Why Haiti is Dying & the DR is Booming

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Пікірлер: 20 000

  • @ziggamon
    @ziggamon5 ай бұрын

    I was deployed to Haiti in 2010 after the earthquake hit. That was the first time I've ever experienced pure anarchy, chaos, and complete poverty when we left the airport.

  • @aidanhart9871

    @aidanhart9871

    5 ай бұрын

    A shame you couldn't go before the earthquake to see it was much the same 😅😅😅

  • @Tethloach1

    @Tethloach1

    5 ай бұрын

    A society that has had many challenges.

  • @rustyshackleford3316

    @rustyshackleford3316

    5 ай бұрын

    You can't fix stupid.

  • @CodexIndia1

    @CodexIndia1

    5 ай бұрын

    Well at least you got to experience the UN run children prostitution and help spread a cholera epidemic.

  • @looseygoosey1349

    @looseygoosey1349

    5 ай бұрын

    @@aidanhart9871 lmao that was brutal.

  • @josezuniga4814
    @josezuniga48145 ай бұрын

    I feel like France doesn't get enough flak for its colonial history like Britain does. By far the former French colonies are some of the worst performing states in the modern day compared to former British and even Spanish colonies, and France continues practices of modern colonialism to this day.

  • @fighter5583

    @fighter5583

    5 ай бұрын

    It's quite funny when you realize Britain's former colonies would grow to become stronger than itself.

  • @ballgang367

    @ballgang367

    5 ай бұрын

    Algeria was pretty well ran but that's about it though

  • @tytsuw2320

    @tytsuw2320

    5 ай бұрын

    yes because France didn't move into its colonies

  • @PrimericanIdol

    @PrimericanIdol

    5 ай бұрын

    Russia is helping the former French vassals of West Africa to finally decolonize and become truly independent.

  • @PrimericanIdol

    @PrimericanIdol

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@@fighter5583Same with Spain and Portugal. Mexico and Brazil are much larger economies than their parent nation.

  • @teodelfuego
    @teodelfuegoАй бұрын

    “On the brink of becoming a failed state.” On the brink? Sounds like the brink is in the rear view mirror at this point

  • @skyyy4570

    @skyyy4570

    Ай бұрын

    ur 3 months too late bro

  • @hotcauldron7918

    @hotcauldron7918

    Ай бұрын

    Makes no differences. They are already a failed state

  • @jmorel42

    @jmorel42

    Ай бұрын

    Definitely a confirmed failed state now

  • @metalkixjr7582

    @metalkixjr7582

    29 күн бұрын

    that is comedy gold

  • @teodelfuego

    @teodelfuego

    17 күн бұрын

    @@skyyy4570 my comment was based on the information in the video which was published three months before my comment. So, I’m not sure what you’re on about, but you do you

  • @charlottecamila2859
    @charlottecamila2859Ай бұрын

    I'm Dominican, but I'll say this. Haiti is a beautiful country although it is not in its best place. Amazing beaches, mountains, and history. They have a beautiful rich culture with nice dances. Their food is actually amazing and the Haitians are a beautiful people too and you will see the most striking bone structures and exotic Black beauty you have ever seen. I truly hope God sheds his mercy and light on Haiti for the betterment, growth, and health of our island. After decades of suffering they deserve peace, unity, happiness, and brotherly love. God bless Haiti and I wish them many blessings, growth and progress! ❤🎉

  • @AnimalLover2400

    @AnimalLover2400

    Ай бұрын

    Is Dominican beauty "exoticl Black beauty" as well, since MOST Dominicans are also of West African descent?

  • @Americafat1

    @Americafat1

    Ай бұрын

    it doesn't fucking matter how "beautiful" a culture is. there gonna eat themselves alive and than come for ur country

  • @BichitaQ

    @BichitaQ

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@AnimalLover2400 I can't tell if this is a genuine question, but the average Dominican and the average Haitian look much different. Dominicans are known to have notable European ancestry whereas Haitians, owing to the great difference in the number of Africans and Europeans in the country during colonial times, are much more racially homogeneous. There of course are dark Dominicans and light Haitians, but the majority of Haitians are very obviously more phenotypically black than Dominicans.

  • @johnstudd4245

    @johnstudd4245

    27 күн бұрын

    God will not bless them as long as "Voodoo" religions are rampant.

  • @charlottecamila2859

    @charlottecamila2859

    27 күн бұрын

    ​​@@AnimalLover2400 Well Haitians are 95% West African DNA and Dominicans are 75% Mixed race Mulattos/Mestizos with 16% being White and 11% Black. I think it's not hard to tell most of us apart.

  • @redox6548
    @redox65485 ай бұрын

    The history of Haiti is just *'wait, it gets worse'* Truly unfortunate chain of events

  • @TheSouthIsHot

    @TheSouthIsHot

    5 ай бұрын

    😆

  • @therealmaiku

    @therealmaiku

    4 ай бұрын

    Yea. It's really unfortunate that France and US decided to kidnap Africans and slave them in their colonies. Also unfurtonate that after just few time after freeing from them they came back robbing the country at gunpoint. And definitely unfortunate that when democracy was starting to work and they were claiming justice and restitution the US and France decided to support criminal groups to start a civil war.

