriving and being greeted by Mike Hammer. There you have it.
Uh, this is near the United States embassy in Cuba, but I think this image is fundamental; it's the image of the beginning of the meetings, and on the Cuban side you can see a man dressed in civilian clothes. Who is this character dressed in civilian clothes in the Cuban part? Well, we started searching yesterday on social media and I realized that indeed the same person, look at his face, I want you to look at it carefully, the same person, there you have it, was also meeting in 2023 at one of these high-level conferences with high representatives of Russia. Well, look, it's the same person, and that's when we realized he's a general, a brigadier general no less. But well, as everything on the internet is known and as it is very difficult, as it is extremely difficult to go unnoticed in the internet age, we have already identified this general and it is not a minor position, not at all. He is the architect, the architect of everything behind Castro's intelligence.
the architect and the head of the intelligence agencies of the Ministry of the Interior, of the feared and Machiavellian State security. All of that falls on the shoulders of this brigadier general, whose name I will tell you in a moment and who, I repeat, was identified yesterday by several people. I'm going to tell you who did it, because all the credit belongs to that person. Hey, they have it on screen. This is, my friends, Brigadier General Romero Curbelo. Romero Romero Curbelo is the name of this general. Romero Curbelo, who I reiterate Romero Curbero, RamĂłn Romero Curbelo, excuse me, who I reiterate is head of the Intelligence Directorate of the Ministry of the Interior. Head of the Intelligence Directorate of the Ministry of the Interior. How did we find out? Well, yesterday, as I told you, we were looking for several to identify him. He was at this meeting with Russia where we saw that he is a brigadier general, but the identification was made publicly by Miguel CosĂo, who assured that Romero Curbelo appears in the Castroist deck, an initiative promoted by the American Museum of the Cuban Diaspora and the Foundation for Human Rights in Cuba to point out figures directly linked to Castroism and the repressive organ of Castroism.
This is General Ramón Romero Curbero, head of the intelligence directorate of the Cuban regime. "It's the 10 of spades in our Cuban deck," Cillo wrote on his social media. Romero Curvelo heads one of the sensitive structures of the intelligence and counterintelligence apparatus, responsible for internal surveillance, monitoring of opponents and political control. He is clearly the architect of Castro's intelligence and everything related to state security in Cuba. There he is, leading one of these meetings with the CIA director. And I'm going to talk about this because I'm now going to give my opinion on what I think this visit was like, and I would love to read yours. I know there are several of you online and leaving your opinions here; I will read each and every one of you. Before that, I want to show some other images, I think some of the most iconic images that yesterday's events left us with. There is the CIA director in front of the United States embassy in Cuba being received by Mike Hammer, the chargé d'affaires.
You have it on screen, and I'm going straight to what I think, and maybe you'll agree with me, maybe you won't, and I'd love to read if that happens, but there is no sign, my friends, no greater sign of weakness than that the Cuban regime, at a time of maximum pressure with almost 30 surveillance flights around the coasts of Cuba, at a time when Donald Trump is saying he's going to take Cuba, that Cuba will be next, at a time when fuel is running out and the regime is playing the victim as a victim of sanctions and a blockade by the United States, would at this moment discreetly receive the director of the CIA in Havana. I believe that Castroism is going through one of its weakest moments in the last 67 years. He has no alternative but to agree to receive the director of the agency who did not come to Cuba to find out firsthand whether or not Cuba is a reality, a threat to the national security of the United States. That's false. The CIA knows perfectly well what the regime's movements are, where the military bases are, and where the espionage centers are. He knows everything perfectly. He knows how many times they take RaĂșl Castro to the bathroom in the early morning, he knows him. It is a mistake to underestimate the CIA. He comes to Cuba as an envoy of Donald Trump to deliver a message that sounds more like an ultimatum than a message from the President of the United States. a full-fledged ultimatum to Castroism, giving it a narrow margin of action in the coming weeks. The United States is committed to working hand in hand with Cuba on security and economic issues, but Cuba has to make changes, profound changes in the direction of democratizing the country. There is a red line, as US officials have clearly stated, that the Cuban regime cannot cross. And that red line represents the democratic aspirations of the people and, of course, an opening in that direction. It remains to be seen whether Castroism will take advantage of or squander this last opportunity. I feel like it's the last card in a diplomatic deck before something from other dimensions happens. It feels like I'm in Venezuela in December 2025 when Donald Trump picked up the phone as a last resort and called dictator NicolĂĄs Maduro in Caracas.
They talked, Maduro stayed, and you 're seeing what happened. Either way, it is a move that effectively reflects weakness, reflects a moment of tension, reflects a Castro regime cornered and with little range of action at the moment.
I would like to read each of your comments because this issue came as a surprise to us during a time marked by popular protest, and it's good that it happened at this moment. They say around here, Mani, hopefully we won't see, hopefully we won't see a Venezuela 2.0. I agree with you, but I still think they'll only leave by force, says Ramiro.
Look, I am absolutely convinced, because I truly believe it, that Castroism is going to miss this opportunity. I said it yesterday with a group of friends when we were talking about politics, and I'm saying it to you now. Castroism will completely squander this small range of action that the United States has given it with this high-level visit and this message. But the message is out there, and if the regime is smart, it has already heard it and knows perfectly well where it's all coming from. Um, I want to take this opportunity this morning to greet each and every one of you who have been joining this program. We have a great audience today, so welcome to the newcomers. Hey, thank you so much for being here and for trusting me. We have a few days packed with information. Yesterday we had a special broadcast. I'm taking this opportunity to say hello. He tells MarĂa del Carmen Jorge, "Thank you for your reflections. Seeing the light at the end of the tunnel."
