What You're Not Hearing about Haiti (But Should Be)
In the hours following Haiti's devastating earthquake, CNN, the New York Times and other major news sources adopted a common interpretation for the severe destruction: the 7.0 earthquake was so devastating because it struck an urban area that was extremely over-populated and extremely poor. Houses "built on top of each other" and constructed by the poor people themselves made for a fragile city. And the country's many years of underdevelopment and political turmoil made the Haitian government ill-prepared to respond to such a disaster.
True enough. But that's not the whole story. What's missing is any explanation of why there are so many Haitians living in and around Port-au-Prince and why so many of them are forced to survive on so little. Indeed, even when an explanation is ventured, it is often outrageously false such as a former U.S. diplomat's testimony on CNN that Port-au-Prince's overpopulation was due to the fact that Haitians, like most Third World people, know nothing of birth control.
It may startle news-hungry Americans to learn that these conditions the American media correctly attributes to magnifying the impact of this tremendous disaster were largely the product of American policies and an American-led development model.
From 1957-1971 Haitians lived under the dark shadow of "Papa Doc" Duvalier, a brutal dictator who enjoyed U.S. backing because he was seen by Americans as a reliable anti-Communist. After his death, Duvalier's son, Jean-Claude "Baby Doc" became President-for-life at the age of 19 and he ruled Haiti until he was finally overthrown in 1986. It was in the 1970s and 1980s that Baby Doc and the United States government and business community worked together to put Haiti and Haiti's capitol city on track to become what it was on January 12, 2010.
After the coronation of Baby Doc, American planners inside and outside the U.S. government initiated their plan to transform Haiti into the "Taiwan of the Caribbean." This small, poor country situated conveniently close to the United States was instructed to abandon its agricultural past and develop a robust, export-oriented manufacturing sector. This, Duvalier and his allies were told, was the way toward modernization and economic development.
From the standpoint of the World Bank and the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) Haiti was the perfect candidate for this neoliberal facelift. The entrenched poverty of the Haitian masses could be used to force them into low-paying jobs sewing baseballs and assembling other products.
But USAID had plans for the countryside too. Not only were Haiti's cities to become exporting bases but so was the countryside, with Haitian agriculture also reshaped along the lines of export-oriented, market-based production. To accomplish this USAID, along with urban industrialists and large landholders, worked to create agro-processing facilities, even while they increased their practice of dumping surplus agricultural products from the U.S. on the Haitian people.
This "aid" from the Americans, along with the structural changes in the countryside predictably forced Haitian peasants who could no longer survive to migrate to the cities, especially Port-au-Prince where the new manufacturing jobs were supposed to be. However, when they got there they found there weren't nearly enough manufacturing jobs go around. The city became more and more crowded. Slum areas expanded. And to meet the housing needs of the displaced peasants, quickly and cheaply constructed housing was put up, sometimes placing houses right "on top of each other."
Before too long, however, American planners and Haitian elites decided that perhaps their development model didn't work so well in Haiti and they abandoned it. The consequences of these American-led changes remain, however.
When on the afternoon and evening of January 12, 2010 Haiti experienced that horrible earthquake and round after round of aftershock the destruction was, no doubt, greatly worsened by the very real over-crowding and poverty of Port-au-Prince and the surrounding areas. But shocked Americans can do more than shake their heads and, with pity, make a donation. They can confront their own country's responsibility for the conditions in Port-au-Prince that magnified the earthquake's impact, and they can acknowledge America's role in keeping Haiti from achieving meaningful development. To accept the incomplete story of Haiti offered by CNN and the New York Times is to blame Haitians for being the victims of a scheme that was not of their own making. As John Milton wrote, "they who have put out the people's eyes, reproach them of their blindness."
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100 Comments so far
Show AllThe explanation you won't see in the FCM (Fawning Corporate Media) to borrow a phrase from Ray McGovern.
I did send some $ to Doctors Without Borders, with the knowledge that is not enough!
So you like FCM (Fawning Corporate Media) too? I'm now using it in place of MSM (MainStream Media). Thanks Ray for the phrase.
Gary
Haiti is what Cuba would be today, were it not for Casto protecting the Cuban people from the rabid USA.
This may be the most accurate observation that I've seen on this board in a while.
Right-wingers harp endlessly about the "oppression" in Cuba (as though there were none in the US) while consistently failing to acknowledge the absence of crushing poverty as seen in Haiti, Jamaica, and other "free" island nations.
q
An interesting contrast between Cuba and Haiti is the fertility rate which, though it has dropped in Haiti, is still very high at 3.54 whereas it is 1.49 in Cuba. Of course eventually, Cuba will have to decide at some point there are too few people there and use incentives and propaganda to get that rate back to 2.03 or whatever their sustainable number is given their low infant mortality rate. But I'd sure rather be in that situation than the alternative. This article didn't talk much about population growth or birth control other than the teaser at the beginning. I understand the author feels that other dynamics (rural displacement) are primary (at least in the short run) in explaining the overcrowding and poor conditions of the major city, but it is worth a mention as to why it is that Haiti has so much less birth control use than Cuba or some other countries.
I wish more people would take population growth more seriously - the TFR for the world is going down (2.65 in 2000 to 2005 to 2.55 in 2005 to 2010 according to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_and_territories_by_fertility_rate), but just like Cuba, the world needs to go below 2 (and get there faster) for a while and then back up to get to a reasonable number of people on this planet - a couple billion is plenty.
Dara Parsavand
PS If you choose to give to the Red Cross, consider not specifying where they spend your money - they are fully competent to allocate resources to reduce suffering in many parts of the globe.
A hundred million, or ten million, is plenty, Dara. Or none.
You mean to say you support the communist government in Cuba? Be careful mujeriego, you could be labeled a terrorist!
So how does one, "confront their own country's responsibility for the conditions in Port-au-Prince that magnified the earthquake's impact, and they can acknowledge America's role in keeping Haiti from achieving meaningful development"? I taught English at Lely High School where 39% of the student body is Haitian. I sent a handful of my students to major American colleges and started them on high-end careers in medicine, etc.
I write Mr. Obama many times per week on his Whitehouse.gov website and not so frequently my Florida Senators and Representative. I either get no response or responses that "blow me off," reiterating the "wisdom" of current policies.
Isn't the real problem the baseball knitting corporations? What can one do to disenfranchise the corporations that misappropriate our money and power? Most Americans who travel anywhere by air are wholly disgusted at the travail forced upon us by over-fearful reactions to things like the underwear "bomber." What can we do?
