Commentary Last week, Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation, the corporation behind the Black Lives Matter movement, issued a rather interesting statement. The corporation’s members stood in solidarity with the people of Cuba. The “U.S. federal government’s inhumane treatments of Cubans” was unacceptable. Not finished there, BLM appealed to the Biden administration to lift the embargo, as it only serves to undermine the “Cubans’ right to choose their own government.” Where some saw a passionate statement of solidarity, others saw opportunists looking to exploit a situation and steal some of the spotlight. The author Jorge Felipe Gonzalez appears to fall into the latter category. In a piece for The Atlantic, aptly titled, “Black Lives Matter Misses the Point About Cuba,” Gonzalez writes, “Cuba is not an empty canvas” onto which calculating, cynical actors “can project their political ideas.” Furthermore, it’s “not a utopian vehicle to advance some fantasy of socialist equality,” nor is “it …