Thank you so much, Maria. And MayelĂn also says, "Castroism is playing its cards while the people are dying. They don't care about anything but themselves." Yes, yes, Iliana this way. Hey Liliana, Commander Romero is from 100 Fuegos, he works as a military general at the refinery in 100 Fuegos. Look, Commander, promoted because Liliana says Ramiro is now a brigadier general, I still think that it was only by force. I agree with you. Hey, greetings to Mailin Santana too. Cuba isn't going to do anything, they say around here. Patricio, greetings to you and Iliana, I see you both up there too. Oh, I also saw Idels; I have several of them online from way back, right?
Greetings. I'll be greeting you more closely at the end because I want to take this opportunity to talk about the important issues, friends. In true Donald Trump style, while the United States was sending the CIA director to Cuba in a last-minute diplomatic effort, in a last breath from a diplomatic point of view, perhaps the last diplomatic card of the United States regarding Cuba, behind the scenes, very much in the style of Donald Trump, he tightened the screws on that negotiation. Sources from the United States government, specifically from the Department of Justice, confirmed that an indictment is being prepared against 94-year-old RaĂșl Castro for the downing and murder of the Cuban and American rescue planes. I don't think this is a coincidence either. It's very much in the Trump style as he negotiates to tighten the pressure, and it seems RaĂșl Castro is close to being put in the dock. I'm sharing this information because I know you'll be interested in this topic.
Look, yesterday Routers, but also other media outlets like CBC News, started reporting on this. And I just want to read a few things. The United States is actively seeking to bring RaĂșl Castro to trial for the downing of the Hermanos AĂ©roes planes in 1996, which killed four Cuban-Americans.
The Justice Department is taking note to file this accusation against RaĂșl Castro, the former dictator, who is still so, is 94 years old, and is occasionally paraded around like a mummy for some event or other. But also, you remember that at the time of the downing he held the position of Minister of the Armed Forces. The potential indictment, which still needs to be approved by a grand jury, would focus on the February 24, 1996, attack, when Air Force MIC 29 rockets shot down two unarmed Cessna aircraft over international waters, killing four people. The victims, whom I also want to pay tribute to from here today, because they are dead whose deaths have not yet been paid for, are victims who still have no one responsible in jail.
They were Armando Alejandre Junior, 45, Carlos Costas, 29, Mario de la Peña, 24, and Pablo Morales, 29, all citizens or permanent residents of the United States, and their bodies, friends, were never recovered. I'm going to share the information and these press reports about what was also another turn of events yesterday, in a day that brought us Cubans ups and downs. Here it is. Just look at the clippings from the American press. This is CBC News.
United States, no, this is Routers. The United States plans to prosecute Cuban RaĂșl Castro, according to a U.S. Department of Justice official.
On the other hand, we have another news outlet here that was reporting on it, that CBC News. The United States is preparing to prosecute the Cuban president. They call him president. Look at the American press calling a dictator that nobody elected president. I am truly amazed. Wow, that's incredible. The United States is preparing to prosecute the president, according to sources here who say RaĂșl Castro. The truth, friends, is that this needs to be read far beyond what it means from a practical point of view, that RaĂșl Castro, the old dictator of 94 years, now in his golden retirement, is going to a dock. You know that this has another interpretation, but of course, because if we follow the history of events in recent months, we have to see what the end was for NicolĂĄs Maduro being tried and convicted in a United States court. He is in New York today, he is in a New York jail and perhaps this is prudent to do at this time, but of course, firstly for a reason of justice, because there are dead. There are dead who are still waiting for justice, there are families who are still waiting for justice.
And secondly, for practical reasons, because this can trigger much more. I also wanted to address the issue because while the CIA director arrives with a diplomatic message very much in the style of Trump, he is tightening the screws on these negotiations, trying to prosecute the old dictator RaĂșl Castro, 94 years old. Now I would really love to read what you think about all this. He's already turned 95, I'm told around here. Well, 94 95, I'm actually kind of wrong about the years, but it's more or less the same.
Nobody lasts that many years in Cuba, my friend.
These people are incredible. I don't know what. Well, yes, I do know that they have eaten, they have eaten very well for so many years. They have it, they take it out, they put it in, they move it around like a mummy, because of the increasingly meager official demonstrations to give it some legitimacy before the Cuban people. But the big truth is that this man is on the verge of being put in the dock if what the American press is publishing today comes to pass. They say around here, "He's already turned 95." Well, on June 3rd, he tells me, "He's about to turn 95." Nobody turns 95 in Cuba, except these people. Well, we'll have to see what the life expectancy is on the island right now, but it seems crazy to me that they're that age and still alive and still causing harm. Mac says, "The American press is all left-wing." Keep that in mind. That's also true.
There are many newspapers that still do not understand the repressive nature of Castroism. They call RaĂșl president.
Look, they're giving RaĂșl Castro the title of president. It's like what I've been reading lately from F, for example, who calls my law or any other right-wing candidate far-right, but when they talk about Cuba they talk about the Cuban president Miguel DĂaz Canel. It's just an incongruity. Hey, we have to make him see it, right? By international press standards.
It says here to you, Diego, as I have said, that Americans are mostly very ignorant of Cuban affairs.
Fortunately, we have an asset in that administration, which is Marco Rubio.
