SORU: aşağıdaki parçaya göre cevaplayınız
We can infer from the passage that the overall Cuban-American community ----.
He is young, dark, and handsome, with a beautiful light
tenor voice, and he swept the Latin Grammy Awards in
2008. But should Juan Esteban Aristizabal, better known
as Juanes, perform his songs at an upcoming “peace
concert” in the Cuban capital, Havana? The debate over
this Colombian rock star, who is based in the US city of
Miami, has been raging on that city's Spanish-language
radio and television shows. Older Cuban-Americans, who
left Cuba in the immediate aftermath of the 1959
revolution there, vehemently oppose the concert. They
argue that it is just the latest attempt by the Cuban
regime to manipulate public opinion. Traditionally, these
older exiles have held all the political power in Miami. But
younger ones are pushing back, especially when it comes
to the arts. Beyond the overall Cuban-American
community, the Juanes concert is seen as a potential
great turning point in US-Cuban relations. A successful
outcome could smooth the way for a further softening in
American policy towards Cuba. Artists other than Juanes
have attempted this kind of bridge-building with Cuba
before; for example, left-leaning musicians like Bonnie
Raitt and The Police appeared there in 1999, but they had
an overtly political agenda. However, Juanes himself,
who is widely admired for his humanitarian work in his
native Colombia, denies having any thought of politics.
“My only message is one of peace, of humanitarianism,
and of tolerance,” he said recently.