Why Haiti is Collapsing...Forever

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History of Everything Podcast

History of Everything Podcast

3 ай бұрын

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The socioeconomic and political crisis in Haiti has been marked by rising energy prices due to the 2022 global energy crisis, as well as protests, and civil unrest against the government of Haiti, armed gang violence, an outbreak of cholera, shortages of fuel and clean drinking water, as well as widespread acute hunger. It is a continuation of instability and protests that began in 2018. But the story has gone much further back
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@historyofeverythingpodcast
@historyofeverythingpodcast 3 ай бұрын
Make sure to protect yourself on the internet. No Chinese firewall will help you as much as my sponsor Aura will www.aura.com/historyofeverything
@NapoleanBlown-aparte
@NapoleanBlown-aparte 3 ай бұрын
Sponsor money 🤑 🤑
@sagittariusa7662
@sagittariusa7662 3 ай бұрын
Grain of salt, you meant a whole truck full of salt.
@aaad3552
@aaad3552 3 ай бұрын
Can U talk about Myanmar.
@aaad3552
@aaad3552 3 ай бұрын
​@@vardekpetrovic9716ma, te no one understand how brain work completely. That IQ test is a conspiracy or misleading.
@arkadisevyan
@arkadisevyan 3 ай бұрын
you kind of glossed over the fact that if they didn't pay that money too France it would have invaded
@BHuang92
@BHuang92 3 ай бұрын
The whole history of Haiti is basically this: "......and then it got worst!"
@historyofeverythingpodcast
@historyofeverythingpodcast 3 ай бұрын
If I did not have to pin my ad comment this is the comment that would b pinned
@InquisitorXarius
@InquisitorXarius 3 ай бұрын
@@historyofeverythingpodcast The French are at Fault for Haiti’s suffering
@Sizeofabigbitch
@Sizeofabigbitch 3 ай бұрын
​@@InquisitorXariusthat's definitely a major factor, but Papa and Baby Doc definitely didn't help, hurricanes don't help, there's a ton of factors involved.
@gideonhorwitz9434
@gideonhorwitz9434 3 ай бұрын
@@InquisitorXariusthe Haitians bear no responsibility for their fck ups
@thecursed01
@thecursed01 3 ай бұрын
@@InquisitorXarius that was ...how long ago?
@kylebrown4293
@kylebrown4293 3 ай бұрын
I think the family guy short said it best when Godzilla felt sad for Haiti and left without destroying anything.
@KingofAwesomness14
@KingofAwesomness14 3 ай бұрын
I....really. that is both sad and endearing.
@MesmerAloofly
@MesmerAloofly 2 ай бұрын
Family guy didnt mention the slavery
@tulipalll
@tulipalll 2 ай бұрын
​@MesmerAloofly the slavery was 300 years ago. The slavery isn't responsible for the rapes, corruption, massacres, and mismanagement, and power hungry Haitians. At some point, you have to take responsibility for your own BS or nothing gets better. Playing the blame game trying to absolve yourself of any responsibility for your own condition is not only dishonest, but robs you of the ability to get better, improve yourself, and correct your situation.
@heisweets
@heisweets 2 ай бұрын
​@tulipalll I'm sure it had nothing to do with being Taxed from the French for years after independence. I'm sure it had nothing to do with foreign countries "help" with leaders
@tulipalll
@tulipalll 2 ай бұрын
@hakcure4294 once again. Haiti hasn't paid on the debt for almost a century and has received $13 billion in aid since then. They are arguably worse off now than when they were paying off the debt almost 100 years ago. As for election meddling, I 100% agree that foreign aid and election interference have not been helpful, and that's why I posit that we abolish ALL aid and election meddling. Leave them to their own devices. But at the end of the day, as I stated, nobody foreign is forcing literally millions of haitian men to rape haitian women. Nobody is forcing their politicians to be as corrupt as they could possibly be. Nobody is forcing them to kill each other by the tens of thousands. Even when they get what they want, even when their demands are met, everything remains the same. At SOME point, Haitians (and foolish, naive, bleeding heart foreigners) have to realize that they are not perfect saints and without fault because centuries ago they were oppressed by white people. Just because you are oppressed does not make you faultless.
@JustMemeingTillWeDie
@JustMemeingTillWeDie 3 ай бұрын
Learning about Haiti's history is like watching a trainwreck -- in slow motion -- and not being able to do a damn thing about it.
@CorgiWrangler
@CorgiWrangler 3 ай бұрын
I compare it to a country committing a holocaust...against itself
@thecursed01
@thecursed01 3 ай бұрын
@rangler " committing a holocaust...against itself" so...like the holocaust? or holodomor. or maoism. i think maoism and leninism fit better. claiming to have freed your people...then implement forced labor and kill millions.
@gronthgronth2628
@gronthgronth2628 3 ай бұрын
As bad as it sounds, the only thing that could stop this quick would be annexation by some foreign power and being held in martial law with severe punishment, while governet by outside authority. Things like this happened in history.
@arthurmiranda8896
@arthurmiranda8896 3 ай бұрын
It's a cursed culture, completely corrupt. Any resources given to Haiti is a total waste.
@conan2096
@conan2096 3 ай бұрын
"there started being some kind of stability" *god didnt like that*
@melaniesmith1313
@melaniesmith1313 3 ай бұрын
A number of years ago, an ecological group planted thousands of tree saplings on Haiti because of severe deforestation. The deforestation had led to topsoil erosion. The erosion made growing crops very difficult. The erosion also meant the topsoil ran off into the ocean, killing the coral and sealife. There is literally a dead zone around Haiti. So it's a great thing the trees were planted. Only within a short time every last damned tree was uprooted and cut down to use to make cooking fires. The reason for the trees had been clearly explained, but it did not matter.
@nicholassmith8779
@nicholassmith8779 3 ай бұрын
Can’t stop stupid.
@volcano3493
@volcano3493 3 ай бұрын
This shows the intelligence of the residents.
@Linki8uu
@Linki8uu 3 ай бұрын
@@volcano3493it more shows the desperation more than intelligence
@bscottb8
@bscottb8 3 ай бұрын
Self-defeating actions are not a sign of intelligence regardless of desperation.
@Sinyao
@Sinyao 3 ай бұрын
@@bscottb8 To be fair, what is the future to you when you are dying of starvation right now?
@dandantheflimflamman
@dandantheflimflamman 3 ай бұрын
Great piece! I was a Marine deployed to Haiti in the immediate aftermath of the 2010 earthquake. We were there for about three months in Port-au-Prince and Carrefour before we were relieved. Two takeaways from my time there: 1) The police were just another gang. They ran protection rackets and demanded bakshish from aid organizations. They did it right in front of us, so it was obviously seen as normal well before the quake. More than once, we had standoffs that I thought were going to turn into gunfights. 2) The UN props up corrupt elites. We were at a WFP distribution point intended to serve people without food. The government distributed tickets that were brought to the WFP to exchange for rice. More than once per day, Land Cruiser-type trucks driven by well-fed and well-clothed men wearing jewelry would show up with a handful of tickets (only supposed to get one per day max) demanding that we load several 50 lb bags into the truck for them. When they were told no, they would threaten us in vague terms. This stuff was all so matter-of-fact that it was obviously normal before we showed up - meaning the UN "Peacekeepers" stationed there had seen it all before and done nothing. Also - and this wasn't intentional, just a consequence of incompetence - the UN Peacekeepers probably caused the cholera epidemic that came after the earthquake. Sanitation was certainly a county-wide problem, but you're really not supposed to dump your sewage directly into a river that people drink from downstream.
@Josh.1234
@Josh.1234 3 ай бұрын
Yeah I was there too a few weeks afterwards with an Christian missions. We ran into the very same stuff, mobs ran the country and the government was definitely involved. We had tractors, and full shipping containers of water and packaged goods stuck on docks waiting for bribes.
@Flitalidapouet
@Flitalidapouet 3 ай бұрын
On top of that, here is the background you could not see on the terrain. US killing 3 Haitian president, and 7 judges, and kidnaping Aristide (president) to leave him in an African desert. IMF and World Bank taking 70% of the decisions of the country to make sure it NEVER develops. The hatred of Globalist, Soros, Britain, MI6, France, Spain because Haiti was first colony of the world that successfully fought back. They will be punished for the next 1000 years for that sin. Elites teach that hatred intergenerationally to their kids. BONUS = When president Moise wanted to start an inquiry on Clinton's foundation kidnaping kids and selling them on the sex slave markets .... oh surprise surprise he gets gunned down, with wife and kids, in his own house two week's later in an operation that costed dozens of millions.
@gamingforever9121
@gamingforever9121 3 ай бұрын
Question? Do you think If the United States took direct control of the country and annexed it we could get the situation under control?
@Flitalidapouet
@Flitalidapouet 3 ай бұрын
@@gamingforever9121 Of course US DON'T WANT Haiti to be under control. After all they are the ones who fucked it up. They killed 3 Haitian presidents, 7 judges, and kidnapped Jean Bertrand Aristide in his house at night and left him in Africa, with no passport and no papers. And Clinton foundation was stealing kids to sell them on child sex trafficking's markets. When president Moise wanted to investigate the Clinton's foundation, well they killed him two weeks later and shot his wife 4 times. So .... of course US is helping 🤣🤣 🤣🤣 They say they killers where Brazilians, but surprise surprise all the neighbor's are unanimous, they where speaking English all along. But hey, who listen to what Haitians have to say after all (sadly)
@Josh.1234
@Josh.1234 3 ай бұрын
@@gamingforever9121 lol worst idea ever.. we would have to go through and try to determine who is part of their mob and inprison them. bad parat is there is so much corruption and lack or morality, I am not sure who would actually run the country and not plunge them back into this state. it would be bloody and harsh.. and innocent people would get killed in the cross fire and americans couldn't handle that.
