ISRAEL TRUTH TIMES

A blog dedicated to investigating events as they occur in Judea and Samaria, in Israel and in the world, and as they relate to global powers and/or to the Israeli government, public figures, etc. It is dedicated to uncovering the truth behind the headlines; and in so doing, it strives to do its part in saving Judea and Samaria, and by extension, Israel and the Jewish People, from utter destruction at the hands of its many external and internal enemies.
Showing posts with label Haiti. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Haiti. Show all posts

Friday, February 19, 2010

No end to cynicism, is there? See previous posts on Haiti for reference.




UN appeals to members for $1.5 bn Haiti aid

Fri, 19 Feb 2010 16:33:57 GMT
The United Nations has made a record appeal of about USD 1.5 billion to help Haitian whose country and livelihood have been ruined by last month's strong earthquake.

The international organization intends to use the self-described "largest-ever humanitarian appeal'' to provide aid for more than 3 million Haitians affected by the large-scale quake.

The UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and his special envoy to Haiti, former US President Bill Clinton, made the appeal on Thursday at a meeting with diplomats from UN member states.

"Before last month's disaster, we had a plan for Haiti's long-term development and reconstruction," Ban said, according to The Los Angeles Times.

"Our challenge today is to reformulate that plan to help Haitians build back better."

The new appeal also seeks funding to revive agriculture, provide emergency telecommunications and manage makeshift camps.

The January 12 quake killed more than 200,000 people and left over one million homeless.

According to the UN, at least two million Haitians are currently in dire need of food.

RB/MB

Sunday, February 7, 2010

Speaking about "ACTS OF GOD". Of course, God is involved in these devastating tragedies and the human toll. But don't you start to see a pattern here too? Government, i.e. NWO negligence, outright criminality, followed by rapacious grabbing of natural resources, prime real estate; ethnic cleansing. Draw your own conclusions.

 http://thisistheendoftheworldasweknowit.com/archives/massive-reserves-of-gold-and-oil-in-haiti

The great tragedy of the 7.0 earthquake that essentially destroyed the nation of Haiti has many wondering if that nation can ever recover.  In fact, as you read this Haiti continues to be a disaster zone of unprecedented magnitude.  Lots of money has been raised by celebrities, but victims of the earthquake in Haiti are still absolutely desperate for food and water.  
But even as Haiti struggles to recover from the greatest disaster in that nation's history, information is coming to light that the key to a brighter future for the Haitians may have been lying under their feet all this time.  It turns out that there are massive reserves of gold and oil in Haiti.  These abundant natural resources could be used to rebuild Haiti and give those people an incredibly bright future - if someone else does not sweep in and steal those resources first.
I'll have to admit when I first heard about oil in Haiti I was quite skeptical.
After all, why wouldn't we have heard about it by now if they had it?
Well, the reality is that there are vast untapped oil reserves in many areas of the globe, and Haiti's have not been developed due to the violence and political instability that have ravaged that nation for decades.  Not to mention the fact that Haiti does not possess the technical expertise to exploit those resources.
But apparently they do exist.
According to a report in the French newspaper Le Post, scientists Daniel and Ginette Mathurin say that  Haiti's oil reserves are larger than those of Venezuela.
In fact, Daniel Mathurin says that Haiti's oil reserves are so much larger that they are not even worth comparing....
"An Olympic pool compared to a glass of water that is the comparison to show the importance of oil Haitian compared to those of Venezuela."
That is an amazing statement considering the fact that Venezuela is one of the world's major oil producers.
But Daniel and Ginette Mathurin are not the only ones making these claims about oil in Haiti.
In a paper dated March 27, 2004, Dr. Georges Michel detailed the history of oil discoveries in Haiti and explained why they have not been exploited yet.
According to Michel, the big oil companies know about the massive reserves of oil in Haiti but in the 50s and 60s there was almost too much oil to go around so they decided that those reserves were not needed at the time and that they would be kept in reserve until later....
[The attitude of these big multinational oil companies was] "We shall keep the Haitian deposits and other such layers of deposits in reserve for the 21st century when the Middle Eastern jackpot are depleted."
In fact, it was apparently known as far back as 1908 that Haiti has substantial reserves of oil.
But those poor people have been kept in abject poverty all this time when they could have been benefiting from all of this oil.
Not only that, but Haiti also apparently possesses a great deal of gold as well.
A United Nations study in the 70s indicated Haiti could be littered with gold and copper deposits.  However, the same political violence and recurring coups that have kept the oil in Haiti from being exploited have also kept the gold from being mined.
So how much gold does Haiti have?  Well, the former president of Dominican Petroleum Refinery recently said that Haiti has vast untapped reserves of gold and iridium (a little known and rare mineral that is vital for the construction of spacecraft) and that these resources should be used to pay off the Haitian foreign debt.
And he is not alone in his assessment.
Back in 2007 a geologist with 27 years of experience hunting for gold was asked what he thought the chances of discovering huge amounts of gold in Haiti were.  This is how he responded....
"I don't think there's a question of whether there's a good deposit here. It's a question of whether we can develop it here in Haiti."
In fact, analysts are predicting "a stampede into Haiti" if the existence of large gold deposits there can be confirmed.
So one of poorest nations in the world turns out to be just brimming with oil and gold....
Do you think that those resources will be used to rebuild Haiti and to give those people a truly bright future?
Don't count on it.
In fact, now that Haiti has essentially been destroyed, troops are pouring in and politicians are already talking about starting business ventures in the country.  To many in Washington, Haiti's natural resources are considered "strategic reserves" of the United States.
You see, for decades Haiti has been viewed by many as being essentially "owned" by the United States.  The U.S. government has done little to actually help the nation of Haiti get on the right path, but they maintain a huge presence there.  In fact,  the U.S. constructed its fifth largest embassy in the world in the nation of Haiti.
But perhaps that is just a coincidence.
The key will be to watch what happens to Haiti's natural resources as the rebuilding of that nation proceeds.
Will all of the gold and oil be used to help the people of Haiti, or will the gold and oil be exploited by ruthless foreigners?
The world will be watching.

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wln_iq5bc8k


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=epwpnMztkM0


Go to:

http://www.brasschecktv.com/page/79.html

for the last video of the series - not on YouTube



No end to the cynicism:

Bush and Clinton:" JUST SEND CASH". ( not in this video)


Take a look at these few articles and clips I collected during the Haiti tragedy.

guardian.co.uk home
  • US accused of annexing airport as squabbling hinders aid effort in Haiti
Priority landing for Americans forces flights carrying emergency supplies to divert to Dominican Republic
  • police officer Haiti
A police officer disperses people in Port-au-Prince. Photograph: Ramon Espinosa/AP
The US military's takeover of emergency operations in Haiti has triggered a diplomatic row with countries and aid agencies furious at having flights redirected.
Brazil and France lodged an official ­protest with Washington after US military aircraft were given priority at Port-au-Prince's congested airport, forcing many non-US flights to divert to the Dominican Republic.
Brasilia warned it would not ­relinquish command of United Nations forces in Haiti and Paris complained the airport had become a US "annexe", exposing a brewing power struggle amid the global relief effort. The Red Cross and Médecins Sans Frontières also complained about diverted flights.
The row prompted Haiti's president, René Préval, to call for calm. "This is an extremely difficult situation," he told AP. "We must keep our cool to co-ordinate and not throw accusations at each other."
The squabbling came amid signs that aid was reaching some of the hundreds of thousands of people in desperate need of water, food and medicine six days after a magnitude 7 earthquake levelled the capital, killing more than 100,000, according to Haitian authorities.
The UN was feeding 40,000 and hoped to increase that to 1 million within a fortnight, said the secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, as he boarded a flight for Port-au-Prince today.
"I'm going there with a very heavy heart. The damage, destruction, loss of life is just overwhelming." The challenge was to co-ordinate relief efforts, he said. "We should not waste a single item, a ­single dollar, just to wait in a warehouse."
The plight of 80 elderly people at a partially collapsed municipal hospice just a mile from the airport, now a huge aid hub, showed the desperate need. The body of a dead 70-year-old man rotted on a mattress, nearly indistinguishable from the exhausted, hungry and thirsty people around him. "Others won't live until tonight," an administrator, Jean Emmanuel, told the Associated Press.
The Haitian government has established 14 food distribution points and aid groups have opened five emergency health centres. Water-purification units – a priority to avert disease and dehydration – were arriving.
But with aftershocks jolting the ruins, bloated bodies in the street and severe shortages of water and food many survivors had had enough: an exodus trekked on foot out of the city to rural areas.
The security situation worsened, with some looters fighting with rocks and clubs for rice, clothing and other goods scavenged from debris. In places the embryonic aid machine did not even try to organise distribution. Aid workers tossed out food packets to crowds and US helicopters took off as soon as they offloaded supplies, prompting scrambles in which the fittest and strongest prevailed.
"They are not identifying the people who need the water. The sick and the old have no chance," Estime Pierre Deny, ­hoping to fill a plastic container with water amid a scrum of people, told Reuters.
Frustration over aid bottlenecks among donors became tinged by national rivalry as it became clear the US was taking ownership of the crisis. A vanguard of more than 1,000 US troops was on the ground and 12,000 were expected in the region by Monday, including marines aboard the aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson which anchored offshore as a "floating airport".
The Haitian government, paralysed by the destruction of the presidential palace and ministries, signed a memorandum of understanding formally transferring control of Toussaint L'Ouverture airport to the US. Hillary Clinton, the US secretary of state, flew in on Saturday and met Préval near the airport. "We will be here today, tomorrow and for the time ahead," she said.
The UN mission, which had a 9,000-strong peacekeeping force in Haiti before the quake, seemed too stunned by its own losses to take control. Its dead include its Tunisian head, Hedi Annabi, his Brazilian deputy, Luiz Carlos da Costa, and the acting police commissioner, Doug Coates, a Canadian.
Flights seeking permission to land continuously circle the airport, which is small, damaged and with a single runway, rankling several governments and aid agencies. "There are 200 flights going in and out every day, which is an incredible amount for a country like Haiti," Jarry Emmanuel, air logistics officer for the UN's World Food Programme, told the New York Times. "But most of those flights are for the United States military. Their priorities are to secure the country. Ours are to feed. We have got to get those priorities in sync."
France, which as the former ­colonial power expects a prominent role, ­protested when an emergency field hospital was turned back. The foreign minister, Bernard Kouchner, said the airport was not for the international community but "an annexe of Washington", according to France's ambassador to Haiti, Didier Le Bret.
Brazil, which saw its leadership of the UN peacekeeping mission as a calling card of its burgeoning influence, was also indignant when three flights were not allowed to land. The foreign ministry reportedly asked Clinton to grant Brazil priority over chartered flights. Nelson Jobim, the defence minister, said Brazil would not relinquish command duties and suggested it, not Washington, would continue to lead UN forces. Analysts said it was vital command issues be resolved.
The Red Cross and Médecins Sans Frontières complained about flights with medical staff and equipment which were re-directed to the neighbouring Dominican Republic. "We are all going crazy," said Nan Buzard, of the American Red Cross.
The Obama administration has enlisted former presidents George Bush and Bill Clinton to spearhead relief efforts.

