Sunday, October 23, 2011

Haitians have a saying: "washing your hands and wiping it with dirt."

Anti-UN Protests in Haiti:
"They've Brought Us Disease and Humiliation"

This is what the U.S. and it's proxies have been doing in Haiti. In fomenting crisis after crisis in Haiti, they must stupidly think that this will "protect their interests." How droll! With instability comes thousands of Haitians aiming for their shores! Same goes for the Dominican Republic, which harbored, armed and nurtured the "rebels" who were the "muscle" for the U.S. sponsored coup of Haiti's first democratically elected government.

For the U.S., it must be tiring to keep Haiti's mass of "useless eaters"** at bay by keeping their Coast Guard on the alert 24/7. This must be why they need this MINUSTAH proxy occupation to do their dirty work. Keep Haiti unstable and control the country?
**Useless eaters: a term applied to the infamous Kissinger Report in which he proposed methods to reduce the populations of underdeveloped countries... or genocide by any other name.


There has never been any intention by the U.S. to uphold democracy or engender stability in Haiti.

A particularly poignant reminder of U.S. intentions in Haiti was the 20 years of a direct, brutal and racists occupation. During the Invasion of Haiti in 1915: The U.S. Marines went straight to the Haitian National Bank and removed its gold reserves to New York City. The U.S. military ruthlessly crushed resistance, murdering leaders, burning villages to the ground and killing 15-30,000 Haitians. Did you know that the resistance was so strong that the U.S. military had to use aerial bombardment to rout the Cacos and their leader Charlemagne Peralte?

Documents of Charlemagne Peralte - read here.

The U.S. Congressional record documents the theft of the gold and the real reason for the 1915 occupation -- read here: The seizure of Haiti by the United States; a report on the military occupation of the Republic of Haiti and the history of the treaty forced upon her ..

The occupation was the means toward changing the Haitian Constitution, primarily to allow multinationals to own property in Haiti and exploit Haiti's resources for foreign benefit and not the interests of the Haitian people.

The $500,000 in gold would be worth 42,000,000+ in today's gold market. The theft fulfilled two purposes, first it made Haiti a U.S. ward; second, Haiti was no longer able to have a gold standard to back its paper currency.

The U.S. must return Haiti's gold! It must pay restitution for all the injustice, inhumanity -- crimes against humanity it has committed in Haiti!

Also, the occupation trained and from that point on held control over the renegade Haitian military (responsible for many coups, massacres, rapes and other atrocities in Haiti).

When Aristide dismantled of the dreaded Haitian military, it must have rankled the US State Department and Bill Clinton, since it's current Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and the puppet they've "selected" as Haitian president, the right-wing Duvalerist, Martelly, is determined to re-institute the military over the objections of most of the Haitian people.

Michel Martelly is sure to get support in his quest for a "pink militia" from the guy newly minted to serve at Washington's leisure. The new Prime Minister of Haiti Garry Conille is Bill Clinton's former Chief-of-Staff in Haiti. No matter that Conille, as well as Martelly do not meet the Constitutional residency requirements to hold elective office in Haiti.

"It is a common misconception, both in Haiti and abroad, that the country’s president holds executive power. In fact, his main power is to nominate the man or woman who does: the Prime Minister.... Garry Conille, 45, is the son of a Serge Conille, who was a government minister under the Duvalier dictatorship." Find out more about: Garry Conille's neo-liberal pedigree
here.

All Haitian's will start respecting the U.S. and it's proxy the UN MINUSTAH military force when they begin to put a value on Haitian life.


Background:
How the U.S. impoverished Haiti
http://www.nathanielturner.com/howusimpoverishedhaiti.htm

Haiti - a history of intervention, occupation and resistance
http://www.indymedia.ie/article/95531

Leta Restavek: The Suppression of Democracy in Haiti

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  • The U.N. Stabilization Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH) has suppressed both electoral democracy and free speech in Haiti by organizing fraudulent elections and shutting down peaceful protests, which has helped to exclude Haiti’s poor majority from participation in the electoral process.
  • Recently released WikiLeaks cables reveal the official U.S. view that MINUSTAH has turned out to be an “indispensible… financial and regional security bargain for the USG [U.S. government]” and that the “Aristide [m]ovement [m]ust [b]e [s]topped.”[1]
  • This systematic suppression of democracy has contributed to Haiti’s status as a “‘leta restavek’, or child servant state,” serving foreign interests.[2]