  • @mazvitaselemani

    @mazvitaselemani

    4 ай бұрын

    I literally cringed at one point. It's absolutely disturbing just how unfortunate the state has been

  • @spence6195

    @spence6195

    4 ай бұрын

    Black people deserve a better world without them evil colonizers

  • @derklebob8161

    @derklebob8161

    4 ай бұрын

    Any country with black people in it is just 'wait, it gets worse'

  • @anabelledagher
    @anabelledagher5 ай бұрын

    as a dominican living in the dr, i thank you for doing this video and shine light on this topic, since i feel it has been poorly covered and not given the enough importance that it deserves

  • @anabelledagher

    @anabelledagher

    5 ай бұрын

    haitians need help and the domincan republic can only do so much. and we as neighbors, are suffering from this too.

  • @ChaoticMadness97

    @ChaoticMadness97

    5 ай бұрын

    x2, im subscribed to see more international issues and other subjects on the channel, this was a nice suprise, BERY well explained. The best solution (IF POSSIBLE) that i see to Haiti, its to try and solve all their problems at same time, Economic, security, a MASSIVE reforestation, and proper building able to withstand both hurricanes AND earthquakes.

  • @LongLivesteph

    @LongLivesteph

    5 ай бұрын

    You guys are making it worse tho

  • @ConvictedRapistTrump

    @ConvictedRapistTrump

    5 ай бұрын

    Dominica and dominica republic are two different nations.@@LongLivesteph

  • @AlaskusA

    @AlaskusA

    5 ай бұрын

    @@anabelledagherim also Dominican, im from macoris

  • @jeffbeland3280
    @jeffbeland3280Ай бұрын

    tl;dr: France is punishing Haiti for achieving independence through a slave revolt. France still doesn't want to talk about it.

  • @alanalb1449

    @alanalb1449

    Ай бұрын

    France doesn't give a shot about them, the habitants of haiti are the problem

  • @doudouelias7077

    @doudouelias7077

    Ай бұрын

    Everything to you is France? America doesn't belong to France but to American ah ha do you get it?

  • @nukfigrs6621

    @nukfigrs6621

    Ай бұрын

    based

  • @EatSumMorChkin

    @EatSumMorChkin

    Ай бұрын

    @@doudouelias7077 Tf are you saying

  • @jenniferwilliams9548

    @jenniferwilliams9548

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@doudouelias7077we have no clue what you're saying

  • @camillepicard2338
    @camillepicard2338Ай бұрын

    as a french person who likes to think i'm well versed in geopolitical stuff, i did not know half of this. i just realized we never ever talk about haiti in france. i guess they know what they did.

  • @teoquero3628

    @teoquero3628

    Ай бұрын

    Of course they know 😂😂

  • @lemmyjay2546

    @lemmyjay2546

    Ай бұрын

    They don’t talk about all the colonies they had in Africa and are still being exploited to this day?! Now why would they

  • @camillepicard2338

    @camillepicard2338

    Ай бұрын

    @@lemmyjay2546 No they do talk about Africa but they don't ever talk about Haiti

  • @ferrari9530

    @ferrari9530

    Ай бұрын

    Haiti is just worse bad people

  • @deeznutz8320

    @deeznutz8320

    24 күн бұрын

    Yeah the French got slaughtered babies were beheaded and then 200 years of absolutely nothing which is blamed on the people that were killed lol

  • @deanl6613
    @deanl66134 ай бұрын

    It would be interesting to see a comparison between all of the former French, British and Spanish colonies. At first glance, it seems like a LOT of former French colonies are failed states.

  • @mattean1

    @mattean1

    4 ай бұрын

    And the Dutch

  • @airborne63

    @airborne63

    4 ай бұрын

    The Haitians MASSACRED every French man, woman and child in 1804. I'm afraid that you'll have to blame the failure of Haiti on somebody else....or maybe BECAUSE there weren't any white folks, as there were in the DR??

  • @raysteal3

    @raysteal3

    4 ай бұрын

    But i have been told the horrible it was the Spanish inquisition....

  • @maxencepenel6202

    @maxencepenel6202

    4 ай бұрын

    Like which ones ?

  • @mike_oe

    @mike_oe

    4 ай бұрын

    Tunesia is reportedly the most democratic and least corrupt country in Africa...

  • @seancosgrove1
    @seancosgrove14 ай бұрын

    I appreciate the mention of the Haitian aggression against the DR in the first half of the 19th century. Many historians when describing why Haiti is poor, they omit how after winning independence, they oppressed their neighbor.

  • @SweetChicagoGator

    @SweetChicagoGator

    4 ай бұрын

    I was quite surprised that Haiti ruled DR for 22 years before finally being overcome and evicted !

  • @tugolditocaribeno2922

    @tugolditocaribeno2922

    4 ай бұрын

    and did you appreciate historians mentioning the Parsley Massacre of more than 20,000 Haitians at the Massacre River of 1932 under the orders of U.S. backed Dominican dictator Rafael Trujillo? or do you appreciate historians mentioning how the U.S. sugar cane factories dominated Haiti, taking ownership of all the sugar cane farms to enrich the U.S? wink wink LOL

  • @jangregory169

    @jangregory169

    4 ай бұрын

    Please, do some research. You are right that Haiti did occupy DR (which they had no rights to) after their own liberation but remember that slavery was still present in DR...which means it was already an oppressed society (at least for black ppl) and it was the Haitians who abolished slavery for black people in DR during this occupation. So, please, tell me, who exactly was oppressed. ..better yet, don't

  • @seancosgrove1

    @seancosgrove1

    4 ай бұрын

    @@jangregory169 Haiti continued to have forced labor for many decades after the slave revolt against the French. The idea that the Haitians selflessly occupied their neighbors on the East side of the island to "free" them is ridiculous. They taxed the average person heavily so they could steal the labor from another nation, turning everyone into slaves of the Haitian state. Maybe talk to a Dominican historian and see how they see it. The story of the oppressed becoming oppressors is not unique historically at all. Just don't pretend as if the Dominicans don't have legitimate grievances against the Haitian government.