Somehow we have to support and overcome objections to Mr. Kucinich for President. The trite argument summarized in "he'll never be elected" can be overcome, must be overcome.
dwyerj1: a fellow Floridian and a campaigner for Mr. Kucinich in the last two elections, I totally concur. Many people know in their "hearts" that Kucinich is one of the few viable leaders who can help bring us out of the everyday and extraordinary disasters of our lives. Kucinich must, however, take the first step for all those who would support him: divorce himself firmly and forever from the Democratic Party which has been a co-conspirator with the Republicans in the perpetuation of these disasters. Failing his doing that, I will not support him again.
Alas Kucinich is too "funny-looking" to ever become President in today's vapid society. Where singers are judged on looks instead of talent. Where plastic surgery is done on underage teens. Where billboards and TV ads bombard us with impossibly perfect people.
Kucinich doesn't LOOK the role no matter his other qualifications. And he's much more qualified than Nader. Who is looking a little too "sad-sack" himself for the role.
Gary
Gary, Well, after Obama, don't you think people are just a little squeamish at selecting a candidate by his LOOKS? And think of all the popular appeal of a homely person. In 2008, white Americans prided themselves on voting for a black to show their racial non-prejudice. How about appealing to good-looking (in their opinion) voters to vote for a homely one to show their appearance non-prejudice? Didn't the general public make a big deal about that British singer (can't remember her name), not really that good a singer when you close your eyes and listen to her. But THAT music came out of THAT face? Hey, I'm just "thinking." I've often advised poor candidates to run against the money of their "fat cat" opponents; and why couldn't physically unappealing ones run against the "rock star" good looks that Wall Street sends from central casting as "electable" candidates?
They do but they lose.
I think we should give up hope for the "follow the money" evolved role of political parties in politics.
We need a movement not another false hope stinkin party.
Ye ol' Party game rigged against you.... you can't even unite as progressives and you think you can beat the Bankster's rigged money system by sayin "vote 3rd Party!" that is nuts an bein a puppet of the system because the party game gives all the power to the Banksters and leaves you frustrated losers.
Sorry i had to be blunt but this is shit the CIA will never tell you.
Just my opinion, and the buck stops here
\and sorry i got off the Haiti tragedy but I think the message of this is what we do here is what we can do.
... this could happen in Northern California on a fault that is predicted to be a 10. with tsunamis as well.
We are lucky.
Jim Glover: "they do but they lose." Unless I'm mistaken, Abe Lincoln was not the handsomest man in the world. When you say "they lose" you're prejudging and throwing in the towel on anybody but the well-helled and well-coiffed ever being elected. And I know you are on a "movement not a Party" kick; and I totally agree about the need for a movement but what makes you think a movement that doesn't exert some electoral power is going to be anything other than a lot of "activists" sitting around congratulating themselves on how "different" they are from all those crooks in politics?
Abe Lincoln barely won in a divided race getting fewer votes than the other candidates. The Democrats were splintered into northern and southern factions and the new-born Republican Party got the Presidency. Four parties were running major candidates so this was a very atypical election.
Gary
Isn't every election "atypical?"
I disagree, Abe lincoln was a very charismatic figure and had great PR and a brilliant man.
You missed my point... or dismissed it with your movement comment.
I am sick of freakin parties that divide folks when it comes to deciding... Parties should be about uniting to win on the most important issues.... peace and justice my friend. If peace people don't unite we won't get it.
3rd parties do not unite and are not designed to unite.
they are designed to fool you into thinking they have power.
It is bull shit ...they don't because to be and represent people power they would be about coalition building around Peace and activism for helping communities all the time.
3rd parties do not exert electoral power, they diffuse it for people power vs the power elite.
I do not like this truth but I want to deal with the reality, not myth and this is a winner take all system where money rules.
Now if 3rd parties wanted to join and grow the movement and talk to each other... Hey, I would be happy... Would you?
Haiti needs a revolution, not a party and so do we.
>>why couldn't physically unappealing ones run against the "rock star" good looks that Wall Street sends from central casting as "electable" candidates?<<
Maybe because the shallowness of American culture would dismiss the average looking candidate compared with the "good-looking" ones. Just a fact of life I am afraid. LBJ was an exception but look how he originally got his office. I'm also afraid with the "full coverage" we now have of candidates for President (which is what I was talking about -- not local candidates who can run on local issues) even FDR would have trouble running for President nowadays.
Wish it was otherwise.
Gary
" He'll never be elected ". If Kucinich stays in the democratic party, probably true. From my perspective, he would have a chance if joined a third party. What America needs is some paradigm of a coalition that is not about left and right but about right and wrong. Screw the labels folks, we are ALL Americans being screwed by the 1% elite. 2012 could be a great window of opportunity for a third party if that party could appeal to citizens across the political spectrum.
"Isn't the real problem the baseball knitting corporations?"
I wonder what would happen if one of the professional sports player associations - unions, if you will - demanded, as part of a collective bargaining agreement, that the uniforms and equipment used in that sport be made by unionized workers who were paid living wages and were provided humane working conditions. Given the grip that sports has on U.S. culture I would imagine, at the very least, an interesting conversation would ensue among sports fans.
In the interest of National Security and personal safety, blame the madmen first.
Look for land grabs and radical privitizers to invade Haiti with "structural adjustments"... and then watch them say, "the Haiti catastrophe was a WONDERFUL OPPORTUNITY!!"
Also read Naomi Klein's The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism!
“...an earthquake of the magnitude of 9/11 can shift the tectonic plates of international politics. The international system has been in flux since the collapse of Soviet power. Now it is possible -- indeed, probable -- that that transition is coming to an end. If that is right, if the collapse of the Soviet Union and 9/11 bookend a major shift in international politics, then this is a period not just of grave danger, but of enormous OPPORTUNITY" -Condoleeza Rice
http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2002/04/20020429-9.html
"Another [9/11 style] attack could create both a justification and an OPPORTUNITY that is lacking today to retaliate against some known targets, according to current and former defense officials familiar with the plan."
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/22/AR2006042201124_pf.html
"Wolfowitz argued that the real source of all the trouble and terrorism was probably Hussein. The terrorist attacks of 9/11 created an OPPORTUNITY to strike,"
http://www.alternet.org/columnists/story/16420/
"I do agree that the tsunami was a wonderful OPPORTUNITY to show not just the US government, but the heart of the American people, and I think it has paid great dividends for us" -Condoleeza Rice
http://www.commondreams.org/cgi-bin/print.cgi?file=/headlines05/0118-08.htm
"Tonight I propose the creation of a Gulf OPPORTUNITY Zone, encompassing the region of the disaster in Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama" - George W. Bush
http://thinkprogress.org/2005/09/15/katrina-speech-text/
"Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said that the hurricane disaster that disproportionately struck poor blacks in New Orleans "gives us an OPPORTUNITY" to rectify historic injustices"
http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/r/condoleezza_rice/index.html?query=HURRICA...
http://tinyurl.com/y9gg79s
Ghandighost: Let me take this OPPORTUNITY to congratulate you on your wonderful collection of quotes on how to take advantage of disasters when they occur---or when they are manufactured. Klein's book is practically my Bible for understanding the operation of modern (meaning uncivilized) capitalism and of course, like good little boys and girls, we should all read our Bibles.