@toms6802
@toms6802 3 ай бұрын
Haiti has had such a bad time with both natural and political crisis facing the nations people. Any country able to help doesn't want to get involved with policing the failing institutions and become seen as unwelcome invaders by the people they are tasked to protect.
@prestonjones1653
@prestonjones1653 3 ай бұрын
Yup. The world learned America's lesson from Iraq and Afghanistan.
@War_Dog455
@War_Dog455 3 ай бұрын
@@prestonjones1653Iraq is actually considered a strategic partner to the US and they both have pretty good relations which are strengthening. Afghanistan might come around if it actually gets itself sorted out.
@AnAngryRedGummyBear
@AnAngryRedGummyBear 3 ай бұрын
@@War_Dog455 Yeah after two tours in Helmand, I highly suggest not holding your breath. Iraq is more questionable. Maybe they decide they want to be a mildly modern country with a heavy islamist bent, maybe they decide they want to be an Iranian satellite.
@Jarekx2007
@Jarekx2007 3 ай бұрын
Except Kenya was willing to help and had the world's backing, but they were blocked on a technicality.
@arthurmiranda8896
@arthurmiranda8896 3 ай бұрын
It's a cursed culture, completely corrupt. Any resources given to Haiti is a total waste.
@gallendugall8913
@gallendugall8913 3 ай бұрын
I was down in Haiti for "Operation Restore Democracy" and at that time, the '90s, Haiti was a misery farm. Conditions were kept at appalling levels in order to coax donations out of western bleeding hearts as well as provide a tax-free way to launder money. There were almost as many "charities" in the nation as people. The rebels who kicked out El Presidente thought they would get to present their case to world public opinion, but the information clamps came down hard.
@bensantos3882
@bensantos3882 3 ай бұрын
Amazing! I heard from another KZfaqr about this lady helicopter rescue evacuation tether lineman serviceman. Apparently they hugged the coast on a rescue mission next to one of the most popular beaches and populated city there. Well this was a normal mission and the locals were used to these helicopters at this point since the earthquake rescue aide/ support. I forgot why they were deployed that day but maybe a cargo tanker was sinking with actual Haitians inside or something. The story starts here though, she was there to help along with the USA military. Well when they got to the ship out by the shore, people were watching but couldn't reach the ship. Some crazy things happened and the helicopter crew was able to help some but the actual lady who went down to save them hit her head, became unconscious because the cord carrying her snapped. She somehow miraculously floated to shore. The tale is told by the actual pilot or the gunner. Anyway time was of the essence and the team wasn't going to leave their teammate behind. Instead of trying to help this soldier who already rescued some of their own countrymen, immediately when they got her dragged to the shore, they began to rip off all her clothes and begin to try and Grape this unconscious white woman. The helicopter did an abrupt turn and just sprayed the shore with bullets trying to get these apes off her. They then did an emergency landing to save her but can you imagine the minds of these savages? Haiti is a hellhole and no one should waste their time, money or resources on these psychopaths. I am curious do you have anymore stories to tell? I'd love to hear them, reply and give you a thumbs up.
@thestic6349
@thestic6349 3 ай бұрын
​@@bensantos3882 This may shock you, but the actions of a few may not represent the many. This is why you don't have such extreme opinions based on this kind of anecdotal evidence. "Savages" my ass... What, we should stop supplying aid to hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of children just from this story of a few assholes?
@arthurmiranda8896
@arthurmiranda8896 3 ай бұрын
@@thestic6349 You cant get this many dictators in succession if your culture is not inherent flawed. I have two friends that served under Brazil's UN peace keeping corp, and the story is almost the same, diverted donations, milking international aid, pure incompetence, and apathy from the leadership. By providing aid you only enable the system to perpetrate itself. There is absolutely no benefit for the children you want to safe in the long run. The whole NGO dupe, is using bored westerner bleeding hearts to milk their bleeding hearts for cash. There is absolutely no incentive to fix a problem that makes you money. Haiti is a wasted effort and should be forgotten.
@Synoopy2
@Synoopy2 3 ай бұрын
Help has to come from within, whether its personal or national. What I mean by help is not food or money, but a system of government, stability and culture. I think the DR and Haiti show counterpoints to each other in regards to this. When government breaks down = lawlessness. Even when they had a government it was barely functional. Cuba is almost as bad, but the difference is it has a functional government = poverty but stability, culture and no lawlessness
@bensantos3882
@bensantos3882 3 ай бұрын
@Synoopy2 You said a whole lot if fluff with no substance or citations to prove your argument. When will you bring up the racial make up of each country? That is the main factor which separates the two nations on Hispaniola. The DR are a mixed European stock and the hellhole of Haiti has Central and Eastern Africans, the way they live and govern is basically the same as in Sub-Saharan Africa, water always finds its level.
@ArchAngel119
@ArchAngel119 3 ай бұрын
Please feel free to make the videos longer. More depth and detail. No this is not satire or a joke, I love your content.
@NewMitchell-wh3fj
@NewMitchell-wh3fj 3 ай бұрын
We used to say that to Quinton and now he makes 8hr iCarly videos
@AlexDesvarieux
@AlexDesvarieux 3 ай бұрын
Hey I'm a fan of your show, long time watcher and first time commentor. I'm also haitian and currently in haiti. Good job on summarizing our history like that it must have been hard. Even we struggle grasping the nuances of it all. A lot of our history is lost to time cuz we weren't good at keeping records in the early days and a good of it was written down by the french. A good chunk of our history got written down by haitian history many years after the independance and the only sources were old people that lived through it so you can imagine that a lot of accounts are mired in controversy. I wanted to add some things just to enrich the video: 1. the event that marked the first slave revolt in haiti was the "seremoni bwa kayiman" or caïman woods ceremony. which was a voodoo ceremony held in the woods where a voodoo priest called boukman spark the flames to the first revolt (some scholars argue he was an imam and it wasn't voodoo but that's a whole other can of worms). 2. Napoleon's army was also composed of non french combatants i.e the polish. There is a commune in haiti called cazale famous for being founded some 400 to 500 polish soldiers that settled there after the war. 3. Haiti didn't get an ambargo simply because dessalines massacred the whites, that did play a part, but it's mostly because they didn't want them to influence other colonies and france wanted to play the long game and try to get haiti back later when they were done with their conquering. Another reason why the US didn't recognise haiti was because france told them not to, they told everyone not cuz they were top dog at the time . The us owed their independance to the french that aided them immensly in their war cuz the french wanted to stick it to the british and the british helped us to stick it to the french. For a while Haiti had strong relations with the british even during the embargo cuz the british ruled the seas and france couldn't stop them. 4.Dessalines named himself emperor of haiti, and declared he'd be the only noble, he wasn't the only revolutionary leader there were others so naturally that pissed the other leaders off, he allegedly wasn't toussaint's second in command, he was third, he allegedly killed the second in command to take his place. After making himself emperor he put a system that was similar to cerfdom but where the people would rent the land, he annuled land deed and a lot other stuff. Naturally people hated him and they assassinated him. 5.His assassination resulted in a splitin of the country into two and then three. At first a republic in the south and a kingdom in the nord. The south would seperate in two very briefly and than be reunified Under president boyer who stayed president for 25 years. 6.Boyer's wife was the widow of Petion, a revolutionnary leader that ploted to kill dessalines and rule the southern half for 11 years, I think she still hold the record for longest serving first lady. 7.Boyer was a horrible leader he's the reason why Haiti and the dominican republic are two seperate country's and the reason why we got that debt cuz he screwed the country so hard and was so afraid of the french that he just accepted without question. 8. Haiti had to take a loan from a french bank to pay the debt, and the french bank was absorbed by an american one later on if i remember correctly. 9.the 21 billion was estimated in the early 2000's, i remember it vividly cuz a president used the restitution of that debt has one of his political goals and he even had a jingle that sang out the exact sum. 10. Numerous reasons were forwared as to why the US invaded us, the one you gave is one of them and another one is that haiti was very chaotic at the time, the president at the time was fighting rebel groups, the kakos, and he was assassinated in 1915. The US fearing the rebelswould take power they ordered the invasion. Another thing at this point haiti was paying the independance debt to a us bank and the fear of haiti defaulting on that debt was also a motaving factor. One last thing the US took our gold reserves during that time and used the debt as justification. 11. Duvalier had zealous female supporters that were called "fiyet lalo" which is another boogeyman term. The terrifying thing about is dictartorship is that anyone could be an informant. Ur neighbor, ur maid, ur waiter litteraly anyone. Families were arrested because a son or daughter reported them talking ill of those in power. 12. Baby doc was a spoiled brat, his wife and mother ran the country in the shadows cuz he just listened to them and didn't care. 13. During the 3 years between 1987 and 1990 haiti saw several leaders, that only lasted for a few months, including our only woman president ever. 14. It's widely know that aristide was a womanizer even as a priest, he seduced/raped several women. Their are claims of him taking teenage girls virginity on his church altar. He's also reputed for having a massive 3rd leg. 15. some scholars claim that hazel's damage still impacts us to this day. 16. Preval was a drunk, he was know for being very laid back, often breaking decorum, ditching his security detail. Several people actually saw preval in his car stuck in traffic while he was president drinking rum. He once stole a bee from my cousin's wife hands at a state event while fleeing from his security detail. He was was filmed pulling on obama's sleeve in order to get his attention. 17. The 2008 protests were called clorox or bateri acid protest cuz people kept saying they are so hungry it's as if they drank battery acid or clorox. 18. I was in school during the earthquake, i was practicing shot put. I had to walk home that day with my dad and it took us three days to realise the extent of the damages because nothing worked and damage was low where we lived. 19. Sweet micky was a rock star before becoming president everybody loved his music. He put out a diss track against a popular journalist during his term. 20.Jovenel's wife was made fun of for that red oufit that she wore, we started calling her the red ranger. 21. We caught the gunmen, they were columbian. Probably members of a drug cartel. It's widely beleived that he was assassinated ny the prime minister he appointed. 22. When g9 blocked the access to the gas terminal, i was stuck in the hospital for a week. We lost a lot of patients due to power. We had to jerry-rig a connection to a nearby cellphone tower's generator to keep the icu running. we lost a lot of patients. 23. A lot of relief supplies get stolen by the people working with the NGO's, and they sell them to the population this has been a major issue for years. Lots of NGO's give out fake report to their backers in order to secure more funding and aid that they can later steal. 24. Ariel Henry is prime minister, he was appointed by jovenel, fun fact he's a neuro surgeon. 25. The vigilante mouvement is called "bwa kale" which means chopped wood, as in chopping wood to make a baton or peeled back penis, the term is basically used when you wanna express that you are ready to get down to business or you are gonna do something extreme. You skipped over the clintons who are responsible for 3 decades of problems in haiti. Haitians hate with a passion the clintons. We loathe their excistence, they like to parade themselves as our champions but theyve only harmed us and they know it theyve even admitted it sometimes. HIV/AIDS and haiti can be a whole series the amount of damage the disease did to us is incredible. You butchered everyone's name it was hilarious. Use google translate put it in french, type the name and press the audio. Couldve added more but i'm tired. Again kuddos on the video, i learned a few things, if you wanna make more videos on us feel free to DM me if you want some help.