  • @indiomoustafa2047

    @indiomoustafa2047

    4 ай бұрын

    Nah bro, only white people can be oppressive.

  • @roamingmompreneur792
    @roamingmompreneur792Ай бұрын

    I’m Dominican and this is the best video I’ve seen on the topic by far!

  • @theshadowking3198

    @theshadowking3198

    Ай бұрын

    😂

  • @801leggy

    @801leggy

    Ай бұрын

    That's because y'all hate to hear the real truth.

  • @x-ray3443

    @x-ray3443

    21 күн бұрын

    @@801leggy cope mald seath

  • @Cerxts

    @Cerxts

    15 күн бұрын

    @@801leggy Which is??

  • @tamara_diamonds422

    @tamara_diamonds422

    14 күн бұрын

    @@801leggy. So what’s the truth? Enlighten us.

  • @sean87arnaout
    @sean87arnaoutАй бұрын

    As an American, that knows some Dominicans that they have all worked very hard to make their country, Dominican Republic 🇩🇴 a very beautiful, nice, and peaceful country to live and work in. Dominicans keep up the great work.

  • @teoquero3628

    @teoquero3628

    Ай бұрын

    Thanks brother, greetings from Punta Cana Dominican Republic 🇩🇴

  • @sean87arnaout

    @sean87arnaout

    Ай бұрын

    @@teoquero3628 😊❤️🇩🇴

  • @Satvik_Insaan

    @Satvik_Insaan

    Ай бұрын

    Americans gave freedom to haiti with france and its amazing that Haiti do not even have oil.

  • @Rogue-zv5to

    @Rogue-zv5to

    7 күн бұрын

    ​@@Satvik_Insaan Haitians won their independence from France on their own. America had nothing to do with it. Wth are you talking about? France should pay back the money they stole from the Haitian people who won their freedom fairly. Shame on France. I wonder if Haiti can sue France for that money back?

  • @Sethsters
    @Sethsters4 ай бұрын

    From 2016-2019 I led several teams on mission trips to Haiti every year. The last time I was there we got stopped by a roadblock of several armed men. We were concerned but we trusted our driver and interpreter, who we had known and worked with for years. He rolled down the window and said something to one of the men, and based on his body language they knew each other. They chatted like friends for a few seconds before the armed man started barking out orders to the others to clear the way for us to pass. The whole ordeal lasted just a minute or two. Afterwards we asked our driver what all that was about and he, in a roundabout way, confirmed it was a gang, but that he was a childhood friend of the the head guy’s younger brother so we had nothing to worry about as long as we were with him. A year later we get the heartbreaking news that our driver’s wife was shot and killed while shopping. I haven’t been back since and probably never will.

  • @Toosii2times

    @Toosii2times

    4 ай бұрын

    That’s wild

  • @esquibelle

    @esquibelle

    4 ай бұрын

    Wow. RIP to that poor woman & her entire country 🙏

  • @aljoschalong625

    @aljoschalong625

    4 ай бұрын

    You LED missions and didn't bother to learn at least some French? Oh my, how american.

  • @donlagay8648

    @donlagay8648

    4 ай бұрын

    @@aljoschalong625 Because he didnt dude. Generally people are chosen for specific conflict areas for their skill set. This is a case of too many video games. Prob a seal recon 69 zulu sniper.

  • @donlagay8648

    @donlagay8648

    4 ай бұрын

    @@Toosii2times Would be if it were true

  • @latoyatangelo
    @latoyatangelo4 ай бұрын

    I’m from The Bahamas and can’t thank you enough for this video. The entire history of Haiti is so sad.

  • @cocunotcracca

    @cocunotcracca

    4 ай бұрын

    no its not .haiti has good history

  • @grandtheftavocado

    @grandtheftavocado

    4 ай бұрын

    They killed all the white people and then built the only country they could

  • @globalreviews6657

    @globalreviews6657

    4 ай бұрын

    France and USA made them pay over 21 Billion dollars for their independence and US soldiers stole their gold… If France gives back the money things might change in Haiti….

  • @xShadowChrisx

    @xShadowChrisx

    4 ай бұрын

    @@FelixAnt I guess if you want a history of lessons full of what not to do?

  • @justapotato4231

    @justapotato4231

    4 ай бұрын

    @cocunotcracca someone didn't watch the video lol

  • @azhurelpigeon
    @azhurelpigeonАй бұрын

    Haiti quite literally has the most tragic history of any country in the world. It genuinely hurts to hear how many innocent people are hurt by so many things that they couldn’t control

  • @CBatista1234

    @CBatista1234

    Ай бұрын

    Haitians have controlled Haiti for 220 years. They have created all their suffering.

  • @nineexists6621

    @nineexists6621

    Ай бұрын

    I mean, I wouldnt say most tragic, I think that goes to china since it has historically had the absolute worst luck ever, their ancient wars consistently had hundreds of thousands of deaths, and in the modern era they were oppressed, forced into drug addiction, tortured and experimented on, and then suffered due to idiotic choices under mao zedong and the ccp

  • @pietkroon6548

    @pietkroon6548

    11 күн бұрын

    what are tardy what about rwanda what about thailand what about hong kong tragedy all round dont romantacise black failure..

