Thank you, SWAG! I am on the fence with regards to sanctions being lifted...reason being is that I feel so bad for the Cuban people. I do think that if sanctions are to be lifted, it should only be done so under certain terms...which is what Castro & his brother will NEVER agree to. I knew several latinos while living in Florida, and one of my most favorite places to visit was South Miami...and in Little Cuba the food is so good that nothing can begin to compare to it...but the crime is incredible. There's so much $$$ in Miami, and alot of it is due to money laundering. Living in Florida and going to college, I encountered some pretty crazy people...which I guess could have come from anywhere...except they were mostly beautiful. Why is it human nature not to second guess people that are nice and good looking, but to second guess people with straggley hair and no-name clothes? Why? Anyway, I can't tell you how many people KNEW about the prostitution even way back then - in Cuba! Living in Cuba is like living in certain parts of Mexico. In America, you might make $2k-$6K per month...there you might only bring home $10 per week (or even month). Women can prostitute and bring home $100 per week in Cuba, therefore being able to provide food & necessities for their families while working less hours! A bj that might cost $20-$30 in NYC only costs $3 in Cuba! This is what worries me, b/c Cuba is ALOT closer than some of these Asian nations that take a blind eye to such indiscretions. Since Cuba is so very close to America, and Puerto Rico is just a hop-skip-&-jump from Cuba, then I'm thinking that sanctions being lifted will only fuel this crime. I know for a fact that many illegals coming from Cuba is what put alot of Miami Americans out of business. Anything in construction gets done alot cheaper if you hire them. Laying asphalt anywhere in the U.S. costs at the minimum $10 per hour, but a Cuban or Mexican (illegal) will do it for half, even though it's under minimum wage! Same goes for drug smuggling. It's such a shame that the Intracoastal Highway / Waterway has become part of the drug runners' path! Makes me sick with all the beautiful marine life in there. I feel so bad for the Cuban people, though. I am just unsure as to the correct avenue to take here. There truly is no industry there, nothing that up and coming...only the rise of prostitution & child labor, plus the growth of various raw packaged drugs...which in turn are flown or floated into the U.S. to be dried, cut, separated, and sold. All for profit, which comes right back to money laundering. We all know Miami is the capital of money laundering, Argentina & Brazil coming in right behind. Makes me a bit scared.