Sioux Rose
GHANDI GHOST: Great post.
PHOENIX20 & TREMAINE: Excellent posts, also.
Sioux Rose, Thanks, haven't heard from you for awhile. The Phoenix
What? Americans? Confront their own country's responsibility for the conditions in Haiti? Americans? Acknowledge their role in keeping Haiti from achieving meaningful development?
That's the funniest thing I've read in years. What about the other 75 countries America has sought to control and destroy in the last 100 years? Not gonna happen. Next joke, please.
I am flabbergasted at the lack of compassion from the people and media of the right wing. Can't we find a way to take our airwaves and newspapers back? I hope carl lindskoog will write Part II of the history of Haiti and include the ouster of Aristide and report just exactly what the pres they put in and the UN advisors were doing there prior to the earthquake.
Countries such as Haiti are a reminder that the global economy is a failure for the great majority of people in 3rd world countries. Haitians who lived in the 1800's (after slavery ended but long before international corporations started infiltrating) were overall at least as well off as those who lived there since 1970. The lack of electricity and the lack of a few other amenities that had not been invented yet was offset by food and shelter (crude though it was) being virtually free and by everyone being able to easily get employment (mostly in agriculture but there were a few other options).
Fast forward to today, and we see that the global economy as run by the massively rich corporations is all about extracting marginal profit in just the right places and times, but obviously it does not care about people as a whole or about national economies as a whole. So in Haiti for example the international corporations might open a few factories employing 1% of the population, but the other 99% of the population not only does not get the income from the factories but faces higher prices and lesser employment opportunities due to the displacement of domestic agriculture and the displacement of other indigenous industries due to encroachment by those same global corporations. Globalism is a net loss for countries such as Haiti.
Health, employment, and political systems collapse priors:
http://www.unity-progress.blogspot.com
tremaine: Well said. Ghandighost above spoke (a la Klein's disaster capitalism thesis) of how disasters create extraordinary opportunities for exploitation by the vultures who go to the scenes of disasters. And so they do, and I expect the birds are already circling in search of carrion. But comments like yours are useful in reminding us that there is another opportunity that uniquely occurs with disaster: the opportunity to focus our ever-distracted attention on the real conditions of human beings in this world. I recall many post-Katrina commentaries that found as a "bright spot" in all this tragedy that it laid bare the structural racism in our society in a way that not any number of lectures by learned professors of sociology could do. We had, in other words, a brief shining "learning moment" in which we learned, among other things, that the right wing assault on "government" had succeeded so well that there was no effective government ready at any level (city, state, national) to deal with a human disaster. (Given the "tax revolt" component of the currently popular tea-baggers, I doubt we made the best use of that moment).
Now we have another "opportunity": to see through a new focus on Haiti as a virtual poster child for the neo-liberal destruction of the world an awareness of what-the-hell we having been doing to the rest of the world. I'm not too optimistic that we will do much better with this opportunity than we did with the New Orleans one. But the appearance today of this article and the companion one by Peter Hallward encourages me to "hope" at least that a vigilant and courageous alternative press can pound on the heads of our consciousness to produce some semblance of awakeness.
thanks carl for setting the record straight. once again
it shows that we live in a country populated by more
evil then most of the world combined.i'm sure i will
get agreement from from my peers here- once we proudly stated
that we were americans to the rest of the world today
its not really something that we are so proud of anymore!
it will take years of goodwill to clean the tarnish off
of current standing in the world.
pjd 412 ----- Good to have a scientist on board.
Do you have expertise in renewables or are you focused on geological?
What is your opinion of the feasibility of renewables replacing 90% of fossil fuels and nuclear energy?
Thanks
"Our Role in Haiti's Plight"
I just read this one and this writer blames the "international community" instead of the US like this one. These people need to get together.
Yeah, read about Amerika's role here: http://dissidentvoice.org/2010/01/catastrophe-in-haiti/
Except:
>>President René Préval issued an emergency appeal for humanitarian aid. He described the scene in Port-au-Prince as “unimaginable. Parliament has collapsed. The tax office has collapsed. Schools have collapsed. Hospitals have collapsed. There are a lot of schools that have a lot of dead people in them. All the hospitals are packed with people. It’s a catastrophe.”
The weak Préval government was unable to respond to the crisis, and the United Nations — which occupies Haiti with close to 9,000 troops — was completely unprepared to manage the situation. Many UN leaders and troops died in buildings that collapsed, including their own headquarters.
International Red Cross spokesman Paul Conneally said that 3 million out of Haiti’s 9 million people would need international emergency aid in the coming weeks just to survive. The UN, U.S., European Union, Canada and countless non-governmental organizations (NGOs) have promised humanitarian aid.<<
Gary
Good point but I think it is a difference of emphasis in the two pieces rather than a disagreement about whether the U.S. or the international community is primarily responsible. Peter Hallward's excellent book "Damming the Flood" was one of the works I was thinking from when I decided to write the piece. I also completely agree with Hallward when he writes
"The noble "international community" which is currently scrambling to send its "humanitarian aid" to Haiti is largely responsible for the extent of the suffering it now aims to reduce. Ever since the US invaded and occupied the country in 1915, every serious political attempt to allow Haiti's people to move (in former president Jean-Bertrand Aristide's phrase) "from absolute misery to a dignified poverty" has been violently and deliberately blocked by the US government and some of its allies."
Its true that this has often been the U.S. acting along with other countries but I wanted to spotlight one historical process where the U.S. really took the leading role even as it worked through "international" bodies like the World Bank, the IMF, and the Inter-American Development Bank.
Brian Concannon's quote in Hallward's piece also fits well with my argument: "As Brian Concannon, the director of the Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti, points out: "Those people got there because they or their parents were intentionally pushed out of the countryside by aid and trade policies specifically designed to create a large captive and therefore exploitable labour force in the cities; by definition they are people who would not be able to afford to build earthquake resistant houses."
Carl
and to think how we are indoctrinated to hate and fear Cuba for not subjecting itself to the same fate.
What they fear most is the discovery that Socialism serves the people better than Capitalism.
Very very good point about Cuba.