  • @thewaterborotrashguy1002
    @thewaterborotrashguy1002Ай бұрын

    I was in Haiti with the Marines in 2004 and again with the Army in 2010. Haiti could be a beautiful country. The beaches and water are beautiful. I hope they get their stuff together.

  • @RomitSaha-oe2hv

    @RomitSaha-oe2hv

    Күн бұрын

    Me too.

  • @JC05
    @JC055 ай бұрын

    Im from Antigua and Barbuda, currently in Guyana, I wasnt aware that our country were sending people over to Haiti, let alone the magnitude of the situation the countrys been in ever since 2021. I hope peace and prosperity can be met within Haiti one day

  • @joe-pm4ls

    @joe-pm4ls

    5 ай бұрын

    Better leave before Venezuela decides to take Esequibo and your stuck there.

  • @menna7927

    @menna7927

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@@joe-pm4lsIf Venezuela does any moves, the US military will blast Maduro's ass straight to the moon.

  • @AwesomeHairo

    @AwesomeHairo

    5 ай бұрын

    Misuse of commas.

  • @PreppyRblxAestheticEdits

    @PreppyRblxAestheticEdits

    5 ай бұрын

    @@AwesomeHairook?

  • @alexanderdantonio8999

    @alexanderdantonio8999

    5 ай бұрын

    @joe-pm4ls 😂. Venezuela isn't going to do anything cause there's oil and the US is boots on the ground. Maduro will get the Noriega treatment from our military very fast. He already knows this...fafo.

  • @Ravenstormx_
    @Ravenstormx_4 ай бұрын

    As a Haitian this is the best foreign video I’ve seen on Haitian history and Haiti-Dominican relations. Extremists on both sides are usually the loudest and give their respective people a bad rep. Also love seeing the comments filled with Dominicans expressing empathy and interest in the tragic history of a naturally beautiful nation. I wish people exposed the unity and empathy of both nations and the unbiased history. I’m proud of our neighbors for achieving all that they did to grow and make their country prosperous. Hoping to see the same for Haiti in my lifetime 🇭🇹 🇩🇴 ❤️

  • @sonnymartinez3051

    @sonnymartinez3051

    4 ай бұрын

    The Dominican Republic is the best potential partner of a stable and functional Haiti. if Haiti was a relatively safe, stable, with the basic infrastructure for trade, commerce and tourism, trust me that Haiti would be filled with Dominicans going there for tourism or business. I would love to visit Tortuga Island, Gonaive, Les Cayes, and Jeremie, as a Dominican, but it is simply way too difficult due to the lack of basic infrastructure. i am sure many other Dominicans have an interest in knowing Haiti other than Port-Au-prince or the border towns.

  • @Ravenstormx_

    @Ravenstormx_

    4 ай бұрын

    @@sonnymartinez3051 oh I’m sure of it! Me as a Haitian it’s too dangerous to visit my own parents hometowns so I feel you 🥲

  • @freeman0048

    @freeman0048

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@sonnymartinez3051The sad situation is the risk reward for DR government or any government to provide any support is too great. The DR plan is obviously to build the wall, stay their distance and let the inevitable happen. After the dust settles, go pick up the scraps.

  • @sonnymartinez3051

    @sonnymartinez3051

    4 ай бұрын

    Honestly, what is can the DR do? Haiti is an asymmetrically different nation from Dominicans, so an integration is out of the questions and will only lead to more problems. The best that Dominicans can do really is safeguarding and protecting their nation and territory from the chaos that governs the neighboring nation. DR has already helped out Haiti with real tangible aid more than all the countries of the world put together, and still continue to bear a heavy burden with Haitians.

  • @freeman0048

    @freeman0048

    4 ай бұрын

    @@sonnymartinez3051 agreed. I would say that's the only option

  • @pragma5282
    @pragma528218 күн бұрын

    Dominican Republic was a spanish province where everyone , black or white, enjoyed spanish citizenship, while Haiti was a french slave colony. Many of the governance structures that existed under spanish rule were preserved after Dominican Republic got its independence, while Haiti has been in chaos and wars with their former colonizers since then.

  • @guzelataroach4450

    @guzelataroach4450

    15 күн бұрын

    Japan lost millions of men and got entire coties nuked yet they buily themself up to the 3rd biggest economy

  • @vMufasa
    @vMufasaАй бұрын

    i've actually always wondered this, thanks for the video

  • @gusefalito6137
    @gusefalito61374 ай бұрын

    As a Dominican living abroad, thank you for covering the histories of both nations with scrutiny and not shying away from their imperfections. I didn't know about the conspiracy with Aristide. It definitely helps me see the situation in Haiti differently. Thank you.

  • @nonyaluvnlyfe6494

    @nonyaluvnlyfe6494

    4 ай бұрын

    DR sounds nice but it's not all that. When I visited La Romana and a few other places I turned around...

