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Boycott Money and Save Your Soul - Launching the Goodwill Revolution Not just a book but an invitation to join the Goodwill
Revolution against an unfair, unjust and deceptive system that
keeps the world poor and without hope. Find out how you can do this,
quit the rat race, and achieve a happier more meaningful life for
yourself and others through goodwill to all
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April 2009 UNDILUTED Vol 15 UNDILUTEDThe Audacity of HopelessnessJamaica's famous journalist, John Maxwell exposes the exploitation and continued victimization of Haiti . by
JOHN MAXWELL, Jamaican Observer, Sunday, April 05, 2009 Hold
on tight to your screams! Ban
Ki Moon, secretary general of the United Nations, an otherwise excellent
human being I am sure, is among those, like the burbling boobies of the
World Bank and other international financial agencies (IFA), who believe
that what ails Haiti is simply a case of distorted economic development
and that there is a simple formula to fix things. Free zone development
and regular voting will be sure-fire cures. The
poorest country in the Western hemisphere got that way, according to an
eminent gaggle of politicians and private sector experts, by native
mismanagement and the incompetence of the black Haitian population and its
leaders. There
are also some people who believe that women who are raped are at least
partially responsible for their own misfortunes and there are, I am sure,
people who will tell you with absolute certainty that Elisabeth Fritzl
must have in some way contributed to her father's delinquency. Hold
on tight to your screams! In
the New York Times last week Ban Ki Moon noted: "Yes, Last
August the secretary general was full of hope: "The time has come to
rebuild the institutions that have been destroyed by years of neglect,
corruption and violence, to strengthen them so that the State is able to
deliver the services that the people need." In
his latest visit Ban said: "It is easy to visit ".
dramatically expanding the country's export zones, so that a new
generation of textile firms can invest and do business in one place. By
creating a market sufficiently large to generate economies of scale, they
can drive down production costs and, once a certain threshold is crossed,
spark potentially explosive growth constrained only by the size of the
labour pool. "That
may seem ambitious in a country of nine million people, where 80 per cent
of the population lives on less than $2 a day and half of the food is
imported." Can anyone really be so ill-informed? Can anyone believe
that a country of nine million poverty-stricken people living on less than
$2 a day and importing half their food can generate thriving markets for
anything but subsistence production? Ban Ki Moon is our new Dr Pangloss:
All is for the best in this best of all possible worlds. Hold
on tight to your screams! "It
is easy to visit The
only problem is that there are people who want Haitians to remain in the
misery they have been made to embrace. The facile American journalistic
explanations for The
Haitians were always presumptuous: two hundred years ago they fought above
their weight and won, abolishing slavery, destroying France's ambitions in
the New World, doubling the size of the USA and above all, being the first
nation anywhere to enshrine the rights of man, woman and child, the
fundamental universal rights of human beings, in their constitution. The
Americans and the French went about solving the Haitian problem in a very
businesslike way. The Haitians had sugar to sell, but their only real
market was the Hold
on tight to your screams! The
solution guaranteed the Haitians would starve anyway, committing
themselves to pay a ransom equivalent to US$120 billion to the French,
buying their freedom in cash having bought it in blood, pauperising
themselves for another century. When they defaulted - as they had to - the
Americans and their accomplices intervened, seizing the Haitian Treasury
and Customs services, abolishing the Haitian constitution, dive-bombing
the Haitian peasants when they rose to assert their rights, stealing
Haitian land, cutting down Haitian forests to plant sisal, installing a
fascist army to maintain the rule of a minority - light-skinned elite who
despised the black Haitians upon whom they battened and fed. They
had great plans, the elite and their foreign friends. They were going to
revolutionise pig-rearing in Then,
when the Haitians were once again pauperised, the experts and their elite
allies introduced the nearest thing to slavery known to this century -
free zones, where Haitians laboured for the price of less than one
Jamaican patty a day. The women were injected with drugs which stopped
their monthly periods so they wouldn't need time off to have babies. They
were prohibited from joining unions. Hold
on tight to your screams! This
is the new dispensation of Mr Ban Ki Moon and of Mr Collier, of Mr
Zoellick, of the World Bank and the IDB, of Mr Kofi Annan and Mr Colin
Powell, of Mr Patterson and Mr Manning. It
will be led by a most unsavoury collection of those George Soros describes
as gangster capitalists, who paid for the terror that has murdered
thousands, driven thousands more into exile, used rape as an instrument of
political enforcement and twice destroyed the Haitians' desperate attempts
to recover their rights - the rights they were the first in the world to
proclaim, a century before the UN, that every human being is entitled to
the same rights and privileges as every other. The
security situation is fixed, according to Mr Ban Ki Moon. Gangs of
convicted and unconvicted murderers and rapists in concert with so-called
UN peacekeepers and child molesters will again control Haiti in the
interests of the largely expatriate elite, the market makers whose older
brothers have brought the world to the brink of moral and financial
disaster, people with the divine right to be rich and to suck the blood of
the poor. Hold
on tight to your screams!
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