What they fear most is any government, forget the labels of Socialism or Communism, that is a potential threat to their power and wealth. When Castro threw the politically and economically powerful elite out of Cuba, they lost billions of $. What they also fear is the domino effect of Cuba's paradigm in other Latin American countries i.e. Venezuela, Honduras ect. Haiti has had the earthquake of capitalist hegemony for many years.
There are no words to express the degree of complicity of the Roman Catholic church. People, around the world, living in such abject poverty deserve to have access to birth control materials and education.
Overpopulation, no jobs, little food, and no birth control are the number one reason Haitians are living in such terrible conditions.
This is one of the greatest sins of our time!!
Chuck, Thanks for bringing up religion, especially the catholic church. Words can't express the destruction brought about by god will provide. We spay our domesticated animals because we understand, but god is in our image, so we can't even consider our own welfare.
Right on, brother Carl. Actually, US imperial intervention stretches back to 1905, some 107 years ago. Haiti is the Showcase of US imperial domination. For 107 years, the US has supported the Haitian ruling clsss, Haitian dictators and the rights of American corporations to do whatever they wanted to in that benighted country. Now we are being treated to the vile spectacle of lying, election-stealing war criminal Geo. Bush, who destroyed the Haitian democracy in March 2004 by kidnapping President Aristide to Africa, actually having the gall to go and "help" suffering Haitians. Haven't you "helped" Haiti enough, Mr. Bush? And now President Obama is sending in thousands of American troops to "help keep order" (read help keep the ruling class in power)...
Thanks to Lindskoog for that important and necessary lesson on the background of Haiti's current plight. US policies have kept them impoverished for a hundred years, but we'll never hear a word of this from any corporate media outlet. Last night watching Rachel Maddow's very concerned coverage of the earthquake, she interviewed a guy from USAID who presented that agency's case as purely humanitarian and only interested in helping the poor Haitians, the way USAID does everywhere when called upon by our compassionate government. Maddow bought the whole line, congratulating USAID for its selfless, heroic efforts on behalf of the world's downtrodden, especially in times like these.
But according to Lindskoog, "USAID had plans for the countryside too. Not only were Haiti's cities to become exporting bases but so was the countryside, with Haitian agriculture also reshaped along the lines of export-oriented, market-based production. To accomplish this USAID, along with urban industrialists and large landholders, worked to create agro-processing facilities, even while they increased their practice of dumping surplus agricultural products from the U.S. on the Haitian people."
The fact is, USAID has followed this pattern in countries all over Latin America for decades. They're known to work very closely with the CIA to undermine governments not 100% subservient to US interests. Their humanitarian cover is cynicism at its worst, in other words at its most typically American. Maddow should know this, but much of the thrust of her show has been defending Obama and the Democrats against Republican attacks, and Democratic administrations tend to rely on USAID far more than Republicans, who just do their dirty work right in the open, no need to resort to camouflage supplied by USAID or other "humanitarian" agencies. Rachel needs to read this piece and reevaluate her reflexive and thoughtless defense and support of Democratic policies. It seems the more Obama proves to be just another arch-conservative Democrat, the more she tries to portray him as indeed the agent of change his campaign ads declared he surely was.
As I understand, China is interested in growing Jatropha Bio-Fuel in Haiti. This would bring a lot of money to farmers in Haiti.
China is sending 1,000 anti-riot police to Haiti after the quake.
Now all of a sudden the U.S. whats to send "aid" to Haiti when we neglected the country for so long.
Watch us protest China's involvement with Haiti, because the U.S. competitor Sirona Fuels wants to grow Jatropha in Haiti too.
Hey, that's OUR backyard! That's OUR slave colony!
We gave them the infamous anti-communist Papa-Doc & Baby-Doc, who set the course for the country! How dare China interfere with OUR little play-toy.
Wait a sec! Dubya is funny looking and he got elected.
for a concise historical summary of Haiti's 200 year struggle that expands on this article:
[http://www.chris-floyd.com/component/content/article/1-latest-news/1900-help-haiti-the-unforgiven-country-cries-out.html
quote
two hundred years ago, Haitian slaves overthrew their French masters -- the first successful national slave revolt in history. What Spartacus dreamed of doing, the Haitian slaves actually accomplished. It was a tremendous achievement -- and the white West has never forgiven them for it.
In order to win international recognition for their new country, Haiti was forced to pay "reparations" to the slaveowners -- a crushing burden of debt they were still paying off at the end of the 19th century. The United States, which refused to recognize the country for more than 60 years, invaded Haiti in 1915, primarily to open it up to "foreign ownership of local concerns." After 19 years of occupation, the Americans backed a series of bloodthirsty dictatorships to protect these "foreign owners." And still it goes on.
unquote
You neglected to mention that one of the principal reasons we sent the marines in 1915 was to take over Haitian Customs and impose taxes on imports which we collected to pay off Haitian debt. This debt was an interesting animal. Back in the mid-19th century the French threatened an embargo and were able to oblige the Haitian govt to agree to pay reparations for the lost property of the French colonists, namely, the slaves who had freed themselves and the plantations they had worked. These debt obligations were monetized as bonds which were sold to investors. I don't recall whether Haiti actually ever made any payments, but anyway, after a while the bonds were deemed worthless and were bought up for pennies on the dollar by US investors. These US investors then used their influence to have the Marines invade to collect their debt. For as long as they were there we sucked every dollar we could from an already impoverished nation, and we left a class of collaborators in charge to keep order and safeguard our investments. So the Haitians actually had to buy their freedom twice, first with blood, and then with dollars. Then came Papa and Baby Doc, or creatures.
Happily for our peace of mind, we are blissfully ignorant of what we have done in the past.
"...This debt was an interesting animal. ..."
"...debt obligations were monetized as bonds which were sold to investors..."
the FCIC... financial collapse investigative committee... started this week...
maybe they should just go back an read what happened 100 years ago...
nice to see the bankers learnt their history well.. that of monetizing and selling off debt...
some things never change...
could it be... islamic acts of terror are a modern day blowback akin to the haitian revolution of 200 years ago... oppressed people taking back what's theirs... hmmmmmmmmmmmm..........
so it goes... the haves and the have mores... alway looking for more... esp. from the have nots and have lesses...
let's go up to 10,000 feet... your post prompted this (very naive) insight...
ok... FDR was an entrenched elite... but... enacted the most sweeping populist programs... in response to a manufactured crisis... the Great Depression... he and Elanor... were widely hated....
