Wednesday, August 31, 2016

Cuba Flight

From the BBC:
"Landmark US commercial flight lands in Cuba"

A US commercial flight has arrived in Cuba for the first time in more than half a century. JetBlue Flight 387 had 150 passengers, including US transport secretary Anthony Foxx.  The plane took off from Fort Lauderdale, Florida, at 09:45 EDT (13:45 GMT) and landed in Santa Clara in central Cuba about an hour later.  The flight marks the latest development between US and Cuba since they restored diplomatic ties in December 2014.  The last time an American airline flew scheduled service to Cuba was more than 50 years ago on a propeller plane, according to Marty St George, the executive vice president of JetBlue. To commemorate the occasion, the plane received a water cannon salute, which traditionally marks a special occasion for a ship or aircraft.   Since the US thawed relations with Cuba, embassies have been re-opened in Washington and Havana, President Barack Obama visited the country and a US cruise ship sailed to the island nation in May.  The Obama administration has approved 10 US-based airlines for regular passenger jet service to Cuba, offering as many as 110 daily flights.  The approved airlines include: American Airlines, Delta Airlines, Alaska Airlines, Frontier Airlines, JetBlue, Silver Airways, Southwest Airlines, Spirit Airlines, Sun Country and United Airlines. Tourism to Cuba is still banned in the US, but the Obama administration eased rules last year to make it easier for Americans to access the long-isolated nation under 12 categories of "authorised travel."


^ I don't understand why there's so much hype about Americans going to Cuba. Technically we have been there since the late 1800s (at Gitmo.) Cuba is still very much a poor, economically/politically repressed Communist country. If I was older during the Cold War I would have wanted to go to Communist countries like the Soviet Union or any of it's satellite states in Eastern Europe, but not to a Communist country in Latin America, Asia or Africa. Those regions don't have much interest to me (Communist or  not.) The only thing I can see as to why Americans would want to go to Cuba is because it's only 90 miles from the US, they have seen all the footage of Cubans risking their lives to flee for decades and they have the 1950s old cars there. I have heard from Americans (as well as Canadians and Brits) who have gone to Cuba in recent months that once they actually got to Cuba the "excitement" quickly waned and it wasn't such a great, adventurous trip as they thought. I would spent my money and go back to nearby Bahamas where they use the US Dollar, everyone is friendly and speaks English and they don't have all the food, tourist, Internet, travel restrictions as Cuba does. ^


http://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-37235307

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.