Mani says here, "Now Tron from China comes with another idea about Cuba. This is a never-ending story." They say around here, "I don't agree with the idea of ââgiving 100 million to the tyranny. It will surely strengthen it." We'll talk about the 100 million. Thanks for reminding me, because it's a topic we have noted here and we're going to talk about it. Diana says here, "There's no dialogue with a dictatorship. This smells fishy to me, I have a bad feeling." He says, "They had it well hidden."
Anyway, friends, and to connect one thing with the other, I think that Castroism is running out of options. I believe that the Cuban regime is between a rock and a hard place, not only because of the tense situation with the United States, but also because of an internal situation that it has no way of resolving. Now they're talking to me about the 100 million. Do you think the Castro regime has any other option than to reject these 100 million if it doesn't even have oil? And we will talk about this in the second section of the program. I want to thank everyone who has been joining and I ask for a brief pause of about 30 seconds. We're already halfway through the first hour of this show. Let's see if the sponsor of this space shows up. So if you sell, buy, have a business, are interested in promoting yourself, look, here we have a YouTube channel with a huge audience where we do a program from Monday to Friday, you're missing out. Write to me on the WhatsApp number that will appear on your screen shortly and we'll talk about how to grow your business and our channel as well.
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Friends, another night of protests in Cuba.
Havana burns for the third consecutive day. The oil is running out and the Castro regime has no way to supply fuel. the country's thermoelectric power plants, most of them in constant ruin. Look, let's go over the details of these protests and then we'll talk about the national electricity system. The Castro regime confirmed to the nation that it is running out of fuel, that it has run out of derivatives, that it has no oil and will not have it in the short term. This led to the country taking to the streets, especially the capital, with fires being set on every corner of some Cuban neighborhoods: LuyanĂł, Lauton, that area of ââ10 de Octubre, but also Vedado, Playa, Marianao, Guanabacoa, erupted in protests two days ago, but there were also protests yesterday, and I bring the images, these images that reached me yesterday through the social networks of Nuevas Protestas. This is Guanabacoa, when neighbors lit bonfires in response to power outages of up to 22 hours a day. I'll start with the pictures.
Very well, you are seeing the images on screen of what these protests were like yesterday in Guanabacoa. I'll get into the details. The police arrive to repress it, they said, and the people defend themselves with stones. The street is the only one, the Cuban described on his Facebook page called Free of Communism when sharing the images. Since last Wednesday, the protests have also spread to several municipalities in Havana. The video you are seeing on screen was shared on social media with tens of thousands of views and shows another focus of protest last night. You remember that Cubans have been demonstrating in the streets for three days now, after several hours without electricity. And let's talk about the context in which we arrived at this moment. The situation is critical, extreme, there is no other way to describe it. Yesterday in the early morning, the national electrical system was partially disconnected, causing a massive blackout from Ciego de Ăvila to GuantĂĄnamo. Throughout the day the regime tried to interconnect the provinces, which does not mean at all that the province that was connected would have electricity, not at all. Um, they started trying to create these islands in each of the provinces to try to provide minimum services to hospitals, polyclinics, and other areas in those places. But the situation is extreme. I want you to briefly watch a video of Marrero Cruz, who yesterday went to the cargo office in Havana trying to give people hope. Marrero Cruz, the regime's prime minister, completely disconnected from reality, said, "We have to speak with optimism, we have to speak, we have to be in the street, we have to leave the offices as if this little group of incompetents who have destroyed the Cuban nation had just arrived in government yesterday." Before I show you the video, I want to ask each of you, please, if you are in Cuba or if you have family in Cuba, if you have been able to speak with them, leave me a message if you have electricity, how many hours the blackout has lasted at the moment, if you have managed to speak with your relatives. We're going to read all your messages at the end of this section because I'm interested in getting feedback on what's happening inside. Meanwhile, listen, listen to the Cuban regime again and again, kicking and screaming in the mud, offering the same solutions that are not real solutions. Here it is.
These are the problems, where the greatest complexity lies, and that's where we need to go. That message of optimistic, but also realistic, confidence from the highest authorities in all sectors in every place, together with the people.
These are not times for the office, for banal meetings, these are times for the street. We must be in the streets, in the hands of the highest authorities in all sectors, in every place, alongside the people.
These are not times for the office, for banal meetings, these are times for the street. You have to be out on the streets. These are not times for offices, you have to be out on the street, says Marrero Cruz, who apparently arrived in government yesterday and they have n't been doing harm for 67 years, eh, as if these people are not responsible for an absolute debacle in the national electrical system. Those responsible for decades of maintenance-free thermoelectric power plants with obsolete Russian technology, while building hotels all along the country's tourist streets. Hotels that are now empty while they built a 40-story tower in the very center of a Havana that is collapsing. You, each and every one of you, are responsible for the state of affairs to which you have led the national electrical system.
Don't try to excuse yourselves here, don't try to sell the Cuban people on the idea that the culprit is a supposed oil blockade that doesn't exist. You are responsible, first of all, for sucking at the Venezuelan teat and becoming dependent on Venezuelan oil, which you now suffer from because it doesn't reach you, or also because of a lack of investment in the national electricity system that has led the country to the current crisis. There is only one person responsible, and that's you. Now then, I would love to read your comments because I am trying to find out what the generation deficit is for today. Yesterday was an absolute record, it was 2,204, but the electric company seems to have fallen asleep or lost power because it is 8:50 in Cuba and they have not yet posted the blackout report for today. I read your comments. "I want to know if they have electricity, if they have been able to communicate with their family, or what they think about this situation," Gilsa says. How shameless these incompetent people are, asking a hungry and desolate people for resistance. They have absolutely no shame, really.
