Anyway the point which you so surely fail to address is that a fortnight in Florida with the family would cost the same as a fortnight in Cuba; contrary to your suggestions, it's not dirt cheap. And why do Brits go to Florida? For Disney and Universal.
Well, gee, why doesn't
el jefe compete with the
norteamericanos and build WorkersParadiseWorld? He has a warm climate and beautiful beaches. Why do you Brits insist instead on travelling across the pond to stand in crowded lines to eat cotton candy and see Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck - especially when you can do it for probably half the cost by taking the Chunnel and the TGF to Paris and EuroDisney? Or do y'all hate the Frogs so much you'd rather go to all the trouble and expense of coming here than put tuppence in the Froggie pockets? (Speaking strictly for myself, I've never understood the appeal of DisneyWorld, and would not trouble myself to cross the street to get there even if they were giving out all the fifty dollar bills you could stuff in a suitcase, but I'm just a crabby old man who hates kids and saccharine, sterile entertainment, so...)
Sidetracked myself... Why do you insist on coming to DisneyWorld when Cuba is perfectly... adequate?
1. Source re: tourist numbers?
Did you really doubt that the U.S. gets millions of European visitors every year?
2005 Italy Netherlands Spain Sweden, Switzerland = about 1.2 million.
2005 France and Germany = about 2.2 million
2005 UK about 4.3 million. Japan, South Korea, Hong Kong, and Taiwan add another 5 million, and it's almost impossible to come to the U.S. from farther away than Hong Kong without coming from another planet. So your allegations of insuperable difficulties in getting to the U.S. or its next-door neighbor in the Caribbean don't hold up very well. Again, maybe
you can't do the travel, but almost eight million of your next door neighbors evidently can.
2. Source re: travel times?
It generally takes about a month or two by caravel to get to the U.S. from Europe, depending on the prevailing winds - longer from Japan and Hong Kong. But somehow, that doesn't appear to present a difficulty to almost eight million of your next door neighbors.
3. Source re: travel costs?
Approximately four to five million euros per day, depending on travel class desired. But somehow, that doesn't appear to present a difficulty to almost eight million of your next door neighbors.
Honestly, I don't quite follow the point you're trying to make. Is it that Europeans don't go to Cuba by the millions because it's too expensive, when you acknowledge yourself that it's less expensive than the U.S.?