  • @morenocesarp

    @morenocesarp

    4 ай бұрын

    you visited the wrong side of la romana, la romana has casa de campo and it soroundings arguably one of the richest places in the americas. @@nonyaluvnlyfe6494

  • @mixtapemania6769

    @mixtapemania6769

    4 ай бұрын

    @@nonyaluvnlyfe6494 Im haitian, the thing is, Haiti compared to ANY country in the americas makes that country look "very nice", even if it's also a 3rd world country with an even higher murder rate. The problem is, the standard of living in Haiti is much lower overall

  • @Jean-vp1yr

    @Jean-vp1yr

    4 ай бұрын

    @@nonyaluvnlyfe6494 there’s still a lot of poverty in DR, I know what you’re talking about cuz I’ve been to La Romana multiple times, but the thing is, overall the country has grown in such a way no other country in the Americas has, DR was one of the poorest countries in Latin America just 35-40 years ago, now its HDI is slightly higher than giant countries like Brazil as of 2023, all of this was achieved in some few decades, if this trend continues, I can’t even imagine what DR will be like in some 50 years from now, hopefully they won’t mess up like Venezuela or Argentina which were expected to be fully developed by this time and then they went backwards.

  • @shiny_teddiursa

    @shiny_teddiursa

    4 ай бұрын

    @@Jean-vp1yryeah the DR might actually become fully developed before bigger Latam countries like Colombia & Venezuela, hopefully they keep it up. Also Latam as a whole should strive to become developed or near it by 2050

  • @kevdes2564
    @kevdes25643 ай бұрын

    As a Haitian still living in Port-au-Prince, you have my thanks for this very insightful review of our history. I wish I could say that things are getting better but that is absolutly not the case. I love my country so much and it's sad that you can't see yourself optimisticly within a year or 2. This spiral may never end.

  • @DarkLobster69

    @DarkLobster69

    3 ай бұрын

    The spiral will end eventually my friend, you just have to believe things will be better. I wish you and your country much fortune in the coming years.

  • @swampghost72

    @swampghost72

    3 ай бұрын

    I hope the best for you and your country my friend..Haiti could be a great place..

  • @TheSangson

    @TheSangson

    3 ай бұрын

    @@DarkLobster69 Yeah, just believing has always worked great

  • @TheSangson

    @TheSangson

    3 ай бұрын

    Dude, you got internet access...make friends literally anywhere else in the world and get out of there

  • @nhatho1723

    @nhatho1723

    3 ай бұрын

    @@TheSangsonbut harder to get out than internet access lol

  • @johnhernandez1235
    @johnhernandez1235Ай бұрын

    What a detailed and unbelievable history. Thanks for such a thorough overview.

  • @juicymelodic
    @juicymelodicАй бұрын

    Interesting fact: Napoleon has sent polish army to quell the rebellion in exchange for liberating Poland from Prussian, Austrian and Russian occupation. When they saw what is going on, they joined the Haitians instead and helped them liberate from French.

  • @vde1846

    @vde1846

    9 сағат бұрын

    A further interesting fact: While Haiti is a "black" ethnostate where European descendants are constitutionally banned from citizenship, the defecting Polish soldiers where exempt from this and declared "honorary negroes." The descendants of these troops and their Haitian wives still live in isolated villages in the highlands and retain a number of Polish cultural traditions.

  • @oscarpatxot659
    @oscarpatxot6594 ай бұрын

    As a Dominican, this has to be the best non biased analysis I have seen on youtube. Well done.

  • @mariealphonse7613

    @mariealphonse7613

    3 ай бұрын

    Your government killed 37000 Haitian people and are sending guns and munitions to destabilized Haiti ... Did you missed that part of your story !?

  • @emmasarlanis

    @emmasarlanis

    3 ай бұрын

    Wanna talk about your invasion of DR for 22yrs and the Moca massacres😂

  • @emmasarlanis

    @emmasarlanis

    3 ай бұрын

    Also pretty stupid to believe the DR is arming Haiti so the they can use the same weapon against the DR😂 pretty counter productive😂 it's your own Haitians from Florida sending in those weapons the elite that fled Haiti and the thugs too😂

  • @oscarpatxot659

    @oscarpatxot659

    3 ай бұрын

    @@emmasarlanis not enough time in an hour to explain every historical event, how about the trujillo era? The Mirabal sisters? And many other things. The subject of this video is explained wonderfully. Maybe he can go in depth in another one on these events you mentioned. I would happily watch as well.

  • @alexcrock7942

    @alexcrock7942

    3 ай бұрын

    ​@@oscarpatxot659Lmao the victims😢

  • @1111e4
    @1111e4Ай бұрын

    I grew up with my Haitian dad never really talking about Haiti and what was going on. This video shows what my family in Haiti is really going through. This is just, horrible.

  • @jonb3150

    @jonb3150

    Ай бұрын

    Look mate, I had to shatter your precious sad thoughts, but Haiti is messed because of Haitians, not because of the French or the American or deforestation. Absolutely laughable and your family would be much better off cleaning out their own country instead of blaming it on someone else.

  • @levitoussaint865

    @levitoussaint865

    Ай бұрын

    same always wondered why the older i get the more i understand when i do my own research.

  • @jayvonnoelsmith8445

    @jayvonnoelsmith8445

    22 күн бұрын

    Yup

  • @JC_Cali

    @JC_Cali

    21 күн бұрын

    Solidarity and sympathy to you and yours!

  • @HashknightGaming

    @HashknightGaming

    18 күн бұрын

    I would say they can come up here to America but the right wing nuts will probably be just a dangerous.

  • @RenaQueenLion
    @RenaQueenLionАй бұрын

    Brilliantly researched video. Well Done.

  • @lakeguild
    @lakeguild10 күн бұрын

    This was very informative, excellent work.

  • @bundesautobahn7
    @bundesautobahn74 ай бұрын

    There was a satellite photo showing the contrasts of the island of Hispaniola. Haiti looked completely barren, the Dominican Republic looked alive and its forests green. Sometimes pictures speak a thousand words.

