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LeOstrich's Posts

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PoliticsRe: CBN Governor Should Be Sacked With Immediate Effect by LeOstrich: 11:52am On Jul 03, 2015
1stola:
Go to HELL!
Fûcking asshóle!

Daughter of a drunkąrd old foól father and a whòre mother.
You still being allowed to post here shows how bias nairaland is.

I have been banned for stating that Yorubas will be left out in a Buhari govt but here you are displaying your delinquent omota upbringing.

Seun this your forum won't last long. The only thing that is keeping you afloat is posters like us who check the foolishness of your APC Janjawiids. Once we stop patronizing your site watch how the debate will reduce to shilling.
PoliticsAnd They Chose Barabas by LeOstrich(op): 11:20am On Jul 03, 2015
When Doyin Okupe described his former boss and ex president Jonathan as Jesus Christ most of you berated him with insults and condemned him as a blasphemer not truly understanding what the Jesus analogy was.

I repeat what Doyin said and which is that Goodluck was like Jesus. To understand Doyin and myself is to understand first and foremost that our Lord Yeshua fought both a physical and spiritual battle for us to emulate. Throughout Jesus life on earth, He faced severe critism and condemnation and not for once did he condemn his accusers and detailers. His mission on earth was to show that we could live exemplary lives out of example without need of Condemnation of others.

Jesus was persecuted, humiliated and finally subjected to a public execution in the most disgraceful manner but throughout his ordeals He never condemned his oppressors and detractors but rather prayed for their forgiveness.

Goodluck Ebele Nnamdi Azikiwe Jonathan remains till this moment a messiah in our political landscape. He showed us that you can run a free democratic society with guaranteed protection of our civil rights and promotion of democratic tenets.

But rather than dwell on the humility of the man to respect the opinions of those he was elected to serve, they saw him as weak. His humble background was also mocked just as Jesus the son of a carpenter was. The same Plebs who felt oppressed by the Political class were not comfortable accepting one of theirs attaining the higher office. Rather they chose to bring him down. Today we have the same characters who failed this country woefully being recycled and for some reason they see this as "change".
PoliticsRe: Buhari Is Proof That We Need An Upper Age Limit by LeOstrich(op): 10:59am On Jul 03, 2015
kokoA:
Doesn't change the fact that your brain is a vacuum.. Go and die!
Le Fool
PoliticsRe: Buhari Is Proof That We Need An Upper Age Limit by LeOstrich(op): 10:08am On Jul 03, 2015
kokoA:
Buhari has a higher IQ than PHD holder Jonathan who believed the best way to secure our pipelines was to engage ex-militants..
Another fool
PoliticsRe: Buhari Is Proof That We Need An Upper Age Limit by LeOstrich(op): 9:57am On Jul 03, 2015
abacusCm:
I can see that you are a minor bcs your comment indicates that.you need to grow up so that you can know that age is not determinatnt of good govt.I know why you were typing thses trash just bcs you belong to the TANoid.you and this guy below belong to the same group.
Janjawiid tadpoles lack yarns.

Fool.
Foreign AffairsRe: County Clerk Resigns Instead Of Issuing Gay Marriage Licenses (Photo) by LeOstrich: 9:56am On Jul 03, 2015
DaBullIT:
Unfortunately for you , my name is Raphael , I am a christian , and i said that in the comment that generated these assumptions

Furthermore, i did not insult God , You don't do insane things for God, as a christian that is , Later she'll be among people who would complain that she has no job and file for bankruptcy , there are several incidents like that

google the man who quit his job because his pay check had 666 number in it .. I mean let's be realistic , even the bible said anyone who does not work does not deserve to eat, There is hierarchy in everything in life, top to bottom, her duty was to sign as a court clerk , her superiors made the law , not her quitting wouldn't stop the law from being effective , The bible said blessed is the servant that applied wisdom
You can claim to be a Christian but that does not make you a Christian.
Foreign AffairsRe: County Clerk Resigns Instead Of Issuing Gay Marriage Licenses (Photo) by LeOstrich: 9:55am On Jul 03, 2015
DaBullIT:
Says the person who just judged me and labelled my way of life as sinful ? isn't that hypocrisy
To judge is to reach a verdict and proscribe a sentence.

