Miami‚ FL is a place that has to be felt rather than seen or heard—and by that I mean observed beyond all senses‚ with mind‚ body‚ heart‚ and soul. I’ve been entrenched in it my whole life‚ a little Cuban princesita not so different from all the rest‚ but it’s only as I’ve gotten older that I’ve fully felt like a part of a community‚ a culture. I feel it when I talk‚ casually‚ to the elderly cashier at my neighborhood grocery store‚ a familiar combination of Spanish‚ English‚ and what many call cubanismos
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In 1846‚ the Spanish colony of Cuba thrived in the illegal slave trade that continued to replenish the supplies of enslaved Africans‚ which made up 36% of the enslaved population in Cuba. The socio-economic characteristics of the Cuban population demonstrated approximately that half of the enslaved persons labored on a sugar plantation. Those same individuals were subjected to a brutal work regime‚ spoke only the language of their diverse African origin and prohibited from contact with the creole
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This cartoon was published on October 30‚ 1962 immediately after the thirteen days of the Cuban Missile Crisis by Edmund Valtmun. After 13 days of being on the brink of war‚ Khrushchev finally agreed to remove the nuclear missiles from Cuba. This cartoon depicts Khrushchev doing just that by way of dentistry in the mouth of Cuban leader Castro‚ saying “This Hurts Me More Than it Hurts You‚” revealing that the removal of missiles in Cuba ultimately meant that Khrushchev had lost the non-combat
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what extent was the outbreak of the Cuban Missile Crisis due to Castro’s provocative actions? The period of 1950 to 1979 saw the Cold War extending beyond its traditional borders in Europe and finally tore the world into a North-South polarization with each major powers supporting and sponsoring a faction in their chosen client states. This could be seen in the Cuban Missile Crisis. Although Castro had genuine security reasons‚ his actions leading up to the Cuban Missile Crisis were aggressive to
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mixing of European‚ African‚ Amerindian and North American cultures. Cuba in general is a traditional society‚ which have they own beliefs. Cubans likes to have fun and enjoy their time by playing dominos‚ or going to the cinema. There is a big and popular Latin American film festival happen each year in Havana. Moreover‚ there are hundreds of thousands of Cubans emigrant to the United States and Spain and other countries. The government in Cuba dominates almost everything‚ so the foreign investors
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to steal from Cuba. The U.S. responded by imposing a partial trade embargo against Cuba on October 19th‚ 1960 (Simon 6). On February 3rd 1962 the US government declared a total embargo on the Republic of Cuba (Simons 6). Fidel Castro analyzed the purpose of the economic blockade on Cuba’s Televisión- Revolución : "This action is aimed
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The Cuban Missile Crisis was the closest mankind ever came to a nuclear war. The United States and Soviet Union mobilized their armed forces and nuclear weaponry‚ bringing the world within hours of a nuclear exchange. The Realist perspective argues that the origins and outcomes of this conflict were caused by the never-ending struggle for military‚ economic‚ and diplomatic power between the United States and Soviet Union‚ but cannot determine why the conflict ended. Instead‚ the Liberal perspective
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The Cuban Missile Crisis The Cuban Missile Crisis was a period of thirteen days‚ lasting from October 14 to October 28‚ 1962‚ during which nuclear war with the Soviet Union seemed imminent. In the height of the Cold War‚ Russia had stationed nuclear warheads in Cuba. The proximity of the weapons sent the nation into a panic and created extreme tensions between the United States and Soviet Union. Eventually‚ an agreement to dismantle the weapons was announced and war was avoided. However‚ the public
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the Soviet Union worked quickly and secretly to build missile installations in Cuba. On October 16‚ 1962. President John F. Kennedy discovered through reconnaissance photographs that the Soviet Union was constructing missile installations on Cuban soil. This meant that only 90 miles of ocean separated the United States from nuclear missiles. In response to this threat‚ President Kennedy organized the Executive Committee (EX-COMM)‚ which was comprised from Kennedy’s twelve most important advisors
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Cuban Missile Crisis Paper The United States & The Soviet Union: Leadership perspective during the Cuban Missile Crisis The Cuban Missile crisis between the United States‚ The Soviet Union‚ and Cuba was one of the most politically tense and hectic periods of time in American and world history. Throughout the decades‚ many historians have addressed and studied many facts regarding what the Cuban Missile Crisis would have symbolized for the world‚ had there been any nuclear attacks from
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