@kylone1
@kylone1 3 ай бұрын
Thanks for the context.
@nomex9829
@nomex9829 3 ай бұрын
Thanks for all those details, that adds important context.
@rustomkanishka
@rustomkanishka 3 ай бұрын
Thank you for writing all that down. It really does put things into context. Living through historic moments sucks like the vacuum of space, and Haiti seems to be moving from historical event to historical event. If I may ask, why do you continue to stay? Why don't you try to get out? I'm not saying you should, I'm trying to understand your mindset.
@AlexDesvarieux
@AlexDesvarieux 3 ай бұрын
@@rustomkanishka I am trying to leave legally. The process is slow, i've applied for humanitarian parole in the US, its been a year and I'm still waiting.
@arthurmiranda8896
@arthurmiranda8896 3 ай бұрын
Thanks for your time, the context was very enlightening.
@Old-school-mind
@Old-school-mind 3 ай бұрын
The problem with Haiti is not as much with its colonial past as with the greed of anyone that get popular enough to run for office. Sad
@kyledabearsfan
@kyledabearsfan 3 ай бұрын
be careful, speaking the truth might get internet activists on you. Its almost like these problems are far bigger than colonialism. But youd be hard pressed to find self-reflection in Haiti.
@SF-eo6xf
@SF-eo6xf 3 ай бұрын
Anyone who blames the colonial past is kidding themselves. Every colony still under French rule is doing much better than they would without it.
@commissarkitty3553
@commissarkitty3553 3 ай бұрын
@@SF-eo6xf colonial rule only enefits the colonists, don't fool yourself in thinking it helps the natives or the slave class. autoriatians don't care about their colony if they didn't gain anything from it and would watch it burn than succeed without them your kidding yourself if you think otherwise.
@Dilbert1999
@Dilbert1999 2 ай бұрын
The ending of colonial rule in Haiti is what started its downfall.
@kyledabearsfan
@kyledabearsfan 2 ай бұрын
@@Dilbert1999 yea in the 1400s, them massacring their entire white population didn't help global affairs either
@dyingearth
@dyingearth 3 ай бұрын
Papa Doc believe in voting. One man, one vote, once.
@Schwazoom
@Schwazoom 3 ай бұрын
One man, one vote, one option, once
@kevinjohnson3521
@kevinjohnson3521 3 ай бұрын
He was the Haitian “Hitler” type! I met a guy whose family was killed when he was 12, made it out alive barely. My Haitian wife’s family liked him, not sure how.
@ReydelCiguay
@ReydelCiguay 3 ай бұрын
For those wondering where the beef between Haiti and Dominican Republic start, look up “Degüello de Moca/Beheading of Moca” it happens right after the Haitian massacre of the French
@prouddegenerates9056
@prouddegenerates9056 2 ай бұрын
@@ijogi All men have shed blood under some banner or another. Forgiveness is what heals, not accusations. You’re no monsters for the actions of ancestors. The present is our responsibility, not the past.
@samfleurantin2412
@samfleurantin2412 2 ай бұрын
The bad blood isn't one sided unfortunately look up the parsley massacre/Kout kouto-a
@midnightunit8531
@midnightunit8531 2 ай бұрын
Im Haitian and I can’t begin to tell you how heartbreaking it is to watch your country fall
@kriskay5020
@kriskay5020 3 ай бұрын
Every time the news mentions Haiti i always think that it's amazing that the country is still around
@edogelbard1901
@edogelbard1901 3 ай бұрын
cant blame kenya for not wanting to adopt this baby
@thecursed01
@thecursed01 3 ай бұрын
kenya blame them?
@TheEsperKing1
@TheEsperKing1 3 ай бұрын
😂 ​@@thecursed01
@Kaiserboo1871
@Kaiserboo1871 3 ай бұрын
@@thecursed01 Ayyyy
@kyledabearsfan
@kyledabearsfan 3 ай бұрын
@@thecursed01 alright, that was good.
@kevinjohnson3521
@kevinjohnson3521 3 ай бұрын
They were kill squads, Barbeque was scared he would get killed!!
@user-cu3xv1yz7g
@user-cu3xv1yz7g 3 ай бұрын
Great story. My ex girlfriend in 2010 was from Haiti, I remember hearing all the horrible stories from her family that made it to the US about what happened there. This really gives me some perspective.
@Josh.1234
@Josh.1234 3 ай бұрын
I am going to venture a guess and say they loved the US and Americans? My time in Haiti and around Haitian immigrants, that's usually what I see.
@Flitalidapouet
@Flitalidapouet 3 ай бұрын
On top of that, here is the background she could not see on the terrain. US killing 3 Haitian president, and 7 judges, and kidnaping Jean Bertrand Aristide (president) to leave him in an African desert. IMF and World Bank taking 70% of the decisions of the country to make sure it NEVER develops. The hatred of Globalist, Soros, Britain, MI6, France, Spain because Haiti was first colony of the world that successfully fought back against Colonialism. They will be punished for the next 1000 years for that sin. Elites teach that hatred intergenerationally to their kids, descendants, and followers. BONUS = When president Moise wanted to start an inquiry on Clinton's foundation kidnaping kids and selling them on the sex slave markets .... oh surprise surprise he gets gunned down, with wife and kids, in his own house two week's later in an operation that costed hundreds of millions. Wonder who could afford that?
@user-cu3xv1yz7g
@user-cu3xv1yz7g 3 ай бұрын
@@Josh.1234 very much so
@orboakin8074
@orboakin8074 3 ай бұрын
I used to be one of those naive people who foolishly believed that every problem in Haiti was due to colonialism or oppression but with more knowledge and perspective (especially as a Nigerian) especially regarding their neighbors like Dominican Republic, who were colonized also, it is clear that many of their problems are of their own making😮‍💨
@donaldmcronald2331
@donaldmcronald2331 3 ай бұрын
There are many reasons why nations fail. Colonialism and exploitation by foreign powers are just part of the puzzle. It's a combination of Haiti's geography and most importantly: a lack of authority or way too much of it. It never developed pluralistic democratic instituitions.
@kuminanida333
@kuminanida333 3 ай бұрын
At least you learned. It is never simple and sometimes there are not any real good guys, just best outcomes. Now here comes a question. When a nation totally collapses and there is only chaos and gangs what does the UN even do at that point? These are issues exclusive to this time because before hand someone else would of simply just conquered them and they would arguably of been better off.
@brianhowe1982
@brianhowe1982 3 ай бұрын
Most failed nations did it to themselves. I hope I'm not living through America's failed state phase, but we did it to ourselves so can't complain.
@Flitalidapouet
@Flitalidapouet 3 ай бұрын
Maybe reassess with this add on info. US killing 3 Haitian president, and 7 judges, and kidnaping Jean Bertrand Aristide (president) to leave him in an African desert with no passport IMF and World Bank taking 70% of the decisions of the country to make sure it NEVER develops. The hatred of Globalist, Soros, Britain, MI6, France, Spain because Haiti was first colony of the world that successfully fought back against Colonialism. They will be punished for the next 1000 years for that sin. Elites teach that hatred intergenerationally to their kids, descendants, and followers. BONUS = When president Moise wanted to start an inquiry on Clinton's foundation kidnaping kids and selling them on the sex slave markets .... oh surprise surprise he gets gunned down, with wife and kids, in his own house two week's later in an operation that costed hundreds of millions. Wonder who could afford that? AS A NIGERIAN, YOU SHOULD KNOW BETTER.
@dhimankalita1690
@dhimankalita1690 3 ай бұрын
I was opposite I was one of those rascist right wing nutjoab who thought every problem of Haiti is because they are black but after coming out of right wing cult 1 years ago I now realised how colonialism and western countries still affect developing countries . How the institution made in colonial tike serves the western countries and exploits the vulnerable
@rikkisan1
@rikkisan1 3 ай бұрын
It's so weird to look at Haiti but then literally look to the right and you see the Dominican Republic like they share an island but they might as well just be two separate islands.
@Flitalidapouet
@Flitalidapouet 3 ай бұрын
One obeyed the US (Rep Dom) the other one attempted to be autonomous and sovereing. Big mistake, here is what happened. US killing 3 Haitian president, and 7 judges, and invaded military 2 times + later sent UN faking to help but in reality uses as an occupation force. Kidnaping Jean Bertrand Aristide (president) in his house, at night, to leave him in an African desert without a passport or identity papers. IMF and World Bank taking 70% of the decisions of the country to make sure it NEVER develops. The hatred of Globalist, US, Soros, Britain, MI6, France, Spain because Haiti was first colony of the world that successfully fought back against Colonialism. They will be punished for the next 1000 years for that sin. Elites teach that hatred intergenerationally to their kids, descendants, and followers. BONUS = When president Moise wanted to start an inquiry on Clinton's foundation kidnaping kids and selling them on the sex slave markets .... oh surprise surprise he gets gunned down, with wife and kids, in his own house two week's later in an operation that costed hundreds of millions. Wonder who could afford that?