  • @dixiedawgs8946

    @dixiedawgs8946

    4 ай бұрын

    yea, looks like they cut ALL trees down ? their side just looks like dirt :(

  • @alexaliaga2390

    @alexaliaga2390

    4 ай бұрын

    @@dixiedawgs8946 very desperate situation

  • @KITTYGALOREXXX

    @KITTYGALOREXXX

    4 ай бұрын

    The trees, shrubs and all forms of vegetation, after drying are used for fuel. Cooking gas and electricity are very expensive and there availability is unreliable. When you live in Haiti you have to be completely self sufficient and it's off grid.

  • @yasinfrei

    @yasinfrei

    4 ай бұрын

    Thanks to France

  • @Senriam

    @Senriam

    4 ай бұрын

    @@acmhfmggruthat is not an accurate statement at all.

  • @chloemagloire3053
    @chloemagloire30534 ай бұрын

    As a Haitian, watching this and realizing the true impact of all these major events we’ve gone through gives me an overwhelming feeling of sadness. I was only 4 years old when Aristide went into exile, to this day I had no idea it was because he was the first to ask for reparations. I thank you so much for retelling the whole story in such a thorough and unbiased way, videos like yours that help spreading awareness keep me a bit more hopeful for my country’s future. Haïti’s many complex issues are just the result of a very unfortunate butterfly effect

  • @MrWood-qd6kr

    @MrWood-qd6kr

    4 ай бұрын

    I would bet it’s because of the Voodoo. Unfortunately, Haiti paid a demonic price for its freedom

  • @bougieproletariat

    @bougieproletariat

    4 ай бұрын

    The reason America doesn't like socialism is because socialist countries can't be exploited, that's why they have an embargo on Cuba, out of resentment.

  • @peterbabickoncan6192

    @peterbabickoncan6192

    4 ай бұрын

    When I look at the footage of Haiti, I can't believe that it is an island in the Caribbean Sea. It looks like I am looking at the landscape and the people living in difficult conditions in Africa, during the 1980s concert, LIVE AID to AFRICA, which I watched as a child I saw footage of hurt childrens. I myself grew up in the communist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, the republic's huge debts led to the breakup of Yugoslavia. All the newly formed countries on the territory of the former republic inherited the financial debt to the World Bank, Russia, USA, UK, France. Despite the civil war in the area of ​​Croatia, Bosnia, which suffered a nationalist bloody attack by the Serbian population in these republics. Despite suffering and years of war, we are still paying the debt we created during the communist regime. However, two new countries are doing relatively well and these countries are Slovenia and Croatia. I hope that your leaders who ruled with a hard and bloody hand did not kill intellectual and educated people in all these decades. Without education there is no progress for society and the state of such a society is soulless. If you have smart and educated citizens, the leaders cannot trick them. By regulating systems and society, dictators make their people stupid, and teach them that others (other countries) are to blame for all the problems in their own country.

  • @naekosl3059

    @naekosl3059

    4 ай бұрын

    @@peterbabickoncan6192 They are Africans but living in a different place. As for Africa itself, many governments remain in existence because of the billions of dollars of free money (not loans) given to them by Western nations and Japan in order for their governments to pay workers and maintain infrastructure. Without that money, a number of African governments would fall as they cannot collect enough taxes to keep on going. Thus Africa is artificially orderly and civilized by the appearance of governments. WIthout the external support, Africa, despite the abundance of natural resources and land and water, would devolve to appear like Haiti. Even Anthony Bourdain in his travel videos across parts of Africa showed that they couldn't even maintain knowledge and technology at the 1850's level. Actually, math and science was quite advanced by the 1850's. I wonder how many Americans could even maintain that level of society if SHTF.

  • @AK-jt7kh

    @AK-jt7kh

    4 ай бұрын

    As someone from the US, I'm so sorry for what our government has done to your country and your people. Maybe your country's path to freedom is a slow one, but it has already passed many milestones. If we were to zoom out by another 100 years, maybe we would see a brand new Haïti that is hard to imagine right now. Hope is never lost, and I thinking the Haitians are strong, brave, and not easily defeated.

  • @stephenmoerlein8470
    @stephenmoerlein8470Ай бұрын

    Interesting comparison. Thanks for the analysis.

  • @beverlyisidore8672
    @beverlyisidore8672Ай бұрын

    Thanks for educating me about Haiti history.

  • @jlfern2882
    @jlfern28824 ай бұрын

    Haiti is in far worse conditions that we can imagine, as many of their children are kidnapped, many men are killed, and the population suffers from disease outbreaks without a healthcare system. I truly feel for my neighbors and wish they recover from the terrible fate they've had.

  • @Challffz

    @Challffz

    4 ай бұрын

    Yeah it's such a terrible fate it's not like they had anything to do with it. It just sorta happened, must have been the wind.

  • @paratame105

    @paratame105

    4 ай бұрын

    @@Challffz I take it you haven't watched the video? The analysis has thoroughly concluded that it was mainly France's and the US's fault

  • @petrabridgemohan7006

    @petrabridgemohan7006

    4 ай бұрын

    From trinidad in cribbean.this has. Been infirmstive....but also d eleohant in d room is reparation and gpod ethival nstive leadershp

  • @Challffz

    @Challffz

    4 ай бұрын

    @@paratame105 It's one-hundred percent white people's fault that blacks can't figure out civilization no matter where they live, yup! Agreed!