9/11 was "predicted" or "wished for" (i'm no 9/11 conspiracy theorist - except for monumental 'asleep-at-the-wheel-ism')... by pnac... Project For a New American Century...
haiti's earthquake is a microcosm study (if you will)... of wealthy powerful moneyed elite colonialism...
the french lost their colony... in early 1800's... and for 200+/- years... the moneyed elite... have been trying to "get it back"... from the monetized worthless bonds... to the sweatshop politics of recent times... now... what could be better to "get it back"... than an "act of god"... for the cowardly elite to have fall in their laps...
you NEVER see the real moneyed elite in the headlines... they get a "face"... reagan... bush jr... et al... in recent times... to do their bidding... then the modern day democrats... led by clinton triangulation... wnated back "in the game"... and now obama... trying to walk a fine line between populism and moneyed elites... obama's heart is in the right place... but he realizes... that from time immemorial... the haves and have mores... always want more and more... and will do anything to get it...
FDR... the new deal... the 20th century middle class... was a freak of "nature"...
since he was part of the haves and have mores... had nothing to preserve for history... and a huge pair of cajones... (perot did too - but he wasn't an "elite" - he was a self made success - and passed off as a sideshow)...
i wonder... i just wonder... what type of reverse "shock doctrine"... could ever be imagined... or maybe they'll just have a "change of heart"... and "spread the wealth"....
yeah... right...
There's lots at http://www.haitiaction.net/
and Flashpoints.net (KPFA) has been covering this well.
We are getting new insight into Haiti here and I for one am glad that Obama is in office. I have read his two books and also read a lot about his mother and I feel confident that he will be an improvement over our past leaders in this situation in particular.
The main problem will be those who complain about obama. I see that the Fox TV did not even bother to report much about Haiti and went back to their usual programs to discuss Ginrich or Giuliani or whoever.
On the day of Haiti breaking apart, I get another email about how aughful the immigrants are in our country.
So I think the problem is not Obama but our own stupid citizens and the climate of watching crap like "American Idol" etc etc.
Thanks for the reports here.
My only comment to add is that I heard that they will be using Guantanamo for hospital recovery mission and that seems like a good way to change the topic on that piece of real estate.
We need a lot more good will-- this is a good country-- they did elect Obama after all even though we have a lot of idiots here. Do NOT give up hope- we need it more than ever and it is out there.
Do not get distracted with Kucinich or others-- yes I too voted for him but now I back Obama -- he needs it.
What Obama needs is Americans to march on Washington in their millions to let him know that they expect him to keep his word. You-all could wear denim. it would be the "Denim Revolution".
probably too late now, though, for health care, ending the Iraq occupation, ending the Afgan Occupation, closing Gitmo. did I foget anything?
I Believe he Changed his mind.
I wish what you said was true. However, it is wishful thinking.
SEE Rahm Emanuel's maxim, The bigger the crisis, the larger the opportunity to capitalize on it (paraphrased).
This is what Obama is doing in Haiti:
1) Providing medical services for those needing first aid.
2) Ensure that ALL rebuilding funds from congress or the IMF go to War profiteering corporations like Bechtel or Halliburton. How much do you want to bet that the MREs (Meals ready to eat) rations aren't being triple priced on the US AND Haitian taxpayer right now for Wall street profits?
3) Make the profits tax free because it is an emergency infrastructure project.
Don't you get it? This is BETTER than a war! They can claim to be helping people while simultaneously racking up mega-gauging war profits without a war. Hell, they'll probably claim God is working for THEM!
The elite bastards are just taking one more piece of human misery and using it as an opportunity to get richer and gain more power. It's Rahm Emanuel's modus operandi.
Every time Obama has hadthe chance to side with the majority over the wealthy in the USA, he's sided with the wealthy.
Internationally, take a look at his administration's response to the coup in Honduras.
Your faith is touching, but misguided.
you really should go to killinghope.org
and educate yourself
Nice site. Thanks for that. An accurate depiction of how capitalism & 'freedom' has been just as much propaganda lie as even communism was painted as evil.
Average people need to show small signs of solidarity to start. Maybe a small symbol or something that we can all start to recognize.
People start to feel strength when they feel part of a larger group.
Then we have a chance for massive protests.
And the same as the agony inflicted upon Iraqiranistan, only By US!
""they who have put out the people's eyes, reproach them of their blindness."
Jingoist Fundicon oligarch perps believe they can buy their way into heaven and God will wipe out their past, present and future sins. I hope a God is taking a tally.
See here's the thing.
These guys don't believe in a God.
Far worse, they not only do not believe in a God, they conclude that such concepts as 'ethics' are rather quaint and really not important unless there are no profit implications.
Oh I know they say they believe, but what they really believe is that they can use the blind faith of others to achieve control of the working class.
This actually works extremely well....look at the Right's success in attracting the poor to their cause by connecting partisan party politics to religion.
So these guys would look at your statement and chortle all the way to the bank...assuming they even gave it a second thought.
Perhaps we should be relying more upon than a hopeful retribution in some promised 'afterlife' and be seeking justice in this one.
"These guys don't believe in a God."
How could they?
Oh they believe in God alright. His name is Mammon.
Gary
physicscitizen January 14th, 2010 5:17 pm
"Oh I know they say they believe, but what they really believe is that they can use the blind faith of others to achieve control of the working class.
This actually works extremely well....look at the Right's success in attracting the poor to their cause by connecting partisan party politics to religion".
I believe the above to be an accurate statement. To those who today benefit from the misery of others and those who expect miracles on a daily basis, be reminded of the song of David "Think not with the fool, There is no God"
Poor and downtrodden, and we like it that way. Here is an excerpt from John Perkins newsletter which came out after the overthrow of Zelaya in Honduras (see reference to Haiti near the end), and which still appears on his website:
"In writing my new book Hoodwinked (Random House, Nov 2009 publication date), I recently visited Central America. Everyone I talked with there was convinced that the military coup that had overthrown the democratically-elected president of Honduras, Manuel Zelaya, had been engineered by two US companies, with CIA support. And that the US and its new president were not standing up for democracy.
Earlier in the year Chiquita Brands International Inc. (formerly United Fruit) and Dole Food Co had severely criticized Zelaya for advocating an increase of 60% in Honduras’s minimum wage, claiming that the policy would cut into corporate profits. They were joined by a coalition of textile manufacturers and exporters, companies that rely on cheap labor to work in their sweatshops.
Memories are short in the US, but not in Central America. I kept hearing people who claimed that it was a matter of record that Chiquita (United Fruit) and the CIA had toppled Guatemala’s democratically-elected president Jacobo Arbenz in 1954 and that International Telephone & Telegraph (ITT), Henry Kissinger, and the CIA had brought down Chile’s Salvador Allende in 1973. These people were certain that Haiti’s president Jean-Bertrand Aristide had been ousted by the CIA in 2004 because he proposed a minimum wage increase, like Zelaya’s.
