APP GRATIS

Cuban with tattoos of Díaz-Canel and the PCC returns to the fray: “In Cuba there is a dictatorship”

In a video on social networks, Pedro Miyares Vega expressed regret for having tattooed the ruler's face on his chest and said he felt “betrayed as a people.” “You are very singao… you and all yours,” he said, addressing Díaz-Canel.


Pedro Miyares Vega, the Cuban who went viral afterproudly show their tattoos of Miguel Díaz-Canel's face and the logo of the communist party,returned to the charge against the regime in a recentvideo in which he stated that there is a dictatorship in Cuba.

in a litlive broadcast which he uploaded to one of his various Facebook profiles, Miyares lost his temper andattacked the Cuban president, his government and the Cuban revolutionaries who attack him for “telling the truth.”

Here there has to be another party and not the communist one of Cuba that. Enough is enough, what they have here is a tremendous dictatorship. In Cuba there is a dictatorship, because it is the only country where people are imprisoned for speaking. That is done badly,” the man, who nevertheless proclaims himself a defender of the revolution and a Fidelist, emphasized emphatically.

Minutes earlier, he had questioned censorship and the lack of freedom of expression, and made reference to the Cubans imprisoned for demonstrating in theprotests of July 11 and 12, 2021, although he avoided calling thempolitical prisoners.

However, Miyares condemned the many attacks he has received in recent times for, according to him, expressing his way of thinking, and exclaimed: "I can't stand one more lie, put me in prison!"

“I am not betraying. "I am telling the truth and I am not going to remain silent," he warned, whileHe described the country's leadership as a mafia and stated that “they will never accept our truths as a people, that is why they call us rams.”

Addressing Díaz-Canel and other representatives of the regime, he snapped: “You are very singao… you and all yours (…) Díaz-Canel singao, if Lenier and El Micha said it, I'm not going to say it…”.

Almost out of his mind, the manHe expressed regret for having tattooed the ruler's face on his chest and said he felt “betrayed as a people.” Then, he stated that he did not take it away because he did not have money for medicine, otherwise, “he would hit him with an iron.”

Miyares ranted against the regime's supporters who have criticized him andcalled “traitor”, “crazy” and “insane”, and maintained that “revolutionaries hurt the revolutionaries themselves.”

“Now I just make a statement and all the people from the CDR come out to hurt me and say that I don't represent anyone. I am and will be a revolutionary, but I am not going to accept this policy that they are doing with our country ofperestroika", he said, and although he declared himself an admirer of the five Cuban spies who were imprisoned in the United States, he noted that after their return to Cuba, the country "is ending."

They are saying yes to the counterrevolution... but they are living off of dollars", he denounced angrily, after revealing that almosthe doesn't have food in his house.

“I've been eating bread for a week because the little rice there is is for my children,” he confessed while showing the freezer of his empty refrigerator, and said that he had asked for land to work on and feed his family, but they didn't help him.

“They have betrayed me, I feel betrayed in this country,” lamented Miyares, whoHe said he had invested his own money to be able to maintain more than 40 groups and profiles on social networks to combat the “counterrevolution.” and defend the regime, a work of which he claimed to have been a pioneer since the PCC ordered the use of the Internet for these purposes.

Enough is enough, we are starving, and my children are skinny", he confessed in his controversial broadcast, in which he defended the Cuban socialist system that staunchly questioned him, as well as its current representatives.

“At any moment they put me in prison for saying my way of thinking,” he said, and stressed: “No one knows how much sacrifice I have made for the revolution, but there has come a time when I am not going to keep my mouth shut because the revolutionaries themselves are those who have hurt me.”

Miyares assured that he will not end up like his father and brother, who carried out internationalist missions and died with nothing, since no leader of the country ever went to see them to know their needs.

Many attribute Miyares' controversial diatribes to his mental state - he himself admitted that in his youth he became ill with nerves - and are surprised by the turn his speech has taken, going from being aunconditional worshiper of the regime to a visceral critic.

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