@SkunkApe407
@SkunkApe407 3 ай бұрын
Haiti refuses help from "white" nations, whereas the DR welcomes help and tourism from outsiders. Isolationism is funny like that.
@jamesheaton5421
@jamesheaton5421 3 ай бұрын
Haiti makes warhammer seem like a hopeful universe. they don't even have orcs having a good time in the chaos.
@passchen-fail3704
@passchen-fail3704 2 ай бұрын
Not everything is about warhammer
@watchdogoffarron2800
@watchdogoffarron2800 2 ай бұрын
Yeah, man, at this point it seems like the orcs could help.
@PervyAutomaton
@PervyAutomaton 2 ай бұрын
​@@passchen-fail3704 we know captain. Like not everything is about the US or china, russia, iran.
@alexanderrahl7034
@alexanderrahl7034 3 ай бұрын
The more i hear about historical revolutions, the more i respect the american founding fathers for succeeding in creating the nation they set out to make. We really are a historical outlier when it comes to revolutions
@MUJUNKY
@MUJUNKY 3 ай бұрын
It's true, but there is a major difference between the American Revolution compared to many others, in that the Founding Fathers actually did believe their political ideals. Many revolutionary leaders are not men of principle, they're men who want to be in power instead of the other guy. Simultaneously, the norm for 90% of human culture is Strong Man rule in some form, where as a lot of the political philosophy of the American Revolution was greatly based around individual liberties, the dignity of a man, and the duty of the state being to serve the interest of the people, not the duty of the people to serve the interest of the state. (Granted, the man in that was pretty explicitly the Christian White Man, but the point stands.)
@Ch-xc4fo
@Ch-xc4fo 3 ай бұрын
@@MUJUNKY Not exactly. The American Revolution had a lot of things line up perfectly for them. For example, the colonies had developed a self-sustaining economy that was diverse enough to sustain itself without British dependence. Politically, the original 13 state union's loose federal power based on pre-existing legislatures allowed it to achieve a relatively smooth transition of power, and the relationship with France ensured the US would have a very important ally for its first years. The cultural and ideological background surely mattered, but they weren't decisive. This doesn't mean the revolution was as decisive either. The struggles between Republicans and Federalists in the early 1800s foreshadowed the civil war, and the war of 1812 was a serious threat to the long-term economic stability of the country. And yet, specters still loom over the country, no matter how faint they are.
@watchm4ker
@watchm4ker 3 ай бұрын
The American colonies had functioning governments going into the war for independence. What they didn't have was a functional overarching government, which took a few tries to get properly settled, and only after the peace was signed. It wasn't a 'Revolution', really, as the governments were not overthrown, merely reestablished without foreign overlordship. By contrast, most revolutions specifically set out to destroy the institutions of power and control, and replace them with new ones. But, trying to build a new power base from scratch is a MASSIVELY difficult task, and getting a population to accept the legitimacy of a state after having tossed out or killed the last one takes decades, if ever. Worse, as many of these revolutions were backed by a violent militia, if not the former state's military itself, you now have a state surrounded by an armed force that was happy enough to oust anyone who made them upset. Especially if any plans to fix the country does not include some measure of *substantial* recompense or reward for their struggle. It is a borderline miracle that George Washington proved to be as principled a man as he was, as his reining in of the Continental Militia and his resignation from office after two terms saved the fledgling USA from military strongmen and Presidents-for-Life that plague so many countries.
@MUJUNKY
@MUJUNKY 3 ай бұрын
@@Ch-xc4fo That's true, the economics of it did help, but the political divisions in the early US were also far, far narrower in comparison to pretty much any of the 20th century revolutions, or even the French revolutions of the same time period. Had the early US been contending with something as vicious and varied as the Spanish Civil War for example, we would not have succeeded, regardless of how strong the economy was or who we had as allies. Economic power was always in the makings for the US so long as it held together politically, especially once westward expansion and manifest destiny took root. There isn't a single other country in the world that has had the geographic advantage the US did in growing, without also having to deal with massive multi-cultural and ideological issues that it brings on. Most US ideological issues at least stem from the same well, or did through the early period of the country. It isn't like we had three different major ideological groups fighting in the streets like Weimar Germany did or the absolute shitshow that was the Russian civil war post WW1, or even the divisions the USA is dealing with today.
@alexanderrahl7034
@alexanderrahl7034 3 ай бұрын
@@MUJUNKY further deep dives into the opinions of the founding fathers on the topic of slavery, as well as the circumstances they were in, shed a much different light on the topic than what we are used to hearing today. Thomas Sowell has written about this a few times, including in the latter half of his book "Black Rednecks and White Liberals" that delves into the topics of "middlemen minorities", the origins of "redneck culture" in America from European immigrants of places like Germany and Scotland, as well as a sizeable chunk on the topic of slavery. Our founding fathers were certainly men of principle. And most were even opposed to the institution of slavery, yes even the ones who owned slaves, reluctantly I may add. I think it was Jefferson, though I may be wrong and if so it was another, who corresponded to other founding fathers via letters about his dismay at owning slaves as part of a bonded estate he inherited and therefore was legally not allowed to simply free them. Multiple letters between him and others about how best to care for them and look after their needs, while managing his own funds, and ensuring that if and when he can release them, he does so by giving them the ability to stand on their own feet instead of throwing them out to fend for themselves, penniless and uneducated. They were also apparently terrified that somewhere down the line, the Union would fall to what they feared was an inevitable race war should the slaves ever be granted their freedom, and they agonized and stressed over how best to go about freeing them without risking the collapse of the nation. Lastly, they had to content with political circumstances of the time. Simply including blatant text freeing slaves and condemning slavery in the constitution would have alienated southern state support which the desperately needed to win the war, and would have lost without. Instead they included careful wording in the constitution to allow for the emancipation of slaves at a later date to occur, through legal challenges using the letter of the constitution as a backing. "We hold these truths to be self evident, that all men are created equal." Being one of those lines. During the prelude to the Civil War, confederate states tried desperately to hold on to their slaves, and challenging their humanity in the face of that line in the constitution was one of them.
@mordreek
@mordreek 3 ай бұрын
Be Hiati. Conquer Dominican Republic to try to pay off debts. Get kicked out. Massive gold mine discovered *after* yeeting. The salt must have been *immense*. But hey, new salt export.
@TheKing-uu7jn
@TheKing-uu7jn 3 ай бұрын
People of Haiti might as well beg Africa for an escape
@TheKing-uu7jn
@TheKing-uu7jn 3 ай бұрын
Also don’t forget Haiti actively tried to steal the DR’s resources such as one of the main rivers
@MasterCode86
@MasterCode86 3 ай бұрын
as a dominican this made lol, the gold mine wasn't even that big and the american company took most of it. But yeah, the salt was huge
@TheKing-uu7jn
@TheKing-uu7jn 3 ай бұрын
@@MasterCode86I hope you don’t mind me asking, but besides the water, is there anything else Haiti is actively trying to steal from the Dominican Republic?
@mordreek
@mordreek 3 ай бұрын
@@MasterCode86 I mean, fair on the relative size but still. And the sad thing is...if it had been found during the Hiatian occupation, I cannot see its wealth going to good use or even kust paying off the debt. If would be squandered in corruption and waste
@robertdagge200
@robertdagge200 3 ай бұрын
I lived in Kinshasa in Congo for a number of years working in the private sector. Basically same stuff going down. UN staff had a ball (could not be stopped by police: costs (alcohol and other imports) subsidized; parties at the weekend in the compounds; flights with no security allowing diamond smuggling etc etc) - life was tough for most all others!! Great music.
@thunderstruck6647
@thunderstruck6647 3 ай бұрын
I didn’t realize the UN was that bad in that instance. Why wasn’t there security on the planes though? Seems like security would be important if it was after 9/11.
@robertdagge200
@robertdagge200 3 ай бұрын
@@thunderstruck6647 Yeah, we all wanted to be in the UN (.. ..) - the ful time employees had paid holidays every couple of months !! Over 36,000 (.…) UN people (including peacekeeping forces) there in early 2020's - and growing..... Effectively a diplomatic pouch on the (UN) plane.
@blueskye1827
@blueskye1827 3 ай бұрын
I can aee the Future of South Africa, is the example of how Haiti is today..
@tauceti8060
@tauceti8060 3 ай бұрын
If SA vote DA that should be averted.
@dean_l33
@dean_l33 3 ай бұрын
Have they started killing the white farmers?
@SaltedBadly
@SaltedBadly 3 ай бұрын
Only because American Govt and Allies fk it up 1st to exploit their resources
@windsurfer8824
@windsurfer8824 2 ай бұрын
You wish lmao
@windsurfer8824
@windsurfer8824 2 ай бұрын
​@tauceti8060 the whole continent isn't south africa white south african clown.
@johnwilliams9179
@johnwilliams9179 3 ай бұрын
Me not knowing much about Haitian history:Yeah, this is bad Me when duvalier gets mentioned : oh, it's about to get bad on a different level.
@kaylew108
@kaylew108 3 ай бұрын
To be fair, trying to put myself in the view of the French after the Haitian revolt….Why would France want to do business and work with them after the whole affair? After how bloody the revolt was with all the slaughter and rape of the French people that were still there, there is no way I can see the French being quick to want to have a strong trade with Haiti and see them succeed as a nation. Also being seen as slaves who revolted. The indemnity’s was always going to be the outcome. One cannot be shocked by it to be honest
@Underworlddream
@Underworlddream 3 ай бұрын
I been thanking about the Haitian revolt before and one if the thing that stick to me that they basically had no hostage and prisoner to trade for a better deal, they killed everyone. Historically lots of the war involved taking of hostage for these reason. Have a few nobile relative would force the French to have to negotiate.
