Verdict with Ted Cruz: Honoring and Remembering My Tia Sonia
The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show
iHeartPodcasts
4.5 • 11.4K Ratings
🗓️ 28 January 2026
⏱️ 31 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
1. Life in Cuba Before and After the Revolution
- At first, many Cubans—including Sonia’s family—believed Fidel Castro would bring hope and equality.
- Very quickly, Castro imposed strict control, destroyed economic freedom, and made the entire population equally poor.
2. The Reality of Communist Cuba
- Universal poverty: Everyone was paid the same and had almost nothing—food shortages, basic needs unmet.
- State surveillance: Every neighborhood had assigned informants who monitored households and reported any anti‑government sentiment.
- Restrictions on daily life: Cubans were barred from renting boats, traveling, or accessing certain services, even if they had citizenship elsewhere.
3. Persecution and Indoctrination
- Sonia witnessed the regime executing and imprisoning dissenters.
- Castro used propaganda to turn children against their families, encouraging them to report relatives critical of the government.
- Schools were forced to teach pro‑communist, pro‑Castro ideology.
4. Family Resistance
- Sonia’s mother (a teacher) was ordered to teach communist doctrine.
- Rather than comply, she pretended to have a mental breakdown so she could be removed from teaching, since quitting was illegal.
- Sonia herself resisted the regime and was repeatedly detained, imprisoned for days, and disappeared without her family knowing her whereabouts.
5. Life After Leaving Cuba
- Sonia left in 1962 but returned over the years with suitcases of medicine, food, clothing, and household essentials—items extremely scarce in Cuba.
- She often left behind even her own clothes because relatives in Cuba lacked basics like underwear and bedsheets.
6. The Illusion Presented to Foreign Visitors
- Tourists and foreign politicians were only shown “model” schools, hospitals, and neighborhoods.
- This created a false image of prosperity, hiding the suffering of everyday Cubans who lived in extreme poverty.
7. Misconceptions About Socialism and Communism
- The conversation highlights how younger Americans often romanticize socialism without understanding its authoritarian outcomes.
- It emphasizes that socialist regimes destroy incentive, suppress faith, and strip away basic freedoms.
- The leaders of these systems live in luxury while the people remain impoverished.
8. The Human Cost
- Sonia stresses that the worst suffering was the inability of families to secure food and basic necessities for their children.
- Many Cubans survive by drinking sugar water to feel full.
- Average income was described as around $30 per month, making survival nearly impossible.
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | This is an I-Heart podcast. |
| 0:02.6 | Guaranteed Human. |
| 0:04.7 | Welcome. |
| 0:05.5 | It is verdict with Senator Ted Cruz, Ben Ferguson with you. |
| 0:08.6 | And today is a really special episode of verdict with Ted Cruz. |
| 0:14.3 | And Senator, I want you to take it from there, but we're taking a little pause from |
| 0:17.4 | politics and talking about someone very near and dear to you. |
| 0:22.7 | Yeah, on Sunday, |
| 0:31.7 | January 25th, my aunt, my theosonia, went to be with the Lord. She and I were incredibly close. My theosonia was my father's younger sister. My dad, as you know, fought in the Cuban Revolution. He was |
| 0:39.6 | imprisoned and tortured in Cuba by Batista's thugs. My theosonia was younger than he is. And so she |
| 0:46.9 | was there after the revolution succeeded. She fought in the counter-revolution. And she was |
| 0:54.0 | imprisoned and tortured by Castro thugs. |
| 0:57.9 | And she's someone who I grew up very close to. I called her my Thialoka, my crazy aunt. |
| 1:03.7 | She is fiery. She loved liberty. She loved America. She has been ill for the last couple of months. |
| 1:13.1 | It was not a surprise when she finally went. |
| 1:16.0 | My cousin, Beebe, who is my Theosanya's only daughter, has been caring for her. |
| 1:21.3 | And she passed Sunday morning in Bebe's living room with her family around her, surrounded |
| 1:30.3 | by family that loved her, that was praying for her, and she's gone to be with the Lord. |
| 1:37.0 | And so our family is grieving because Theosonia was a larger-than-life personality. |
| 1:42.2 | She had an unbelievable heart. |
| 1:47.8 | She would help anyone. She, she, she was extraordinary. And, and she was someone who, before she fell ill, we had my |
| 1:56.4 | theosonia as a guest on verdict. I wanted her to come on verdict. And tell her story. Tell her story |
... |
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