Judgement is in complete without a verdict and a sentence.

I only told you that your lack of morals in the disguise of liberalism is not a yardstick to arrive at a conclusion at others.

The Bible is filled to the brim with Prophets who warned and pointed out sin without sentencing. This is not the same thing as judging some one.

But you in your first post here condemned the Clark as a hypocrite, an adultreous liar and sinner even though you know nothing of her personal life and you mocked her decision to quit her work as folly that sooner or later the financial situation will tell on her.

This just summarized who you are and that is that you see financial gain over moral convictions.

I won't be suprised if you engage in ritual sacrife as long as it improves your bank balance.
PoliticsRe: Comparing The Appointments Of GEJ With That Of PMB. Who Is More Fairer? by LeOstrich: 9:16am On Jul 03, 2015
OP are there only 39 MDAs ?

Why not list out all the appointments.

Meanwhile your list is filled with career civil servant appointees.

Why not list GEJ's total ministerial cabinet and appointments rather than pick the non Northern candidates.
PoliticsRe: Buhari's Memoirs And Books by LeOstrich(op): 9:01am On Jul 03, 2015
The dunce will ruin this country
Foreign AffairsRe: County Clerk Resigns Instead Of Issuing Gay Marriage Licenses (Photo) by LeOstrich: 8:58am On Jul 03, 2015
DaBullIT:
Do i have to be gay to be realistic ? Someone leaving their job because she doesn't want to disobey the bible ?

Tell me she's never lied , she's never seen anyone wrongly prosecuted , she's never commited adultery , she's never had a bad thought in her heart ?

If she has ever seen, or committed any of the SINS listed above , especially 1,2 and 3 , then she's supposed to have left her job eons ago
There are still some people with conscience.

Do not use your sinful life as a yardstick to judge others.
Foreign AffairsRe: County Clerk Resigns Instead Of Issuing Gay Marriage Licenses (Photo) by LeOstrich: 8:56am On Jul 03, 2015
DaBullIT:
In her mind, she's doing the right thing abi ?She's been obeying man ever since, loading up her 401k , when that stops, i hope God will continue paying her salary

Oh and i expect some gunkies to tell me God provides for his people
Be very careful for the God you insult is not like your Allah that needs you to fight for him.
PoliticsRe: What Obama’ll Discuss With Buhari, By U.S. Officials by LeOstrich: 8:39am On Jul 03, 2015
Trailblazer1:
will the Doro dullard understand all this undecided
The dullard is going to America to get a juicy loan package in worthless dollars in order to tie us down to western banks for the next 40yrs.
PoliticsRe: What Obama’ll Discuss With Buhari, By U.S. Officials by LeOstrich: 8:32am On Jul 03, 2015
The Puppet has been summoned to get his latest assignment.
PoliticsRe: Flood Takes Over Major Roads In Uyo Despite Multimillion Dollar Drainage (pics) by LeOstrich: 7:53am On Jul 03, 2015
Can you imagine what the situation will be like if that drainage was not present?

Stick to your useless SW and stop searching for faults in another man's backyard.

If this was that slum village Lagos you will come out to blame it on blocked drainage ad population pressure even though there hasn't been any major improvement on Lagos drainage since Marwa administration.

Why are you APC people so darn jealous and envious?
PoliticsRe: Flood Takes Over Major Roads In Uyo Despite Multimillion Dollar Drainage (pics) by LeOstrich:
Was this the situation since the commissioning of the drainage canals?

The level of unprecedented rainfall which was over 100mm in 48hrs is what occasioned this flood.

Even in the US, flooding still occurs when the levies reach their capacity.