@Flitalidapouet
@Flitalidapouet 3 ай бұрын
@@Underworlddream Haitian where not aware Europeans traded prisoners. They had no idea this was an option, simply because they where themselves killed on spot for decades and never exchange for "better deal" and none of them could read or write. It's creasy how people judge from 2024 event in the 1700's without adjusting their mind to the reality of the time.
@Underworlddream
@Underworlddream 3 ай бұрын
@Flitalidapouet Trading Prisoner was the reality of that time, and it was way for a long time, it was only the modern time that we stopped doing it and had no real effect on negotiation . Also from this video it mention that the Hatian were help by the British, Spanish, and other whites who would have let them know this and it mention Toussaint Louverture didn't want to kill all the white because he know they need diplomatic connections with other nation but after he died that Jean-Jacques Dessalines had all the white killed.
@constantinethecataphract5949
@constantinethecataphract5949 3 ай бұрын
The Haitian revolt was both brutal and goofy ahhh. The slaves killed the owners then wore their clothes because they thought they would give them magic powers of the hwyte mahhn
@ReydelCiguay
@ReydelCiguay 3 ай бұрын
You have to understand it based on leadership, Louveture was more open to working with the French and even tried being governor of the Island by invading DR. Upon being betrayed by the French, Dessalines is the one who would go on to do the Haitian massacre and the Beheading of Moca in DR. Dessalines being blood thirsty tyrant is what lead to Haiti being what it is
@user-nw3zm2tc8x
@user-nw3zm2tc8x 3 ай бұрын
I discovered your short-form work a few months ago and I’m happy to view this long-form piece. Your work is very insightful and carefully crafted. Keep this good content coming. Hopefully, the YT overlords don’t give you a hard time. This type of content is worthy and should be allowed to reach everyone. History is for everyone; keep it coming.
@Flitalidapouet
@Flitalidapouet 3 ай бұрын
Ya ya but he "conveniently forget" all the important information's like US killing 3 Haitian president, and 7 judges, and kidnaping Jean Bertrand Aristide (president) to leave him in an African desert. IMF and World Bank taking 70% of the decisions of the country to make sure it NEVER develops. The hatred of Globalist, Soros, Britain, MI6, France, Spain because Haiti was first colony of the world that successfully fought back against Colonialism. They will be punished for the next 1000 years for that sin. Elites teach that hatred intergenerationally to their kids, descendants, and followers. BONUS = When president Moise wanted to start an inquiry on Clinton's foundation kidnaping kids and selling them on the sex slave markets .... oh surprise surprise he gets gunned down, with wife and kids, in his own house two week's later in an operation that costed hundreds of millions. Wonder who could afford that?
@rionmoonandroid
@rionmoonandroid 3 ай бұрын
When has Haiti NOT been falling apart?
@PervyAutomaton
@PervyAutomaton 2 ай бұрын
When the french still owned it. Or so says all the people from there lol, them going on there own was what startet it.
@apeman9238
@apeman9238 26 күн бұрын
​@@PervyAutomatonAfter the French got kicked out of Haiti, the Haitians had to pay off a massive "reperations debt to the French. and not to forget the American take over and the corruption.
@haldon12
@haldon12 3 ай бұрын
Thanks for this video. It's heartening that so many history, fact and news related channels are getting the word out about the situation in Haiti. It's dark, sad, fascinating and absolutely depressing, but it will only get worse if change can't be made.
@DauthEldrvaria
@DauthEldrvaria 3 ай бұрын
Comment deleted lol. Wow.
@arthurmiranda8896
@arthurmiranda8896 3 ай бұрын
I think that all we can learn is that trying to change it from the outside only makes things worst.
@prototype_15
@prototype_15 3 ай бұрын
Another compelling history lesson 💯 your storytelling absolutely trumps normal television P.S. it would help a lot if Stakuyi added a small year counter for context in the other international events going on and what not
@michaelbrown7430
@michaelbrown7430 3 ай бұрын
Thanks for the work you put into these videos, it is very appreciated
@erinaltstadt4234
@erinaltstadt4234 3 ай бұрын
Thank you, this was very interesting and informative. Thank you very much for all the effort you put into this, it is real appreciated.
@shinyuy
@shinyuy 3 ай бұрын
Wonderful work, great job with this marathon of a video. I have neighbors from Haiti and while they are happy to share a meal sometimes they never talk about their former home. I have a better understanding of why.
@MrValent
@MrValent 3 ай бұрын
Great job my friend. I appreciate the the hard work put into this video!
@Mrnickman16
@Mrnickman16 3 ай бұрын
Thanks for the rundown Steve.
@urbanarmory
@urbanarmory 3 ай бұрын
I just wanted to say, I'm new to this channel and I think this particular video was excellently done! Nicely laid out explaination for a matroshkah doll worth of problems
@piercemaciain4847
@piercemaciain4847 2 ай бұрын
Well done. Your breakdown of this seemingly continual problem was thoughtful and through.
@Capt.Steele
@Capt.Steele 3 ай бұрын
I'm already guessing a lot of people in the comments are going to blame colonialism and the French for much of haiti's challenges, but the same can be said for pretty much every Caribbean state. The truth is often far more complex, and I look forward to seeing your take on the situation!
@All_Hail_Chael
@All_Hail_Chael 3 ай бұрын
Easier to blame someone else than accept your own failings/shortcommings. You cannot help some people, I have stupid friends, they do stupids things, nothing I do, no advice I can give will make them smart. They blame everyone else because admitting you have a lower than average IQ hurts people's feelings. This is true the world over, entire nations do this, my Mum is Irish, they blame the Brits for everything. Terrible loser mentality.
@InquisitorXarius
@InquisitorXarius 3 ай бұрын
Not every carribean island is a poverty ridden hellhole like Haiti, nice equivalency fallacy btw.
@All_Hail_Chael
@All_Hail_Chael 3 ай бұрын
@@InquisitorXarius Go look up internationl murder rates per capita. The top ten is literally Carribean countries and the ones around Mexico, about 5 of each.
@jamrockz100
@jamrockz100 3 ай бұрын
@il_Chael yup Jamaica (where I live, born and raised) is a great example of that
@InquisitorXarius
@InquisitorXarius 3 ай бұрын
@@All_Hail_Chael Murder rates are not the sole indicator of a countries status. Haiti is the only country in the Carribean dealing with crippling poverty and famine, those two things may be worsened by Natural Disasters but their primary cause is the French and the Nepotistic, Elitist, Oligarical, Bigoted, Exploitative, and Autocratic systems of society and state they the French created. Antiqua and Barbados, Jamaica, The Virgin Islands, St. Kitts, Dominican Republic,Cuba, etc aren’t dealing with anything close to the sheer malignant colonial legacy left by the French in Haiti. Stop downplaying it, denying it, or blaming it on the Haitian people nor solely blaming it on the Haitian regimes who the French have supported to keep Haiti impoverished.
@stephanrae2878
@stephanrae2878 2 ай бұрын
Thank you for this, very informative. BTW, your fast speaking style is right at the edge of my understanding. I had to go back and re-listen to you twice.
@deezelfairy
@deezelfairy 2 ай бұрын
It's called pacing, and it needs to be fast to get through a lot of information in an hour long video. Slow it down to much and it becomes boring and people don't engage.
@johnbean6683
@johnbean6683 3 ай бұрын
Well done sir. Glad to see the work you put in.
@jamesbaggett7223
@jamesbaggett7223 2 ай бұрын
I used to live in the Caribbean on another island. One of my co-workers was a Haitian fellow in his early 20's. Smart fellow who was studying Videography at the local University. He went to visit family in Haiti and came back mad as a hornet. He'd taken a drone with him to film some footage there and some locals had taken to throwing rocks at his drone because according to him "It's witchcraft". But politically corruption is blatant across the Caribbean diaspora. I was an editorial cartoonist and courtroom artist for several news publications on Sint Maarten. The government was a revolving door of people being convicted with embezzling charges , funneling money into personal projects and off-island accounts. Then crying foul when the Netherlands (which was in a way shoring up the flimsy economy) asks for the recipits for the money they pump into their crumbling tourism industry. Great example is The Great Salt Pond...a natural salt pond located in the center of the Dutch side capital city. Some 30-40 years ago a politician got the brilliant idea to move the landfill for this overpopulated 16 sq mile country NEXT TO THE POND! Now the pond tests for Mercury levels 15x more than the deadly levels. Numerous people have been diagnosed with cancers and illness from living and working near that pond. Hell my ex-wife is a clerk in the government there and had a sinus infection for most of our marriage from the fires burning at that landfill...which sits next to a Carnival Village, and several Government buildings. It's heartbreaking.
@rvairplanesrd
@rvairplanesrd 3 ай бұрын
You missed that in 1822 Haiti invaded Dominican Republic that got its indeoendence from Spain on Dec 21 of 1821. During 22 years Dominicans were slaves of Haitians and helped to pay their deb with France untill indeoendence in feb 27th of 1844.
@geogmz8277
@geogmz8277 3 ай бұрын
Something that all these KZfaqrs and mainstream media fail to mention despite the abundance of records and evidence that this indeed happened! Also no one absolutely no one mentions how Haitians killed thousands of Dominican civilians (women and children) on their way after getting their butts handled by Dominicans during the independence war.
@coltoneverett9636
@coltoneverett9636 3 ай бұрын
Thank you for your continued effort and fabulous content!
@annapoteet2483
@annapoteet2483 2 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for your comprehensive summary of Haiti’s history.
@2006gtobob
@2006gtobob 3 ай бұрын
Wow, more info than I've ever known about Haiti, thank you.
@jaysonemile6633
@jaysonemile6633 3 ай бұрын
Yea he missed some details(as a Haitian American) but overall pretty good. I’ve said the same thing Haiti has been in this perpetual cycle of being a failed state since its inception.