Jaser says, "Good morning. Well, Bruno is inciting everyone there to go out into the street.
Maybe it's so everyone will come out and protest." Well, he's inciting, he says, "They've been hitting people in the street. If they go out alone, unarmed, I feel sorry for them, although they don't dare."
Eh, it says " e por acĂĄ cubastro". "I agree with Marrero for the street," says Iliana. Well, I think Marrero's subconscious failed him a little there. She says, "I'm behind schedule. If they're going to take advantage of this opportunity because it's Tron's that interests them more than Rubio's, I mean, Cubastrica, I hope I'm wrong."
Marrero says, "Get out of here already. How long are you going to keep bothering us with this fat, greasy idiot and his nonsense?"
Well, it's truly incredible, is n't it? Listening to them say that so many meetings aren't necessary. The same ones who have been meeting for decades and decades in a useless and pointless way.
Jorge says, "I'm at the GuantĂĄnamo base, my daughter is in CĂĄrdenas. They've had power outages for 5 days in block four. 50 days in CĂĄrdenas," says MarĂa from here. They are completely cut off from communication; even landline phones are out of service. Look, interesting. Yasche tells me here, " General Romero was my supervisor in the military. I once had a heated argument with his driver, who took my father to meet with him and told him that I was going down the wrong path." Look, General Romero now occupies the top position in Castro's intelligence.
Look how far he's come. And there he met with the head of the CIA, the director of the CIA. It says here, "1639 MW, according to the OlguĂn electric company. We'll have to see, I'll look it up. Thanks for the information." It says here, "When he asks us to be in the streets, it's an order to repress the people." I'm going to make one last attempt, then I'll try again to see if the blackout report for today is available. You know perfectly well that this is much, much more than that. The truth is, friends, the situation is critical, it is critical. so much. So I also want to share with you at this moment the plea for help from a Cuban woman, a Cuban woman who has been posting what I'm about to show you on Facebook. She just posted it yesterday and it's already gone viral, and I want to share it here because maybe there are people who aren't Cuban, who are from Latin America or Europe, who see us and don't understand the level of crisis that we are experiencing today. Imagine 48, 50, 70 hours without electricity. What happens to the little food that people have?
What about the limited supplies? Uh uh it's really really worrying. I would like to thank Joelvis RamĂrez for this great chat. Joelvis, greetings to you. Joelvis says, Civil Defense releases strong statement. I'll look for it. Uh uh, allow me to do the search, you know we're live. Thanks for letting me know, Joelvi.
Anyway, let's go with this message from a Cuban woman that effectively reflects the magnitude of the crisis. Here it is. I'll be showing them on screen. Look at what it says. To whomever can save us. My country Cuba is slowly dying, without electricity, without water, without internet and without food. From the bottom of my heart I want to scream, but we can't. It is considered a crime, but the pain consumes the Cuban when he sees his people going hungry. They gradually took away our electricity, to the point that today it doesn't exist and the word "light" is replaced by "brightness." They gradually took away our errands and forced us to buy food at high prices with meager wages. They cut off our electricity from arriving on a ship and hearing the word. How much do you want to withdraw?
We only have 3,000 or nothing of getting to a bank, sorry. They recently announced that Texas would restrict or limit phone and internet service, but they told us they would remove it almost entirely as it is now. They took away our medicines and replaced them with empty shelves or the phrase "there are none." They took away our dreams, our hopes, our future, and our will to live, saying we wanted to die. How I long to die They took away our voice to express pain, anguish, despair, to say, "Enough, this is not life, because they immediately burden us, they force us to resist. But we resist watching those who no longer have the strength to resist die." The youth lost in a sea of ââtears where they say goodbye to their people to seek a new life and help those they leave behind, and many do not succeed. A family is left doubly devastated in the memory of the farewell and the departure. But no, we are not obligated to lie.
Why the hell isn't this life? Because the hell this isn't life. They are restricting us more and more. We are dying more and more while still alive, but without souls. It finds us, it doesn't find us, some find the solution. Either I steal, or I starve, or I emigrate, or I end up with nothing. My Cuba, the Cuba where I was born, is dying; you have to leave it to be able to live or at least see a change. It was part of these statements from these Cuban women that, I repeat, are going viral on social media and the truth, friends, I find it incredible, incredible that these people dared just a few weeks ago to sign that more than 6 million Cubans support them. that these people had the nerve to collect signatures and claim that they collected the signatures of more than 6 million Cubans. How can they lie like that? How can they be so shameless? Honestly, friends, I can't understand it. I'm checking the Electrical Union profile again. I don't want to change the subject without giving you this information, and if it's not there, we can move on and I'll read it to you later, no problem. The information is not available. They fell asleep at the National Electric Company. Okay, let's take a short break and I'll continue because in this situation the United States is providing millions of dollars in aid, 100 million dollars in direct aid to the Cuban people, aid that has only one condition and that is that the regime does not manipulate it, that it is delivered through channels independent of the government. I have all the details of the regime's response and Marco Rubio's response yesterday. I'll be right back to you, friends. I'm Mar Jor Castro and I invite you to be part of this YouTube channel, this community that grows every day. On this channel you will find information, opinions, quality content that we bring to you every morning from Monday to Friday at 8 am. We meet in a live program of about an hour so that you have all the information you need to start the day informed. We also do it on Saturdays at 10 a.m.
