No you weren't. Unless all your posts are sarcasm. Which I highly doubt.Aha, I was being blatantly sarcastic.
Then you figured wrong, another thing that doesn't surprise me.I figure insane people like you and Yukon would consider Cuba a terrorist country.
Hmmm, I find it odd that you think a person whose only crime is political dissidence is a "criminal" in the traditional sense. And then to top that off, equate him to terrorists. Simple astounding the silliness in your posts.Before you cry about Cuba not letting a criminal travel abroad maybe you should look at your own country and her allies misdeeds.
The man has an excellent military service record, he began his "criminal" career by going on a hunger strike because of Cuba's censorship of the net. Cuba branded him a criminal because he spoke out against the molestation of individual freedoms. The fact that you would chastise him, brand him a criminal along with Cuban authorities, so you can maintain a bastardised delusion of Cuba and the US, screams volumes about you character.
But hey, if you think freedom of speech is a crime, which I don't doubt, have at it.
I do find your level of hypocrisy, hilarious though.
Easy, I have a passport, and I travel still, with two criminal convictions still on my record.The guy has a criminal record. How easy is it for a Canadian with a criminal record to travel?
You really should stop using Wikiality to get your info. He was never convicted of anything, other then being jailed as an American agent and political dissident.Cuban government response
"Cuba will not accept pressure or blackmail, important Western media groups are again calling attention to a prefabricated lie. It is not medicine that should resolve a problem that was created intentionally to discredit our political system -- but rather the patient himself, unpatriotic people, foreign diplomats and the media that manipulates him. The consequences will be their responsibility, and theirs alone."The Cuban state newspaper Granma stated that Fariñas's legal troubles began "because of a physical altercation with a female co-worker - not politics" and described him as "a paid agent of the United States" and employee of the U.S. Interests Section.[6]
— Granma, March 8, 2010 [6]
Keep feeding your delusions though. It just keeps reinforcing the image you've created.
Yep.I believe that as long as you aren't on parole or other similar restrictions, Canada can't prevent you from leaving the country. But other countries don't have to let you in.
Life saving medical care can not denied, all inmates have access to free medical care, and he is capable of purchasing a health care package like the rest of the populace. Besides that childish obfuscation, there's no law against political dissidence in the US.I wonder what kind of medical treatment a political dissident would get in the united states, if necessary?