@BoblopZmuda
@BoblopZmuda 2 ай бұрын
Something that stood out to me in a very very sad way was the GDP per capita graph. It has a very sudden and steep recent uptick. GDP per capita going up is typically a sign of of a couple things, increase in production or a decrease in population..
@PureMaddness2151
@PureMaddness2151 2 ай бұрын
Really loved the videos man keep up the great work
@plantemor
@plantemor 2 ай бұрын
This was so friggin interesting. Thank you for taking us through this timeline.
@RogueCheyne
@RogueCheyne 3 ай бұрын
That image of the border between Haiti and DR is just insane.
@SkunkApe407
@SkunkApe407 3 ай бұрын
That's what isolationism looks like. Look at the border between North and South Korea. Same thing. Haiti has refused all outside help for generations, whereas the DR has been open to outside support and welcoming to tourists. The DR has money coming in, and a government that acts, mostly, in the interests of its people. Haiti, on the other hand, is a nation run entirely by gangs, as it has been since the first revolt. Haiti has never had a unified identity, nor have they ever acted or operated as a nation. Haiti has been at war with itself since the day they chased out the French. The only way to save Haiti is to let it completely fail, and then have some larger, more developed nation come in and build something entirely new and different. More than likely, it will have to be a joint venture between the US and the DR. The DR will probably take control of day-to-day governance, whilst the US handles financial backing and military support, until the DR and US can come to an agreement regarding ownership. I see the DR and US settling on a Territorial Accord similar to that of Puerto Rico, making the former Haiti and DR a single nation under the protective umbrella of an American Overseas Territory. Cuba probably won't be happy, but when are they ever?
@constantinethecataphract5949
@constantinethecataphract5949 3 ай бұрын
They literally deforested their island because they were too rama rama to re plant trees LMAO
@Jean-vp1yr
@Jean-vp1yr 3 ай бұрын
@@SkunkApe407the historical facts you shared about Haiti being a tumultuous country since day one, that’s accurate, however, I don’t see DR agreeing to take over Haiti anytime soon…if you ever ask someone from the DR what they think about annexing Haiti, they might get offended by the question, Dominicans want to stay out of Haiti’s affairs. Two totally different worlds in one small island.
@brandonlyon730
@brandonlyon730 3 ай бұрын
@@Jean-vp1yr Yeah and the costs to making the Haiti region remotely profitable would be astronomical it be a giant money sink to anyone. Unless the whole nation becomes depopulated I don’t see the DR annexing Haiti anytime soon.
@JaimePolanco-bg3he
@JaimePolanco-bg3he 2 ай бұрын
@@Jean-vp1yrDominicans are protective over their side of the island and are very mistrusting of Haitians do to the countless atrocities committed by Haiti to DR. When even Haitians in DR tell you not to trust a Haitian, that should tell you something
@annoneemoose
@annoneemoose 3 ай бұрын
Haiti just needs completely isolated for a few generations until an organic, self sustaining hierarchy forms that is recognized by the locals. Whatever that looks like.
@DR3ADER1
@DR3ADER1 2 ай бұрын
They did that. And it led to the invasion of the Dominicans, who had to revolt against Haiti in bloody conflict to regain their freedom from their oppressors. This was after Haiti split itself in two because their Slave Revolt leader declared himself PRESIDENT FOR LIFE almost immediately after his band of merry psychopaths stopped slaughtering thousands of White French children and women and men who were NOT slavers.
@IthliniEllyanSenah
@IthliniEllyanSenah 2 ай бұрын
Thank you for this podcast. Very informative.
@joemartin1631
@joemartin1631 3 ай бұрын
Love your videos dude. Keep up the great work.
@TheForeignGamer
@TheForeignGamer 3 ай бұрын
An important detail to note is that while Haiti was trying to pay off its indemnity to France, they resorted to mass deforestation of their own trees, which only further exacerbated their long term ecological (and economic) woes. Truly a tragedy of the highest caliber.
@OsirisLord
@OsirisLord 3 ай бұрын
I just wanted to add that the ecology of Haiti has contributed to the disasters being much worse than they should have been. The Haitian side of Hispanola is heavily deforested compared to the Dominican side, a consequence of Haiti's plantation economy needing to clear land. However all of those tree roots used to hold all of the soil together and now they're gone. As a consequence when the hurricanes and earthquakes rocked Hispanola they were far more destructive to Haiti than the Dominican Republic because of land slides and floods that would have been prevented had they not cut all of their trees down. It also doesn't help that despite having a third of the land as the Dominican Republic Haiti has the same population, which results in higher population density, thus making the land slides and floods even more destructive.
@TheKam93
@TheKam93 2 ай бұрын
That could be a explanation 100 years ago. They are independent more approx 150 years. They could have created a forrestation programs, to fix it, they had more then enough time for that.
@OsirisLord
@OsirisLord 2 ай бұрын
@@TheKam93 that sounds like something s country with a functional government might do. This is Haiti.
@jacaredosvudu1638
@jacaredosvudu1638 2 ай бұрын
​@@TheKam93 i think haiti doesnt have programs other than education, central bank and commerce
@strider_hiryu850
@strider_hiryu850 2 ай бұрын
saw the shorts. decided to check out the full vids
@brewstore8080
@brewstore8080 2 ай бұрын
Thank you @historyofeverythingpodcast for the overview. For me as a Pole it's still preety exotic to hear about Haiti, despite long history of our nations.
@Skelator_Sikelator
@Skelator_Sikelator 3 ай бұрын
...This must be what it feels like to living in a very miserable Tropico 6 run.
@Josh.1234
@Josh.1234 3 ай бұрын
The cholera outbreak was almost definitively from the Nepalese UN troops. They had cases break out then it broke out in the population. The locals were not fond of the UN at that point.
@gimzod76
@gimzod76 3 ай бұрын
Turned out the UN compound was emptying straight into the river wasn't it?
@EM-tx3ly
@EM-tx3ly 3 ай бұрын
Not to mention the abuse of minors by UN peacekeepers especially boys
@Josh.1234
@Josh.1234 3 ай бұрын
@@gimzod76 honestly don't know but there is no septic system in Haiti. All the roads have open concrete chutes where storm and septic water run into the streams. I wouldn't be surprised if their compound did as well but doubt they had many options. Still doesn't mean they aren't in the wrong for bringing people with cholera.
@Amy-jn7oi
@Amy-jn7oi 2 ай бұрын
already liked the video and I'm only up to the sponser! thank you for all your time and effort on this subject. the algorithm must be picking it up because I have no idea how I ended up here but I'm here to learn now!
@bickyboo7789
@bickyboo7789 3 ай бұрын
Love your videos bro. Keep up the good work.
@JimBaker-vk6ed
@JimBaker-vk6ed 3 ай бұрын
You didn't mention when hati invaded the DR and caused human crimes against the people
@adrian100
@adrian100 2 ай бұрын
Other than this omission I thought the video was unbiased.
@joshua7551
@joshua7551 3 ай бұрын
As someone who has run multiple humanitarian operations in the state of Haiti, it truly hurts to see how much their government has failed them at every step of the way here. Haiti really has had all of the worst outcomes anytime they face adversity. I still keep up with some of my contacts within the country and most of them are just trying to figure out how the hell they can get out.
@bensantos3882
@bensantos3882 3 ай бұрын
What kind of stories can you tell us? I will bump and give you thumbs up and replies too!
@constantinethecataphract5949
@constantinethecataphract5949 3 ай бұрын
Why do people feel sad or care about what happens in some foreign country? When i look at places like haiti i think "well this place sucks, oh well" that's it, i don't feel sad or offended they are poor, i don't feel like it's my moral or religious duty to help random people they either are indifferent or straight up hate me cause im white. This modernized version of white man's burden is just plain weird to me.
@mitchellseibel2859
@mitchellseibel2859 3 ай бұрын
Thank you for actually being a good and reliable source of information. Seriously when it comes to that on the Internet it’s worth it’s weight in gold I’ve already subscribed and liked I love all your videos man it’s good to actually feel informed for once.
@michielvoetberg4634
@michielvoetberg4634 3 ай бұрын
Learned a lot. Thanks!
@justacuteonigiri
@justacuteonigiri 2 ай бұрын
Haiti is basically the quote "It couldn't get any worse can it" brought to life
@josephjenott931
@josephjenott931 3 ай бұрын
😂 sorry, I just imagined what that would sound like. “President Barbecue” 😂
@garrettcarlile1610
@garrettcarlile1610 3 ай бұрын
I was literally looking for a video about Haiti yesterday
@SIDisTHE
@SIDisTHE 3 ай бұрын
Great video. Their whole history is so tragic.
@PhilosophicallyAmerican
@PhilosophicallyAmerican 3 ай бұрын
In under 20 minutes, I can tell this is a more well-researched and far less biased take than what RealLifeLore offered. Thank you for making this.
@mrmacguff1n
@mrmacguff1n 3 ай бұрын
Lemme guess, just much easier to blame Every bad thing on white people?
@LucasDimoveo
@LucasDimoveo 2 ай бұрын
Less biased?
@PhilosophicallyAmerican
@PhilosophicallyAmerican 2 ай бұрын
@@LucasDimoveo RealLifeLore placed practically all the blame for Haiti's condition on France and Western powers at large. This approach entirely rejects the human agency the Haitians themselves have.
@efecan82
@efecan82 3 ай бұрын
Fallout Haiti. Raiders run the show.
@hugehoglilnuts2905
@hugehoglilnuts2905 3 ай бұрын
I think I’d rather live in the Mojave wasteland than Haiti
@constantinethecataphract5949
@constantinethecataphract5949 3 ай бұрын
At least the raiders are realistic while in fallout you'll never see melanated raiders except for a few here and there. In reality it would be the melanated that would be the majority of raiders and the vanilla be a handful here and there.