In a unanimous resolution, the United Nations (U.N.) Security Council decided on Friday, October 14, 2011 to renew the mandate of the U.N. Stabilization Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH) for one year, reducing its numbers to “pre-earthquake levels.”[3] U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon has declared that he “envisions a gradual withdrawal” over the upcoming years.[4] According to journalist Ansel Herz, many Haitians have been protesting MINUSTAH’s presence for at least a year. “There’s a [wide] range of demands,” he asserts, “Some people want MINUSTAH… to simply leave… Others are asking that they transform their mission from one of military so-called peacekeeping into development.”[5]

From an outsider’s perspective, it may seem unclear why many Haitians are indignant about the presence of U.N. peacekeeping troops in their country during such a tumultuous period. A vast number of news articles have reported that the protests are a response to recent accusations of severe misconduct and neglect by a relatively small number of U.N. troops. These include the collective rape of an eighteen-year-old man and the appearance of cholera, likely an inadvertent import from Nepalese peacekeepers.[6] These long-running reports tell the story of a supposed humanitarian group troubled by a series of isolated incidents of abuse and neglect. An in-depth overview of MINUSTAH’s history on the island, however, depicts a security force systematically serving foreign interests over those of the Haitians. Local residents are indignant because they see MINUSTAH as a tool of the United States’ self-interest in the region, and because the U.N. forces repeatedly have suppressed democracy, failed to address authentic humanitarian concerns, and have at times even perpetrated mass violence against Haitian citizens. By suppressing the Fanmi Lavalas party and other social and political movements, MINUSTAH has actively excluded Haiti’s poor majority from political participation, working against the interests of Haitians fighting for progressive economic and social reform. As President Martelly has observed, the recent alleged rape merely “‘put gas on the fire’ of relations between Haitians and the peacekeepers.”[7]

Recent Haitian History: the Aristide Affairs

To appreciate the context in which MINUSTAH’s troubled role is being played out, it is necessary to recount some recent aspects of Haitian history. In 1990, over two-thirds of voters elected Jean-Bertrand Aristide president of Haiti as the candidate of the Lavalas popular movement. Notably, he had the “overwhelming support of the poor.”[8] He worked to improve health care and education, raised the minimum wage, and changed trade policies to favor domestic agricultural production.[9]

After being overthrown by a military junta, Aristide was reelected in 2000 as part of the transformed Fanmi Lavalas party, which took a more leftist stance than its predecessor had. [10] On February 29, 2004, a contingent of U.S. Navy Seals transported the President to exile in Africa, carrying out the calculated diplomacy of the U.N., Canada, and France. The U.S. and U.N. claim that rather than performing a coup d’état, they had rescued Aristide from growing armed conflict between supporters and detractors of the President, which supposedly posed a threat to international safety.[11] Aristide, however, insists that his “rescue” was involuntary.

Leaked diplomatic cables demonstrate that high-level U.S. and U.N. officials worked aggressively to prevent Aristide’s return to Haiti. President Barack Obama (2009-present) and U.N. Secretaries General Kofi Annan (1997-2006) and Ban Ki-moon (2007-present) have all urged the government of South Africa to keep Aristide sequestered on that continent in an apparent attempt to quash the Fanmi Lavalas movement. [12] It was in the context of this political vacuum after the alleged coup was staged that MINUSTAH’s predecessor was created.

About MINUSTAH

MINUSTAH was originally formed to “succeed a Multinational Interim Force (MIF) authorized by the U.N. Security Council in February 2004, after President Bertrand Aristide departed Haiti for exile.”[13] It continues to operate under a mandate “to restore a secure and stable environment, to promote the political process, to strengthen Haiti’s Government institutions and rule-of-law structures, as well as to promote and to protect human rights.”[14] MINUSTAH is in Haiti under Chapter VII of the U.N. Charter, under which the “[Security] Council may impose measures on states that have obligatory legal force and therefore need not depend on the consent of the states involved. To do this, the Council must determine that the situation constitutes a threat or breach of the peace.”[15] The mission’s presence in the country is thus based on the proposition that since 2004, violence in Haiti has threatened the international community.

