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Octafish

(55,745 posts)
30. In 1991, I met Jean Bertrand Aristide, then the president in exile of Haiti...
Fri Apr 18, 2014, 01:34 PM
Apr 2014

It was a short time after the generals, with the tacit approval of Poppy Bush, overthrew the first democratically elected leader in 70 years of the poorest nation in the hemisphere. I wrote about it 13 years or so later on DU:



Aristide told me the Generals ran Dope, Inc. on Haiti. Personally.

Posted by Octafish in General Discussion (Through 2005)
Sat Mar 20th 2004, 06:49 PM

Sorry if the following is an old read. The thing held true then and holds true still…

I met Jean Bertrand-Aristide after he was deposed by the generals in the early 90s. He came to metro Detroit and spoke before the Cranbrook Peace Foundation.

The newspaper I then worked for didn’t see any reason for sending me to cover Aristide’s speech. The editors weren’t BFEE, but the events on a Caribbean island just weren’t “local” enough for their budget. So, I went on my own time.

The Cranbrook people were happy to see me. They wanted, of course, as much coverage as possible. So, they invited me and the other interested reporter types to have at him for an hour before his address.

I’m ashamed to report, at an important event in two nation’s larger media market, only a couple of CBC radio reporters out of Windsor and one local Detroit TV crew bothered to show. I was the lone print guy. Anyway…

Aristide answered every question asked in English or French. He also told us about life in Haiti, where there were four doctors to care for 4 million people. Another interesting stat: One percent of the population own 99-percent of the property.

I asked Aristide what the United States could do to help him restore democracy to Haiti? Aristide said all Poppy Doc Bush had to do was pick up the phone, call the generals and say, “Get out,” and they would quit their coup and the first democratically elected leader of Haiti in 75 years would be returned to power. Bush didn't and Aristide wasn't until Clinton sent the US Marines, many years and many Haitian lives later.

The reason for Bush Senior's inaction? Aristide said he didn’t know the answer, but he suspected Bush’s politics favored the landowners over the masses. (“Sounds familiar,” I then thought and still think today.)

Aristide said that the generals were deep into the wholesale cocaine importation business. Now who would be their partner in all that? Besides the wealthy landowners, for whom the Generals worked, I mean.

Original OP from 2004: http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=show_mesg&forum=104&topic_id=1257891&mesg_id=1259743



The Bushes and the people they front for are doing to the United States of America what the landowners of Haiti -- and those in Columbia and the other nations of the world where the small minority control the majority of wealth, land and resources. These undemocratic tools only work to enhance their own privileged positions and holdings. The rest of humanity could be cattle or piss-ants, for all they care.

You know I am a broken record when it comes to Nov. 22, 1963: The problems our nation and world face today -- from war without end to inequality and welfare for the wealthy to pollution and overpopulation to those who think "There's nothing we can do..." stem from that moment when the forces of totalitarianism took control of the US government from democracy.

Recommendations

0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

I don't see anything. All is well. NightWatcher Apr 2014 #1
Oh pretty good (down Spot). Hard to figure which flies to tie (DOWN SPOT!)... Junkdrawer Apr 2014 #2
. . . Brigid Apr 2014 #13
We're a corrupt country, let's call it what it really is and start holding people accountable Corruption Inc Apr 2014 #3
In today's world, you have a point. I was always raised to hold DEMOCRACY sacred... Junkdrawer Apr 2014 #5
It's not the "Democracy" part that was wrong.... Junkdrawer Apr 2014 #7
While we are at it ... 1000words Apr 2014 #4
In the absence of a strong grassroots movement from below, expecting anything but what we have... Junkdrawer Apr 2014 #6
... MohRokTah Apr 2014 #8
---... Junkdrawer Apr 2014 #9
... MohRokTah Apr 2014 #10
Oh. That old RW chestnut. Junkdrawer Apr 2014 #11
No, that fact of history. MohRokTah Apr 2014 #14
Friendly advice: AM Talk Radio.... Junkdrawer Apr 2014 #16
Friendly advice, you have no clue who I am or what I know. MohRokTah Apr 2014 #17
You gave me the clue. n/t Junkdrawer Apr 2014 #19
You jumped to a conclusion. eom MohRokTah Apr 2014 #20
If you have falciparum malaria, I'm going to assume you were in Africa recently... Junkdrawer Apr 2014 #21
This is true - it has always been an oligarchy TBF Apr 2014 #34
This op Jesus Malverde Apr 2014 #12
UNREC brooklynite Apr 2014 #15
The "what to do" is really pretty easy. MohRokTah Apr 2014 #18
How interesting then, that the OP didn't suggest it. brooklynite Apr 2014 #22
Do keep up... Junkdrawer Apr 2014 #23
It would have killed you to put in a direct cite? brooklynite Apr 2014 #31
since you accused me of not suggesting what to do.... Junkdrawer Apr 2014 #35
It's a plutocracy The Second Stone Apr 2014 #24
We need to focus our efforts closer to We the People... Junkdrawer Apr 2014 #26
It's a great show: The Generals put up a brave fight, but the Globetrotters always win. Octafish Apr 2014 #25
Long ago, I met the sons of a wealthy Columbian oil shipping businessman... Junkdrawer Apr 2014 #27
''The Principles of Newspeak'' Octafish Apr 2014 #28
Very apt picture you draw. Junkdrawer Apr 2014 #29
In 1991, I met Jean Bertrand Aristide, then the president in exile of Haiti... Octafish Apr 2014 #30
My favorite Michael Parenti speech is "Democratic Government vs the State".... Junkdrawer Apr 2014 #32
I don't see it. Is behind that ... er rock Apr 2014 #33
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