@abishia
@abishia 3 ай бұрын
Dude awesome video, this was extremely informative
@jacobstutzman7591
@jacobstutzman7591 3 ай бұрын
Thanks for covering this
@aspie-anarchist9854
@aspie-anarchist9854 3 ай бұрын
When I look back at revolutions and wars for independence i often conclude that perhaps the people who fight for their cause should not be in charge after victory. Just because you can lead armies doesn't mean you can lead a nation. Like look at Mao, Castro, the jacobins, or the bolshleviks. You should have people coming with the constitution and political philosophy separate from the people fighting. I guess it worked in america but even so many of rhe founders of rhe ideology weren't the ones fighting.
@zacharythode3601
@zacharythode3601 3 ай бұрын
I think the main reason so many of these revolutions fail, in contrast to the US revolution, is they lack something the US had. Namely the country was functional and self sustaining prior to the revolution. And having a bunch of people leading the revolution who were both well educated philosophers as well as competent military leaders helped. The US also had a generally well educated population. Most Central American and African nations had none of these things. The population was uneducated and poor. The country was not self sufficient and had no industry. And the leaders are mostly warlords with no ability to actually rule.
@lloydgush
@lloydgush 3 ай бұрын
Yes, because the ones doing the fighting did not want power for themselves. The philosophers that inspired the government also didn't want power. They trusted each other to rule themselves, and even the former red coats. They fought, won, then stopped fighting. And remember, the only reason why it started with "legal" slavery was because of two colonies.
@CountKibblesNBits
@CountKibblesNBits 3 ай бұрын
You also have to account the vast majority of the founding fathers were also wealthy businessmen who understood how an economy should run. Despite this the Continental Army still almost rebeled mid revolution due to not getting paid because congress couldn't agree over a tax plan. Then you had Shays Rebellion afterwards (veterans still haven't gotten paid), then the Whiskey Rebellion.
@ryankoroll5421
@ryankoroll5421 3 ай бұрын
Armed revolutions are generally always a catastrophe, with only a few exceptions. They generally end in more war, more death, more instability, more crime and poverty. Peaceful revolutions and slow, gradual change historically is the way forward to prosperity. Haiti, I'm afraid, has had so many destructive revolutions that the national psyche is just trauma. I don't know how one comes back from that.
@aspie-anarchist9854
@aspie-anarchist9854 3 ай бұрын
@@ryankoroll5421 im sorry but when has that ever happened? Seriously because millions of people died in the peaceful fight for independence in India. I can not think of any peaceful revolution. Even something like the fall of the Berlin wall which had no shots fired was built off the back of almost of century of constant wars.
@Azazel-uv3sx
@Azazel-uv3sx 3 ай бұрын
My family has been fleeing from there en masse in recent years :/ cannibals in the streets where they used to be restricted to just the mountains away from civilisation, massive violence, targeting government workers like my aunt simply because those who were in charge already fled the country to allow the lower level staff to be drug out and murdered and eaten...Whatsapp videos abound every single day in the chats of both the adults and the kids
@lloydgush
@lloydgush 3 ай бұрын
Sorry...
@badddkattt
@badddkattt 3 ай бұрын
That’s terrible! I hope your family stays safe.I read part of an old history book about Haiti and in the 1920s there was still reports of cannibalism which was covered up by the government. I wondered if the tradition had continued. What is the context ; is it Voodu, or something else?
@Azazel-uv3sx
@Azazel-uv3sx 3 ай бұрын
@@badddkattt From what I gather, there's 2 primary reasons for that. One is related to lack of food both manmade and natural. The second is related to voodoo, of which my great aunt who raised my mother (as grandma worked in America to provide) was a priestess and died a slave owner. Grandma talks about Haiti back in 1940s and how they were poor with dirt homes and a few of the mixed blacks and whites would have lovely homes of all colours - but also she spoke of the beautiful birds and their different colours and the scales of iguanas being blues and yellows and reds. Then comes my mother's generation, being raised in Haiti in the 70s and 80s where she now jokes that even the birds dont migrate to Haiti anymore because the people are so hungry that they have overhunted natural food sources. Lacking food, the cannibals who are often living on the mountainous regions away from society, cannot provide food for themselves legitimately. Another reason is for voodoo rituals and calling spirits into one's own body by drinking blood and sacrifice. Mostly, the mountain peoples are poor, highly religious, outcasts who genuinely have no other source of food available to them. But to say they would not kill and harm others if they had a stocked pantry would be incorrect as well. From using the roots of plants to create mind numbing poisons to enslave or hanging a dead baby wrapped in cloths upsidedown to bathe in moonlight to extract a "demon poison" from the black ooze that pours from the rotting corpse, Voodoo and its practitioners are a very real threat. Some do animal sacrifice only, others do not.
@stilltraceable6753
@stilltraceable6753 3 ай бұрын
Thanks. Love you and your content
@wadejustanamerican1201
@wadejustanamerican1201 3 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing this information.
@Roman.Leave.Me.2.My.Circles
@Roman.Leave.Me.2.My.Circles 3 ай бұрын
The 21st-century academic consensus over the beautiful island country of Haiti is my favorite leftist tussle. In the 19th century, Haiti was the only part of the world that had fallen to the chaotic Third World conditions which, after 1950, became common in the former European colonies. So by reading 19th-century reactions to Haiti, we can see how the 19th century would have regarded the 20th-or at least, one important aspect of the 20th. In Haiti, we see one aspect of life without promises made and kept: poverty, corruption, violence and filth. In a word: anarchy. Haiti is the product of the persistence of human anarchy, and an excellent symbol because it symbolized exactly the same thing to Carlyle and Froude. The latter visited; his observations are recorded in his travelogue of the trip, The English in the West Indies; Or, the Bow of Ulysses. Haiti is far more anarchic now than it was in 1888, of course, whose Port-au-Prince is a paradise next to today’s. Froude gets all enraged because he sees a ditch full of garbage. The 19th century’s Haiti is the 21st’s whole Third World. Modern Wikipedia leftists are not amused: [All of this is wildly misleading. Haiti was founded by heroic men and women who launched the first successful slave revolt in history.] It is amazing how even the tone of the narrative, with words like “heroic,” has become as factual as the date of a battle to this sorry excuse for a scholar. Haiti was founded by heroic men and women who launched-well, not the first-revolutionary genocide in history. As Wikipedia dryly notes: [The Haitian Revolution defeated the French army in November 1803 and the Haitian Declaration of Independence happened on January 1st 1804. From February 1804 until 22 April 1804, squads of soldiers moved from house to house throughout Haiti, torturing and killing entire families. Between 3,000 and 5,000 people were killed.] Not to worry! “Torturing and killing entire families” can be good akshually: [Nicholas Robins, Adam Jones, and Dirk Moses theorize that the executions were a “genocide of the subaltern,” in which an oppressed group uses genocidal means to destroy its oppressors]. 20th-century scholarship! Never change. (Don’t worry, it won’t.) The explanations for Haiti’s failure to be Japan have shifted over the years-Haiti could probably use Emperor Jacques back, genocide or no genocide, since it currently has no elected officials and is under the de facto control of a gang leader known as “Barbecue”-whose Wikipedia page notes: [Chérizier has denied that his nickname “Babekyou” (or “Barbecue”) came from accusations of his setting people on fire. Instead, he says it was from his mother's having been a fried chicken street vendor.] ¿Porque no los dos? But the latest Haiti just-so story to grace the pages of the narrative, incredible as its chutzpah may seem, is that Haiti in 2023 looks like the above because of-the indemnity that the French made them pay for the aforesaid genocide-almost 200 years ago. [After several unsuccessful efforts to take back the island by force, the French King Charles X ordered the Haitians to pay upwards of 40 percent of their national income to former slaveholders in reparations or face further violence. Thomas Piketty estimates that the French owe the Haitians at least $28 billion from this extortion.] Their views on the Treaty of Versailles, were not recorded. The Third World’s history of unpayable national debt is a long one. The world’s history of unpayable national debt is a long one. However, if we humor the ridiculous Marxist theory that the First World has kept the Third backward through profitable extraction of colonial rents, debt payments, etc, we have to at least keep ourselves grounded by measuring the actual net payments-rather than notional amounts which not only could not be paid, but were not paid. The notional amounts in the Treaty of Versailles were pretty high, too-to say nothing of a certain indemnity to Israel-and yet Bavaria, apparently, is doing fine. Helpfully, Wikipedia, which is a reliable source, has this number-sourced, I believe, from the New York Times: Over a period of about seventy years, Haiti paid 112 million francs to France, about $560 million in 2022. These were payments on the gold standard. A French gold franc is 0.29 grams of gold; a gold dollar was 1.6 grams of gold; so this was about 20 million dollars in gold, over 70 years. 30x price inflation since the 19th century is a good rule of thumb, so $560M feels about right. (Larger numbers seem to include interest.) When I work this out in gold inflation rather than by price inflation, I get about $2B. For a country… over 70 years… this is not a lot. Is this 19th-century debt really why Haiti does not look like Bavaria? Are Marxist sure about that? Are there really no other countries that had a lot of 19th-century foreign debt, yet prospered? The University narrative is not for the caviar-class, NPR-listening friends-but the Haitians, workers, peasants, etc, on whose behalf he toils, lecturing for far too little pay, in the academic saltmine of a freshwater college. Over time, the grim experience of an academic serf and that of an agricultural serf seem to merge-the lecturer is a sort of sharecropper, paid with a handful of pennies, and restricted to the grim floodplain landscape of postmodern Chomsky-Fonerism. There is no biodiversity on this red-dirt farm. There is only one crop and no choice but to pick it.