Brasscheck: ABOUT THE UN , THE US, AND HAITI, coup
Slavery in Haiti
, videos
Chavez: US occupying Haiti under the guise of humanitarian aid
Jan. 18, 2010
JPost.com Staff , THE JERUSALEM POST
The US is occupying Haiti under the guise of sending aid to the earthquake-stricken population, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said during his weekly television show on Sunday night, according to a Reuters report.
The news agency quoted Venezuela's leader as saying that he had read that 3,000 US troops were being deployed to Haiti - "marines armed as if they were going to war."
Chavez reportedly stated that he had not seen any American soldiers aiding the Haitian people. "Are they looking for the injured? You don't see them. I haven't seen them. Where are they?" he asked.



THE FLU CASE

The Militarization of Emergency Aid to Haiti: Is it a Humanitarian Operation or an Invasion?

By Michel Chossudovsky
Global Research, January 15, 2010


Haiti has a longstanding history of US military intervention and occupation going back to the beginning of the 20th Century. US interventionism has contributed to the destruction of Haiti's national economy and the impoverishment of its population.
The devastating earthquake is presented to World public opinion as the sole cause of the country's predicament.
A country has been destroyed, its infrastructure demolished. Its people precipitated into abysmal poverty and despair.
Haiti's history, its colonial past have been erased.
The US military has come to the rescue of an impoverished Nation. What is its Mandate?
Is it a Humanitarian Operation or an Invasion?
The main actors in America's "humanitarian operation" are the Department of Defense, the State Department and the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID). (See USAID Speeches: On-The-Record Briefing on the Situation in Haiti, 01/13/10). USAID has also been entrusted in channelling food aid to Haiti, which is distributed by the World Food Program. (See USAID Press Release: USAID to Provide Emergency Food Aid for Haiti Earthquake Victims, January 13, 2010)
The military component of the US mission, however, tends to overshadow the civilian functions of rescuing a desperate and impoverished population. The overall humanitarian operation is not being led by civilian governmental agencies such as FEMA or USAID, but by the Pentagon.
The dominant decision making role has been entrusted to US Southern Command (SOUTHCOM).
A massive deployment of military hardware personnel is contemplated. The Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral Mike Mullen has confirmed that the US will be sending nine to ten thousand troops to Haiti, including 2000 marines. (American Forces Press Service, January 14, 2010)
Aircraft carrier, USS Carl Vinson and its complement of supporting ships has already arrived in Port au Prince. (January 15, 2010).  The  2,000-member Marine Amphibious Unit as well as and soldiers from the U.S. Army's 82nd Airborne division "are trained in a wide variety of missions including security and riot-control in addition to humanitarian tasks."  
In contrast to rescue and relief teams dispatched by various civilian teams and organizations, the humanitarian mandate of the US military is not clearly defined: 
“Marines are definitely warriors first, and that is what the world knows the Marines for,... [but] we’re equally as compassionate when we need to be, and this is a role that we’d like to show -- that compassionate warrior, reaching out with a helping hand for those who need it. We are very excited about this.” (Marines' Spokesman, Marines Embark on Haiti Response Mission, Army Forces Press Services, January 14, 2010)
While presidents Obama and Préval spoke on the phone, there were no reports of negotiations between the two governments regarding the entry and deployment of US troops on Haitian soil. The decision was taken and imposed unilaterally by Washington. The total lack of a functioning government in Haiti was used to legitimize, on humanitarian grounds, the sending in of a powerful military force, which has de facto taken over several governmental functions.  


TABLE 1
US Military Assets  to be Sent to Haiti. (according to official announcements)
The amphibious assault ship USS Bataan (LHD 5) and amphibious dock landing ships USS Fort McHenry (LSD 43) and USS Carter Hall (LSD 50).
A 2,000-member Marine Amphibious Unit from the 22nd Marine Expeditionary Unit and soldiers from the U.S. Army's 82nd Airborne division.  900 soldiers are slated to arrive in Haiti by January 15th.
Aircraft carrier, USS Carl Vinson and its complement of supporting ships. (arrived in Port au Prince on January 15, 2010):  USS Carl Vinson CVN 70
Several U.S. Coast Guard vessels and helicopters
 

USS Carl Vinson
The three amphibious ships will join aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson, guided-missile cruiser USS Normandy and guided-missile frigate USS Underwood.

USS Normandy


Leading Role of US Southern Command
US Southern Command (SOUTHCOM) with headquarters in Miami is the "lead agency" in Haiti. Its mandate as a regional military command is to carry out modern warfare. Its stated mission in Latin America and the Caribbean is  "to conduct military operations and promote security cooperation to achieve U.S. strategic objectives." (Our Mission - U.S. Southern Command (USSOUTHCOM) The commanding officers  are trained to oversee theater operations, military policing as well "counterinsurgency" in Latin America and the Caribbean, including the recent establishment of new US military bases in Colombia, within proximity of the Venezuelan border. 
General Douglas Fraser, commander of U.S. Southern Command has defined the Haiti emergency operation as a Command, Control, Communications operation (C3). US Southern Command is to oversee a massive deployment of military hardware, including several warships, an aircraft carrier, airborne combat divisions, etc:
"So we're focused on getting command and control and communications there so that we can really get a better understanding of what's going on. MINUSTAH [United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti], as their headquarters partially collapsed, lost a lot of their communication, and so we're looking to robust that communication, also.
We're also sending in assessment teams in conjunction with USAID, supporting their efforts, as well as putting in some of our own to support their efforts.
We're moving various ships that we had in the region -- they're small ships, Coast Guard cutters, destroyers -- in that direction, to provide whatever immediate assistance that we can on the ground.
We also have a U.S. Navy aircraft carrier, the USS Carl Vinson, moving in that direction. It was at sea off of Norfolk, and so it's going to take a couple of days for it to get there. We need to also just resupply it and give it the provisions it needs to support the effort as we look at Haiti. And then we're looking across the international agencies to figure out how we support their efforts as well as our efforts.
We also are looking at a large-deck amphibious ship with an embarked Marine Expeditionary Unit on it that will be a couple of days behind the USS Vinson.
And that gives us a broader range of capability to move supplies around, to have lift capability to help support the effort there also.
So bottom line to it is, we don't have a clear assessment right now of what the situation on the ground is, what the needs within Port-au-Prince are, how extensive the situation is.
We also, finally, have a team that's headed in to the airport. From my understanding -- because my deputy commander just happened to be in Haiti when this situation happened, on a previously scheduled visit. He has been to the airport. He says the runway is functional but the tower doesn't have communications capability. The passenger terminal -- has structural damage to it, so we don't know what the status of it is.
So we have a group going in to make sure we can gain and secure the airfield and operate from it, because that's one of those locations we think we're going to have a lot of the immediate effort from an international basis going into.
And then we're out conducting all the other assessments that you would consider appropriate as we go in and work this effort.
We're also coordinating on the ground with MINUSTAH, with the folks who are there. The commander for MINUSTAH happened to be in Miami when this situation happened, so he's right now traveling back through and should be arriving in Port-au-Prince any time now. So that will help us coordinate our efforts there also, because again, obviously the United Nations suffered a significant loss there with the collapse -- at least partial collapse of their headquarters.
So that's -- those are the initial efforts that we have ongoing And as we get the assessments of what's coming next, then we'll adjust as required.
The secretary of Defense, the president, have all stipulated that this is a significant effort, and we're corralling all the resources within the Department of Defense to support this effort." (Defense.gov News Transcript: DOD News Briefing with Gen. Fraser from the Pentagon, January 13, 2010)
A Heritage Foundation report summarizes the substance of America's mission in Haiti: "The earthquake has both humanitarian and U.S. national security implications [requiring] a rapid response that is not only bold but decisive, mobilizing U.S. military, governmental, and civilian capabilities for both a short-term rescue and relief effort and a longer-term recovery and reform program in Haiti." (James M. Roberts and Ray Walser, American Leadership Necessary to Assist Haiti After Devastating Earthquake, Heritage Foundation, January 14, 2010).
At the outset, the military mission will be involved in first aid and emergency as well as public security and police activities.  
US Air Force Controls the Airport