I was told by a Panamanian bank vice president, “Every multinational knows that if Honduras raises its hourly rate, the rest of Latin America and the Caribbean will have to follow. Haiti and Honduras have always set the bottom line for minimum wages. The big companies are determined to stop what they call a ‘leftist revolt’ in this hemisphere. In throwing out Zelaya they are sending frightening messages to all the other presidents who are trying to raise the living standards of their people.”
Look at the fight we have every time they want to raise the minimum wage in this country, with corporations, hiding behind the skirts of small business, fight like the dickens with lavish ad-prop and lobbying efforts. So it is easy to see how in literal banana republics a coup is a distinct possibility of actions by corporations. Despicable of course. But what else is new?
Biggest problem is such actions also suit the American Empire. It is a form of colonization with the MilitaryIndustrialComplex calling the shots.
Gary
The profits of Wall Street are inversely proportional to the slave labor wage level of the Carribean and South and Central (soon to be NORTH as well) America.
As Cheney would say: Things are going swimmingly.
I find few countries capable of greater collective amnesia than the US people. I think it is because so many Americans are convinced of the divine rightness of everything America does. This is bolstered by a press which is:
A). Afraid to burst that bubble because of fear of lost ratings.
and
B). Builds up that false view because it boosts ratings.
and
C). Is persistently in the interests of the very wealthy companies that own this same press.
I hope you guys have all read "The Shock Doctrine"...now sit back and watch the disaster capitalists work their magic of misery.
This earthquake is likely going to be the LEAST of these poor people's problems in the next years.
Send our own Papa-Doc Duvalier Clinton to Haiti along with his wife Mrs DuvalierHillary Clinton to live the rest of their lives in Haiti. With their ability to raise money for their own
Arkansas Library, they can raise money for their new library
in Haiti. We must rid this country of the Clinton Circus.
Okay, I've read through all the postings here so far, and while several mention Cuba for historical comparison, nobody seems to wonder whether they have announced an intention to send in their vaunted medical corps the way they did immediately after Katrina AND WERE TURNED AWAY.
I've been watching all the news available, including World Focus (which DID have a piece this evening on the imperialist history of Haiti and the slave revolt and the reparations), but not a word on potential Cuban aid to Haiti. My bet is that one reason the U.S. is sending in big military ships is to keep the Cubans out.
Of course it's all for our "caring" for our needy neighbors to the south, whom we will not abandon, and besides, them damned Cubans don't speak French!
Won't surprise me one bit if our presence there compounds the disaster. No large-vessel functioning port, an airport with a single functioning strip, roads in the city intended for foot traffic and half of them clogged by fallen debris. No water. No electricity. Hospitals rubble. Why hasn't Nestle arranged an air drop of their fancy bottled water?
Before this is over Haitians will be blamed by the likes of Pat Robertson for cannibalism. But Christian NGO Humanitarian Mercenaries were able to save some. (CUT, to appealing-looking white couple talking to the camera about their experience helping those poor people...)
To paraphrase from Butch Cassidy & the Sundance Kid, "Hell, the stench'l probably kill ya."
-30-
Cuba sent in medical aid YESTERDAY. It was one of the countries mentioned on Rachael Maddow. China had it's team mobilized within two hours, (don't know if they've actually arrived yet), and even Venezuela beat the US, being second only to the Dominican Republic.....
You are right, this will be used as a political chess game by the time things are finished with, but hopefully the people of Haiti will get the required relief...
BTW, if my memory serves me, the entire Mogadishu issue started when the fine CHRISTIAN people refused to feed the hungry children in Somalia unless they converted from their native religion, even though they had ample food in their compound. The christian compound was stormed and the food taken and the missionaries then asked for US support....
I saw that China arrived in 24 hours or less; it's definitely not your grandfather's China anymore.
I would like to point out what I felt was a very subtle piece of propaganda which I heard numerous times in the coverage of Haiti's trouble..... "Even China is sending a contingent." It was the word "EVEN" that caught my attention, as if it is such a surprise that they would. Yes, the American coverage managed to put a little seed of doubt about China's desire or ability to do something humanitarian (after their own earth quake disaster such a short time ago,I would expect them to understand what is needed). Maybe the talking heads on CBS didn't even realize how condescending it sounded, but my ears have become very sensitized.
DJM: Astute observation.
Well according to the official Cuban news (granma.cu) there were about 350 Cuban medical people already in Haiti when the quake struck and more will be sent but how many had apparently not been decided as of late Wednesday or early Thursday.
How many medics and how many countries they are in I don't know but it is fairly well known that Cuba has medical people in many third world countries.
It's so nice to see that other small countries like Iceland and Sweden have flown in assistance very quickly.
"What's missing is any explanation of why there are so many Haitians living in and around Port-au-Prince and why so many of them are forced to survive on so little"
The Walls of Prison USA are built from bricks of non-answers to the questions of why and how, and defiance toward the curiosity and compassion of people. Keep that separation of church and state, so that USans can hear the preacher preach compassion, then shrug like Atlas when it comes time to act.
"they can acknowledge America's role in keeping Haiti from achieving meaningful development"
USans, individually see themselves as "fighting the good fight", that is, "pulling their own weight". They see their government as supporting them in this "good fight" and indeed it does, maintaining the gladiator arena, for the gladiators.
Thus it cannot make sense for the USA to extend any kind of "socialist" helping hand to anybody, anywhere, ehh? Think of the US government as the committee responsible for awarding the grand prize to the champion gladiator.
"News hungry" Americans? LOL!!! Most of them have never heard of Haiti, and could not care less either, and would not even be able to locate this island nation on a map. China, having to fly half-way around the world, and Belgium were the first nations to have help there. Cuba, this horrible communist nation, already there with 400 medics and setting up a field hospital to treat injured. And where is the US? Busy figuring out how to profit from any help and sending flights to "scout the area". Yea...and Columbus was an American too!
Vera: Yep!
Listening to a reporter on www.kpfa.org yesterday morning, Cuba had set up two field hospitals in Haiti already.
O Bomb em' is sending in "troops."
It kind of sounds exactly like what the corporations and the government are doing in America today!
Carl Lindskoog:
Thank you for writing this article. You have done the research on Haiti's history and I hope more people read what you have stated for a better understanding of U.S. "aid."
I'm glad this has stimulated a good deal of discussion! To learn more about USAID and the damage it has done in Haiti you must read Josh DeWind and David Kinley's outstanding book entitled "Aiding Migration: The Impact of International Development Assistance in Haiti (Westview Press, 1988.)
