AOC Won't Want the Country to See This Powerful Video of a Cuban Man Walking Into an American Supermarket for the First Time
The firebrand Democratic socialist Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York has made a name for herself promoting the glories of socialism while conspicuously ignoring its downfalls.
While those with even a cursory understanding of world history over the last century often find it astounding that there is so much ignorance surrounding the way socialism has always — always — played out when applied to nations like Russia, Venezuela and Cuba, AOC’s base is not known for their economic savvy but rather that same, old, ancient human sin of covetousness that has led millions to believe the state can afford them what fortune has not: provision and comfort.
It is, of course, authoritarianism and poverty that Marxist governments are best adept at establishing, as, again, history blatantly shows us.
Just 91 miles away from the southernmost tip of Florida, the island nation of Cuba has been a living example of the failures of communism for decades, and yet when AOC and her ilk aren’t outright ignoring the suffering of the Cuban people, they’re blaming the United States for its desperate poverty.
Ocasio-Cortez rather ironically points to food insecurity in the United States to support her economically destructive policies, yet she would most certainly rather not have you know that what true equality looks like in Cuba is widespread and certainly equal desperate poverty.
A pair of YouTubers consisting of a Cuban-American woman and a Cuban man who recently came to the United States is certainly shaking up AOC’s worldview with moving videos contrasting life in their ancestral homeland, “Cubita linda,” and the bounty and plenty available for ex-pats here in the land of the free.
Yoel and Mari uploaded a video earlier this year showing Cuban Yoel’s first trip to a grocery store in the United States, and it is both paradigm-busting … and heartbreaking.
The pair opened their video in Cuba itself, where Mari managed to covertly film the inside of a Cuban grocery store.
She showed us the bare shelves, the insane prices of the odd assortment of non-perishables and the long lines outside that can be forced to wait even longer when the power goes out in the grocery store.
When she and Yoel arrived in Miami, however, she was eager to show him the abundance of American supermarkets, but it turned out to be an incredibly poignant experience for the two of them.
Upon entering a local Aldi, Yoel at first joked and goofed off, excitedly grabbing an advertisement flyer at the front of the store before they entered its inner sanctum.
He excitedly picked up limes — “There’s limes!” he declared in Spanish — as well as huge onions, which he remarked were the size of a “pelota.”
As he began to take in the sheer volume of food packed on shelves and in the coolers, however, he slowly grew more somber and it became clear emotions were running high.
“Como hay carne — y queso!” he commented — “How much meat and cheese!”
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