You fool.
PoliticsRe: CBN Governor Should Be Sacked With Immediate Effect by LeOstrich: 2:42am On Jul 03, 2015
[quote author=1stola post=35421766][/quote]Try use your cowpea brain.
PoliticsRe: CBN Governor Should Be Sacked With Immediate Effect by LeOstrich: 2:39am On Jul 03, 2015
1stola:
Shut da fùck up tripe

Would you rather prefer a numbskull igbo over a competent hausa man that will do the job right?
This ibo guy is a bastąrd crook.
Under 3 days of his appointment, he reintroduced back the ATM charge and a dollar now worth N230 from 157 shocked

Sack him immediately! angry
NgeneUkwenu
Try and get sense. We are still suffering the gross foolishness of you Janjawiid broom wielding zombies who vote in this gerriatic I,literate as President.

Elections are over so no need to play the ethnic card .

Read up on each post here on this thread before commenting from that your ritual enclave in Osogbo.
PoliticsRe: CBN Governor Should Be Sacked With Immediate Effect by LeOstrich: 2:33am On Jul 03, 2015
989900:
Well said.

An average 'working Nigerian' spends roughly N1,000 on imported fuel per day. How many Nigerians spend N30,000/ month on bags, shoes and all those other imported stuffs?

OBJ (after stealing), grew our reserves from $4.8B in 1999 to $43B (while paying our Paris club debt) according to NOI (though OBJ claims otherwise). However, NOI acknowledges Yar' Adua grew it to $62B before GEJ took over.

And now what do we have left? $30B?

Going forward, any half-sane individual would expect progress (say north of $100B), not retrogress while accumulating more debt, though selling oil at the highest average price over the longest period in history!

The stolen/unremitted billions of dollars by this administration+refined petroleum products importation+subsidy racket+forex round tripping between Government and banking establishments is at a minimum, 9 times more responsible for the gluttony of dollars than all other imports put together.
You don't seem to understand the big picture.

The West will only buy your crude once you maintain an open market.

Since you foolishly depend on oil for everything, it is thus expected that your biggest buyer will expect you to open up your market for their imports.

Read the long post I replied you with above on the Haitian economic crisis and see how the US deliberately turned that Nation from a self sustainable rice producer to the biggest importer of US rice imports.

The author of the article quoted by OP is against any form of trade restrictions. They want your country to be a dumping ground.

It doesn't matter that most of the rice we consume in Nigeria is from SE Asia and India since the commodity is traded by London brokers who stand a chance to lose hefty commissions and also that chances are that one in two shipments will be handled by western merchant vessels.

The West stands to lose out on this trade restrictions.

The US has laid their demands bare to Buhari that before they can resume buying our crude we must first and foremost return all our foreign reserves to the dollar and stop considering entrying any monetary agreement with BRICs. They have also insisted on guarantee that we maintain the dollar and that we take a juicy IMF loan which will tie us to the dollar for the next 40yrs. Why do you think Buhari is shouting no money when he hasn't even told us what exactly he wants to do with more money and exactly how much he needs to run the country efficiently? Buhari's alarmist call is to prepeare you and your zombie ilk to accept his IMF proposal when he finally sends a proposal to the Senate for approval.

This govt you must first remember was supported into office by Obama who was so desperate to get GEJ out of the way by even loaning Buhari his personal campaign manager and Change Mantra.

Open your eyes and stop believing every useless lie.

The reserves where shared to your respective state governors who complained at one time that there was no need to save during a boom period. I blame GEJ for playing politics with our reserves and still maintaining the wasteful fuel subsidy out of political considerations for his second term.
PoliticsRe: CBN Governor Should Be Sacked With Immediate Effect by LeOstrich: 2:05am On Jul 03, 2015
989900:
Looks like the word 'fool' is the new 'baby' in your chest of vocabulary -- good luck with it till it gets stale
Funny enough, you want me to 'get sense' when you have all your lobes shut down.
I stated my 'opinion' (which obviously is beyond your wheel house), only for an oik like you to come at me with foul words and a lame solution with 'plant cocoa trees" like 'exports' alone is the magic wand to arresting the falling Naira.
I want you to take the time to read this post.

Who knows you may get some sense after reading it.

PPAngel:
How does a state fail?

It’s a question you can’t help asking yourself as you make your way in Haiti, through the chaos left by four severe tropical storms in 2008 and the destruction wrought by the 2010 earthquake—some of which is still evident on the streets of Port-au-Prince today, five years later. It’s not just the unrebuilt infrastructure that raises this question, but also the human and political waste caused by so many years of corrupting collaboration with the United States, the United Nations and outside nongovernmental organizations (NGOs).