MINUSTAH includes both traditional “blue helmet” peacekeeping troops and police officers.[16] These troops are from many different countries, with very few of these forces speaking Haitian Creole, the language of the island’s poor.[17] The U.N. spent USD 5 billion on the institution even before the earthquake hit Haiti in January 2010, and USD 793,517,100 in the current year alone.[18] MINUSTAH, therefore, is a heavily funded multinational U.N. peacekeeping force directed to perform security functions, monitor elections, and assist human rights groups in order to prevent Haiti from breaching international peace.

The WikiLeaks Cables

Recent diplomatic cables supplied by WikiLeaks, however, provide some evidence that MINUSTAH has been acting to protect the security interests of the U.S. government and the political ambitions of Brazil. According to a March 2008 U.S. State Department cable, the Brazilian state, which supplies the largest contingent of U.N. forces, “has stayed the course as leader of MINUSTAH in Haiti despite a lack of domestic support for the PKO [peacekeeping operation]. The MRE [Ministry of External Relations] has remained committed to the initiative because it believes that the operation serves FM [Foreign Minister] Amorim’s obsessive international goal of qualifying Brazil for a seat on the UN Security Council.”[19] Even though the Brazilian population supports a withdrawal of its forces from MINUSTAH, then, the country’s government has not withdrawn its troops due to its ambitions of pleasing the U.N. and obtaining elusive Security Council membership.

In a 2008 cable, former U.S. Ambassador to Haiti Janet Sanderson emphasizes that MINUSTAH “is an indispensable tool in realizing core USG [U.S. government] policy interests in Haiti… A premature departure of MINUSTAH would leave the Preval [sic] government or his successor vulnerable to… resurgent populist and anti-market economy forces – reversing gains of the last two years… It is a financial and regional security bargain for the USG.”[20] Thus, Sanderson sees MINUSTAH as protecting U.S. interests by preventing social and political movements from thwarting neoliberal policies and the post-earthquake influx of corporations in the country, which are working on a variety of development schemes on the island.

A 2006 cable also relates that policymakers from both the U.N. and the U.S. held a meeting concerning how the “Aristide [m]ovement [m]ust [b]e [s]topped.”[21] Edmond Mulet, Head of Mission of MINUSTAH at the time, “urged US [sic] legal action against [forcibly exiled president] Aristide to prevent [him] from gaining more traction with the Haitian population and returning to Haiti.”[22] These cables demonstrate that the U.S. government sees the poor pro-Fanmi Lavalas majority as “resurgent populist and anti-market economy forces” that “must be stopped,” and is prepared to use MINUSTAH to suppress their democratic participation.[23] Haiti’s poor majority has been actively involved in politics since the advent of the Fanmi Lavalas party, which has strenuously worked against the neoliberal policies of the time to achieve economic and social reforms.[24] Many poor Haitians are now engaging in so-called “resurgent populist and anti-market economy” politics via peaceful protest against the presence of MINUSTAH and in support of reforms such as an increase in the minimum wage.[25]

In the course of acting in the interests of the U.S. by thwarting these popular “forces,” MINUSTAH has actively suppressed democracy. As Mark Schuller, an anthropologist specializing in the impact of international development aid, nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), and MINUSTAH on Haitian social and political life put it, MINUSTAH comprises the

enforcers… Many say that they are responsible for keeping Haiti a ‘leta restavek’ – a child servant state, owned by the international community. To many Haitian commentators, the Préval government willingly gave up control [to MINUSTAH and other international bodies] in exchange for its continued survival. The protesters MINUSTAH suppressed could have destabilized Préval [26]

and his small base of support. The mission has blocked both electoral democracy and popular protest in order to prevent these so-called “populist and anti-market economy forces” from gaining political power.

Party-Banning, Eleksyon Zombi,[27] and Other Examples of Electoral Fraud

One of MINUSTAH’s most important mandates was to carry out the 2010 presidential and general elections “through the provision of technical, logistical, and administrative assistance as well as providing continued security.”[28] There were, however, several major problems with the elections, which were funded by both the U.S. and the U.N.[29] Most notably, over twelve parties were banned, including Fanmi Lavalas, Haiti’s most popular party and one supported largely by the poor.[30]