As Ephraim noted, USAID is currently being heralded as the U.S.-sent savior of the Haitian people. It is ironic, then, that many of those people hurt, killed, or made homeless by the earthquake would likely not have been in the Port-au-Prince area in the first place if it weren't for USAID and other American-led institutions. As many have already argued, we must continue to watch USAID and all "relief" agencies (especially governmental relief agencies) closely.
In addition to DeWind and Kinley's book, anyone wanting to know more of this history should check out Paul Farmer's classic "The Uses of Haiti." It will blow you away! Two books by Alex Dupuy are also very useful when considering this economic and political history: "Haiti in the World Economy" and "Haiti in the New World Order"
Carl
physicscitizen
"I find few countries capable of greater collective amnesia than the US "
US amnesia may have something to do with the fact that children attend windowless schools...
Pavlovian-Skinnerian operant conditioning, also called brainwashing.
Of course it affects memory and natural intelligence, not to mention good feelings. It is supposed to yield psychopaths like the Bushes.
So many are still good people, in spite of schools without oxygen!
You can't forget what you never learned.
Vern
"and to think how we are indoctrinated to hate and fear Cuba for not subjecting itself to the same fate.
What they fear most is the discovery that Socialism serves the people better than Capitalism."
Vern, forget Socialism, everybody is afraid even though the priests and nuns under the Catholic Empire in Rome lived for centuries under Communist principles, but now non-profits be t he Dams to guard off an uprising of the masses or a US Revolution, non-profits will be the left hand limbs of Fascism.
Have not figured out yet how to separate the corrupt ones from the non-corrupt.
"But shocked Americans can do more than shake their heads and, with pity, make a donation. They can confront their own country's responsibility for the conditions in Port-au-Prince that magnified the earthquake's impact, and they can acknowledge America's role in keeping Haiti from achieving meaningful development. "
And they can pay attention to what happens next, and for years to come, to make sure it isn't the type of disaster capitalism so brilliantly described and exposed by Naomi Klein in "The Shock Doctrine".
They've ignored the return to and intensification of business-as-usual in New Orleans and on the Indian Ocean shores devastated by the tsunami, and all the other areas wrecked by natural and political disasters. Let's not repeat the mistake in Haiti.
See the movie "The Power of Community: How Cuba Survived Peak Oil", for an alternative.
The U.S. 82nd Airborn(e) has taken over the airport just outside Port-au-Prince, just suisse.
Disaster Capitalism. Thanks, Naomi, you blabbermouth you.
The Marines are coming!
How come they were not in Afghanistan?
-30-
YOU HAVE A BLACK PRESIDENT...BUT NOTHING HAD CHANGED IN HAITI
From Ashley Smith, writing in CounterPunch.org:
First the Bush administration and now the Obama administration have used the coup and social and natural crises to expand the U.S.'s neoliberal economic plans.
Under Obama, the U.S. has granted Haiti $1.2 billion in debt relief, but it hasn't canceled all of Haiti's debt--the country still pays huge sums to the Inter-American Development Bank. The debt relief is classic window-dressing for Obama's real Haiti policy, which is the same old Haiti policy.
In close collaboration with the new UN Special Envoy to Haiti, former President Bill Clinton, Obama has pushed for an economic program familiar to much of the rest of the Caribbean--tourism, textile sweatshops, and weakening of state control of the economy through privatization and deregulation.
Thus, as previous U.S. presidencies have done before, the Obama administration has worked to aid Haiti's elite, sponsor international corporations taking advantage of cheap labor, weaken the ability of the Haitian state to regulate the society, and repress any political resistance to that agenda.
The Obama administration should also immediately lift the ban against Aristide's return to Haiti, as well as the political ban on his party, Fanmi Lavalas, from participating in the electoral process. After all, a known drug criminal and coup leader, Guy Philippe, and his party Front for National Reconstruction (FRN) has been allowed to participate in the electoral process. Aristide and his party, by contrast, are still the most popular political force in the country and should have the right to participate in an open and fair vote.
i agree that we must talk about predatory policies that the US has implemented all across latin american and the carribean (not to mention other parts of the world) but why is no one talking about COLONIALISM???????? i have heard nothing about France in all of the reporters and commentators discussions of the inviable hatian state. . . and what is France's role in this devastation? what happens when thosands of people are kidnapped from their homes and shipped far away to work for others. yes the United States is guilty now but just because slavery happened "a long time ago" it does not mean that it does not play an enormously important role in the "development problems" that Haiti faces.
Why are we not talking about REPARATIONS?????? does France have no duty to rebuild a country that they forced to be created?? the Haitians are not to lazy or inept to govern their country but being left with a small island that has no developed industry and thanks to importation policies how can it???
i am calling for reparations from France. . . maybe we should also call for wage adjustments from these predatory companies as well.
this is a natural disaster but the extent of the "chaos" does have a history . .
abraços
maureen
"But shocked Americans can do more than shake their heads and, with pity, make a donation. "
So, the American volunteers who were there helping the people of Haiti while the earthquake struck I guess don't count... especially the ones who lost their lives in the rubble. Oh, and of course those are just our ships, vehicles and helicopters there in Haiti now, but, operating them is people from other countries who just like to wear the American flag on their uniforms instead of their country's own flag... Oh,
and I guess the American Red Cross has decided to sit this one out entirely, too.
By and large, you go across this country and you will find, we don't do and have never done things to help others "out of pity", we do them out of a shared sense of Humanity and Brotherhood, we do them understanding self sacrifice, we do
them because sometimes someone has to... The America you write of isn't the one I know of. The America I know is filled with people who have sacrificed their lives, their well-being, perhaps seen a son or daughter lost to them, because an idea of helping another person on this earth came before their own personal safety. We haven't always been on the right side or done the right thing, but more so than not, we have always tried to live up to the better angels of our selves, and more so than not, we always try correct what we have done wrong.
And what great risk have you ever taken to aid another human being in this world?
not sure who yer talkin to there, snow white,
But while I cherish people of whatever country who volunteer to pull babies out of the river, at some point it seems like it would be worth using their brain-heart bone and recognizing that so many babies are floating by that you can't get to even a small fraction of them, and that piling babies up on the riverbank doesn't really do them that much good anyway, so that a bunch of us have to get together and go up to the bridge and stop the person who's throwing the babies in the river in the first place.
That baby tossing is happening a little in Haiti, but the main baby tossers in the world live right here in the us, and most people, even the ones we feel for and admire who are swimming after babies, don't face that fact because it's just too painful. They've hitched their wagons to the stars and stripes and can't emotionally detatch it long enough to see what's pulling it.
