Of all the knocks on President Biden鈥檚 decision this week to re-loosen some of his predecessor鈥檚 re-restrictions on U.S. engagement with Cuba, this line from Wednesday鈥檚 put a new wrinkle on my old forehead:
鈥淚t knocked the wind out of the Patria y Vida 尘辞惫别尘别苍迟.鈥
As a reader who greatly respects the Miami Herald editorial page, I respectfully but strongly disagree.
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The Patria y Vida movement erupted last July 11: the loud and unprecedented island-wide demonstrations against Cuba鈥檚 iron-fisted and ham-handed communist regime. It was fueled in part by the Latin Grammy-winning protest anthem 鈥Patria y Vida,鈥 or 鈥淗omeland and Life,鈥 a passionate poke at the Cuban Revolution鈥檚 morbid motto, 鈥淗omeland or Death.鈥
It was an electrifying cry of long-boiling Cuban rage. But it was the Cuban regime, not the Biden Administration, that knocked the wind out of it 鈥 arresting more than a thousand protesters, convicting them of 鈥渢reason鈥 in kangaroo trials and handing them, even teenagers, monstrously long sentences.
In the aftermath, sadly, Cuba looks no closer to democratic regime change than it did on July 10 鈥 no matter how many Miami voices insist, as they鈥檝e done for 63 Groundhog Day years now, that the regime鈥檚 gonna fall any second if we just stick to the isolation plan.
READ MORE: Yes, cruise lines screwed up in Cuba. But engagement built up Cubans' sense of control.
So at this point I鈥檇 argue that, if anything, Biden鈥檚 Cuba policy changes stand to blow fresh wind into the Cuban opposition鈥檚 sails. That鈥檚 because, in a country as suffocatingly controlled as Cuba is, we鈥檙e reminded that the best long-term tool the dissident movement had before and has now is more economic than political. It鈥檚 about making money more than melodies. It resides in the island鈥檚 private businesses more than it marches through its potholed streets.
And that鈥檚 where the Biden plan, like the Obama plan before it, looks most focused: reviving cuentapropista or private entrepreneur energy, which has already forged a sizable Cuban cohort that's experiencing independence from the communist state. That wasn鈥檛 possible a decade ago 鈥 but it was made possible because, while the regime won鈥檛 concede political liberties, it鈥檚 had no choice but to indulge Cubans鈥 economic freelancing in order to prevent national starvation.
Biden is re-opening Cuban entrepreneurs' access to capital that makes them less reliant on their Big Brother state 鈥 and that can erode Big Brother's grip on them as regime hardliners die away.
In foreign policy that鈥檚 called an underbelly to exploit. But former President Trump鈥檚 retighten-the-Cuba-screws strategy was instead a domestic policy show. He slashed U.S. money and travel to the island to make Cuban-American voters think the Cuban military, which runs much of Cuba鈥檚 economy, would be bled dry and surrender to exile leaders by Election Day 2020.
Cuentapropistas don鈥檛 vote in Miami-Dade County, so they were actually the ones bruised by Trump鈥檚 Cuban door-slamming.
HERMANO GRANDE
Biden is simply re-opening their access to U.S. remittance cash, to dollar-toting U.S. travelers who patronize cuentapropista restaurants, B&Bs and shops 鈥 and now to the direct U.S. investment in the Cuban private sector his administration greenlighted last week. It's capital that makes them less reliant on their Big Brother state. That shift in turn can gnaw away at Hermano Grande鈥檚 grip on them 鈥 especially as the regime鈥檚 octogenarian hardliners die away.
Yes, I understand Hermano Grande will inevitably siphon some of that money through cuentapropista taxes and remittance fees. But that's a trade-off we can deal with if we're talking about a strategy that actually has a chance of empowering ordinary Cubans 鈥 instead of an isolation illusion that鈥檚 made them wait and chafe in the Caribbean sun for six decades and counting.
In fact, as the Miami Herald editorial was going to press this week, in the independent digital Cuban daily 14ymedio 鈥 penned by a former Cuban political prisoner 鈥 was going online to argue that Cuba 鈥渘eeds another revolution, one that gives its entrepreneurs big wings.鈥
It was one more indication that Cubans consider their smart entrepreneurial ferocity to be as subversive a force as their emotional Patria y Vida anger 鈥 that each provides wind for the other.
Which is why it鈥檚 an encouraging coincidence that in the same week Biden鈥檚 giving Cuban business owners new oxygen, Cuban singer and 鈥Patria y Vida鈥 co-composer Yotuel another major protest song will be released, on Friday.
A big part of me hopes its Spanish title is something like 鈥Ejercer el Negocio鈥 鈥 Takin鈥 Care of Business.