The US Air Force has taken over air traffic control functions as well as the management of Port au Prince airport. In other words, the US military regulates the flow of emergency aid and relief supplies which are being brought into the country in civilian planes. The US Air Force is not working under the instructions of Haitian Airport officials. These officials have been displaced. The airport is run by the US Military (Interview with Haitian Ambassador to the US R. Joseph, PBS News, January 15, 2010)
"The FAA's team is working with DOD combat controllers to improve the flow of air traffic moving in and out of the airport. The US Air Force reopened the airport on 14 January, and on 15 January its contingency response group was granted senior airfield authority ... Senior airfield authority enables the Air Force to prioritise, schedule and control the airspace at the airport, ..." (flightglobal.com, January 16, 2010, emphasis added)

The 1,000-bed U.S. Navy hospital ship, USNS Comfort, which includes more than 1,000 medical and support personnel has been sent to Haiti under the jurisdiction of Southern Command. (See  Navy hospital ship with 1,000 beds readies for Haiti quake relief, Digital Journal, January 14, 2010). There were, at the time of the Earthquake, some 7100 military personnel and over 2000 police, namely a foreign force of over 9000. In contrast, the international civilian personnel of MINUSTAH is less than 500. MINUSTAH Facts and Figures - United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti


TABLE 2

United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH)
Current strength (30 November 2009)

9,065 total uniformed personnel
7,031 troops
2,034 police
488 international civilian personnel
1,212 local civilian staff
Estimated combined SOUTHCOM and MINUSTAH forces; 19,095*
*Excluding commitments by France (unconfirmed) and Canada (confirmed 800 troops). The US, France and Canada were "partners" in the February 29, 2004 Coup d'État. 


Haiti has been under foreign military occupation since the US instigated February 2004 Coup d'Etat. The contingent of US forces under SOUTHCOM combined with those of MINUSTAH brings foreign military presence in Haiti to close to 20,000 in a country of 9 million people. In  comparison in Afghanistan, prior to Obama's military surge, combined US and NATO forces were of the order of 70,000 for a population of 28 million. In other words, on a per capita basis there will be more troops in Haiti than in Afghanistan.
Recent US Military Interventions in Haiti
There have been several US sponsored military interventions in recent history. In 1994, following three years of military rule, a force of  20,000 occupation troops and "peace-keepers" was sent to Haiti. The 1994 US military intervention "was not intended to restore democracy. Quite the contrary: it was carried out to prevent a popular insurrection against the military Junta and its neoliberal cohorts." (Michel Chossudovsky, The Destabilization of Haiti, Global Research, February 28, 2004)
US and allied troops remained in the country until 1999. The Haitian armed forces were disbanded and the US State Department hired a mercenary company DynCorp to provide "technical advice" in restructuring the Haitian National Police (HNP). (Ibid).
The February 2004 Coup d'État
In the months leading up to the 2004 Coup d'Etat, US special forces and the CIA were training death squadrons composed of the former tonton macoute of the Duvalier era. The Rebel paramilitary army crossed the border from the Dominican Republic in early February 2004. "It was a well armed, trained and equipped paramilitary unit integrated by former members of Le Front pour l'avancement et le progrès d'Haiti (FRAPH), the "plain clothes" death squadrons, involved in mass killings of civilians and political assassinations during the CIA sponsored 1991 military coup, which led to the overthrow of the democratically elected government of President Jean Bertrand Aristide." (see Michel Chossudovsky,  The Destabilization of Haiti: Global Research. February 28, 2004)
Foreign troops were sent into Haiti. MINUSTAH was set up in the wake of the US sponsored coup d'Etat in February 2004 and the kidnapping and deportation of the democratically elected president Jean Bertrand Aristide. The coup was instigated by the US with the support of  France and Canada.
The FRAPH units subsequently integrated the country's police force, which was under the supervision of MINUSTAH. In the political and social disarray triggered by the earthquake, the former armed militia and Ton Ton macoute will be playing a new role.
Hidden Agenda
The unspoken mission of US Southern Command (SOUTHCOM) with headquarters in Miami and US military installations throughout Latin America is to ensure the maintenance of subservient national regimes, namely US proxy governments, committed to the Washington Consensus and the neoliberal policy agenda. While US military personnel will at the outset be actively involved in emergency and disaster relief, this renewed US military presence in Haiti will be used  to establish a foothold in the country as well pursue America's strategic and geopolitical objectives in the Caribbean basin, which are largely directed against Cuba and Venezuela.
The objective is not to work towards the rehabilitation of the national government, the presidency, the parliament, all of which has been decimated by the earthquake. Since the fall of the Duvalier dictatorship, America's design has been to gradually dismantle the Haitian State, restore colonial patterns and obstruct the functioning of a democratic government. In the present context, the objective is not only to do away with the government but also to revamp the mandate of the United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH), of which the headquarters have been destroyed.
"The role of heading the relief effort and managing the crisis quickly fell to the United States, for lack -- in the short term, at least -- of any other capable entity." ( US Takes Charge in Haiti _ With Troops, Rescue Aid - NYTimes.com, January 14, 2009)
Prior to the earthquake, there were, according to US military sources, some 60 US military personnel in Haiti. From one day to the next, an outright military surge has occurred: 10,000 troops, marines, special forces, intelligence operatives, etc., not to mention private mercenary forces on contract to the Pentagon. 
In all likelihood the humanitarian operation will be used as a pretext and justification to establish a more permanent US military presence in Haiti. 
We are dealing with a massive deployment, a "surge" of military personnel assigned to emergency relief.
The first mission of SOUTHCOM will be to take control of what remains of the country's communications, transport and energy infrastructure. Already, the airport is under de facto US control. In all likelihood, the activities of MINUSTAH which from the outset in 2004 have served US foreign policy interests, will be coordinated with those of SOUTHCOM, namely the UN mission will be put under de facto control of the US military.
The Militarization of Civil Society Relief Organizations
The US military in Haiti seeks to oversee the activities of approved humanitarian organizations. It also purports to encroach upon the humanitarian activities of Venezuela and Cuba:
"The government under President René Préval is weak and literally now in shambles. Cuba and Venezuela, already intent on minimizing U.S. influence in the region, are likely to seize this opportunity to raise their profile and influence..." (James M. Roberts and Ray Walser, American Leadership Necessary to Assist Haiti After Devastating Earthquake, Heritage Foundation, January 14, 2010).
In the US, the militarization of emergency relief operations was instigated during the Katrina crisis, when the US military was called in to play a lead role. 
The model of emergency intervention for SOUTHCOM is patterned on the role of NORTHCOM, which was granted a mandate as "the lead agency" in US domestic emergency procedures.

During Hurricane Rita in 2005, the detailed groundwork for the "militarization of emergency relief" involving a leading role for NORTHCOM was established. In this regard, Bush had hinted to the central role of the military in emergency relief: "Is there a natural disaster--of a certain size--that would then enable the Defense Department to become the lead agency in coordinating and leading the response effort? That's going to be a very important consideration for Congress to think about." (Statement of President Bush at a press conference, Bush Urges Shift in Relief Responsibilities - washingtonpost.com, September 26, 2005).
"The response to the national disaster is not being coordinated by the civilian government out of Texas, but from a remote location and in accordance with military criteria. US Northern Command Headquarters will directly control the movement of military personnel and hardware in the Gulf of Mexico. As in the case of Katrina, it will override the actions of civilian bodies. Yet in this case, the entire operation is under the jurisdiction of the military rather than under that of FEMA." (Michel Chossudovsky, US Northern Command and Hurricane Rita, Global Research, September 24, 2005)
Concluding Remarks
Haiti is a country under military occupation since the US instigated Coup d'Etat of February 2004.

The entry of ten thousand heavily armed US troops, coupled with the activities of local militia could potentially precipitate the country into social chaos.

These foreign forces have entered the country to reinforce MINUSTAH "peacekeepers" and Haitian police forces (integrated by former Tonton Macoute), which since 2004, have been responsible for war crimes directed against the Haitian people, including the indiscriminate killing of civilians.

These troups reinforce the existing occupation forces under UN mandate.

Twenty thousand foreign troops under SOUTHCOM and MINUSTAH commands will be present in the country. In all likelihood, there will be an integration or coordination of the command structures of SOUTHCOM and MINUSTAH. 
The Haitian people have exhibited a high degree of solidarity, courage and social commitment.

Helping one another and acting with consciousness: under very difficult conditions, in the immediate wake of the disaster, citizens rescue teams were set up spontaneously.
The militarization of relief operations will weaken the organizational capabilities of Haitians to rebuild and reinstate the institutions of civilian government which have been destroyed. It will also encroach upon the efforts of the international medical teams and civilian relief organisations.
It is absolutely essential that the Haitian people continue to forcefully oppose the presence of foreign troops in their country, particularly in public security operations.