A state doesn’t fail because of some innate inferiority in its people. I make this obvious point only because people who don’t know Haiti often try, as subtly as they know how, to claim this is the case. They’re wrong: a state fails because of its history.


Haiti from its inception has been a peculiarly globalized entity. The slavery with which the French colony enriched itself was a global labor and agricultural phenomenon, bringing people from Africa to the Americas in order to serve as free labor on plantations owned by Europeans. Haiti’s revolution, too, was a global phenomenon, linking those same three continents. Haiti’s early debt was global; its economics under slavery and, later, the US occupation were global as well—and still are.

Many readers of The Nation may know something of the remarkable history of this country, since the magazine has been following it for more than a century. But for those of you coming to it cold: Haiti had unbelievably promising beginnings. Though tarnished by centuries of slavery, the country was the creation of some of the great geniuses of the 1700s. But the enormous potential of these singular men was destroyed by France, which kidnapped and killed some of Haiti’s ablest leaders, most notably Toussaint Louverture. In 1825, a scant two decades after Haitian independence was declared, France demanded an indemnity of 150 million francs (roughly estimated at $20 billion in today’s dollars) for the property lost by French plantation owners during the quite bloody, quite fiery revolution—one that Haiti had won.

Haiti was to compensate France not only for lost plantation lands and crops, but also for the loss of the Haitians themselves—i.e., for the right to be masters of their own bodies—since Haitian slaves had been France’s most valuable Caribbean asset. France backed up this demand with the threat of a full-blown blockade, and Haiti agreed to pay in exchange for France’s recognition. As a result, France duly recognized Haiti as an independent country (the United States, still a slave-owning nation and too geographically close for its own comfort, did not do so until 1862, in the midst of the Civil War). The huge debt payments were delivered assiduously by the Haitian government with money borrowed—conveniently—from French banks. Haiti also paid the interest on those loans in a timely fashion.

These reparations to France depleted Haiti’s already starved coffers and led to repeated financial crises within the country. They also led to privations, to an inability to develop domestically and to political instability—indeed, political turmoil, with presidents entering and leaving office sometimes biannually. France, in collusion with the United States, continued to bleed Haiti until related debts were finally paid off—in 1947!

This is how Haiti began to be a failed state.

France was not the only country to force Haiti down the road to failure. In 1909, US financiers began to lay the groundwork for an American occupation of Haiti. It was around that time that the National City Bank, based in New York, acquired a stake in Haiti’s central bank and created a railway to support American exploitation of Haitian resources, especially cheap labor (a little more expensive than out-and-out slavery, but…) and a variety of agricultural products for American consumption, such as sugar (and, later, the industrial production of baseballs and women’s undergarments). As Graham Greene wrote in The Comedians, his novel about Haiti in the 1960s: “It is astonishing how much money can be made out of the poorest of the poor with a little ingenuity.”

There was never any real excuse for the occupation. Haiti was unstable, the Americans said, after a sitting president was dragged from the French embassy by a mob and killed; shortly after, the marines descended. Well, Haiti had been unstable for years. The occupation was simply a mechanism to control Haiti while American businesses sucked value out of the country and made sure nationals of other countries could not. A year after the occupation’s end, Maj. Gen. Smedley Butler, the marine in charge of establishing and securing control, wrote: “I spent most of my time being a high-class muscle man for Big Business, for Wall Street and for the bankers. In short, I was a racketeer, a gangster for capitalism…. I helped make Haiti and Cuba a decent place for the National City Bank boys to collect revenues in.”

Nothing that the occupation built was meant to benefit Haitians. As Ernest H. Gruening wrote in 1922 in this very magazine: “nobody, be he ever so kindly and human, can wholly transmute a military Occupation into a lawn party.” During the nineteen-year occupation, periodic rebellions and uprisings were brutally put down by the marines. Finally, in 1929, another massacre of Haitians provoked a review of the occupation by Congress, as well as an eventual pullout in 1934.

