Well, let's go back to the OP, shall we? Cleon asked:...while it is almost certainly true that Idoitic economic policies hurts the Cubans more than idiotic embargoes, that doesn't magically make the harm from the embargo go away and the embargo is the topic of this thread.
To which I pointed out that Cuba refuses its citizens permission to visit the U.S.; if anything, Cuba is even more restrictive than the U.S. Someone pointed out here that 10,000 U.S. citizens are allowed to visit Cuba each year. How many Cuban citizens are allowed to visit the U.S.?Is there anyone who honestly thinks US policy towards Cuba makes even a little bit of sense? This is ridiculous. You shouldn't need permission from the State to visit your family.
I didn't see where Cleon was talking about the economic embargo there; that issue appears to have worked its way into the discussion gradually. If you insist on limiting the discussion to the issue raised in the OP, then we should drop the economic debate right now and focus on how many Cubans are allowed to visit the U.S. each year, and vice-versa.
But the embargo is not the topic of the thread (the topic is misleadingly named, frankly), nor is it the topic of the OP. So you can claim the embargo is hurting the Cubans all you want, but don't accuse me of derailing the thread.
Now, perhaps the embargo has hurt Cuba economically, but I doubt even you think it would be anything other than a basket case even if it was lifted, because of the government's disasterous economic policies. So shouldn't everyone's attention be focused on how those disasterous policies can be changed, rather than on why the embargo should be lifted? Shouldn't the homeowner do something about the termites in his walls and the crumbling foundation under his house, rather than worrying about the faucet dripping in the kitchen?
Or do you think the damage done by the embargo is comparable to the damage done by almost fifty years of communism and that dripping faucet = (termites + foundation)?