It is essential that Americans across the land forcefully oppose the decision of the Obama adminstration to send US combat troops to Haiti.
There can be no real reconstruction or development under foreign military occupation.

Doctors Without Borders said its cargo plane with 12 tons of medical supplies had been turned away from the congested Port-au-Prince airport three times since Sunday, and five patients died for lack of the supplies it carried.
"We were forced to buy a saw in the market to continue amputations," said Loris de Filippi, emergency coordinator for the group's Choscal Hospital in Cite Soleil.
Haitian officials say the death toll from the quake was likely to be between 100,000 and 200,000, and that 75,000 bodies had already been buried in mass graves.
See also: the FLU Case, article on Haiti

and THIS shocking comment:

Re, Haitian population reduction


Date: 2010-01-19, 6:18PM MST


from craig's list
While gruesome, I love how Mother Nature works to slowly restore a little balance. Even after this earthquake, no one brings up the question of how ridiculously overpopulated that country is (as is virtually every other country on the planet).
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Haiti is overpopulated no longer. I'm not referring to those who died in the earthquake, but that hundreds of thousands of Haitians will be coming to the U.S.

This is according to Fox News and other news sources.

Their stay is supposed to be temporary. But most people, having dealt with temporary visa immigrants, know that they'll be permanent.

Then these same Haitians will be caught up in Obama's amnesty program, which is scheduled sometime before 2012.

Anybody want to start a business in Haiti? It's now the Land of Opportunity.

Israel to Send Police to Patrol Port-au-Prince

Shevat 5, 5770, 20 January 10 06:45
(Israelnationalnews.com) Following a request from the UN Secretary-General, Israel will send 100 policemen to Haiti to join a UN force in maintaining order in the capital city which was struck by a devastating earthquake last week.
Port-au-Prince has been racked by looters taking advantage of the anarchy in the city to plunder property in toppled buildings.
© Copyright IsraelNationalNews.com
Subscribe to the free Daily Israel Report - israelnn.com/subscribe


Haiti: 2 local Jews helping Israeli aid
http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1263147932263&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull

http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/715326?src=mp&spon=34&uac=105250MN


OIL IN HAITI!

Haiti is rich in oil: real reason for US and UN invasion?



Thursday, 21 January 2010 16:09




Haiti has huge oil reserves, larger than Venezuela, as well as valuable uranium deposits, according to a report in Le Post.

Scientists Daniel and Ginette Mathurin said  Haiti's oil reserves are larger than those of Venezuela.

"An Olympic pool compared to a glass of water that is the comparison to show the importance of oil Haitian compared to those of Venezuela, " Daniel Mathurin said.

The revelation that Haiti is rich in oil might explain why the US troops were so fast in entering Haiti after the earthquake. The same troops did not appear for days on end to help the people stranded in New Orleans after the city was hit by Hurricane Katrina.

Keeping the price of oil artificially high by controlling all oil fields and by trading oil futures contracts off the regulator's radar screen in secret in the Chicago stock exchange is another scam of the Bilderberg cartel.

George Bush in December 2008 signed a special energy independence bill that excluded oil from Canada's tar sands in the Boreal Forest from being purchased by the US government and army - that even though Canada is the largest exporter of oil to the USA and the price of oil was soaring to new heights in 2008, ensuring by this move Saudi Arabia a guaranteed US market.



Saturday, January 16, 2010
I have heard rumors that Haiti has vast oil reserves -- and that the globalists want these reserves. However, the globalists cannot get the reserves, because the oil belongs to the Haitian people. So the globalists do not allow the Haitians to exploit the oil reserves, because it would allow the Haitian people to prosper. It would allow the Haitians to build proper infrastructure, so that 7.0 earthquakes do not have such a devastating effect.
The article below is translated from French (read the original here) using Google, so it may not be 100% translated and of course verify whether these scientists are to be believed. Nevertheless, as I stated in my previous article Haiti Has Huge Resources of Gold and Iridium Says Former Dominican Petroleum Refinery President Leopoldo Espaillat Nanita, it is interesting that Bill Clinton and George Soros have been recently talking about rebuilding Haiti's infrastructure and starting business ventures in the country. Perhaps Clinton, Soros and the many other globalists have confirmed that these oil, gold, uranium, zyconium and iridium deposits DO exist in Haiti and they want to gain control at the expense of the Haitian people.


Scientists Daniel and Ginette Mathurin indicate that under Haitian soil is rich in oil and fuel fossible which were collected by Haitian and foreign experts. "We have identified 20 sites Oil, launches Daniel Mathurin stating that 5 of them are considered very important by practitioners and policies.

The Central Plateau, including the region of Thomond, the plain of the cul-de-sac and the bay of Port-au-Prince are filled with oil, he said, adding that Haiti's oil reserves are larger than those of Venezuela. An Olympic pool compared to a glass of water that is the comparison to show the importance of oil Haitian compared to those of Venezuela, "he explains.

Venezuela is one of the world's largest producers of oil.

Daniel Mathurin reveals that investigations of several previous governments have allowed to verify the existence of these large deposits of oil. It reminds a document of Lavalas party to power in 2004, had specified the number of sites in Haiti hydrocarbons.

According to Daniel et Ginette Mathurin, the lake region, with cities like Thomazeau and Cornillon, contains large deposits of oil.

Asked about the non-exploitation of these sites, Ginette Mathurin said that these deposits are declared strategic reserves of the United States of America. While stating his incomprehension of such a situation, it reminds that the Caribbean is considered the backyard of the United States.

But Daniel and Ginette Mathurin indicate that the U.S. government in 2005 authorized the use of strategic reserves of the United States. This door must be used by the Haitian political négiciations to launch with U.S. companies with a view to exploiting these deposits adds Daniel Mathurin

Experts argue that the government acted Jean Claude Duvalier had verified the existence of a major oilfield in the bay of Port-au-Prince shortly before its fall.

Moreover, Daniel et Ginette Mathurin show that uranium 238 and 235 and the deposit zyconium exist in several regions including in Jacmel. Uranium is used in nuclear reactors to produce electrical energy.


http://www.youtube.com/v/nLAstyeUIt0&hl=en_US&fs=1&">http://www.youtube.com/v/nLAstyeUIt0&hl=en_US&fs=1&" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="425" height="344">

OH-MY-GOD! disaster preparedness a day before, also in Tel-Aviv!

DS

Haiti Disaster Relief Scenario Was Envisaged by the US Military One Day Before the Earthquake

