Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire

Who Is the Failed State? Cuba, Revolutionary Ethics, and the Moral Bankruptcy of Western Capitalism
Isaac Saney
30 Jul 2025
🖨️ Print Article
Haitian women having their blood pressure taken
Haitian women having their blood pressure taken at a mobile clinic staffed by a Cuban medical brigade in Salomon market in Port-au-Prince.

The Cuban revolution endures despite more than 60 years of U.S. attacks. One system exploits the people, while the other prioritizes their needs. Which nation deserves the label of "failed’?

Originally published in Facebook.

In an age where propaganda masquerades as truth and empire cloaks itself in the garb of “democracy,” few lies are as pervasive—or politically useful—as the assertion that Cuba is a failed state. This accusation, deployed with relentless regularity by U.S. officials, corporate media, and neoliberal ideologues, is meant to delegitimize a revolutionary and socialist project that has refused to bow before empire.

But what does it mean to be a “failed state”? And more importantly, who gets to define failure?

Let us be clear: Cuba is a besieged state, not a failed one. Under siege from the most powerful imperial force in the world—the United States—it has endured more than six decades of blockade, economic sabotage and subversion. The U.S. blockade is not merely a trade, financial and commercial embargo. It is an economic war designed to produce misery, scarcity, and discontent. It is a deliberate and cruel attempt to collapse a sovereign society. And yet, despite this onslaught, Cuba continues to pursue a project rooted in ethics, equality, and human dignity. It does not hide its problems; it confronts them.

Contrast this with the conditions in the so-called “developed” West. In the United States—the wealthiest country in the history of the world—over 40 million people live in poverty, with millions more living one paycheck away from destitution. Children go hungry. Entire communities are criminalized. Access to healthcare is rationed by income. Gun violence, mass incarceration, addiction, homelessness, and the erosion of democratic rights are not aberrations; they are features of a system in which profit trumps people.

In the United Kingdom, a country that once governed a vast colonial empire, the situation is no better. Austerity has gutted public services. Food banks have become institutionalized fixtures in working-class communities. The National Health Service, once a global model of publicly funded healthcare, has been bled dry by privatization. Homelessness is rising. Inequality is deepening. And the political class blames the poor for their own misery while rewarding the rich for their predation.

So let us ask: who is the failed state?

Cuba, despite having a GDP per capita a fraction of the U.S. or UK, provides universal healthcare, free education through to the doctoral level, and a literacy rate that surpasses many wealthy nations. Life expectancy in Cuba is on par with the U.S.—a country that spends more on healthcare than any nation on Earth, but still fails to provide it to tens of millions. In the midst of devastating shortages caused by the blockade, Cuba sent doctors to dozens of countries during the COVID-19 pandemic, while the U.S. hoarded vaccines and the UK prioritized profits for pharmaceutical companies.

And perhaps most importantly, when confronted with rising inequality and hardship, the Cuban state does not blame the people. It does not pathologize poverty. It does not criminalize desperation. It does not call the poor lazy, or the vulnerable expendable. It recognizes that social vulnerability is a collective challenge, not an individual failure.

As Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel recently affirmed, “The Revolution does not hide its problems. It faces them with ethics and social justice, even in the midst of extreme circumstances.” This is the essence of revolutionary responsibility: to claim one’s people, even and especially in their suffering. Unlike the leaders of capitalist states, who see the working class and the marginalized as burdens or threats, Cuban leadership speaks of the vulnerable as ours. “Our homeless. Our inequalities. Our vulnerable youth.” In that single possessive word, "our", is a world of difference.

This is the living embodiment of Amílcar Cabral’s revolutionary axiom: “Tell no lies, claim no easy victories.” Cuba does not pretend all is well. It does not present a façade of invincibility. But it does not give up. It does not disown the poor. It does not privatize social suffering or profit from despair. It seeks, even amid crushing sanctions, to provide care.

More than thirty targeted social programs have been launched in Cuba to address inequality and social distress. These are not neoliberal “efficiencies” or charity-based palliatives. They are redistributive, rights-based initiatives aimed at repairing and restoring the social fabric. And they are pursued not because they are easy—but because they are right.

Meanwhile, in Western nations that claim to be paragons of democracy and development, politicians deploy rhetoric of “personal responsibility” while enabling systems of exploitation. Homeless people freeze on the streets while billionaires buy their next yacht. Prisons expand while schools decay. Fossil fuel corporations rake in record profits as the world burns. And rather than speak of our vulnerable, Western leaders speak of “those people,” as if inequality and immiseration were a natural condition or personal choice.

Again, we ask: who is the failed state?

Failure is not the inability to avoid hardship. It is the refusal to respond to hardship with dignity and justice. A failed state is not one that suffers, but one that abandons. By this measure, it is not Cuba that has failed. It is those Western states that have abdicated any sense of collective responsibility, any commitment to equality, equity, and any belief in solidarity.

