At the beginning of this podcast, the voices of the Gente de Zona duo are heard, who, in a concert in Chile, launch complaints against their country of origin and shout that they are against communism.

Then a Chilean journalist is heard complaining about the ignorance of the artists, who seem to know little or nothing about the history of the country they are visiting.

"It's the toll payment," says Reinier Duardo.

In his opinion, "Gente de Zona seems to have stopped making music to do politics. They were hooked by the Stefan machinery and everything that moves behind it, do they want stages, concerts, contracts? They have to say the motto. And the The motto now is: Down with communism.

Only they went to say it in a country where the elections were won by the communists. And where they do know what a dictatorship is, not because they were dictated to on paper, but because of the dead and exiles who he left that of Augusto Pinochet.

According to Bárbara Betancourt, they have been called ignorant, not only by this journalist, but by several others, both in traditional media and online.

Baby recalled that those who accuse the Cuban government of "violations of human rights for more than 60 years" are the same ones who greeted President Díaz-Canel a few years ago at a concert in the Ciudad Deportiva, thanking and acknowledging that he was there as part of the town.

Fragments of that concert and of those enthusiastic greetings to the government that they are now accusing, are also heard on the podcast.

Very far from Chile, but very close to the spirit of those messages of hatred against the communists, in Florida, congresswoman María Elvira Salazar announces through all media and platforms, her intention to pass a bill against any attempt to give space to the socialists in the United States.

And the sacrosanct freedom of expression, where is it?

We already know that they call anyone who dares to want some social justice in America a socialist, but to propose to ban the thought of socialism, that can only be called capitalist totalitarianism.

And McCarthyism.

One of its most enthusiastic spokespersons spiced up the news by asking for action to be taken from the law, that is, a "witch hunt."

Alexander Otaola proposes to think about what they are going to do with all those who have some socialist thought.

Hitler revived and Edgar Hoover, the persecutor of the left, remain like infants, in front of the ultra-right spokesmen of the state closest to Cuba.

Incredible but true: the same people who so many times accused the Revolution of politicizing culture, of turning numerous singers into militants, who in reality were the creators of this type of song, now promote and pay others who cannot even show lyrics , neither politics nor love, barely shouting slogans, at least one verse against socialism, to be able to perch on a platform.

We keep chapping.

listen to the podcast