  • Text size
  • Larger
  • Smaller

SEE ALSO: CNN — An e-mail from Haiti, then minutes later, a nightmare
“Last Tuesday, from his room at the Hotel Montana near Port-au-Prince, Haiti, U.S. Air Force Maj. Ken Bourland sent an e-mail to his wife telling her that he was fine and had just settled in for what was going to be an exciting time taking a disaster preparedness course.”
Michel Chossudovsky
Global Research
January 21, 2010
A Haiti disaster relief scenario had been envisaged at the headquarters of US Southern Command SOUTHCOM in Miami one day prior to the earthquake.
The holding of pre-disaster simulations pertained to the impacts of a hurricane in Haiti. They were held on January 10. (Bob Brewin,Defense launches online system to coordinate Haiti relief efforts (1/15/10) — GovExec.com, complete text of article is contained in Annex)
The Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA), which is under the jurisdiction of the Department of Defense (DoD), was involved in organizing these scenarios on behalf of US Southern Command.(SOUTHCOM).
Defined as a “Combat Support Agency”, DISA has a mandate to provide IT and telecommunications, systems, logistics services in support of the US military. (See DISA website: Defense Information Systems Agency).
On the day prior to the earthquake, “on Monday [January 11, 2010], Jean Demay, DISA’s technical manager for the agency’s Transnational Information Sharing Cooperation project, happened to be at the headquarters of the U.S. Southern Command in Miami preparing for a test of the system in a scenario that involved providing relief to Haiti in the wake of a hurricane.” (Bob Brewin, op cit, emphasis added) 
The Transnational Information Sharing Cooperation project (TISC) is a communications-information tool which  “links non-government organizations with the United States [government and military] and other nations for tracking, coordinating and organizing relief efforts”.(Government IT Scrambles To Help Haiti, TECHWEB January 15, 2010).
The TISC is an essential component of the militarization of emergency relief. The US military through DISA oversees the information – communications system used by participating aid agencies. Essentially, it is a communications sharing system controlled by the US military, which is made available to approved non-governmental partner organizations. The Defense Information Systems Agency also “provides bandwidth to aid organizations involved in Haiti relief efforts.”
There are no details on the nature of the tests conducted on January 11 at SOUTHCOM headquarters.
DISA’s Jean Demay was in charge of coordinating the tests. There are no reports on the participants involved in the disaster relief scenarios.
One would expect, given DISA’s mandate, that the tests pertained to simulating communications. logistics and information systems in the case of a major emergency relief program in Haiti.
The fundamental concept underlying DISA’s Transnational Information Sharing Cooperation project (TISC) is  to “Achieve Interoperability With Warfighters, Coalition Partners And NGOs” (Defense Daily, December 19, 2008)
Upon completing the tests and disaster scenarios on January 11, TISC was considered to be, in relation to Haiti, in “an advanced stage of readiness”. On January 13, the day following the earthquake, SOUTHCOM took the decision to implement the TISC system, which had been rehearsed in Miami two days earlier: 
“After the earthquake hit on Tuesday [January 12, 2010], Demay said SOUTHCOM decided to go live with the system. On [the following day] Wednesday [January 13, 2010], DISA opened up its All Partners Access Network, supported by the Transnational Information Sharing Cooperation project, to any organization supporting Haiti relief efforts.
The information sharing project, developed with backing from both SOUTHCOM and the Defense Department’s European Command, has been in development for three years. It is designed to facilitate multilateral collaboration between federal and nongovernmental agencies.
Demay said that since DISA set up a Haiti Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Relief Community of Interest on APAN on Wednesday [the day following the earthquake], almost 500 organizations and individuals have joined, including a range of Defense units and various nongovernmental organizations and relief groups. (Bob Brewin, Defense launches online system to coordinate Haiti relief efforts (1/15/10) — GovExec.com emphasis added)
DISA has a Southern Command (SOUTHCOM) Field Office in Miami. Under the Haiti Disaster Emergency Program initiated on January 12, DISA’s mandate is described as part of a carefully planned military operation: 
DISA is providing US Southern Command with information capabilities which will support our nation in quickly responding to the critical situation in Haiti,” said Larry K. Huffman, DISA’s Principal Director of Global Information Grid Operations. “Our experience in providing support to contingency operations around the world postures us to be responsive in meeting USSOUTHCOM’s requirements.”
DISA, a Combat Support Agency, engineers and [sic] provides command and control capabilities and enterprise infrastructure to continuously operate and assure a global net-centric enterprise in direct support to joint warfighters, National level leaders, and other mission and coalition partners across the full spectrum of operations. As DoD’s satellite communications leader, DISA is using the Defense Satellite Communications System to provide frequency and bandwidth support to all organizations in the Haitian relief effort. This includes Super High Frequency missions that are providing bandwidth for US Navy ships and one Marine Expeditionary Unit that will arrive shortly on station to provide medical help, security, and helicopters among other support. This also includes all satellite communications for the US Air Force handling round-the-clock air traffic control and air freight operations at the extremely busy Port-Au-Prince Airport. DISA is also providing military Ultra High Frequency channels and contracting for additional commercial SATCOM missions that greatly increase this capability for relief efforts. (DISA -Press Release, January 2010, undated, emphasis added)
In the immediate wake of the earthquake, DISA played a key supportive role to SOUTHCOM, which was designated by the Obama administration as the de facto “lead agency” in the US Haitian relief program. The underlying system consists in integrating civilian aid agencies into the orbit of an advanced communications information system controlled by the US military.
“DISA is also leveraging a new technology in Haiti that is already linking NGOs, other nations and US forces together to track, coordinate and better organize relief efforts” (Ibid)
ANNEX
Defense launches online system to coordinate Haiti relief efforts
By Bob Brewin, Govexec.com01/15/2010
http://www.govexec.com/story_page.cfm?articleid=44407&dcn=e_gvetwww
As personnel representing hundreds of government and nongovernmental agencies from around the world rush to the aid of earthquake-devastated Haiti, the Defense Information Systems Agency has launched a Web portal with multiple social networking tools to aid in coordinating their efforts.
On Monday [January 11, 2010, a day before the earthquake], Jean Demay, DISA’s technical manager for the agency’s Transnational Information Sharing Cooperation project, happened to be at the headquarters of the U.S. Southern Command in Miami preparing for a test of the system in a scenario that involved providing relief to Haiti in the wake of a hurricane. After the earthquake hit on Tuesday [January 12, 2010], Demay said SOUTHCOM decided to go live with the system. On Wednesday [January 13, 2010], DISA opened up its All Partners Access Network, supported by the Transnational Information Sharing Cooperation project, to any organization supporting Haiti relief efforts.
The information sharing project, developed with backing from both SOUTHCOM and the Defense Department’s European Command, has been in development for three years. It is designed to facilitate multilateral collaboration between federal and nongovernmental agencies.
Demay said that since DISA set up a Haiti Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Relief Community of Interest on APAN on Wednesday, almost 500 organizations and individuals have joined, including a range of Defense units and various nongovernmental organizations and relief groups.
APAN provides a series of collaboration tools, including geographical information systems, wikis, YouTube and MySpace-like pages and multilingual chat rooms.
Meanwhile, other organizations are tackling different technological challenges. Gianluca Bruni, the Dubai-based information technology chief for emergency preparedness and response for the World Food Programme, is setting up networks and systems to support United Nations and nongovernmental organizations in Haiti. WFP already has dispatched two communications kits to Haiti, with satellite systems that operate at 1 megabit per second and can support up to 100 users. It also has sent laptop computers, Wi-Fi access points and long-range point-to-point wireless systems to connect remote users to the satellite terminals. Bruni said eventually WFP plans to set up cyber cafes in Haiti for use all relief workers in the country.
Jon Anderson, a DISA spokesman, said the agency is supplying 10 megabits of satellite capacity to Navy, Marine and Air Force units engaged in the Haiti relief operation.
Many of the relief organizations and agencies in Haiti are bringing their own radio systems to the country. DISA has deployed a three-person team from its Joint Spectrum Management Element to help manage radio frequency spectrum.
The Joint Forces Command’s Joint Communications Support Element deployed two teams equipped with satellite systems and VoIP phones to support SOUTCOM in Port-au-Prince late Wednesday. Those systems were operational “in a matter of hours,” said JCSE Chief of Staff Chris Wilson. The organization will send another team to Haiti in the next few days.
Wilson said JCSE was able to get its gear into Haiti quickly because the systems already were loaded on pallets in Miami in preparation for an exercise that has been canceled.
So many governments and agencies from around the world have responded to the crisis in Haiti that they have overwhelmed the ability of the Port-au-Prince airport to handle incoming relief flights. The Federal Aviation Administration has had a ground-stop on aircraft headed for Haiti for much of the past two days.



Report: US weapon test aimed at Iran caused Haiti quake

Sat, 23 Jan 2010 10:34:46 GMT
An unconfirmed report by the Russian Northern Fleets says the Haiti earthquake was caused by a flawed US Navy 'earthquake weapons' test before the weapons could be utilized against Iran.

United States Navy test of one of its 'earthquake weapons' which was to be used against Iran, went 'horribly wrong' and caused the catastrophic quake in the Caribbean, the website of Venezuela's ViVe TV recently reported, citing the Russian report.

After the report was released, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez also made a similar claim, saying that a US drill, carried out in preparation for a deliberate attempt to cause an earthquake in Iran, had led to the deadly incident in Haiti, claiming more than 110,000 lives.

Though Russian Northern Fleets' report was not confirmed by official sources, the comments attracted special attention in some US and Russian media outlets including Fox news and Russia Today.

Russia Today's report said that Moscow has also been accused of possessing and utilizing such weapons.

In 2002, a Georgian Green Party leader claimed that Moscow had instigated an earthquake on Georgian territory, the TV channel said.

According to ViVe, the unconfirmed Russian report says earlier this month the US carried out a similar test in the Pacific Ocean, which also caused another 6.5 magnitude earthquake in an area near the town of Eureka, California.

The California quake resulted in no deaths or serious injury, but left many buildings damaged.

FAA warned in an advisory Friday that “due to limited ramp space at Port-au-Prince airport,” with the exception of international cargo flights, “the Haitians are not accepting any aircraft into their airspace.”
The advisory added that domestic U.S. military and civilian flights to Haiti must be first be cleared by its command center. Exemptions will be based solely on the basis of ramp space. The agency also starkly warned “there is no available fuel” at the Port-au-Prince airport.




Thursday, January 28, 2010

About Haiti: Doug Casey is another of my favorite investors: intelligent, extremely well traveled, original, doesn't mince his words. Substitute ISRAELI GOVERNMENT for HAITIAN GOVERNMENT, and you have the situation today - highlighted.

 



BabyDOC , Ehud BarAK"

 AK, OC...  : listen to the sound of their names...YUCK! They SUCK!