Nineteen years of occupation left enduring scars on Haitian society. The racism and segregation enforced by the marines led directly to the reactionary black-power rhetoric employed by François “Papa Doc” Duvalier as he rose to power in Haiti. The brutality and kleptocratic behavior of Duvalier’s administration, while not unknown in pre-occupation Haiti, had been honed to a fine point under the Americans’ regime. The nightmarish Duvalier and his corrupt son and successor, Jean-Claude (“Baby Doc”), fertilized the terrain on which Haiti as a failed state would grow.

Haiti has never existed in a vacuum. In fact, Haiti today is a creation of the world, its failures often purposefully molded by outsiders, though almost always in collusion with the Haitian elite, who stand to profit from these failures. In this, it is not dissimilar to other corrupt countries with a history of colonial exploitation.


Here is a contemporary example of how this works: under Bill Clinton, Haiti’s leaders were pressured to reduce the country’s longstanding tariffs on imported food (including rice) from 50 percent to about 3 percent. The United States then began dumping cheap, taxpayer-subsidized surplus rice on the Haitian market, ostensibly for humanitarian reasons, but actually so that it could dispose of an otherwise unsellable product.

Clinton’s policy was brilliant and double-edged. The Haitian politician who had to approve it was none other than the overthrown Jean-Bertrand Aristide, arguably the first freely elected president of Haiti. Aristide had been ousted in 1991, less than a year after his election, while George H.W. Bush (Papa Bush) looked the other way. Doubtless in return for Aristide’s acceptance of the lower tariff, as well as for other promises made, Clinton returned him to power. But once back in the National Palace, Aristide saw his authority undermined by the havoc and unrest that this very policy was causing in the countryside. The cheaper US rice undercut and effectively destroyed Haitian rice farming. A country that was largely self-sufficient in this staple in the 1980s was importing 80 percent of its rice by 2012.

So if Haiti can no longer feed itself, is this because it is a failed state? Haitians have rarely been fat, but the food crisis and food dependency began when weak Haitian leaders agreed to open the country’s markets to predatory global forces. This is the ugly face of “free trade.”

The crisis in rice farming also initiated a huge flow of rural people to the capital, because rice cultivators and their families could no longer survive in the countryside. The resulting overpopulation of the capital was a factor in the large number of people killed in the 2010 earthquake. After the quake, Clinton—by then the UN special envoy to Haiti, helping to run the reconstruction effort—apologized to the Haitian people. “It may have been good for some of my farmers in Arkansas, but it has not worked. It was a mistake,” he told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in 2010. “I have to live every day with the consequences of the lost capacity to produce a rice crop in Haiti to feed those people because of what I did; nobody else.” He has called the policy a “devil’s bargain.” Nonetheless, imports of subsidized American rice only increased after the earthquake. Haiti imports as much as 50 percent of its food now, mostly from the United States. Today, Haiti is the second-biggest importer of US rice in the world.

Now let’s look at politics. In 1991, Aristide was overthrown. In 1994, Bill Clinton reinstated him. Aristide served out his truncated five-year term and was elected president once more in 2000, only to be overthrown again, in 2004, this time under Baby Bush (George W.).

For seven years after that second coup, Aristide lived in US-imposed exile in South Africa. He was allowed back into Haiti only in 2011, when President Obama, given various factors, could no longer reasonably prevent his return.

Though Aristide was, for at least two decades, the overwhelming choice of the Haitian people, his support has dissipated in the chaos caused by two anti-democratic coups and a barrage of natural disasters, as well as the generational shift that has come with new voters who simply don’t remember him. Even so, the current Haitian president, a conservative Duvalierist who is another puppet of the United States, has recently put Aristide under illegal house arrest, fearing his potential as a disrupter as Haiti begins the long-overdue slog to a new round of elections.

That Haitian president is Michel Martelly, a pop singer whose slender victory in 2011 was engineered with the collusion of the United States, the UN and the Organization of American States (OAS). With his pro-business stance, Martelly is a lot more to the liking of American corporate interests in Haiti than Aristide. Among his greatest achievements as president: diverting earthquake-relief money to help extend and modernize transportation in northern Haiti, far from the earthquake’s path, as well as expanding the incentives to seduce low-wage light industry to Haiti (mainly in the north) and freeing up gold-, silver- and copper-mining contracts for giant multinational extraction companies to begin excavating (also in the north).