The notoriously venal Haitian Provisional Electoral Council (CEP) originally banned Fanmi Lavalas in February 2009, claiming it could not “verify Aristide’s signature, sent while he was still in forced exile in South Africa, as head of the party.”[31] A leaked U.S. Embassy cable dating back to 2009 revealed the U.S. government’s opinion that the CEP had thus “emasculated the opposition,” “almost certainly in conjunction with President Preval [sic].”[32] Completely revoking the majority party’s right to compete in an election on such a technicality was indeed “emasculating,” removing all power held by the largely poor opposition to René Préval’s government (1996-2001 and 2006-2011). Despite U.S. Ambassador to Haiti Kenneth H. Merten’s fear that the party would later appear to be “a martyr and Haitians [would]… believe (correctly) that Preval [sic] is manipulating the election,” U.S. government officials strongly encouraged the continuation of the fraudulent election.[33] The Fanmi Lavalas party was once again banned in the 2010 elections. MINUSTAH was largely instrumental in the execution of the elections through logistical and security support, as specified in its mandate. The U.N. Mission thus worked against the political participation of the poor majority by trying to support these elections.

Other serious electoral problems abounded: long lines, incomplete voter registries, fraud, and violence, along with the general lack of an “infrastructure for holding a fair and representative vote.”[34] A practice called eleksyon zombi in Haitian Creole also persisted, in which surviving citizens’ names were absent from the registries, while those of neighbors who died in the 2010 earthquake were used to file fraudulent ballots.[35] Perhaps partially due to the ban on the Lavalas party, the voter turnout for the election, which was twenty-three percent, was the lowest in the Western hemisphere for over sixty years.[36] Because of this fraud and lack of infrastructure, the majority of candidates called for the annulment of the election. Soon after, Edmond Mulet, Head of Mission at MINUSTAH during the election, personally called two candidates telling them to withdraw these requests because they were in the lead.[37] They followed his advice, knowing that Mulet, as head of the body running the elections, would know the results. Mulet would see to it that the election results were exactly as the authorities wanted them; several months later, President Michel Martelly won the run-off election. Both Mulet’s dispensing of insider tips and the logistical support of the rank-and-file peacekeepers helped to push the fraudulent elections through as anticipated. As the body charged with logistical and security-related support for the election, the Mission helped to systematically deny electoral democracy to the people of Haiti, forcing the country to elect a pro-U.S/U.N. candidate and playing a major role in keeping the country as a leta restavek.

Suppressing Protest

In addition to the suppression of electoral democracy, well-known journalists and academics have denounced MINUSTAH for a number of incidents of violent repression of peaceful demonstrations. According to anthropologist Mark Schuller,

they clamp down on citizen mobilization, most egregiously in 2009 during the campaign to increase Haiti’s minimum wage. They shot tear gas numerous times, preventing people from protesting and crippling the state university (especially the human sciences school). They also shot at the funeral for Aristide supporter Father [Gérard] Jean-Juste.[38]

This behavior is part of a clear pattern of suppressing protest among Haitians and preventing political organization, especially among pro-Aristide activists. During another peaceful demonstration against MINUSTAH’s renewed mandate, MINUSTAH peacekeepers “threatened [protesters] at gunpoint… Shots were fired, and a UN vehicle drove into the crowd and pushed several protesters and an international journalist into a ditch.”[39] At another protest, “MINUSTAH troops with riot shields arrived to reinforce the police, firing warning shots and dispersing the protesters.”[40] This suppression of social movements complements MINUSTAH’s suppression of electoral democracy. The same cross-section of poor Haitians who form the majority of the Fanmi Lavalas party, and of the country as a whole, had organized in support of the removal of MINUSTAH, supported Father Jean-Juste, and fought for an increase the minimum wage. These are the “populist and anti-market forces” about which the U.S. State Department had occasion to speak.

Haitian Social Movements Continue Their Fight

Contrary to its mandate to protect the human rights of the Haitian people and promote democracy, MINUSTAH has suppressed democracy both by supporting fraudulent elections and by repressing peaceful protests. In each of these instances, the mission has taken on the role of “enforcers,” holding the Haitian people in check and helping to keep Haiti as a leta restavek. As analyst Beverly Bell asserts, however, “the country’s highly organized grassroots movement has never given up the battle its enslaved ancestors began…The mobilizations, protests, and advocacy have brought down dictators…and kept the population from ever fitting quietly into anyone else’s plans for them.”[41] Haitians, especially the poor majority, have been fighting for economic and social democracy and for the autonomy to rebuild their nation. To achieve these goals would require unseating both MINUSTAH and the interests of the U.S., as the WikiLeaks cables demonstrate. Haitians are protesting in large part because of this systematic suppression of their nation’s right to self-determination. The “fire” to which President Martelly refers had been raging years before the recent allegations of rape and other abuses, and it will not be doused until Haitians find justice in their own country and not just in their distant memory.