Doug Casey on Haiti
(Interviewed by Louis James, Editor, International Speculator)
    Editor's Note: Dear Readers, I wish you could have heard Doug when we spoke about Haiti. His words may seem cold-hearted – discussing adoption in terms of misallocated capital! – but he was passionate indeed in this conversation. When he spoke of the Haitians having nothing, not even shovels and crowbars to dig their loved ones out of the rubble, his feelings about the men who've made Haiti the place it is were very clear. Perhaps we should do one of these live at our next conference. L
L: So, a big thing on people's minds is the earthquake disaster in Haiti. David Galland mentioned in a recent edition of our free Daily Dispatch that you have friends helping orphans in Haiti. Can you tell us more about that and the situation in Haiti in general? You've been there, you've studied the place, and now it's been leveled. Let's talk about Haiti.
Doug: Sure. I first went to Haiti in about 1970, back in the days of Papa Doc, before he shed this mortal coil, then again a few years later when his son, Baby Doc Duvalier, had taken over, and most recently, when I went down in 2003 with the friend David mentioned, Susie Krabacher. (There's a write-up of my 2001 visit in the June 2001 issue of the International Speculator, for those who are subscribers.) Susie is the wife of my attorney. She runs the Mercy and Sharing Foundation in Haiti. I've visited the orphanages and everything she's put together.
But I've got to say that Haiti now is not the same Haiti I first visited 40 years ago.
L: What's the difference?
Doug: Well, there are many differences, actually. For one thing, while no one knows what the population of Haiti really is, it's probably close to triple what it was in 1970. So, people are much more evident – that's number one. Number two, people are much more centered in Port-au-Prince. It was a much more rural, as well as less populated, country back then. Three, there were actually trees on Haiti's part of the Island of Hispaniola, which it shares with the Dominican Republic.
L: There still are, on the Dominican side.
Doug: Yes. When you fly over, you can actually see the difference.
L: I've done that. It's the only place in the world I've been to that actually looks like a map: where I was, it was green on the Dominican side of the border and brown on the Haitian side.
Doug: Yes, it's incredible. It was actually rather nice, back in the old days. I drove all around the country in the 1970s, even though you had to get special permission from the police – which took most of a morning – and there were army checkpoints along the way.  Last time, I just went to Port-au-Prince. And that's where you see a really big difference. Port-au-Prince was a much smaller, mellower city in those days that seemed to be totally crime-free. By that I mean that you could wander back to your hotel in the middle of Port-au-Prince, totally inebriated, with hundred-dollar-bills hanging out of your pockets, and no one would touch you. I'm convinced they wouldn't even dream of it – or if they did dream of it, it would turn into a nightmare.
I suppose, if you're so inclined, you could think of this as one of the advantages of having a dictatorship with secret police. In the days of Doc Duvalier, they were known as the Tontons Macoutes. But they weren't so secret; they were all basically thugs who affected dark glasses. At any rate, one thing Papa Doc knew, and Baby Doc understood as well, was that tourists were of major importance to the economy. There's no question that if anyone touched a tourist…
L: It didn't go well for them.
Doug: No. He'd live just long enough to sincerely regret it. So there just wasn't much street crime. It was a little like Russia before the collapse of the Soviet Union. A tourist was very safe there as well, because the place was full of secret police who made everyone afraid to do anything bad to them.
L: I've seen that in Belarus, which still has a KGB (and it's called that). A college co-ed is not free to start whatever business she wants, but she will walk down a dark street in some forgotten part of Minsk with no fear at all. And there are uniforms everywhere…  olive drab or midnight black.
Doug: My opinion has long been that the number of sociopaths in a society follows a bell-shaped curve. Most Haitians, Russians, Americans, what-have-you, are basically decent human beings. But following Pareto's Law, if 80% of them are decent, then 20% of them are, let's say, "problematical." Take 20% of that 20%, and now you're dealing with the real Bad Boys. Those people were kept at bay back in the days of Papa and Baby Doc, if only by recruiting them to the Tontons Macoutes, where their depredations were focused on the people other than casual tourists. But now they've come out of the woodwork.
So now the whole bell curve has shifted higher on the sociopath scale. Port-au-Prince is not a nice place anymore. When I was down there last, there were four foreigners kidnapped in separate incidents, just in that week, just in that city. That's really an incredible number, when you think about it – it's just not the sort of place many tourists go, so there are hardly any foreigners there.
L: So where does that leave Haiti now, earthquakes aside?
Doug: Haiti, I'm sorry to say, is a total basket-case country. There is just no hope for it.
L: None at all? Why?
Doug: The primary reason is because of the governmental structures they have set up there. There are no property rights. It's a highly bureaucratized place. Nobody knows for sure who owns what, in terms of land, which is a problem in itself. Worse, it's estimated that the state owns at least half of the land, which no one takes care of, so it's the first to have all its trees cut down. But you can't be sure who owns what. It's all "dead capital."
L: Tragedy of the Commons.
Doug: It's a perfect example of it. Things that "everybody" owns are really things that nobody owns. In Haiti, it's impossible to start a real business, because in order to do so, you have to get approvals, pay fees and bribes, jump through ridiculous hoops, and wait forever – we're not just talking about having to go to a dozen agencies to get your papers stamped; we're talking about going to 50, or even 100, to get your papers stamped. It's unbelievably byzantine. And it's not going to happen unless you pay bribes along the way. So, there's no capital. It's almost hopeless to think of any domestic business being generated.
L: It's certainly not an environment that attracts many investors I know.
Doug: The only foreign businesses I know are some clothing manufacturers taking advantage of cheap labor. They used to make baseballs there…
L: Baseballs?
Doug: Yes. Most major league baseballs were sewn in Haiti. But the government drove the baseball business out of the country by making them crazy with regulations, restrictions, and revenuers. Think about that. Baseballs are a rather specialized product. When you've got a labor force that's trained in a specialized skill like sewing a baseball properly, the last thing you want to do is pick up and leave. You'd have to find new facilities, train a new labor force, all kinds of new aggravations. So the government really must have driven them to their wits' end, to force them to pick up a specialized business like that and leave. Especially as cheap as labor costs are in Haiti – almost free.
L: It must have been pretty bad. I always wonder, when I travel to a real hell-hole and see a nice hotel, or restaurant, how on earth anyone could run a business in such a place. I figure they must be the president's brother or something along those lines, or they'd never get all the permits and papers, and the bribes needed to stay open would kill them if the taxes didn't.
Doug: Well, I can tell you that back in the 1970s, there were some very nice hotels in Port-au-Prince. I stayed in downtown Port-au-Prince, which is inconceivable today – and I'm not talking about just since the earthquake. Even before the quake, no one who went there in recent years would even think about staying anywhere downtown. Back in the '70s, though, I stayed in a rather nice hotel downtown, including two meals a day (which were truly excellent, because of the French influence on the cooking), and it was only $10 a day. It was like staying for free – fantastic.
There were other nice hotels up in Petionville, which is on a little mountain overlooking Port-au-Prince. They were nice because you got the breezes and the views. This is where a number of old hotels, which I've been to, collapsed burying scores of people. And those weren't high-rises, so it really was a severe quake.
But now, or when I was there the last time, the electricity was only working a few hours a day… if you had it in hotels, it was because they ran diesel generators. There was nobody in the restaurants because everyone was really afraid to go out. Anyone who had any money had bodyguards. It was really just an unpleasant environment.
That's not because the Haitians are any different from other people in the world; it's because the government structure there has devolved so far.
L: Into simple, blatant thuggery.
Doug: Absolutely. I met with a government minister on my last visit – I believe he's now Haiti's ambassador to the United Nations. As you know, one of my hobbies for the last 30 years has been to go around to these places – hell-holes, generally – and try to sell them on a plan to totally reform their country. It would change the place instantaneously from a hell-hole into a garden spot – which is entirely possible.
I'd usually meet with the head of state – which is not as hard as you might think – and I'd tell him I could do three things for him. One: I could put him on the cover of every major news magazine in the world in a favorable light, which is the opposite of how he'd usually appear at the time. Two: I could make him legitimately very rich. (It's impossible to get rich the way the likes of Mobutu and Marcos did anymore.) And three: I could set things up so the people would love him, so he wouldn't have to worry about every guy he meets being the one who would pull out a .45 and put a bullet in his head.
The means for achieving these three things was to basically privatize the whole government, 100% of their assets, issuing shares to the people, and making them owners of their country. With, of course, a whack of cheap founder's stock going to the retiring dictator and his pals to make them go away – what corporate types call a "golden parachute."
Of course, it never went anywhere. Generally speaking, the guy would listen with some interest, but all the guys below him would talk him out of it. Ending corrupt government control of the economy and shifting it to a free market would break their rice bowls. All of these places are kleptocracies. The power of the state is the most effective means man has ever devised for stealing. So, in Haiti, just like in the U.S. or anywhere else, government doesn't attract the best and the brightest; you get the worst, the most sociopathic. It's absolutely perverse.
L: You mentioned before the 20% of the 20% who are the Bad Boys in society at large. I think government attracts the 20% of the 20% of the 20% who aren't just bad but smart enough to see the enormous power to plunder the state offers them, and are ruthless enough to knowingly embrace crime on that level. To knowingly enact measures that will increase the misery of the masses for your own gain, you have to be way out on the far end of the bell curve in lacking simple human decency and compassion for others. If I believed in hell, the deepest, hottest circle in it would be reserved for such people.
Doug: That's absolutely right. Government everywhere in the world draws that type of person – regardless of the type of government. And if a decent person, a misguided idealist perhaps, gets into government, he'll almost certainly be co-opted and corrupted after a while. It reflects poorly on the level of spiritual evolution among humans. But that's another story…
L: And Haiti had a really bad case of "governmentitis," even before the quake hit.
Doug: Yes. I'd put the blame for the magnitude of Haiti's problems 100% at the feet of its government. It's not the geology, nor that this earthquake was the strongest ever, nor a lack of building codes. The devastation is due to the government having kept the place so dirt poor for so long, they simply have nothing to help them cope with the event.
If the same thing happened in a wealthier society, there would be a lot of damage, lots of problems, a great deal of inconvenience – but it wouldn't have killed hundreds of thousands of people. These Haitians are so poor, they don't even have shovels to dig people out. They don't even have crowbars to pry apart collapsed walls; they have to do it with their own bare hands – and they don't even have gloves. They've got nothing.
So, of course there was widespread devastation. There were no savings. No food set aside. No water set aside. These people are living, literally, hand-to-mouth. So, if there's a natural disaster, the impact is magnified by several orders of magnitude because of the poverty – and that's due entirely to the government. And, idiotically, people you see on TV are looking to the government to solve the problem… the stupidity of the chattering classes leaves me thunderstruck.
