Honestly is it any better in capitalist countries?
The moment you go protest something the government or a company is doing that's ethically or morally wrong or disadvantages the working class, you get beat up by police and thrown in jail. How is it different?
Or if you talk bad about a company you get sued for slander for millions of dollars to shut you up.
The Canadian government needs to declare Israel a terrorist state and start applying hard sanctions. And also dismantle all the zuonist organisations in Canada that manipulate our government and our media.
Of course the Cuban government isn't perfect. But Cuba's most important problems aren't due to their authoritarianism. Their biggest problem is trade. They're unable to get the resources they need mostly because of the sanctions, greatly reducing their standard of living.
And honestly, I could excuse the authoritarianism due to the simple fact that US imperialism still poses a huge threat to them, being the only communist country in all the Americas. They don't really have a choice to have a hard stance to protect what they have. Or else it wouldn't be long before they get completely exploited the way they have been before the revolution.
You forget how Americans are being manipulated by the wealthy elites. These guys own all the media and 100% control the narrative. When people's minds are corrupt, how are they going to change the laws? How are they going to use democracy to change anything when democracy itself is sham?
You reach a point where mob justice is the only way to freedom.
With how the U.S. has been apply economic sanctions against Cuba since the 60's it's pretty obvious. Anybody who's been doing trade with the U.S. has been forbidden to doing any trade with Cuba. Their only economic partners have been Russia, China and Venezuela.
More recently, Venezuela was the only supplier of oil to Cuba, and now the U.S. attacked Venezuela and gained control of their oil, and stopped al shipping to Cuba. Because of this, Cuba can't even produce electricity because their power stations ran on oil.
You're being dishonest and obtuse on purpose here.
Even Cuba has better access to education and health-care and shelter than in it US. Every other challenges they're facing is because of the US and their sanctions.
I got singled out at an LCBO by a cashier who refused to allow me to purchase anything. Her excuse was that my partner didn't have her ID. I was purchasing it for myself, but somehow because she helped me carry the bottles she had to be carded as well. When just in front of me, a man and his son had just done the same. And when I left I received a rude comment about being a francophone, even though I speak prefect English. The cashier had heard us talking to each other beforehand.
I also heard some not so nice comments about francophones in general around me wherever I went. Some nasty generalizations and stereotypes.
In Montréal it was mostly "why don't you speak English? Canada is a bilingual country yknow" type of comments from people who were born and raised here but gained so much disdain from French that they outright refused to learn the language. Which is pathetic when they themselves only speak English.
And finally there's the Gazette newspaper and CJAD talk radio that shit on francophones every chance they get. Pitting the English speaking population against the francophones.
What happens when someone does something morally wrong but legal? Like CEOs of large companies who profit from human misery or essential needs such at food, shelter or healthcare ?
They are the ones steering these companies towards profits over human lives. Not only is it legal, it's part of the game. Even though it's morally wrong.
And what about media that corrupt minds, promote hate, and create division? What they're doing has a real impact on society and especially on marginalized groups. This can have important consequences on their lives. But it's all legal.
I believe in such cases mob justice is justified until what these people are doing is recognized as a crime by the governments and justice systems.
Honestly is it any better in capitalist countries?
The moment you go protest something the government or a company is doing that's ethically or morally wrong or disadvantages the working class, you get beat up by police and thrown in jail. How is it different?
Or if you talk bad about a company you get sued for slander for millions of dollars to shut you up.