Is the failure of the democratic experiment in Haiti the fault of a people who cannot govern themselves? No, it’s the fault of outside interests and their Haitian collaborators, who together continue to hold the reins of power in Haiti.

By the way, I don’t mean to suggest that Aristide was democracy personified. He was flawed, but so what? Let’s put it this way: unlike Aristide, the Duvaliers—both Papa Doc and Baby Doc—were grotesque violators of free speech, honest elections and human rights, but still they managed, in the shadow of the United States, not to be overthrown for almost thirty years. Aristide, in that same shadow (Haiti hasn’t moved!), was overthrown within eight months of taking office, and then overthrown a second time. This is not about a state’s failure; it’s about failure imposed on a state.


Let’s also consider corruption, another symptom of failed states. Many say the Haitian government is disorganized, but no one is fooled: actually, the Haitian kleptocracy has been carefully organized—especially during the occupation—to be porous and incompetent, to allow for corruption. It exists to feed those politicians who kowtow to outside interests. It is a mechanism into which money is poured and then siphoned off. The Duvaliers merely perfected what the occupation handed down.

Since 1915, the United States has treated Haitian governments as, at best, rubber stamps for US policy, American businesses working in Haiti, and Haitian-run businesses friendly to American interests. For almost the entire twentieth century, only US-approved Haitians could be president. The embassy looked the other way at internal political repression, to say nothing of continuing starvation in the countryside, as long as Haitian governments were friendly—or at least anticommunist, like Papa Doc’s. Any leader who seemed to have an agenda that put the Haitian people first was thrown out, including Daniel Fignolé, a wildly popular political figure who was in office less than a month in 1957, shortly before the Duvalier dictatorship; and, of course, Aristide, who slipped in during a moment of change in Haiti and the world (post-Duvalier and post–Cold War, respectively) but was quickly sent packing.

Ever since Aristide was deposed for the second time, in 2004, there has been another occupation of Haiti, this time by the United Nations. A decade later, some 7,000 international military and police personnel still operate from the huge, modern UN Logistics Base near the airport (which is no longer named for François Duvalier but for Louverture, another coup victim sent summarily overseas). From “Log Base,” as it is called, peacekeepers have been sent out to quell dissent, resulting in many casualties. They’ve rounded up the discontented and they’ve developed informants within progressive and popular movements. They ride around town in casual pickup trucks with gunners in the back, facing the trailing traffic.

All of this is done with the ostensible motivation of protecting the Haitian people and keeping things secure. As The Nation’s Gruening wrote concerning the marine occupation in 1922: “this proceeds under the guise of benevolence…. Colonel Russell [the head of the occupation at the time] told me that it was the two million Haitian country people that he wanted to help, and that he was very fond of them but [that he was] against the ‘three hundred agitators in Port au Prince….’ The Occupation’s affection for the Haitian proletariat is truly touching. Obviously if the [agitators are] eliminated, the most docile and the cheapest labor supply that a concessionnaire ever dreamed of will be easily available. Twenty cents a day is the current Haitian wage.” Today, thanks to the machinations of American businesspeople in Haiti and colluding legislators in Washington, the minimum wage has been kept low: to less than $5 a day. Haitians’ 1922 pay comes to roughly $2.82 in today’s dollars. So, in ninety-three years, the value of a Haitian’s labor has increased by little more than $2.

One final problem must be understood in picking apart the failure of the Haitian state, and that is the overwhelming presence in Haiti—especially in Port-au-Prince and in Cap-Haïtien—of nongovernmental organizations, usually foreign-based. Unscientific estimates suggest there are some 10,000 NGOs operating in a country smaller than Maryland with a population of 10 million.