Source: AP

This analysis was prepared by COHA Research Associate Courtney Frantz.

References for this article can be found here.

To read more about Haiti, click here.

Please accept this article as a free contribution from COHA, but if re-posting, please afford authorial and institutional attribution.

Exclusive rights can be negotiated.

Sunday, October 2, 2011

Don't Occupy Haiti - Occupy Wall Street

NYTimes @6:50pm:
"After allowing them onto the bridge, the police cut off and arrested dozens of Occupy Wall Street demonstrators."

NYTimes @7:19pm:
"In a tense showdown over the East River, police arrested hundreds of Occupy Wall Street demonstrators after they marched onto the bridge's Brooklyn-bound roadway."
People are hopeful again. How great it is to see and hear the determination in young people's voices and hearts again. Many have been feeling such bitter disillusionment with the Obama White House and its continuing perpetuation of "the mindset that got us into Iraq."

Its inspiring to witness the unity, determination and courage of the people occupying Wall Street for over two weeks now. Yesterday was a banner day even though the atmosphere got chilly when, unfortunately, when more than 700 protesters were entrapped and arrested by the NYPD for marching peacefully across the Brooklyn bridge.

Wow! It must be an eye-opener for some to witness the United State's "newspaper of record" resorting to editing its content to represent the views of the Oligarchs who pull their puppet strings. Those who are experienced in fighting for social justice are acquainted with the distortions, misinformation, and lies of the U.S. mainstream media; particularly of the NY Times.

This is what democracy looks like.

What wonderful show of solidarity that so many folks organized protests and occupations all over America in support of the Occupy Wall Street movement.



Haitians plan to march across the Brooklyn bridge (again!)," and will join in solidarity with the Occupy Wall Street movement.
Don't Occupy Haiti! Occupy Wall Street! New York's Haitian community will march across the Brooklyn Bridge to "kole zepòl" (join shoulders) with the Occupy Wall Street demonstrators on Friday, Oct. 7. We will rally in Cadman Plaza at 4 p.m. and then cross the Bridge at 5 p.m. Initiated by Fanmi Lavalas (NY), International Support Haiti Network (ISHN) and KAKOLA among others. For more information, call 718.421.0162.
The great Uruguayan writer and journalist Eduardo Galeano, who wrote the classic, "The Open Veins of Latin America" is a strong supporter of the continuing Haitian struggle for freedom. He presented a speech on Tuesday September 27, 2011 at the National Library in Montevideo on a panel debate on “Haiti and Latin America.” His speech is entitled: "Haiti, Occupied Country."
It is worth repeating it once again, so that the deaf can hear:

Haiti was the founding country of the independence of [the] America[s] and the first one that defeated slavery in the world.

It deserves much more than the fame sprung from its misfortunes.

At present, the armies from several countries, including mine, are occupying Haiti.

How is this military invasion justified? By alleging that Haiti endangers the international security.

Nothing more.

Throughout the nineteenth century, Haiti’s example was a threat to the security of countries that still continued practicing slavery.
Galeano could have been referring to economic slavery, in light of the global economic crisis that has resulted from the actions of Wall Street and the banksters. Haiti, says Galeano, is not "known for its historical feats in the war against slavery and colonial oppression." The speech is a strong affirmation of Haiti's influential and positive historical role on the world stage before the imperialist interventions and occupations. He laments that so much of the coverage of Haiti is dominated by reports on disasters. Galeano notes the talent of Haiti's artists and their propensity for "transforming garbage into beauty."

Haitians know well the daily struggle to transcend a punishing poverty, physical misery, mental pain, anger and despair over not having a real democracy. Everyone in the world is waking up to this fact. We don't have a representative government. We feel abandoned and voiceless. This was the situation even before the earthquake calamity.

Haiti after the Earthquake Disaster

Haitian writer Edwidge Danticat expressed the fighting spirit of Haitians who fought the regime of Francois "Papa Doc" Duvalier during the Duvalier regime in her new book, "Create Dangerously." She tells the story of "Marcel Numa and Louis Drouin were patriots who died so that other Haitians could live. They were also immigrants, like me. Yet, they had abandoned comfortable lives in the United States and sacrificed themselves for the homeland."