@EM-tx3ly
@EM-tx3ly 3 ай бұрын
Haitians need King Henri Christophe 2.0
@RraltKing
@RraltKing 3 ай бұрын
The claims of Haiti's founding through "revolutionary genocide" are certainly a tendentious framing, though the accurate death tolls cited admittedly give one pause from a humanistic perspective. However, to simply handwave such violence as perhaps justified shows an alarming moral relativism unbecoming of the purportedly lofty "academic" tone struck. The narrative then utterly goes off the ideological rails, trotting out a veritable cavalcade of racist canards - characterizing Haitians as animalistic savages incapable of democratic self-governance, peddling antiquated pseudoscientific discrimination, even invoking despicable slurs like "subaltern" to dehumanize the other. Tying Haitian economic struggles to a nefarious conspiracy of so-called "First World" extraction and debt-trapping strains maximum credulity. While I cannot deny the severely deleterious impacts of colonial legacies and external economic factors, presenting this as the sole causation is clearly a post-hoc rationalization in service of an insidious victim-blaming agenda. I could go on, but I imagine I have satisfactorily demonstrated my ability to dispassionately deconstruct, albeit through a subjective ideological lens, the deeply flawed premises and logical fallacies riddled throughout that repugnantdiatribe. Though I fundamentally object to its racist underpinnings.
@pieceofschmidtgamer
@pieceofschmidtgamer 3 ай бұрын
History of Haiti in a Nutshell: "Comrade, I know things look bad right now..." *"They're about to get way worse."*
@warbrain1053
@warbrain1053 3 ай бұрын
Love that meme
@JennaWeisz
@JennaWeisz 2 ай бұрын
Thanks! I learned a lot!
@Stellaknot
@Stellaknot 3 ай бұрын
Thanks for the content!
@lucaswilker6692
@lucaswilker6692 3 ай бұрын
I've heard that Godzilla attacked Haiti but left before causing any damage
@julonkrutor4649
@julonkrutor4649 3 ай бұрын
So they slaughtered all wight people, even those how helped them. That lead to international isolation. To break that, they had to take on debt from there colonial master that crippled them for centuries. ... Lesson: Do not slaughter those how helped you in your revolution just because they have a color.
@cypherparadigm3428
@cypherparadigm3428 3 ай бұрын
I only liked the video because you said thank you. Thank you for spreading information, in an easily digestible manner.
@Flitalidapouet
@Flitalidapouet 3 ай бұрын
you mean, he forgot any important info, like US killing 3 Haitian president, and 7 judges, and kidnaping Jean Bertrand Aristide (president) to leave him in an African desert. IMF and World Bank taking 70% of the decisions of the country to make sure it NEVER develops. The hatred of Globalist, Soros, Britain, MI6, France, Spain because Haiti was first colony of the world that successfully fought back against Colonialism. They will be punished for the next 1000 years for that sin. Elites teach that hatred intergenerationally to their kids, descendants, and followers. BONUS = When president Moise wanted to start an inquiry on Clinton's foundation kidnaping kids and selling them on the sex slave markets .... oh surprise surprise he gets gunned down, with wife and kids, in his own house two week's later in an operation that costed hundreds of millions. Wonder who could afford that?
@isaacthor3186
@isaacthor3186 2 ай бұрын
Came from the Spotify podcast just to like and comment. Keep it up bruv
@artje90
@artje90 3 ай бұрын
How can something fall apart when it was never whole to begin with
@rafm3068
@rafm3068 3 ай бұрын
You missed the entire section where Haiti occupied the Dominican Republic and after 1844 continued to invade but lost almost every battle to smaller Dominican forces.
@MasterCode86
@MasterCode86 3 ай бұрын
yeah, most people who talk about Haiti usually avoid mentioning it, kind of hard to keep neutral after you hear how the haitians went full CHAZ and completely failed to govern. It was basically lawlessness outside of santo domingo
@rafm3068
@rafm3068 3 ай бұрын
@@MasterCode86 Yes, it's always a battle trying to get Academics or the media to add those events so that people can get better context. They openly defame Dominican Independence and brainwash young people into only getting filtered history that helps their narratives
@rafm3068
@rafm3068 3 ай бұрын
@marekcracovia4061 It is very relevant. Haitian defeat led to the collapse of the Haitian Empire and more weakening. It is also something a lot of Haitian and Academia tend to hide in the US.
@dragano556
@dragano556 3 ай бұрын
@@rafm3068 I thought Haiti helped Dominicans get independence from Spain?
@rafm3068
@rafm3068 3 ай бұрын
@dragano556 No Dominicans were a group that formed first on the island. The first indepdence was 1821 then Haiti annexed in 1822 and the second Dominican Indepedence was from Haiti in 1844. Then Haiti invaded and lost against the Dominicans. There was a third independence from Spain in 1865.
@walterhosner4626
@walterhosner4626 3 ай бұрын
Great show Thamks
@conrification
@conrification 29 күн бұрын
Than you for the video.
@rconway1357
@rconway1357 3 ай бұрын
Haitians come to America and fly the Haitian flag and talk about how great their home is, while demanding citizenship.
@asddsa28
@asddsa28 3 ай бұрын
the more i hear about Haiti I feel so bad for there history its the worst history of a country I ever heard. I dare say the land is cursed.
@alexthompson8977
@alexthompson8977 3 ай бұрын
I think the congo beats them
@constantinethecataphract5949
@constantinethecataphract5949 3 ай бұрын
The more i learn about them the more rαç1ςτ i became. The guys literally cut up almost all the trees on the island and didn't re plant anything, this goes beyond mentality, even the dumbest medieval peasant in Europe knew to replant trees. And the mud pies jesus christ. These guys are just 1ηf3r10r, Period.
@ssjjshawn
@ssjjshawn 3 ай бұрын
General Buttnaked says Hello
@troykv96
@troykv96 3 ай бұрын
@@alexthompson8977 At least Congo has the excuse that they got setup to fail by the colonizers, Haiti could have been great, there was a point in time where hope actually existed for a better tomorrow... but never came.
@alexthompson8977
@alexthompson8977 3 ай бұрын
@@troykv96 actually I think the previous native rulers of the Congo were just has savage as the Belgium colonizers
@alexpilz5614
@alexpilz5614 Ай бұрын
Thank you for making videos like this despite the difficulty posed by the algorithm.
@chrisc.2783
@chrisc.2783 3 ай бұрын
Video 3 of book suggestions haha. You would really love "The Crusader" by Michael Alexander Eisner, and you and your wife would enjoy the "Ring of fire" series by Eric Flint. Both are right up your alleys.
@wingzero7X
@wingzero7X 2 ай бұрын
Well at least it’s not a massive earthquake
@randomcenturion7264
@randomcenturion7264 2 ай бұрын
Don't jinx it.
@MonfangHowlett
@MonfangHowlett 3 ай бұрын
You know, someone could say that a series of natural disasters occurring after a guy said "VooDoo is the same as Catholicism" would mean something.
@HelgiWaag
@HelgiWaag 3 ай бұрын
Imagine people actually worshipping a diety that casually murders 300k people over a something some guy says like that. Psychotic 🤯
@MasterCode86
@MasterCode86 3 ай бұрын
and know you are getting it.
@CountKibblesNBits
@CountKibblesNBits 3 ай бұрын
Apparently a voodoo curse was put on the place, since the president that said that was deposed 4 years prior to the natural disasters
@Andrijko85
@Andrijko85 3 ай бұрын
Incredible work! Wow!
@tricross2663
@tricross2663 3 ай бұрын
Thanks for the Video.
@SgtRocko
@SgtRocko 3 ай бұрын
Quite good, Stakuyi! I've lived in Haiti twice, and was stationed there in the Marines. I'm fluent in Kreyol & have a tonne of friends there still. I adore Haiti but weep for the constant woes she has suffered. Ayiti Chewi has never caught a break. ONE THING - not ALL whites were deported/k*lled after the Revolution - Napoleon sent Polish soldiers to fight the rebellion, who turned on the French and sided with the former slaves. In 1804 over 500 were still alive and stayed. Dessalines granted them land they built the cities of Cazales (said to be be the Kreyol attempt at pronouncing Zalewski) and Fond-des-Blancs. To this day, a large portion of the people living there are lighter, have blue eyes, and consider themselves Polonè (Poles). There are 3 or 4 other towns where the descendants live in the same Komin (Commune). When John Paul II was there, he made it a point to meet with the Polonè community, which fostered Polish classes being started, folk culture clubs strengthened, etc. I've spent time in the towns I mentioned and it's amazing to see what they DO and DON'T remember. Hope you don't mind my sharing that little interesting bit of history, Stak!
@Flitalidapouet
@Flitalidapouet 3 ай бұрын
Since you love history in an honest way, maybe you will be interested in the rest of the history. US killing 3 Haitian president, and 7 judges, and invaded military 2 times + later sent UN faking to help but in reality used as an occupation force to put pressure on the president. Kidnaping Jean Bertrand Aristide (president) in his house, at night, to leave him in an African desert without a passport or identity papers. IMF and World Bank taking 70% of the decisions of the country to make sure it NEVER develops. The hatred of Globalist, Soros, Britain, MI6, France, Spain because Haiti was first colony of the world that successfully fought back against Colonialism and showed the way to other colonies. They will be punished for the next 1000 years for that sin. Elites teach that hatred intergenerationally to their kids, descendants, and followers. BONUS = When president Moise wanted to start an inquiry on Clinton's foundation kidnaping kids and selling them on the sex slave markets .... oh surprise surprise he gets gunned down, with wife and kids, in his own house two week's later in an operation that costed hundreds of millions. Wonder who could afford that? All that info has been covered in books, articles, documentaries, etc ... wiht a little research you'll find it easily. CHEERS
@EM-tx3ly
@EM-tx3ly 3 ай бұрын
Hopefully they’re safe Haiti has been lawless lately and frankly the polones stand out like sore thumbs
@scorpiovenator_4736
@scorpiovenator_4736 3 ай бұрын
Haiti: and it got worse
@octavius32a64
@octavius32a64 3 ай бұрын
Excellent work
@demiankeaough4616
@demiankeaough4616 2 ай бұрын
Good video. Thanks for the effort.
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Рет қаралды 2,8 МЛН
小女孩把路人当成离世的妈妈,太感人了.#short #angel #clown
0:53