Cuban reacts to what happened with the Cuban in Cancun: "Let's stop thinking of ourselves as a superior race to others."

The Cuban @dr.aloma posted a video on TikTok calling for Latin unity and criticizing the attitude of superiority among Hispanic communities.



Cuban abroadPhoto © @dr.aloma / TikTok

A Cuban content creator identified on TikTok as @dr.aloma published a 58-second video yesterday calling for Latin unity and harshly criticizing the attitude of superiority that some groups adopt towards others within the Hispanic community itself. This comes in light of the recent incident that occurred in Cancún involving a Cuban.

In the clip posted on TikTok, the Cuban sends a direct message: "I see everyone attacking each other and no one has been mature enough to put a stop to it."

“Let us stop believing we are a superior race to others,” says @dr.aloma, which constitutes the central theme of his intervention.

The creator explicitly mentions those who are often targets of attacks on social media: "We are all equal, and within the human group, we have the undocumented, the Mexican immigrant, the Cuban, and we should all treat each other as family and as the Latinos that we are."

One of his most direct remarks points to the dynamics of the digital platforms themselves: "let's stop making trending videos for a like to achieve division."

His proposal is as simple as it is profound: "to practice the only religion that benefits humanity, which is to be a good person."

It also issues a warning to those who fuel confrontation: "if you're not going to say something positive, then keep quiet."

And she argues that generalizations are unjust: "In every country there are bad people and good people, and the actions of one should not cause the others to suffer."

The video is produced at a time of rising tensions among Latin communities on TikTok, where since 2025, content has proliferated that pits Cubans, Mexicans, and other immigrant groups against each other, partly fueled by the political debate on migration in the United States.

Cubans have occupied a particular position in these frictions: sometimes pointed out by other Latinos as a group perceived to have privileges compared to other immigrants, but also victims of xenophobia both in the United States and in Mexico.

In September 2025, a Cuban woman in Mexico defended Cuban migrants against xenophobic comments, stating that "we did not come to take anything from anyone."

That same year, a Cuban Uber driver in the United States was insulted by passengers who demanded that he speak English and threatened to call immigration authorities, in a video that garnered over 340,000 views.

In February 2025, a Mexican TikToker criticized Latinos who voted for Trump, sparking a viral debate about identity and loyalty within the Hispanic community.

@dr.aloma is a regular voice in these discussions: in May 2026, he published a video about Cuban emigrants showcasing luxury brands, which garnered over 680 reactions and more than 220 comments.

"For a discussion, two people are needed," the Cuban reminds us in her video, a phrase that encapsulates the tone of her message: the division among Latinos does not exist in isolation, and everyone bears responsibility for either fostering it or halting it.

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Yare Grau

Originally from Cuba, but living in Spain. I studied Social Communication at the University of Havana and later graduated in Audiovisual Communication from the University of Valencia. I am currently part of the CiberCuba team as an editor in the Entertainment section.

Yare Grau

Originally from Cuba, but living in Spain. I studied Social Communication at the University of Havana and later graduated in Audiovisual Communication from the University of Valencia. I am currently part of the CiberCuba team as an editor in the Entertainment section.