I mean, the Dominican Republic next door is hardly any glowing beacon of freedom, but it's vastly better than Haiti, and it's got the same geography, climate, and so forth, so it's all a matter of government. That's illustrated equally well with the differences between East and West Germany, North and South Korea… there are many examples throughout time and across space. And now they're looking to the Haitian government to be in charge of rebuilding the place… the concept is literally insane.
L: I was thinking about that… The big China quake a couple years ago was a 7.9, and it killed fewer people than this one in Haiti, which was only 7.0. That's pretty bad, but it's a log scale, so the China one was nine times more powerful. The Mexico earthquake of 1985 was clocked in at 8.1 and only killed 10,000 people – and Mexico was not the richest country at the time.
Doug: In spite of that, the usual idiots are saying it's all because they didn't have adequate building codes in Haiti. The reality is, it doesn't matter what kind of building codes they have. They could make the building codes so strict that every building has to be built on giant hydraulic shock absorbers. But no buildings would be built, because no one could afford to comply. Safe, high-quality buildings aren't the result of regulations. They're the product of capital, wealth, and technology – Haiti has none of these things.
And, I'm sorry to say, that it doesn't matter how much aid you send to Haiti, the situation will not improve at all. You may assuage their pain for a while, but it won't change anything. Those pitiful lives won't be any better – and most of the aid won't even get to the people. Most of what even gets there will be siphoned off by the people on top – they're experts at that, and completely ruthless.
L: Is there no chance that whatever is rebuilt from the rubble of Haiti might be better than what existed before? It looks like the earthquake pretty much took the government out.
Doug: Well, thank God for small favors, I guess. Anything is possible, I suppose – maybe the place has gone downhill so far that the quake has helped them hit absolute bottom, and now they will somehow organize themselves in a new way. But where would they get the understanding of economics that would prompt them to build a system that doesn't allow government thugs to stop them from building and producing and so on? I promise you, it won't be from all the aid workers driving around in Range Rovers.
Look, Haiti has a lot of possible advantages. It's got hundreds and hundreds of miles of nice beaches and oceanfront property – actually, when I first went down there in the 1970s, one thing I thought about doing was starting a diving business. Strip away the dysfunctional society, and it's a very nice place. It used to have some excellent art markets and artists – but they've all moved abroad.
L: It's got great rocks too. The geology just on the other side of the border is highly prospective for gold and copper, among other things. Nickel mining was a big business on the island, and the Pueblo Viejo mine, owned by Barrick/Goldcorp, is one of the biggest copper-gold mines in the world. The whole island is basically one giant gold anomaly. There's every reason to think there's great wealth waiting to enrich the Haitian people, if they could just create a healthy business environment on their side of the island. I know of only one junior exploration company there now, but I think there could be a real gold rush, if it were safe to invest there.
Doug: Right, but no one wants to go there now, because even if you got a concession, it would be impossible to work through the legal system, and if you do it illegally, paying bribes, you get into other trouble…
L: That's what I'm saying. The gold and other metals are probably there. As you say, there's lots of beautiful oceanfront property. It's a tropical island, so food can grow year round. There's no reason for Haitians to be poor, other than their form of social organization. So, if the earthquake just pushed the reset button on that, maybe there's a chance for something better to emerge?
Doug: A counter-example that dovetails with that is Hong Kong, which has no natural resources, and after World War II, it was full of poor and uneducated Chinese. In a couple generations, it became one of the wealthiest places on the planet. The only advantage it had turned out to be the one that mattered most: it had one of the freest economies on earth.
And look at Japan. Essentially no resources. But when they abandoned their medieval ways, in the 19th century, they became a world power in short order. And again, after World War II, when the place was totally, totally destroyed, they opened up for business and within only 20 years became the third largest economy in the world. That, in spite of having to import most natural resources. So, yes, it's a matter of the social system.
In fact, having natural resources is usually a negative, as Venezuela and Saudi Arabia, among others, have shown. Without a free market, those resources serve only to make the state more powerful and put the people at greater risk. It's totally perverse – a real pity.
L: So, you say anything's possible, but you don't sound convinced. I don't think the U.S. government and international busybody groups, like the IMF, can teach anyone anything about real free enterprise, but the nearest thing to a government in Haiti right now is the U.S. military – again. Isn't it possible that they might leave something better behind than what was there before the quake tore it all down?
Doug: Well, even if the U.S. government and the IMF and other agencies involved in the rescue effort decided to build something, it would be done with money extracted from people elsewhere, not by investors, who have to give people what they want, if they're going to make money. And there's no guarantee that anything they'd build, physically or institutionally, would be what the Haitians need, or that would work for them. That's not the solution at all.
In fact, all the free food that will pour into the country may ultimately be counterproductive. Sure, it will feed people during the crisis. But they'll keep sending it for years, and it will drive down local prices, making it unprofitable for local farmers – of whom there are few enough as it is – to grow anything for sale. So it will ultimately worsen the situation. At best it's just keeping people subsisting until the next disaster, or disease, or entropy, takes them out. It's a bad situation.
The only solution is for the people of Haiti to rise up and abolish their totally counterproductive government, privatize absolutely everything – which would give the average Haitian some capital – and create an environment in which people are allowed to work and keep what they earn. Even if people are completely poor and ignorant, allowing them to work and keep what they make gives them a chance to build something. They've got to get as close to the way Hong Kong was as possible.
L: But they aren't going to do that.
Doug: No. Precisely the contrary. They're going to try to set up a new government, living on foreign aid, which will be the same as the old government. For years, Haiti has barely even produced on a level of subsistence farming. That's because these people are so poor, they don't have equipment, they don't have seeds – it's almost like the whole country is grubbing for roots and berries with their bare hands. Close to 100% of the income in the country is from the million Haitians who work overseas, and foreign aid. Almost nothing is produced in Haiti. And everything in stores is much more expensive than in the U.S., because it's all imported -- and taxed. I'd say almost all the foreign aid that's not stolen is wasted.
I remember back in the day, I drove from Port-au-Prince out to Cap-Haïtien. I drove past a city called Duvalier Ville that was apparently built with foreign aid money. They'd fantasized about making it the new capital. But when I drove by, it was deserted and already a ruin – though it had only been built ten years before.
That's what's going to happen to the aid money. It's totally destructive; it impoverishes both the givers and the recipients. (See our conversation on charity.)
L: So, they are not going to do what they should do, the aid isn't going to achieve what it should do… what should anyone moved by the suffering of all those poor people do to help?
Doug: First off, you've got to be very careful giving money to these NGOs. Most of these NGOs are corrupt, wasting the money on salaries and public relations. With what's left over, they employ young collectivists to drive around in Range Rovers with clipboards and cameras, making notes and writing worthless reports that nobody reads. That's where the money you give them goes – what doesn't get siphoned off to Washington to keep their lobbying offices on K St. open.
As a matter of course, I'm very suspicious of most large organizations. Any organization, when it gets old and large enough, becomes concrete-bound and corrupt.
L: The organization's own existence, and the benefit of those who live off it, becomes the top priority, not the organization's initial mission.
Doug: Right. If you feel compelled to try to help the Haitians, recognizing that it's not going to do any good over the long term, but will at best only alleviate some short-term suffering, the only one I know personally that does good work is Susie Krabacher's foundation. I know them well, and they have no overhead. All the money goes into actually helping children. Even though I don't think they change anything for Haiti, they do good for some needy children, and I do endorse them. If you want to give money, this is one I know works.
L: What about my idea, wanting to adopt an orphan? It might not change the country's future, but it sure would change that child's future.
Doug: That's a thought. But as you know, I hold the Roman view (see CWC on Rome); if you're going to adopt a kid, you should wait until they're at least 10 or 12 years old, so you at least have an idea of what you're getting. To me, it makes more sense to focus your effort on helping the able to become more able than to put a band-aid on someone who will never truly heal. It's a misallocation of capital.
The other thing is that, bureaucracies being what they are, the expense, time, and aggravation required to leap all the legal hurdles to adopt is huge. So much money would go to lawyers and anything but the kid… As nice an idea as that is, it just seems like you're trying to swim upstream with it.
L: That's my big concern. I don't want to subject my existing family to all the inspections, detections, infections, neglections, and selections we'd have to go through in order to be able to adopt. And, being divorced, I'm not sure they'd even let me – I suspect letting a needy child die of neglect in a government orphanage is better in a bureaucrat's eyes than taking a chance on an imperfect man who hangs out with radicals like Doug Casey.
Doug: Yes, and I hate to say this, but you have to remember that most of those children have suffered from diseases and malnutrition from an early age. So even if you give a kid like that all the best breaks, the odds are against them even achieving at a normal level in life.
L: So there's nothing that can be done to help?
Doug: I'm afraid the only solution for Haiti is internally driven change. It can't be helped from outside.
L: Wow… Tough Medicine.
Doug: That's the way I see it.
L: I don't see any investment implications here…
Doug: Well, there would be, if the Haitians totally – and I mean totally – cleared away their government. I'd invest in Haiti then.
L: It'd be at a bottom.
Doug: It'd be at a bottom, it's beautiful, its people will work very hard for little pay. It could be a great investment. But that's a pipe dream. The rescuers are going to make it impossible for anyone to make money investing in Haiti, so no one will invest in Haiti. Things could change, but the odds are overwhelming that Haiti will remain a welfare bum and even get worse.
L: So what would constitute evidence, to you, as an international speculator, that Haiti has hit bottom and has cleared a path for moving upwards?
Doug: Well, as you know, I think there should be only two laws: do all that you say you are going to do, and do not aggress upon others or their property. If they wrote a constitution and those were the only two laws in it, the place could have a chance. But that's not going to happen. Haiti is one of those places that writes a new, complex, and ever more cockamamie constitution every few years. Which doesn't really matter, in that they completely disregard it anyway.
L: What about new anti-earthquake technologies? Could an event like this thing push more money into that field and create opportunities for speculators?
Doug: That could be – it's the sort of trend Alex Daley, our technology guru and editor of Casey's Extraordinary Technology, is good at spotting. But it's not going to help Haiti so much as places like California.
L: Right. Another sobering talk – we should go to the movies next week and talk about the entertainment business.
Doug: Yes, I'm planning on seeing Avatar tomorrow night. Until next week, then.
L: Thanks, Doug. Next week.

