Üstelik adamlara uygulanan ambargolar kısıtlamalar var yoksa Kübanın insanı şu durumda Türkiyede olsa abartısız en güçlü devletlerden biri olurduk. |
Küba'da %3 işsizlik varmış Türkiye'de ben 9 Dolar asgari ücret versem Irak ve Suriye'deki işsizleride işe alırım Dip Not: Bu arada Küba'da benzin 1.3 Dolar , bide internet yasak |
Gittin mi nereden biliyorsun? |
Küba'da internet yasak olabilir ama burada değil |
Egitimde ve tıpta zirveye oynayan adamlarda mı internet yasak olacak? Nerenizden uyduruyorsunuz bunları? |
Aynen eğitimde zirveye oynuyorlar hala ambargosuz günlerde Abd'den kalma 1950 model külüstür cadillacları Küba'da kullanıyorlar.Şu süper zekalar hemen bir araç üretsin. |
Hocam bunlara göre Türkiye nirvanaya ulaşmış tem ülke he diyip geçecen |
Her teror saldirisi, dusen tape, yakilan askerleden sonra enistemin kayincosu yavaslatiyor interneti zaten. Torkiyede hersey cok gozel, keyifimiz yerinde teror yok issizlik yok hersey cok guzel. Selam ve dua ile. |
Tıp egitimi camide namaz öğrenmeye benzemez. Senin ülkende neden kanser araştırmaları, kansere karşı aşı geliştirmeleri yapılmıyor bir düşün. Bir cacık bildiğin yok, anca iftira atıp duruyorsun. |
Konu Küba konusu Türkiye ile ne alakası var Ben diyorum Küba kötü sen diyorsun Türkiye böyle Fidel Baba'nın 900 Milyon Dolar serveti , Rolex saatleri ,adidas giysileri,yudumladığı coca cola,9 Dolar asgari ücret olması ve halkına sosyalizm Rüyası satması.Bide fidel babanın benzeri Kim Jong bey. DuAlar selamlar bol olsun sizede |
Asgari ücret 9 dolar; Aylık elektrik, ısınma, su masrafları 2 dolar. Asgari ücret 1300 TL; Aylık elektrik, ısınma, su masrafları 300 TL. Singapur vatandaşı seni. |
İyiki youtube'da yerli yabancı gezi vloggerları var ve iyiki Küba'daki gibi internetimiz yasak değil ve bunları takip edebiliyoruz.Yoksa senin dediklerine inanıcaz.Herkes tutturmuş Küba'da insanlar mutlu diye alın bunlarda mutlu ; < Resime gitmek için tıklayın > |
Küba sosyalist halka önem verir işçiye önem verir. Oralarda devrim vardır bizdeki sağcılar ise paraya önem verir adam çarpmaya önem verir aradaki fark bu . Din iman diyede uyuturlar milleti. |
Halkına öyle bir önem verir 9 Dolar asgari verdiği halkına rağmen 900 Milyon Dolar minnik servet ile vefat etmiş FİDEL CASTRO ; Kaynak :http://www.forbes.com/sites/keithflamer/2016/11/26/10-surprises-about-castros-extravagant-life/#2ffe28d17302 |
O zaman internetini adam gibi kullan, gözünle oku, beyninle yorumla Government Subsidies Despite the average wage in Cuba looking like it is extremely low by western standards, we must now factor in the actual cost of living in Cuba. As most people know, Cuba does not have a capitalist economic system. The fact is that the country is communist/socialist, meaning that most workers work for the state and they receive low monetary salaries, but the state provides for them in different ways. We can take a look at some of these economic subsidies to see how they influence buying power for the average Cuban. 1- Cubans get free food allowances and are allowed to purchase additional rations of staple foods at cost price from government run bodegas and depots. 2-Cuban utility bills are all highly subsidized. The monthly phone, electricity, and gaz bill is only about $2, which is basically nothing when compared to western bills. 3- All medical coverage is provided free by the government. 4- Gasoline is sold as subsidized costs. 5- Education is completely free, even for older people wanting to return to school just for a few classes. 6- Beer, alcohol, food is all sold by the state at cost or near cost. 7- Rental rates for properties are controlled and most Cubans own their own homes. 8- Property taxes and goods and service taxes are zero. http://bestcubaguide.com/cuba-poor-country-salary/ |
Much has been written about Haiti being a failed state in the wake of its devastating earthquake. But just to its west lies another human catastrophe in the making—Fidel Castro’s Cuba. Havana is a city of sorrow—a once elegant and prosperous capital brought to despair by 51 years of deliberate neglect and isolation. A country that has been plundered by a succession of foreign powers, homegrown dictators and mobsters imported from America now languishes in a bizarre time warp where little has changed in more than half a century. Its people go about their daily routines bereft of consumer goods, nutritious foods, meaningful jobs or adequate housing—most of them born after the revolution that swept Castro to power in 1959 and now, thanks