These NGOs, each with its own projects, don’t operate under any kind of umbrella; nor are they truly regulated. What they do, unintentionally, is substitute their own services for the services that a government should provide. They prop up the kleptocratic state, a mechanism for distribution of corruption. Over the years, the United States has spent billions through the Agency for International Development, a principal funder of NGOs, in an attempt to “develop” Haiti—and has achieved effectively nothing. A report by the World Bank on its own role in Haiti from 1986 through 2002 stated that “the outcome of the [World Bank] assistance program is rated unsatisfactory (if not highly so), the institutional development impact, negligible, and the sustainability of the few benefits that have accrued, unlikely.”

The end of Haiti, its utter ruin, has been predicted since the state was declared in 1804. The outside world believed a country run by former slaves could never survive; Haitians looked around and sometimes agreed. In 1944, the legendary Haitian novelist Jacques Roumain published Gouverneurs de la rosée (Masters of the Dew), set in a deforested, drought-plagued landscape. When I first arrived in Haiti in 1986, the environmental end of the country was already considered imminent. Everyone would starve and die; AIDS, too, was about to take its toll.

Today, Haiti is still deforested, the environment abused and ignored. Much of this has to do with dire poverty and government negligence, as well as foreign and domestic exploitation. But in spite of deforestation and drought, despite mudslides and hurricanes and earthquakes, despite the destruction of rice cultivation, the collapse of Haiti’s sugar industry, the neglect of its coffee cultivators, the ongoing crisis of AIDS, tuberculosis and, now, cholera—Haitians survive.

Is this because they have a special resilience, that “dignity in poverty” that visitors like to rattle on about? Nope. It’s because the situation has been so bad for so long that almost every tiny Haitian village has sent at least one person out of the country into the huge diaspora, and those wanderers (equal to about 20 percent of the on-island population) have been sending their dutiful remittances back, even over generations. This immense brain drain has adversely affected everything on the island, but it has also been crucial to Haiti’s survival as a failed state.

Many small, formerly agricultural countries survive this way in the globalized world. The Philippines is another good example: its government, like Haiti’s, provides few services and little employment for its growing population, and instead sends its people out to participate in a global economy from which, although poorly paid by employers abroad, they can send home enough money to keep people alive on the islands. Sri Lanka, Vietnam and many other countries survive in a similar fashion.


Living off such remittances, those who still reside in the home country are less likely to find themselves at that edge of desperation where political organization and unrest become urgent and necessary. Grassroots change is abortive or endlessly deferred, a situation that is much preferred by the small local elite, which provides nothing and thereby gains everything. Haiti’s ongoing crisis is the product of global forces, and only huge, unlikely changes in international behaviors—especially on the part of the biggest, most abusive nations and organizations—will allow the Haitians themselves to turn things around.
PoliticsRe: Wike Squanders N60bn In 30 Days, Says APC by LeOstrich: 1:53am On Jul 03, 2015
It is very obvious that only a fool will support APC with the way they blatantly lie .
PoliticsRe: CBN Governor Should Be Sacked With Immediate Effect by LeOstrich: 1:51am On Jul 03, 2015
barcanista:
Rather than praising the CBN Gov the OP was abusing the man without making a drop of sense. Nigerians that understand how stuffs work know that the ban by emefiele is a very good one and will encourage local production. How can Nigeria continue to use her depleting reserve on goods like toothpick and luxury like private jet? The president should backup the action of the CBN with a policÝ ban on government officials using private jets.



For the record Buhari cannot FIRE Emefiele. He needs 2/3 Senate and APC don't have the numbers.
LeOstrich:
I know the people behind this article are the same dudes in BlackStone who recently appointed Sanusi as their regional representative in Africa.

The aim of this useless write up is to ridicule the CBN's effort at curtailing imports which account for much of the forex demand.

No where in the article did the writer post an alternative rather the author mocked the banning of non essential items and went on to declare that we as a nation are not capable of feeding ourselves and so the need to maintain rice and sardine imports plus the very neccessary toothpicks.


This write up should serve as an opener to those of discerning minds of how the west wants to treat us as a dumping ground for their products.

The OP of course is another illiterate Taju posting out of Osogbo who neither understands what he just posted but is merely doing the job he was paid to circulate smear campaign.

As long as we have people like OP and his legion of daft APC Buharist zombies then know that this country can never ever summons its many problems.

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