Subscribe, turn on notifications, leave a comment telling me where you're watching from, and welcome to this community that grows every day. Friends, we're back and I'll give you the information. The United States has offered the Cuban regime $100 million in aid, with the sole condition that this aid goes directly to the Cuban people and is not sent, or rather, not managed through Cuban government structures.
What would be the alternative? The Catholic Church could be one of these avenues.
The Cuban regime responded yesterday, but before anything else I want to share a fragment of Marco Rubio's statements from last night where he responded to the Castro regime, because the Castro regime was denying that this offer had occurred and Marco Rubio tells them that they are liars, that this was told to them privately and then he told them publicly. so that you can understand how these people lie. And excuse me, I believe Marco Rubio, uh, I absolutely believe him because the mythomaniacs at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs are textbook liars. What did Marco Rubio say? Listen.
Catholic at the Vatican last week. I spoke to the Catholic Church again.
They're willing to play that role. So hold up. Cuba's l Yeah, they're lying. They lie all the time. Um I mean, how can he say it's not a real offer? We've made it to them privately.
There you have it, and now I'll get to what you didn't hear because, well, it's in English and I want to make it easier for you to understand. Uh, I want you to understand this perfectly. Marco Rubio says, "I want to talk about Cuba now." They ask him, "The State Department just renewed the $100 million offer to Cuba. The Cuban foreign minister says this is an absolute lie and that no money is coming. Are there any conditions?" they ask Marco Rubio, tied to that $100 million.
The secretary responds as follows. No no. The only condition is that it has to be distributed by non- governmental sources such as the Catholic Church. I was in the Vatican last week, I spoke with the Catholic Church again and they are willing to take on that role. The reporter asks him, "What's the problem? Cuba is lying." And Marco Rubio says, " They are the problem, they're lying, they lie all the time. I mean, how can they say it's not a real offer? We've made it to them privately, we 're not just making it public. There's $100 million, by the way, we gave them humanitarian aid after the hurricane. We provided them with $600,000 worth of humanitarian aid, of which $3,000 was distributed. $3,000 of which is still being held, but it's available to them. Now we're saying, here's $ 100 million worth of humanitarian aid, so I do n't know if they're watching a broadcast in Cuba, but if they are, I do n't know if they're watching this broadcast in Cuba," Marco Rubio said, "but if they are, listen, the Cuban people should know that there's $100 million worth of food and medicine available to them right now." And the reason it's not reaching the Cuban people is... The regime. The reporter says, without any strings attached. And Marco says, "The only condition is that it has to be distributed by non- governmental organizations." We don't want, we don't want non- governmental organizations. Yes, this can be humanitarian aid if the government steals it for itself,â says Marco Rubio.
He is then asked the following: In a year, will there be someone named DĂaz-Canel or Castro in charge of Cuba? This is a crucial question, the one he is being asked right now. And the Secretary of State says, âI donât know.â I hope not, because if they are, then Cuba probably hasn't made any progress. They ask him, "Is there still a plan for change in Cuba?" And Marco Rubio says, "I mean, look, the change in Cuba is that its economy doesn't work." It is not a functional economy. I don't understand. â But what is the United Statesâ plan?â they ask him. âIâm trying to understand the United Statesâ plan.â
They ask Marco Rubio pointedly, and he responds as follows: â Well, I wouldnât tell you exactly what our plan is because I donât want them to know what our plan is, but our plan for Cuba is a prosperous future.
Thatâs not what we want.
Itâs in our national interest to have a prosperous Cuba, not a failed state 90 miles off our coast.
So, how do you have a prosperous state? Listen, how do you have a prosperous state where people can succeed? Do Cubans understand? Do you know, do you understand as well as I do, and where we come from? Cubans are successful everywhere in the world, except in one place: Cuba.â And he goes on to say, âThey canât because the current model they have is broken, it doesnât work, and it will never change as long as the people who are running it are in charge.â They are close-minded, unfortunately. I hope I'm wrong. I would love for them to come to their senses and say, "Okay, we recognize that this really has to change, and it has to change drastically, but right now it doesn't seem to be indicating that; they seem to be digging in." That's the diagnosis made by the Secretary of State. I'm also going to show you another short clip where he said the same thing. Look, millions of units of humanitarian aid. So I don't know if they watch your broadcast in Cuba, but if they are, the Cuban people should know there's millions of units of food and medicine available for them right now.
It's crystal clear, friends, that the United States government is willing to help the Cuban people. It already has. They've distributed 3 million units of aid in the east, and now there are 100 million. But I want you to understand how the regime has responded, because Bruno RodrĂguez, with all that he represents and his usual tone on Twitter, said the following. I want to show you just one excerpt.
He reported that for the first time, the United States government formally and publicly offered aid to Cuba through a statement from the State Department.
valued at $0,000,000.
In his X account, the Foreign Minister pointed out that it remains unclear whether the aid will be in cash or in kind, and whether it will be allocated to the most urgent needs of the people, such as fuel, food, and medicine. The head of Cuban diplomacy stated that, in any case, even considering the incongruity of the apparent generosity from those who subject the Cuban people to collective punishment through economic warfare, the Cuban government does not, in practice, reject foreign aid offered in good faith and with genuine cooperative aims, whether bilateral or multilateral.
