Posted on 01/29/2008 3:25:32 PM PST by decimon
There's the problem.
I cannot believe that ample food could not be produced in Haiti.
Dominicans live on the same island and they seem to be doing OK.
A good friend of my husband and I’s was a Missionary in Haiti and so was his wife, it’s sad this country is falling apart and their government doesn’t seem to wanna help
The Dominicans have not stripped their half of the island of trees for firewood for cooking.
Haiti is a hellhole. When a country is dedicated to Satan, as this one was in 1804, the result is not surprising.
The George Soros vision for all of humankind?
I thought Clintoon fixed Haiti
There are a lot of Haitians in the Boston area, and --- I have to add this --- they're beautiful.
Every night for dinner
We got a big old chunk of dirt
And if we were really good
We didn’t get desert
When I was Your Age...
The government is the problem.
He fixed it alright.
Yes I am aware of that, thank you
A “Turd World” typical socialist paradise. Every democrat’s dream come true.
>> two cups of rice now sell for 60 cents
I really feel for those poor folks.
But 2 cups of rice for 60 cents sounds like Associated Press Bull$hit to me.
It’s inconceivable that private enterprise couldn’t deliver rice the short distance to Haiti for much less than that.
Or maybe those prices have UN corruption factored in.
Raising Arizona
[an old convict and H.I. lying on their prison bunks, passing the time]
Ear-Bending Cellmate: ...and when there was no meat, we ate fowl and when there was no fowl, we ate crawdad and when there was no crawdad to be found, we ate sand.
H.I.: You ate what?
Ear-Bending Cellmate: We ate sand.
[pause]
H.I.: You ate SAND?
Ear-Bending Cellmate: That’s right!
Yeah, no kidding. It should be a great growing climate.
I am also surprised they wouldn’t be going after plant leaves (even grass) of some kind and eating these instead of dirt. The only thing I can think of is that they don’t have any of this around where they are. I’d go for plants and grass first. At least you may be able to boil them and kill off any bacteria/viruses (mostly).
If you weren’t really good—you got dessert! Pie-ala-mud.
I spent 4 weeks there on a medical missionary team. The only cure to Haiti will be to invade, completely take over the country, and run it as a territory of the US for at least 2 generations.
The problems are so systemic and so ingrained in the population that just bringing in a “new” Haitian government will result in zero change.
Truly a shame, because the country could be beautiful, a massive producer of sugar, coffee, wonderful tourist destination, and an economic success like many Caribbean nations. The people have so many generations of outright repression they have zero history - or even concept - of a free life or even a normal life. No one alive has even the slightest concept of what life could be like, because they - nor anyone they know - ever experienced anything but destitute poverty.
Truly a case of the haves and the have nots, and it will not change short of an external force.
In my case, every one of them was fixed on me. You know you're not dealing with healthy people when you see yellow eyes.
The only way for Haiti to ever get out of this self destructive cycle is foreign occupation. Haiti is simply a failed state that cannot function by itself. But it would be selfish to do that because it’s “neo-colonialism”.
From Wikipedia:
US occupation
Throughout the nineteenth century, Haiti was ruled by a series of presidents, most of whom remained in office only briefly. Meanwhile, the country's economy was gradually dominated by foreigners, particularly from Germany. Concerned about German influence and growing military presence, and disturbed by the savage public dismembering of President Guillaume Sam by an enraged crowd, the United States invaded and occupied[6] Haiti in 1915. The United States imposed a constitution written by future president Franklin D. Roosevelt, and applied an old system of compulsory corvée labor to everyone. Previously this system had been applied only to members of the poor, black majority.
Nationalist rebels, called Cacos[7], waged a persistent guerilla warfare, headed by Charlemagne Péralte (until 1919) and Dominique Batraville (until 1920). Roosevelt was disenchanted with the burden and negative social aspects of attempting to impose U.S. influence on the population and proceeded to implement an earlier disengagement agreement, thereby ending the U.S. occupation in 1934.[8]
Woodrow Wilson and FDR fixed Haiti.
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