Cuba, on the other hand, chooses the harder road—the one lined not with wealth but with principle. It stumbles, it struggles, but it does not surrender. And in refusing to lie, to claim easy victories, or to devalue human life, it reminds us of what a government can be: not a guardian of the financial oligarchy but a steward of dignity.

So the next time the charge is made—Cuba is a failed state, ask: compared to what? To a world where billionaires fly to space while countless millions can not afford rent? To a system that sacrifices the poor on the altar of profit? To societies that punish vulnerability and commodify health, education, even life itself?

Cuba is not perfect. No society is. But it is a project still rooted in justice, still committed to the people, still alive with revolutionary ethics. That, in a world drenched in cynicism and cruelty, is not failure. It is the kind of success that capitalism will never understand.

So let us ask again—clearly, honestly, and with conviction: Who is the failed state? And which is the failed system?

Isaac Saney is a Black Studies and Cuba specialist and coordinator of the Black and African Diaspora Studies (BAFD) program at Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia.

Cuba
Global South
Donald Trump

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles? Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


Related Stories

Rodrigo Durão Coelho
15 million Venezuelans enlist to defend their country amid U.S. threats, says ex-diplomat Carlos Ron
29 October 2025
He stresses, however, that the atmosphere is not one of panic despite the possibility of military aggression.
Pablo Meriguet
Cuba denounces Trump admin pressuring countries to change their vote against the 62-year US blockade
29 October 2025
The Cuban foreign minister has stated that, in addition to diplomatic pressure, intimidation has been exerted on certain countries that condemn
Roger D. Harris
Will the US Attack Venezuela?
15 October 2025
Solidarity activist and analyst Roger Harris takes stock of the rapidly escalating US military threats against Venezuela.
Robert Inlakesh
Hamas, Trump, Israel, and Who Accepted What Ceasefire – Analysis
08 October 2025
As it stands, there is no chance that a ceasefire can be implemented, according to the current parameters of the Trump-Netanyahu plan.
Carlos Ron
“We will blow you out of existence”: Trump’s Caribbean spectacle
08 October 2025
What is being carried out against Venezuela is not an operation against drug trafficking but rather a regime change operation.
​​​​​​​ Ajamu Baraka, BAR editor and columnist
Trump “Peace Plan” A Cynical Cover to Continue Campaign of Palestinian Extermination
01 October 2025
The so-called "peace deal" does not offer peace; it demands surrender.
Editors, The Black Agenda Review
ESSAY: U.S., The Caribbean, and the Future, Tim Hector, 1984
17 September 2025
“There has been divide and rule in the modern Caribbean with a vengeance, all in the interest of US hegemony over the economic, milit
Pindiga Ambedkar , Arnold August
Were Canadian Elections Existential in the Context of US-Canada Tensions? (Part 2)
06 August 2025
Interview with Arnold August, writer, political commentator, and analyst of the North American continent, on the political situation in Canada
Roger D. Harris , John Perry
Trump’s Latin American Policies Go South
30 July 2025
Trump's Latin America playbook reads from the old colonial handbook—coups for Venezuela, sanctions for Cuba, and open arms for far-right leader
Margaret Kimberley, BAR Executive Editor and Senior Columnist
Ukraine Terrorism and the Question of U.S. Involvement
04 June 2025
The U.S has been involved in every aspect of Ukraine’s military activity against Russia.

More Stories


  • Marwa Yousuf K.
    Mamdani and The Liberal Repackaging of Power
    12 Nov 2025
    Zohran Mamdani's victory in the New York City mayor's race was significant, but liberalism succeeds by presenting a veneer of change where it may not exist.
  • Issa Shivji
    The Petty Bourgeoisie in the Thought of Amilcar Cabral and Walter Rodney
    12 Nov 2025
    A deep exploration of Cabral’s and Rodney’s thoughts on the petty bourgeoisie and class struggles in Africa.
  • Raïs Neza Boneza
    Macron, Madagascar, and the Return of France’s Old Colonial Ghosts
    12 Nov 2025
    In 2025, Françafrique didn’t die — it just booked a seat on a French military plane. Macron’s “Operation Rescue” proves that old habits still fly first-class.
  • The Cradle News Desk
    Israeli soldiers confirm Palestinian civilians murdered 'without restraint' in Gaza 'free for all'
    12 Nov 2025
    A new film shows that Israeli troops were encouraged to exterminate Palestinians, including women and children, by their politicians and Jewish religious leaders.
  • BAR Radio Logo
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    Black Agenda Radio November 7, 2025
    07 Nov 2025
    In this week’s segment, we examine claims of a genocide against Christians in the African nation of Nigeria, and the geopolitical strategems behind the narrative. But first, we discuss the election…
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us