RodrĂguez Parrilla said that Cuba also has no problem working with the Catholic Church, with whose cooperative efforts it has a long and positive history of joint work. The diplomat... Very well, those were Bruno's words, which I wo n't quote in full because I'm not interested in doing so, but yesterday DĂaz-Canel also spoke about this offer. DĂaz-Canel said that, well, he wasn't going to reject it, that he wanted to know more about what it was about. Always speaking in this tone High-flown, isn't it?
As if they had any option at this moment to decline this offer of $100,000.
And DĂaz-Canel, I'm going to briefly quote what he said, I'm going to read your comments, what do you think about the aid? I know you're writing to me here and I 'll do it as soon as I finish posting this information. Look, the Cuban dictator responds to the United States' offer of aid, saying he will find no obstacles. What this man says is one thing, what he will do is another. To be honest with you, I don't think this aid will arrive, and I don't think it will arrive not because of the United States, but because of the Cuban regime that has completely torpedoed all kinds of aid that doesn't come from them, that they can't manipulate politically, that they can't claim and steal. And yesterday the Cuban dictator said the following. In a message posted on social media, DĂaz-Canel stated that Cuba's experience receiving international aid, Even from the United States, it has been broad and constructive.
This guy's a liar, huh? He says, "However, the ruler described it as paradoxical that Washington offers aid while, according to him, it maintains policies of collective punishment." Not collective punishment, you shameless people, are the ones who inflict it on the Cuban people.
Collective punishment is what you inflict while you live very well and don't suffer hardship.
Talking about resistance while you live in privileged neighborhoods, huh, with generators, and your children study at private foreign universitiesâyou shameless people, all of you.
Diaz-Canel says here, he also pointed out that the country's main current needs areâlisten to the needsâ fuel, food, and medicine. Everything, everything should be supplied by the Cuban regime itself, which is in charge of the state. And now they're asking the United States for help in these three areas. He says, "The ruler insisted that the easiest and quickest way to alleviate the situation would be to lift and ease the sanctions." Of course, so these people can line their pockets. And the coffers, well, no. I think the United States' strategy of offering $ 100 million in aid is a positive one. That's just my opinion. I think it reflects quite well the current administration's commitment to the Cuban people. I think it excludes Castroism and everything related to the stateâa state that steals the aid, a state that monopolizes its distribution, and that uses aid as a political weapon. It's a bit of a way to blackmail the very population it subjugates. Therefore, I hope those millions reach the Cuban people. Now, I'm not so sure they will. I think they won't, not because of the United States, but because of the Castro regime itself, which will do everything possible to sabotage the delivery. That's what I think. I'd love to know what you all think. Michel says here, "These people will steal even the horns of that aid they send, even the hides." or ends up in the hands of state employees in charge. They have certainly squandered that too. "Eh," he says cheekily. They are shameless. They are shameless. They are offering help to the people. But of course, since they are not part of the people, since they are a privileged class, since they are above the needs of the population, do you think that DĂaz Canel Lamachi, the other one and the other one suffer blackouts? Please, please. Arturo says here, "The criminals are sharpening their teeth as always, crazy for money." He says, "The greatest help Cubans need is to get these miserable people out of the corrupt government and bring them freedom." It is known that things donated by China and Europe end up in stores for sale.
Of course, how did it end? Do you remember the Mexican donations in dollar stores? So, given this history, do you think any serious government is going to want to distribute aid through state mechanisms? Of course not.
Of course not. If there are other people who can distribute it. Denis says here, "Excuse me for what I'm about to say, but the dictatorship in Cuba will never fall because the United States has always supported that damned dictatorship. It 's all a charade. What a disgusting world politics," he says in a message he just left me, and I also have other messages here. Hey, Yelvi, I'm about to confirm the Civil Defense thing. I didn't want to say it here because I need to confirm it before saying it. "Oh," he says, "but thank you, thank you for your message." "He says, ' I have other messages, you know, you ca n't eat good looks, but Canel doesn't struggle, he rejects what he doesn't need, he lives like a king.'" Of course, Daisy, that's exactly right.
Lourdes says, "Listening to the Castro regime is listening to lies." Without a doubt, friends, I propose a brief pause and I'll be right back because I have another topic that will interest you.
Political prisoners. Cuba's youngest Lady in White, who spent almost 5 years in prison, was released yesterday, but with a condition. Sisia Vascal left prison on the condition that she go into exile, into banishment along with part of her family.
This is how the Cuban regime treats young people who think differently: it imprisons them and then sends them into exile.
Either way, I am deeply happy that this courageous young Cuban woman is in lands of freedom. A short break and I'll be back with the information.
Very well, friends, as is almost the norm, the Cuban regime sends its troublesome young people into exile, the young Cubans who decide not to remain silent, the best of the youth, eh, who are either imprisoned or in exile. Yesterday, Cicia Vascal, the youngest lady in white who was imprisoned for the July 11 protests, who was serving an extensive prison sentence, almost 5 years in prison, this young woman, has just been released and sent into exile along with her family.
I have the images of Sisi leaving prison and I'll go over the details of everything related to this. Look here, ID card.
Take a look at the video you are watching on the screen. The Lady in White was serving a 6-year prison sentence for her participation in the July 11, 2021 protests. Her sentence was supposed to extend until November of next year, but according to MartĂn Noticias, she traveled to the United States with a humanitarian visa obtained with the support of the Rescate JurĂdico Foundation, which allowed her to leave directly for the United States. And I have more to tell you. I have images of his arrival in the United States, some statements made by Sis Cis Abbascal, to whom I send my deepest gratitude for everything he did for the freedom of Cuba, for his courage, for speaking on behalf of an entire nation, for carrying the dignity of Cuba on his shoulders, even though this has cost him 5 years in prison. I'll go with the images of his arrival in the United States and some statements he made to the media outlet MartĂn Noticias there.
