Oh then why did you bring up prostitutes?
It was a hyperbolic alliteration to make a point.
Yes, the Soviets were always concerned at the amount of human labor it took to do anything. Just read the history of the Soviet Union. A true worker's paradise.
If you want to get into it, it might be a good idea to start a new thread, but as in-a-nutshell as I can put it (which means I'm telling you before you tell me that it's overly simplistic that it's overly simplistic) it basically went like this:
Life under Stalin was incomprehensible hell.
Khrushchev came along, and swung things way in a liberalizing direction... too much so for that small cabal of survivors of Stalin's tyranny. The guess is, they survived under Stalin because they were comfortable with his way, and so were made nervous by Khrushchev who was amazingly progressive for the situation.
Internal dissent happened, and Brezhnev got into power, and he pulled things more towards what Soviets would call a "middle-ground" (and yes, I know how weird that can sound, but as it was...)
Under Brezhnev, workers were still going to have things like quotas, but worker's rights that were supposed to be guaranteed in their constitution were going to start to be honored, and it was a mixed blessing.
As long as you met your quota, and as long as you weren't threatening to overthrow the state, life became tolerable to workers, and became a big giant headache to farm and factory managers, because at the end of the day, as long as the workers had complied with the strict wording of the law and how it defined their rights as workers, then there was no way you could ask them to work harder, or to stay late, or bribe them with overtime... and that completed the destruction of farming started by Stalin, because you couldn't get the farmers to work long hours during planting and harvesting season (curiously, Lenin never thought the farms should be collectivized... I know some ex-Soviets who think Stalin did it simply because he was from Georgia, and they have a historical grudge against Ukrainians, and that Ukrainians were the *target* of collectivization, and not just the victims, because the real bread-basket is not Russia, it's the Ukraine).
Anyway, the point is, everyone in the Soviet Union, from the workers on up to the highest levels of management knew darn good and well that the west was more productive, and Soviet leaders and factory managers would tell workers, "You know, if you were willing to work a bit harder, we could be that productive", and the workers would say, "NO! This is a worker's state. It's Friday 5:00 PM and I'm going to drink vodka with Vladimir."
All they, the workers, cared about was that life was "good enough". They had guaranteed health care, a guaranteed job, and a guaranteed place to live. Yes they could strive for better food and accommodations, but frankly, for plenty of them, they were content enough with what they had as long as there was vodka.
It was a headache to be a non-military researcher. A researcher would be told to invent and build a prototype of a new toaster. Being the super-well educated in math-and-engineering Russian that he was, he'd come up with a design that was centuries ahead of anything.
He'd ask for materials, and his boss would respond with something like, "Okay, here's three tonnes of the finest titanium steel and 120 barrels of raw crude", which he'd take and parlay through the gray-market with other people who had piles of copper wire or warehouses full of plastic ingots, and would eventually get all the parts and materials.
He'd start assembling the prototype for a presentation due on Monday, and it's late Friday, so he asks his worker-class engineering assistants to stay late, and they'd say, "You know, you're starting to sound like a bourgeois pig. This is a workers state. Goodnight."
So he'd slave away himself all weekend, killing the pain of the tedium and fatigue with vodka, and he'd have the prototype ready for the presentation.
He goes in and makes his presentation. It's centuries ahead of anything found in Japan, Germany or America, and his boss would *then* say, "Are the Americans doing it?"
He'd say no. The whole point was to come up with something better than what the Americans were doing... was it not?
Whereupon his boss would say, "Then why should we do it? Throw it away. I have another project for you."
Yes I know that sounds silly... just like it sounds silly to imagine General Motors being managed by MBAs with majors in finance and no experience nor training in engineering, and who'd never seen an assembly line nor been on a shop floor. Imagine what a mess *that* would make of an automobile manufacturing corporation.
Anyway... in terms of the deal of oil for sugar between the Soviets and Cuba, the terms of the deal were the terms of *that* deal, negotiated with Castro sitting on the other side of the table.
And we get it [oil] cheaper than you. And the people in the Middle East get it cheaper than us.
Which is weird given that you get 60% of your petroleum imports from Canada.
Do you know anything about the Soviet-Cuban Military History?
Yup... including the part where the US quietly withdrew missiles from Turkey when the Soviets withdrew theirs from Cuba. The point was, the Soviets could not and would not guarantee Cuba the same kind of massive land-based defense with a gazillion tanks like they did for the East Bloc.
Canadians still flock to Vegas.
Yeah I know... what Vegas has that Canadian casinos don't have are the peripheral benefits, like state regulated brothels.
Yes I am sure the Cubans would love to become permanent cabana boys, cocktail waitresses, and butt wipers to Canadian retirees.
Yeah, well, with 500,000 now out of work, they'll have to find something to do. What would you suggest?
The Yanks are Coming... to Cuba.
To do what?