  • @walterrutherford8321

    @walterrutherford8321

    4 ай бұрын

    Now there is a people who are owed reparations! The country was forced to buy themselves out of French slavery long after slavery had ended! 😡

  • @justtheilluminativ282
    @justtheilluminativ2825 ай бұрын

    Video ideas for the Modern Conflicts series: - Mexican Drug War - Somali Civil War - Cabo Delgado Insurgency - Yugoslav Wars - Bougainville Separatist Crisis - The Indo-Pakistani Wars/Kashmir - Ugandan Bush War - Rwandan Genocide - The Two Congo Wars - South African Border War - Angolan Civil War - Sri Lankan Civil War - Nepalese Civil War - Central African Republic’s Civil War - Rise of Boko Haram - Rise of Abu Sayyaf/Piracy in the Sulu Sea - Ambazonia Separatist Crisis - Azawad Crisis/War in the Sahel - Algerian Civil War - Decline of Venezuela - Salvadoran Civil War - Guatemalan Civil War - Decline of El Salvador - Liberian Civil War - Sierra Leonean Civil War - Colombian Conflict - Ivorian Civil War - Western Sahara - West Papua Crisis - South China Sea Dispute - Shining Path Insurgency in Peru - Rhodesian Bush War - Piracy in the Gulf of Guinea - Sino-Vietnamese Skirmishes After 1979 - The Two Sudanese Civil Wars

  • @leoX11

    @leoX11

    5 ай бұрын

    World is definitely fucked up

  • @harryroadman1089

    @harryroadman1089

    5 ай бұрын

    Guyana Venezuela conflict?

  • @chipscreamjuche9962

    @chipscreamjuche9962

    5 ай бұрын

    They have a claim ​@@harryroadman1089

  • @Maryland_Kulak

    @Maryland_Kulak

    5 ай бұрын

    Why are you so obsessed with war?

  • @krishthakar6661

    @krishthakar6661

    5 ай бұрын

    Add Ukrainian Orange Revolution , Revolution of Dignity and Yeltsin Black October

  • @Elsith01
    @Elsith01Ай бұрын

    I have family in the DR, and I visit about once a year. I guess in this context, the DR is doing well, but traveling there outside the resort is very annoying and frustrating, especially with the police stopping you for no reason and letting you go if you pay them off. You can't walk down the street without someone trying to scam you or lure you to some establishment, which isn't so bad as a restaurant, but when you try and leave, they ask for large tips by saying, "Oh, you can give me enough to make my family happy, or I can go out for a drink!" or some nonsense with a stupid smile on their face, thinking they're being charming. If you rent a car, just be careful with the police, because they will stop you whether or not you're breaking the law, you will get stopped either way. Also, ignore the locals who try to flag you down to park somewhere, even if you have no intention of stopping. If you're a tourist without family in the DR, just stick to the resorts; if you have family who are not affluent, you have to tolerate a lot of BS, not from the family, but having to travel through the areas where they live. During my last visit I decided to just rent a place where the wealthier residents live and invited a couple of family members to stay over. I specifically went to a wealthy residential area, not a wealthy tourist area, because you will experience frustrating nonsense there as well. Oh boy, I am in a bad mood; I typed up more than I intended. Ha!

  • @Oofu

    @Oofu

    14 күн бұрын

    Yeah, that's what I don't get about most videos that talk about DR, as a Dominican myself. They always compare Haiti and DR as "poor" and "rich" respectively, but it never really feels like that whenever I go. Like sure, comparatively, DR is "rich," but we still have a long ways to go. 😅 Don't get it wrong, I love DR for my neighbors, culture, music, etc.. but past that, excluding places for tourists, it gets a little grey and honestly, a bit scary.

  • @kaiduponte4091

    @kaiduponte4091

    11 күн бұрын

    Wow, thx for sharing this information.

  • @henrydelima2455

    @henrydelima2455

    6 күн бұрын

    Yea this is bull. I travel to DR at least twice a year. I always rent cars and tour the whole country right up to the Haitian border. Police in DR don’t harass tourists. This is an absolute lie.

  • @Elsith01

    @Elsith01

    6 күн бұрын

    @@henrydelima2455 BULL! They specifically look for license plates that are rental. I can see them just pulling random cars over to see who would do it. I learned to always stick to the lane that's further away from them when I spot them. I have family that live there and they just laugh about it because everybody knows this is what it's like. I say what you are saying is a complete lie. I'm very much familiar with this country.

  • @Elsith01

    @Elsith01

    6 күн бұрын

    @@henrydelima2455 no one needs to trust you or me. If anyone is reading this, simply Google "Dominican Republic police pull over tourist cars" and you'll see who is telling the truth.

  • @raenaj4749
    @raenaj474928 күн бұрын

    This was extremely informative

  • @jeffreydweeks
    @jeffreydweeksАй бұрын

    Corruption, Corruption over and over. The millions of dollars in aid that has been stolen is insane.

  • @letsreasonthisout2898

    @letsreasonthisout2898

    Ай бұрын

    Hillary Clinton's brother made millions on US aid to Haiti. Look it up.

  • @myownfashionclosetllc5108

    @myownfashionclosetllc5108

    Ай бұрын

    Those million of dollars Haiti never seen. The information is out there so if you guys truly want to know, the information is there. Asked Clinton and his wife for the money that supposed to help rebuild Haiti. Yes, they do have corrupt politicians who are only working for their pockets, but so are the people who take part of the corruption. Clinton also destroy our rice production so he could sell his rice in the country. Talking about corruption, you will be surprised some key people who are involved in destroying the country. America is not innocent in what is going on in Haiti, and so are some other countries. For example, if someone is doing something where the law is prohibited, and I get involved in that, I am at wrong as much as that person. To what level? That's a different story.