Look here.
So, how does it feel? I feel nervous. I still can't believe it.
How was that departure from Cuba? How did you find out they were going out?
Well, well, I found out through my family that since October they had already proposed it to me by state security due to health problems. I accepted, they told me that the first one who had to leave Cuba had to be my mom, and that if my mom didn't leave they weren't going to let me leave.
My mom had to do it for me so that I could have proper medical care.
We have already started the process and thanks to the State Department, Santiago, all the members of the foundation, we are here today.
How are you feeling health-wise? How are you doing? Did you have Bartholinitis? Did you have a problem that you had inside? How are you?
Well, I feel good. I have to wait until a doctor sees me to find out if it's true or not.
And your dad? How did your dad come to the decision to stay? So, Mom, how did it go?
Well, that was a very difficult decision because it's a marriage of many years.
His daughters and the other son remain there.
Very good. These were the words of Sisi Abascal and her mother upon their arrival in the United States. I really have mixed feelings. Happy because he is free, of course, happy because he was able to escape the dungeons of Castroism, but the feeling is mixed because the best of Cuban youth, friends, are imprisoned or exiled. And I want to, I don't want to end the program, obviously I have other things to tell you and I want to read your comments, but I want to take a minute, a minute from here, from this modest channel to send all my gratitude, I take my hat off to you, friends, for the Cubans who have not stopped protesting in the last few hours in Cuba. There's a lot of talk about negotiations, about the CIA in Cuba, about the tensions, about the situation, but what about the Cubans who protest? What courage does it take to go out with a pot to bang on it and block a street in a totalitarian regime, where that can cost you more than 10 years of your own life imprisoned in a dungeon of Castroism? We really need to appreciate the courage behind each of those who have taken to the streets in the last few hours. And I pay tribute to you from here because you have truly carried the dignity of the entire people on your shoulders and have spoken and shouted in the name of the entire nation, of those who are afraid, of those of us who are not there. They have shouted for everyone, they have expressed for everyone the feelings of an entire people, which is a feeling of freedom. To you, to those who have protested, to those who have written to me privately, to those who have sent me your photos, there are people here whose messages you can't imagine, my friend, my inboxes are overflowing with messages. They say, "No, don't post my name, but I was there, look at the video I recorded. Don't post this video, but I want you to see that I played the caldero. Look how it left, how my caldero turned out," a young Cuban man, whom I'll introduce to you here, told me. The caldero sent me a video of this very caldero. No, no, no, I have n't been able to post it for security reasons. This young man wrote to me from Havana, but he said, "Look, man, look how the caldero I played yesterday turned out, huh?" And here I have the image because it truly fills me with pride, huh? There you have it, there you have it. Look how the caldero I played yesterday in my neighborhood turned out. I did n't stop... It's playing, and I've saved it because I'm going to keep playing it. An act that perhaps isn't valued in other places, like banging a pot, folks. There you have it, right? That's the future of Cuba. I believe that the future of Cuba is made up of young people who have decided, after so long, that their children are going to live and their grandchildren need to live in a better place. And from here, of course, all my gratitude, pride, honor, and applause for each and every one of you. You truly are the future of Cuba, and that's what makes me wake up with the total conviction that we are going to be free, that Cuba has changed, and that we are being governed by an increasingly tiny group of people who have entrenched themselves in power, but the feeling of freedom and the sense of liberation are anchored within Cuban society itself. And to this young man who sent me this photo that went viral yesterday, all my applause from here. And keeping this in mind, I want to give you a A brief intervention, almost at the end, by Carolina Barrero. Carolina Barrero was speaking about this very thing, about the courage behind these demonstrations of public discontent in Cuba. She was speaking at a forum in Denmark, and I want to briefly show you the imagesâ not all of them, but I do think it's important that we see this first part because, friends, this is something we need to talk about.
I have here, here is the image of Cuban women recently, last month, there was an amazing protest with hundreds of people in the streets at night. They went to the headquarters of the communist party. I'm sure many of you remember what it's like to live in a communist country in Eastern Europe, in the Baltic republics, not so long ago.
Europe forgets this wasn't so long ago, and it can happen again: to live under a totalitarian regime. So, for hundreds of people to go out in the middle of the night and set fire to the headquarters of the communist party is no small thing.
Incredible. It is incredible, and this just happened last March, and that's not in the news. My other important message was I wanted to mention this here so that you know, even though it's not reported enough, that the Cuban people are fighting for freedom. They aren't just waiting to see what Europe or the White House do or don't do. This is important. Okay, friends, almost at the end of today's program, I want to give you a brief summary of what has been an extremely intense day in terms of news. The CIA director landed in Cuba in an absolutely extraordinary event. The CIA director brought a direct message from Donald Trump to the Cuban regime. The United States is willing to support and discuss the economy and security, but only if the Cuban regime makes essential and fundamental changes. Only if the Castro regime stops lending its national territory to powers antagonistic to the United States. A declaration that was almost more of an ultimatum, because yes, the head of the CIA met in Cuba with RaĂșl Castro's grandson. The power behind the throne, RaĂșl Guillermo Castro, was at that meeting receiving this message. Perhaps the last diplomatic card in these increasingly tense relations between the United States and Cuba.