What will break the fear that grips the over 600,000 Haitians still living on the ground in leaky and foul tents and tarps in Port-au-Prince? Haitians must not succumb to the spiritual death of indifference, fatality and depression as some did during the sick Duvalier dictatorship.

Reportedly, during the dictatorship of Francois Duvalier, U.S. sent marines to stop an attempt to topple Duvalier by Cubans and Haitians of the diaspora. At the present time, the dictator's son, who is accused of "crimes against humanity" and corruption is back in Haiti. It is a blow to justice that this criminal has not been tried and convicted for his crimes. Martelly has advocated absolution for this man. He has welcomed the same Duvalierist elements who terrified the Haitian population to join his government and be his advisors.

The bloody dictatorship of the Duvaliers was a 30 year ordeal supported by the U.S. - "the most powerful nation in the world." The usual suspects, those who conspired for regime change in Haiti are continuing to torture the Haitian population -- U.S., France and Canada, along with their coalition of the UN-willing. For background on their intervention in 2004, read the Ottawa Initiative and Max Blumenthal's "The Other Regime Change.

Lead by the U.S. supported the fraudulent and exclusionary "selection" earlier this year of Michel "Sweet Mickey" Martelly. Martelly is a Compas performer and Duvalier supporter. The Fanmi Lavalas political party, Haiti's most popular party, has been barred from the last two elections. Martelly has connections to the brutal military coup/junta leader Raoul Cedras, a U.S. protege sent into dictator retirement with a golden U.S. taxpayer parachute. Martelly reportedly is nicknamed for a former military junta leader, Colonel Michel "Sweet Mickey" Francois. See Mother Jones story: More from the Exile Files - Despots of the Caribbean and Club Panama.

Too bad the U.S. is so intent on "calling the shots in Haiti," and is consistently opposed to what the people are in desperate need of: a decent roof over their heads, development, infrastructure (education, social justice, security, food security...), jobs, health, well-being, rebuilding and most importantly, a real democracy.

Why is Haiti, -- the so-called "poorest nation in the Western Hemisphere" used as a pawn in U.S. foreign policy? Why are opportunists like Bill Clinton and George Bush given "carte blanche" to polish up their "legacies" to the detriment of Haiti's majority population? Should we laugh or cry when we read that a company that Clinton is involved with is now selling cholera insurance? Are you kidding me?

It's really incredulous. This item comes from Ezili Dantò's listserve:
"Just when you think Clinton can't get any more grotesque in Haiti. This comes along. Clinton Foundation makes no investment in clean portable water and sanitation plants but in cholera insurance?
The epidemic is a business opportunity to increase insurance market share in Haiti? Our death means dollars to the fake humanitarians renting homes from the Oligarchy that have moved to Florida, Montreal and Paris while collecting high Haiti rents from the NGOs who've fundraised on our people's death and misery.
[Now] "Swiss Re and its Clinton Global Initiative (CGI) partners have introduced a new programme to provide Haiti’s female entrepreneurs with rapid insurance payments for income lost by their micro-businesses as a result of cholera."
Evidently, the uses of Haiti by the U.S. are first and foremost for the greed and profit of the multinational profiteers who practice "disaster capitalism" all over the world. Secondly, from what can be gleaned from the historical record and readily observed from the poisoning of Haiti's water system with cholera by the proxy UN occupying force, the uses of Haiti include support for those who seek to marginalize and "depopulate" Haiti (genocide). Thirdly, they wish to enforce imperialist neocolonial ideologies articulated by their right-wing "think tanks" such as The Heritage Foundation - an organization whose plan for the militarization of aid to Haiti was implemented by the Obama administration after the Haiti quake disaster.

Why such a consuming interest in controlling Haiti by the Heritage Foundation? What could these "U.S. policy makers" possibly want of a country that they've seen as impoverished and leaderless like Haiti? Given that the fifth largest, most self-contained and one of the most expensive U.S. embassies in the world was built in Haiti, one could ask the same question of the U.S. government.