Julius Caesar said it's easier to find men who will volunteer to die than to suffer pain with patience. And it's even harder---far far harder---to find people willing to suffer the pain of self-examination enough to stop fighting and killing and dying for dumb causes like "patriotism" and "helping people in other countries", which is virtually always (i can't think of a single exception in our history) a cover for US corporate militarism, and projection of our own evil into the world and fighting it out there where it's not, rather than back here where it is. Nine times out of ten the people we're "helping" are in trouble in the first place because of the way we live our lives.
While it's impossible to know what people's motivations are, even if they tell you (because not 1 in 10,000 people knows his or her own motivations), a reasonable guess would be that the reason people don't use their brains to figure out about the babies is not because they're stupid. By and large, you go across the country and you will find we help people out of our own cowardice and unwillingness to face our own shortcomings, desperate need for distraction, speed, feeling of false connection and community, just for a few examples. The rest---self-sacrifice, patriotism, shared humanity---is mostly window dressing we put up after, with just a tiny little bit enough of the truth to make it seem plausible. (In psychology it's called the hook we hang our projections on.) In fact, almost without exception we as a country are on the wrong side of every conflict we get involved in. If there are 2 wrong sides we're likely be on both.
In Haiti right now, the US ships and helicopters etc are a continuation of a century+ of racist/classist domination, now in the current form of disaster capitalism. Rumor has it they blocked Dr.s Without Borders from using the airport so US troops could come in--the true conservative philosophy, seeing coercion and punishment as the solution to every problem.
"And what great risk have you ever taken to aid another human being in this world?"
Again, don't know if you're talking to me or Mr. Lindskoog but i ain't done nothin.
well, unless running into burning buildings counts. And then there's that time I spent my whole adult life facing the pain of self-examination, at least partly to become a better instrument for improving the world. You'd be better not asking things like that like you already know the answer... unless you already know the answer. And you don't know the answer here, fool. You don't know me. Or Mr. Lindskoog, I'd be willing to bet.
Shame on the Haitian elite! Shame on the US government. What's weird to me is that there are so many Haitians in the USA, and I don't think most of them know any of this that was discussed in the opening statement. The ones who are living in the USA should be enjoining non-Haitian US citizens to lobby in Washington and bring about overall awareness of what has been going on in Haiti.
When people are living in abject poverty (in Haiti), do they really care where a grain of rice is coming from? This is why I've always been proud of what Castro has done with Cuba. I'm glad the former USSR is out of the equation. Cuba has realized that she did not need the USA or the USSR!!!
it's started:
..."the US was supporting the Haitian government's "vision of rebuilding" the country and following its priorities, Crowley said it was "absolutely not true" that US military planes with troops were being allowed to land at the airport while those carrying aid supplies were not.
"They are bringing in aid, communications gear for the Haitian government so they can begin to operate and function once again," he said.
Crowley added that the US was "prepared to augment UN and Haiti forces if they need help, but for now, they are there for a humanitarian mission only."
~~Critical component!!
But Lieutenant-General Ken Keen, commander of the US military operation in Haiti, told ABC's This Week programme that the military was going to have to play a security role.
"We are here principally for a humanitarian assistance operation, but security is a critical component," he said.
Source:
Al Jazeera and agencies
Regardless of the role the US has historically played in the suffering and oppression of the Haitian peoples the US seems unable to respond to anything other than by using the military.
That's what happens when nearly all ( other than the bail out money ) the country's resources are channeled through the MIC.
is that anything like being a tool?
"it is time to put the thorny issue of culture at the center of efforts to tackle global poverty. Why is Haiti so poor? Well, it has a history of oppression, slavery and colonialism. But so does Barbados, and Barbados is doing pretty well. Haiti has endured ruthless dictators, corruption and foreign invasions. But so has the Dominican Republic, and the D.R. is in much better shape. Haiti and the Dominican Republic share the same island and the same basic environment, yet the border between the two societies offers one of the starkest contrasts on earth — with trees and progress on one side, and deforestation and poverty and early death on the other....
...The late political scientist Samuel P. Huntington used to acknowledge that cultural change is hard, but cultures do change after major traumas. This earthquake is certainly a trauma. The only question is whether the outside world continues with the same old, same old."
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/15/opinion/15brooks.html?em
And for an accurate translation of David Brooks' racist column, read Matt Taibbi:
http://trueslant.com/matttaibbi/2010/01/18/translating-david-brooks-haiti/
Please explain what is racist about pointing out that one nation with a black and mulatto population does notably better than another nation with a black and mulatto population, despite similar challenges.
You might like to read the response my colleague Tom Driver and I wrote:
An Open Letter to David Brooks on Haiti
http://www.truthout.org/an-open-letter-david-brooks-haiti56199
Carl Lindskoog
Brooks is in fact saying, ""if one black-mulatto nation does well and another does poorly, then obviously the issue is not race. So what is the issue?" His argument is precisely the opposite of a racist argument. He is saying race is not a factor. Culture is the deciding factor, not race.
"...The feeling of the nation must be quickened; the conscience of the nation must be roused; the propriety of the nation must be startled; the hypocrisy of the nation must be exposed; and its crimes against God and man must be proclaimed and denounced... There is not a nation on the earth guilty of practices more shocking and bloody than are the people of the United States, at this very hour." - frederick douglass - 1852
~~ Well Said~~ That's It ~~ All Words and No Action ~~ Humans have allowed Themselves to be Conditioned ~~ Beirderbeck Group ~~ Global Control~~~ Zeitgiest~~USA "AMAN IN A CAVE" ~~ WHAT A FARCE ~~ BRING BUSH N BLAIR AND ALL THEIR ENTOURAGE TO BE ACCOU
NTABLE FOR 4 WAR CRIMES ~~PROB IS WHO CAN DO THAT ~~ ANSWER ~~ THE PEASANTS ~~
PROBLEM THOUGH
TOGETHER WE STAND DIVIDED WE FALL
GETTING FOLK TO STAND UP### MOST FALL DOWN
AND ALLOW THERE SERVITUDE TO CONTINUE
~~ SAD INDITEMENT OF THE HUMAN PSYCHE~~ CHECK OUT " VENUS PROJECT "
~~~~ENJOY YOUR MOMENTS ~~~~~ BEST WISHES TO ALL LIVING FORMS ~~ AL : )
Kucinich - 2012
So - where are the marketing gurus? If we want to get him in, then we have to "sell" him to the populace. Regardless of whether branding is nauseating, that's what it will take. If homely is how he is then, then market that. Trust, down-to-earth, like your neighbour, you get the drift.
If the hopeful were disenchanted, the cynics reinforced with Obama, let's not sit back and wait for Palin and whoever to get elected by the masses.