I hope TikTok doesn’t remove this video anytime soon.
Please click on the link below 👇🏿
Same observations in Creole by a Haitian patriot. 👇🏿
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After listening to this woman, whom I would qualify as a GNB, I remembered this AYIBOPOST article that I had kept in my archives because I had seen changes coming imminently, and my question is:
Is it true or is it a show?
I hope not, see my recent article:
DON’T BE AFRAID 😨.
In another article on this platform entitled: Let’s get outraged. Finally, I had already demonstrated how Non-Governmental Organizations, commonly known as NGOs, were harmful to our country on the political, economic, financial, and social levels.
Is Donald Trump the long-awaited Avatar who would come to reverse the Machiavellian plans laid by the evil geniuses of the world’s greatest country, which have caused great harm to many countries?
He is perceived as an enemy of good, but could he be the surgeon who must perform a painful operation so that a disease does not deteriorate to the point of death?
Only time will tell.
This masterful article irrefutably explains Haiti’s seemingly insoluble situation.
*ALL HAITIANS CONCERNED ABOUT THE FUTURE OF THEIR COUNTRY MUST READ IT.*
There is no author’s name. It is undoubtedly a collective.
AYIBOPOST
“We are so unaccustomed to the truth that the slightest truth, even the most placidly spoken, immediately takes on an air of arrogance.” (Fernand Venanderem)
Should we persist in blaming the puppet that acts without tracing the hand that activates it and the brain that commands that hand?
Haiti, the world’s first Black republic, is a country of profound poverty and recurring instability that borders the richest country on the planet. Can common sense lead us to believe in the complete neutrality of the United States in the policies of a state within its control?
In 2010, following the earthquake that devastated Haiti and left more than 250,000 dead, former US President William Jefferson Clinton (Bill Clinton) made a surprising admission before the US Senate Foreign Relations Committee. In a statement tinged with great sentimentality, he took responsibility for the fact that millions of Haitians are dying of hunger today, for having forced the Haitian government to adopt trade deregulation measures that were devastating for the country’s economy.
“This decision may have benefited a few Arkansas farmers, but it didn’t work,” he admitted. “It was a mistake. I’ve had to live every day with the remorse of the decline in rice production capacity to feed the Haitian people. All because of what I did.”
Bill Clinton is the American president under whose administration the second American occupation of Haiti was reinforced in 1994 with the intervention of 22,000 marines after the United States, at the request of former President Jean Bertrand Aristide, imposed the devastating embargo that decimated the middle class and accelerated the impoverishment of the masses. Curiously, a year after the devastating 2010 earthquake, President Michel Martelly decorated Bill Clinton with the Haitian government’s most prestigious medal.
The significance of this distinction was later understood when the Arabic website Al Jazeera revealed that the American agency USAID financed Martelly’s election in 2010. Moreover, in Haiti, it was difficult to understand the interest of the then US Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, who personally traveled to decide the outcome of the election. The current president of the Provisional Electoral Council, a judge of the CEP that organized the 2010 elections, Pierre Louis Opont, has also confirmed that the results announced in 2011 were indeed those of the electoral council. Is this not a return favor, when one of the two mining contracts awarded by Haiti in over 50 years benefits the company of Hillary Clinton’s brother?
A Tradition of Interference
It should be remembered that this is not USAID’s first attempt at interfering in Haiti. The newspaper Le Monde diplomatique, for example, reveals that the agency spent $36 million to help former World Bank official Marc Bazin win the 1991 elections over the then popular leader of the masses, Jean Bertrand Aristide.
USAID is the omnipresent “development” agency in Haiti, which is rife with inconsistencies. Among the most glaring are its significant investments in the agricultural sector. While Haiti is now the third-largest consumer of U.S. rice in the world, USAID invested tens of millions of dollars in the development of Haitian rice in 2013.
The real objective was not to truly promote the revival of this sector, since the U.S. Congress had passed the Bumper Amendment in 1989. This law prohibits the U.S. government from investing in a country where it operates, in the development of products that could compete with American products. A Haitian technician clearly demonstrated the technical absurdities of such an investment. And indeed, the WINNER project for the rice sector ended in failure.
Haiti’s economy has always relied primarily on agriculture, and the U.S. is currently the leading supplier of agricultural products to the market. How can the United States logically promote industries that risk competing with its own products on the Haitian market?
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