Comments:

Ezra says:

If we sent the first, best, and most complete field hospital to Haiti, our system comes out on top compared with any other government in the world. The USA and French sent in hundreds of doctors and nurses and they were unable to treat injured because they had no infrastructure in place. It took them two weeks to start getting things off the ground. They initially had insufficient plaster for casts, no dialysis equipment,  etc. because planes with the equipment were not allowed to land.

There are gannifs over here, but the society is functioning, businesses are starting up,  major research labs of IBM and Intel have been set up here. I don't know where your brain was in this posting.

DS responds:

Ezra, where are YOUR brains? Do you know how to read English? Do you understand the word "HIGHLIGHTS? That is where the similarity lies.That is what I was trying to point out.

To all, if this wasn't clear from the start, I will make it clear now. Of course I am not talking about a failed state financially at this point. I am talking about DICTATORSHIP. It is a POLITICAL AND MORAL issue. Yet if you dig deep into Israeli society, you WILL find that about 18 families rule, and business competition is crushed fiercely.

Read this article again:


http://israeltruthtimes.blogspot.com/2010/01/do-you-live-in-free-country-compare.html

Notice that we are number 44 on the list, while Haiti is number 141; obviously quite a difference, but compared to Australia, Switzerland, or even to increasingly socialist- communist USA, we are still way behind in terms of economic freedom. Dictatorship breeds financial hardship as well. Our medical success is not a reflection of our political success, it is a reflection of centuries of Jewish dedication to medicine, Jewish ingenuity, Jewish talent, Jewish love of humanity.

Doug Casey explains very clearly that the worse of the crop make their way to the top, and that is what has been happening in Israel as well. Just read the post before this one, and see for yourselves. See what Barak the monster is doing to Jews, what his acolytes Bibi, Peres and co. support and condone. Is that NOT tyranny? Is that NOT fascism? Is that NOT dictatorship? Is that NOT evil and a denial of human rights? Is Ehud Barak any better than Baby Doc? I don't think so: I think he is worse: he is going against G-d Himself.

DS

SHmuel added:


Yesterday someone finally did something about the gruesome so called "supreme court" which elects itself with some help from some friends.
A very angry fellow sent flying a shoe against the face of the Wagner lover beinish. 
I regret the waste of a good shoe.

Beinish is a criminal, a ghastly unJew that conspired in the murder plot against Rabin with her girlfriend Arbel.  She, following orders from the "shabak" set aside files against Raviv, or code champagne", who was working for the shabak and took part on the whole conspiracy to eliminate Rabin.
The minutes of the meeting of the co conspirators have been made public.
That item, beinish, also constantly acts to harm Jewish life and rights to Eretz Israel.
As a pastime and in full convergence with her being, she also INTENTIONALLY attended Wagner music concert with her girlfriend Arbel. (beremboim conducting). Wagner until then and even now is not played in israel.
That garbage aggregate  did that to demean the memory of Holocaust victims as Wagner was a known virulent anti-Semite and a favorite of the top Nazis.   

Grotesquely, while the top unJews including the poison dwarf barak was piping in Germany about the Holocaust, the same deviant barak - police SS dress alike "yassam" was razing a Synagogue to teach others overseas how to do it.  At the same time other D'Ambrosian monsters were assaulting Yeshiva students and a Rav. 
The whole entourage was piping BS in Germany and at the same time expelling the "idf" Chief Rav to install in his place a pseudo rav the unJews fabricated.

To disinfect the pestilence that grew here out of the unJewish hatcheries, THE PEOPLE MUST FREELY ELECT A NEW  GOVERNMENT SYSTEM and install in it decent human beings replacing the unJews that ooze all over the GOI.

Down with the unJews!


Jack writes:

“…and most of the aid won’t even get to the people. Most of what even gets there will be siphoned off by the people on top – they’re experts at that, and completely ruthless.
.   .   .   .

Close to 100% of the income in the country is from the million Haitians who work overseas, and foreign aid. Almost nothing is produced in Haiti. And everything in stores is much more expensive than in the U.S., because it’s all imported -- and taxed. I’d say almost all the foreign aid that’s not stolen is wasted.”

This is what defeated Charles Brannan. He tried to find a way to distribute surplus food to people so poor that they are off the money economy without distorting the markets. He could not find a way to defeat corruption in the chain of distribution people in the government, “aid” organizations, trucking companies and so on, taking some, most or all of it and diverting it to the marketplace. Casey sure knows where the NGO’s are at. Charity begins at home, after all. Truly

It’s totally pathetic that the people of Haiti look to their “government” to rebuild the country when it’s the government that has turned Haiti into a starving basket case and general disaster way before the earthquake. Casey is right on, of course, that they need do-it-yourself governance but they don’t know how. They don’t even know that they can possibly do that. What they need is the Hashkem plan but no one is there to lead them and organize them to start it rolling.

Jack

Shmuel retorts:


The terrifying aspect of it all is exposed by what that those aware enough must internalize.
The un-Americans are doing their best to do the same to the USA!!! And so far with no small success.
The insidious process of de-farming and de-industrializing is bound to the same objective as it was in Haiti.

In Eretz Israel the process parallels that but so far is predicated upon unJewishizing the Nation only.
The GOI has a problem with de farming the Islamic sector and their intent of using the kibbutzim to do the same to the Jewish sector failed because the kibbutzim imploded. 


Jack continues:

This is why the Communists no longer talk about the Communist agenda. People have seen that it doesn’t work because this is what inevitably happens when government controls the economy and the life of the people. The government is run by individuals and it’s the 20% of 20% or maybe even 20% of that who gravitate to careers in government. They have no interest in real reform. That would mean they would have to work for a living and justify receiving a salary in the private sector. And in most cases (certainly here in Israel) they are unemployable. They do not want reform because they are in a position to demand bribes (sometimes thinly disguised as campaign contributions, membership in the union or other form of shake-down (jeans day contributions) or flat-out steal. As he says, the state is the most effective means man has ever devised for stealing.  The last thing they want is real reform that would empower the people over them.

Throwing people off the land and into the cities: It’s going on all over the world and not just because of industrialization. What drove them off in Haiti was not only the government not allowing the farmers to keep what they produced. It was also due to cheap imported food from the US. The same happened in Mexico, where the US and the IMF and the World Bank forced Mexico to end subsidies to small corn producers, which were the mainstay of Mexican grain production, because the subsidy was inimical to free market. Eliminating the subsidy, of course, drove corn prices in Mexico up, which enabled Cargill to flood Mexico with corn at prices reflecting US government export subsidies. That was not inimical to free market. (I don’t know why. I’m not an economist, just a dumb law professor.)

And if you want to know what expansion of government controls leads to, take a long hard look at Haiti. They have those insane, Byzantine regulatory procedures because they benefit the people in control. You want to set up a business here? Fine, but there is a fee for every approval in the process. You can short circuit it by bribing the right party, who will distribute it according to our unwritten rules. Haitians abroad send money home to their impoverished families? Good. We will tax it and take our “share.” Haiti can no longer produce food? Then when it is imported, we will tax it and take our “share.” No one has clear ownership of land so no one will invest and everyone scrounges off the land that no one owns. They have turned a tropical paradise into a desert island.

Remember, 20% of 20% of 20% are the career politicos. Don’t think that electing the other half of them will solve the problem and bring the country back to the people. The mega-corporations have well paid people on the job all the time riding herd on the people in the government and the bureaucracy. If all the people do is to rally every four years, or even every two years, to hit the streets and pass out fliers and knock on doors and spread the word and lick envelopes and then go home and leave the government alone with the corporate lobbyists, what do you suppose happens. And now, corporate bribery is protected free speech. (Oh, not corporate bribery, but corporate donations to campaign funds and membership fees and jeans-day funds and other forms of supplemental retirement funds for elderly politicians.)

If you want democracy, you have to govern yourselves and you have to constantly reduce the power of the government. Do not look to the government for anything. Whatever government does is only to enhance the wealth and power of the people in the government. Don’t even listen to the heartfelt rhetoric about starving babies and polar bears. It’s about their own power over you, not about polar bears, not about baby seals, not about starving babies or social justice.

End of rant.