to rigid censorship, largely conditioned to accept their impoverished lot. Prosperity is the last thing that comes to mind as you watch the Cuban people wearing clothing that went out of style years ago. Even shoes are washed and hung on the laundry line along with shirts and pants. To listen to Castro’s cronies—those among the political and business elite whose loyalty is secured with perks unavailable to ordinary Cubans—the economic situation is solely the fault of the US embargo imposed after the revolution. More thoughtful Cubans discreetly offer a different explanation: They blame Fidel’s feckless experiments with communism—his initial seizure of $25 billion worth of private property from Cubans and the nationalization of all businesses, forcing the middle class to flee to Miami; his bizarre decision to send 300,000 Cubans out of a population of only 11 million to fight wars in Africa in the 1980s; his Cold War alliance with the Russians that left his country bankrupt and saddled with antiquated technology when the Soviet Union collapsed. Everyone in Cuba knows the status quo can’t last. But no one knows how or when it will end. The political structure, like Havana’s crumbling buildings, seems to be held up by force of habit and little else. Fidel’s failing health has cast him into the shadow of public life. His brother Raul is now the man—struggling to maintain the family’s grip on power by taking two steps forward and one step back, permitting cellphones and Internet access to those few who can afford them. (But don’t try logging on to that den of imperialists, Facebook—it and many other sites are off-limits.) “The Revolution,” is invoked endlessly on TV channels that are so dull they make C-Span look frivolous. A recent segment on a morning news show devoted six minutes to the just-completed harvest of limes, praising it as “a triumph of socialist workers’ cooperation.” There’s no advertising in Cuba—unless you count the pervasive propaganda on TV and painted on walls rallying the masses with Stalinist-style slogans that would make a North Korean cringe. Roadside billboards proclaim the 51st anniversary of “La Revolucion” with glamorous portraits of Che Guevara and assorted other “freedom fighters”—all responsible in varying degrees for bringing Cuba to its knees. Meanwhile, the average citizen of Havana goes about his mundane life, lining up at stores whose shelves are often empty, waiting in long lines for Chinese-made buses that never seem to come or trying to hitch rides in 1950s-era American cars that belch black fumes and contribute to the choking air quality that leaves the city covered in grime. In Havana’s densely populated, older sections, less than half the homes are connected to city sewers. A majority of the buildings are decayed beyond repair. The government claims that 96 percent of Cubans own their own homes—referring to the crowded apartments where generations of families are forced to live together. Even if that figure were true, no one seems to know who owns the outsides of their once-majestic buildings—so no one takes responsibility for maintaining them. Many fear that, when this regime eventually collapses, a wave of exiles will return from Miami and lay claim to the properties that Castro stole from them. Cuba is in limbo, its creaky, centralized economy sustained for now by Latin America’s other delusional dictator Hugo Chavez—who sends oil in return for Cuban doctors dispatched to Caracas. The day of reckoning for Cuba’s calamity is approaching. It will take an international effort to put this country back on its feet. http://havanajournal.com/politics/entry/brutally-honest-assement-of-current-life-in-cuba/ |
Küba'yı Küba yapan vintage dediğimiz araçlar zaten. Gerçi ormanları katledip Toki binaları diken zevksiz sürüsünden ne beklenir ki? Küba Tıp alanında lider ülkelerden biri. Türkiye neyde lider söyler misin? Bilim mi var ülkede? Varsa yoksa islam da islam. |
Küba dandiğin dandiğidir , Türkiye ile kıyaslama yapmıyorum ben Süper olsaydı Küba Dünya'da çok fazla komünizm meraklısı var hepsinin parasıda var direk Küba'ya yerleşirlerdi. |
Türkiye ile kıyaslama yapma zaten. Yakında Suriye ile kıyaslayabilirsin ama, sonumuz onlar gibi olacak. |
Cuba
Kişi başı GSMH - 7500 USD
Enflasyon - %4.4
İşsizlik - %3
Fakirlik sınırı altındaki nufus - %1.6 (2006)
Türkiye
Kişi başı GSMH - 9100 USD
Enflasyon - %8
İşsizlik - %11.3
Fakirlik sınırı altındaki nufus - %16.9 (2010)
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