Perhaps This is Castroism's last chance for a non-violent or diplomatic solution to this conflict. The truth is, I believe Castroism will squander it.
Meanwhile, the situation in Cuba is escalating. The fuel crisis is fueling social unrest, and protests are erupting again in Havana. A third night of massive protests in the capital: street blockades, barricades, banging pots and pans, a city plunged into darkness like the rest of the country. The situation is dire. Yesterday, the national electrical grid collapsed, and even today, my friends, the effects are still being felt. But this is a situation that won't be resolved because the fuel shortage is chronic, and the regime doesn't have the money to buy it on the international market. "There's no fuel, there isn't any," the Minister of Energy said on live television, and obviously, this hasn't changed and won't change. On the other hand, the United States is offering direct aid to the Cuban people in the form of $100 billion to be distributed through non-governmental organizations, with only one alternative.
State, the regime shouldn't be mishandling the aid. The Cuban regime was releasing some information, saying yes, that it accepted, but we'd have to see how this aid was distributed, always raising objections as if it could do anything other than accept and remain silent. The island, my friends, is venturing into uncharted territory where diplomatic options for resolving this situation are dwindling and where the coming days will be crucial in determining the outcome of all this. I would love to know your opinions on this, how you have seen the events of the last few hours, what you expect to happen with the arrival of this special envoy from Donald Trump, and what you think will happen later? They say here, Daisy, I hope they have already frozen several assets in international accounts belonging to the elite, they publicly exile an opposition member and have the nerve to say that there are no political prisoners in Cuba. It's unbelievable. Daisy says, "The role is that of errand boy for RaĂșl's mafia godfather," says Daisy, if they are so brazen as to be demanding. Right?
Suddenly they're getting demanding about the aid, as if they could. I remember DĂaz-Canelâuh, this was after the hurricane, I think it was in Cauto, in Granma, right?âa woman approached him and said, "Well, mattresses, can you give me mattresses?" And DĂaz-Canel said, "We don't have any." But he also spoke to her in this rude way, and after not even having mattresses to distribute, now they're being picky about the aid. No, what bothers them, friends, is that they can't get their hands on that aid. What bothers them is that they can't gain political advantage from that aid. So, of course, they look at it from afar, they look at it with insecurity, they look at it with distrust, that's what bothers them. He says here, "Thank you very much for the whole report." I want to encourage those who do not believe that Cuba will be free soon not to lose sight of the fact that we will soon be free from communism. " So be it." Michel says, "How families are stopped at will and kicked out of the country, huh, it's really hard." They have no friends, they won't have years to pay for what they've done to the Cuban people." Mercedes says, "Thank you Mac for your program. Thank you D and for your great effort in giving us the best information. Thank you so much, Mercedes, for tuning in. I also wanted to tell you, friends, that if you've made it this far in the program, if you like how we bring you the information and the news, if you like how we do this every morning, it would help us a lot if you could give us a like right now. We've had over 1,000 people throughout the entire program, just on YouTube. On X, we currently have 363.
If those 1,000+ people had given us a like, this program would be much more popular on this platform. So, if you like what you see, please give us a like and subscribe. It doesn't make sense that we've been here for an hour and 11 minutes and you're watching but you're not a follower of this channel. Furthermore, you can also help us by becoming a channel member, which allows us to improve the conditions under which we broadcast these shows so you have a better experience. If you want minute-by-minute information For minute-by-minute updates on everything happening in Cuba during this situation, you can follow us on all our other social media platforms. We're everywhere. The descriptions and links are in this video's description.
We're on Facebook, we're on X, we're on Instagram, we're on TikTokâ we're on all the networks. So please follow us. If you're in Cuba and want to stay informed, but you have limited internet access, we have WhatsApp and Telegram channels where the information will be delivered condensed and using less data. We've thought of you too. So follow us on our channels; the links are in this program's description. I wanted to remind you, if you're new to our broadcast, that we do these programs Monday through Friday around 8:00 AM. I know it's a busy time, but it's a time when people are eager for information, when they want to know what's been happening. And we've been doing this program at this time on Saturdays for a while now; that is, tomorrow we'll do it a little later, around 10:00 AM Cuban time. Well, because it's Saturday, I'm not going to do it... I'd have to get up early, but it would be 4:00 AM here in Spain. I ask you to tune in tomorrow because the program is sure to be very good. From Friday to Saturday. Journalists know that everything happens for a reason. From Friday to Saturday. They say here, Mac, we all appreciate your excellent program. Thank you very much, thank you all very much. I won't delay the closing any longer. I send you all a huge hug. It has been a pleasure to have you with me today, and yesterday, which have been intense days. I apologize because sometimes I read more comments than I need to, but when there's a lot of information, it's hard for me to keep up with everything. We'll take it one step at a time. So if I didn't greet you, if I didn't read your comment, I apologize, I'll do it later when the live broadcast is over. Now then, a huge hug to everyone. Happy and blessed Friday. Have an excellent Friday. See you tomorrow, Saturday, at 10:00 AM in Cuba, 4:00 PM in Spain. Spain. Goodbye, friends. I'm Margor Castro, and I invite you to join this YouTube channel, this community that's growing every day. On this channel, you'll find information, opinions, and quality content that we bring to you every morning. From Monday to Friday at 8:00 AM, we'll be live for about an hour so you have all the information you need to start your day informed. We're also live on Saturdays at 10:00 AM.
Subscribe, turn on notifications, leave a comment letting me know where you're watching from, and welcome to this community that's growing every day.
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