By the way, no need to wonder who's "heritage" The Heritage Foundation and their facilitators in the Obama regime support. During Obama's big speech on jobs last month, he didn't see fit to mention that Detroit has an over 50% unemployment rate. Rep. John Conyers finds the omission reprehensible. Is it any wonder that Conyers got so ticked-off that he spoke out against Obama's economic policies and revealed that it was Obama who put Social Security cuts on the table in the fake partisan posturing during the debt ceiling debate. Prof. Eric Dyson has noted that Obama is "willing to sacrifice the interest of the African-Americans in deference to a conception of universalism because it won't offend white people." During the same interview, Dyson urges Obama to: "Go to Detroit... show you're down with the blackest city in America!" Prof. Cornel West and Tavis Smiley - on Obama: "Many of us are exploring other possibilities in the coming elections."

Obama had many supporters in the African diaspora during his campaign in 2008. He fooled a lot of people and maybe some in the African diaspora still support him. Why?

In reality, Obama has not done anything positive for Haiti, except for "overseeing" the further enslavement and occupation of Haiti. And clearly, appointing Bill Clinton and his Boo as head of Haiti relief must have been some kind of inside joke - see the investigative report on the shoddy shelters that Clinton built. And what are we to make of the other Clinton, Hillary and her arm-twisting to get her pick Martelly placed as a figurehead of the nation of Haiti?

Haiti is the scene of an international crime. Historically, Haiti has been the testing ground for neoliberal, imperialist, capitalist ideologies before they are perpetrated on the rest of the world by the agents of imperialism -- the IMF, the world bank/IDB, WTO, USAID, and the nation of NGOs.

Of course, the massacres, killings, rapes, child molestations and impunity perpetuated by the UN military forces are what is reserved for so-called developing countries by these proxy occupiers. They clearly understand that they will not be held fully responsible for any heinous crime they commit while in Haiti.

Haiti may as well be at war. Even though Haiti was not allegedly attacked by "box cutter wielding Muslims," Haiti lost more people than the U.S. lost in what's been called the worst act of terrorism committed on U.S. soil. There have been more Haitian "casualties of war" than there have been U.S. soldiers killed in both Iraq and Afghanistan. There is something very wrong when in 2010 more U.S. soldiers died from suicide than were killed in combat.

The conservative scientific journal The Lancet projects that 800,000 Haitians will eventually be infected with cholera and 11,000 will die. The UN cannot show just cause for why the Nepalese military who they carelessly stationed in Haiti are still there -- holed up in their barracks eating up the over 800 million budgeted for the UN occupation. The UN has their own water filtration systems inside their fortresses, which are more often than not ringed buttressed by walls and barbed wire. The UN has not thought to share these systems with the Haitian population they've infected with cholera.

It should be clear by now, from the revelations contained in the Haiti Wikileaks cables and other reports on the situation in Haiti by investigative journalist, researchers, scientists and educators, that the U.S. proxy occupation of Haiti by the UN agents of empire, MINUSTAH has absolutely nothing to do with upholding real democracy, the security of the people. The UN is in Haiti for the security of the foreigners, so it will not alter its mission and become some kind of "peacemaker" and "builder" of coalitions in solidarity with the Haitian people and in support of the national interests of Haiti, or its constitution.

Is it a wonder that Haitians want these criminals, occupiers, killers, rapists and child molesters to leave Haiti and go "stabilize" in their own countries, the sooner, the better?

We all know the majority of the world's oligarchs have no concern about the poor, especially the black and poor of this world. And for some racists, Haiti is as black, dirty and poor as a human being can get, outside of "sub-Saharan" Africa.

Look at the way the world's population showed such love and support for Haiti during the earthquake crisis! Or even how the world responds so generously and kindly during any human disaster, in the world. Dehumanization and exploitation of Haitians must stop.

What can we do, who value human life and who want the mean spirited, small minded culture, which seems to dominate the world to stop? After all, we are the majority. We are world. We are the 99%. We occupy the earth, so must our mindset! We must defeat the mean spirited imperialist who are of a colonialist greed-mongering mindset. They cannot be allowed to impose their sick predatory thinking on the rest of us.

Haiti deserves solidarity, not the demonization of its culture, its people, and disregard for its great role in world history. There must come a day when Haiti's greatness will be self-evident and they will just have to shut up and applaud "this great little nation!" That day will come when we all unite to put people above profit, and commit to uphold peace and freedom for all.

This week marked the 20th anniversary of the first U.S. backed coup against Jean-Bertrand Aristide in 1990. Haiti: Harvest of Hope.

May Haiti forever remain a "pest" to those who try to enslave her and may "Haitianism" spread to the four corners of the Earth. Thank Good Haiti stands for the triumph of good over evil.

Mesi Papa Desalin! - English

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