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In this episode, Alex dives into a high-profile “humanitarian” trip to Cuba, where influencers and activists traveled to deliver aid and protest U.S. sanctions amid a deepening national crisis marked by blackouts, fuel shortages, and collapsing infrastructure. Drawing on Paul Hollander’s idea of “political pilgrims,” it explores how figures like Hasan Piker may have entered a tightly controlled environment already primed to see what they wanted—while the Cuban government carefully curated what they could see. The convoy brought food, medicine, and solar panels to an island producing only a fraction of its energy needs, but critics argue the trip also echoed decades-old patterns of selective exposure and ideological projection. The result: a mission meant to highlight suffering that may have instead helped sanitize the system behind it.
By centeredfromreality5
1010 ratings
In this episode, Alex dives into a high-profile “humanitarian” trip to Cuba, where influencers and activists traveled to deliver aid and protest U.S. sanctions amid a deepening national crisis marked by blackouts, fuel shortages, and collapsing infrastructure. Drawing on Paul Hollander’s idea of “political pilgrims,” it explores how figures like Hasan Piker may have entered a tightly controlled environment already primed to see what they wanted—while the Cuban government carefully curated what they could see. The convoy brought food, medicine, and solar panels to an island producing only a fraction of its energy needs, but critics argue the trip also echoed decades-old patterns of selective exposure and ideological projection. The result: a mission meant to highlight suffering that may have instead helped sanitize the system behind it.

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