  • @pepito3461

    @pepito3461

    Ай бұрын

    Funny that people think rep dom is different than Haiti on this point

  • @debbymorey7691

    @debbymorey7691

    Ай бұрын

    UN needs to help build infrastructure and stop throwing money at them , only to disappear with each disposed president. The wall looks great, take note Biden.

  • @hcrat2262

    @hcrat2262

    Ай бұрын

    Ask French, USA and beyond why? No matter what they will never control Haiti. Yes, they us alot of bad things. But Haiti will rise again despite that well designed plot for daring to abolish slavery. They keep up stealing from us for the longest and yet they blame it on us.

  • @davemccage7918
    @davemccage79184 ай бұрын

    I’ve been to Haiti at the Royal Caribbean Cruise Line’s privately owned beach. If you go just beyond the visitor area in the tree line there is a massive fence that looks like it belongs in Jurassic Park to keep the locals away from the tourists. When you’re in Jamaica, or any other Caribbean island, you just walk around the city along with the native inhabitants like any normal country. It was weird to such a drastic difference between the island nations.

  • @UrbanCommentBot

    @UrbanCommentBot

    4 ай бұрын

    I've been there as well. I spoke to local workers there that said the island was a pleasant free getaway for Haitians, but now they can't go there. They are very unhappy about it but feel powerless against parasitic foreign occupation.

  • @naekosl3059

    @naekosl3059

    4 ай бұрын

    @@UrbanCommentBot It's not "foreign occuption" for a private property to erect a fence to keep violent or looting trespassers out. If that fence was removed, rampant looting would occur.

  • @UrbanCommentBot

    @UrbanCommentBot

    4 ай бұрын

    Hm, although I was being a bit dramatic with that term to over empathize with the feelings of the people, I feel like you had to ignore parts of my comment to make that response. And that's fine. Thanks for your perspective.

  • @MrLlama-je8de

    @MrLlama-je8de

    4 ай бұрын

    @@naekosl3059 you mean looting from the previous inhabitants of Haiti by (presumably) the ancestors of the tourists. I’m not calling for violence against the descendants of slave owners, but there’s a reason the people in Haiti are struggling

  • @henryballing8164

    @henryballing8164

    4 ай бұрын

    The cruise line could just stop going there if it's so bad for Haiti. I doubt that would help the country at all though

  • @rhearamjohn4792
    @rhearamjohn4792Ай бұрын

    It's really sad to see a fellow caribbean island with conditions like this...makes you realise how fortunate you are

  • @lethalxxlori
    @lethalxxlori15 күн бұрын

    this is probably one of the most informative and interesting videos i’ve ever seen on a country’s history. Thanks for making me a more informed person! and I hope the US and France realize what they’ve done.

  • @kevinsbikingadventures278
    @kevinsbikingadventures2784 ай бұрын

    I know a woman whose parents are from Haiti and who has been to both Haiti and the Dominican Republic. I've only been to the Dominican Republic. One thing that I found odd that she said is that both countries seem to have drastically different environments and just "feel different." Your video explained a bit about why she felt that way, especially concerning deforestation.

  • @Xenlacasa45

    @Xenlacasa45

    4 ай бұрын

    Haiti is dry like and mountainous while the DR is green forested rains more.

  • @claudium6769

    @claudium6769

    4 ай бұрын

    Haiti is a black majority country and RD is not. That's why one has gangs, drugs, crimes and the other one not.

  • @kekeke8988

    @kekeke8988

    4 ай бұрын

    @@Xenlacasa45 Stated to be false in this very video. In fact, Haiti gets more rainfall.

  • @arielperez797

    @arielperez797

    4 ай бұрын

    yea i went to the DR/Haiti border a few years ago and you can see the difference. the haitian side becomes like a desert instantly. you can almost see a natural border because of the difference in foliage.

  • @Dannyfr33sh

    @Dannyfr33sh

    4 ай бұрын

    My grandfather RIP when I used to visit Dominican Rep as a little boy says Haiti is cursed because the majority of people do voodoo. And DR is a Christian nation that’s is why

  • @jeanmorel7203
    @jeanmorel7203Ай бұрын

    I am dominican, and I learned things in these videos that I had never heard before. Great work 👏 👍

  • @JehsuBenIsrael

    @JehsuBenIsrael

    Ай бұрын

    Why do Dominicans hate Haitians and black ppl in general?

  • @anonymouspsychedelicsuser8109

    @anonymouspsychedelicsuser8109

    Ай бұрын

    Me no black papi

  • @Cuppachoccy

    @Cuppachoccy

    Ай бұрын

    @@tjones44236😐

  • @judeironheart7252

    @judeironheart7252

    Ай бұрын

    protejan esa frontera, hermano

  • @sageex3931

    @sageex3931

    Ай бұрын

    There are a few different issues at play with Haiti, but the short answer is a complicated history of colonialism, slavery, and racial tensions that were uniquely damaging to the nascent Haitian state. Whereas Haiti was the second independent nation in the Americas, the nations who secured independence after Haiti did so in much different paths. The United States secured independence with the help and recognition of France and Spain, and most of the colonial administration pre-independence remained in control after independence. While there were certainly adjustments, the leaders and power bases before and after American independence were largely the same. Other prominent breakaway factions accomplished the same: Simon Bolivar and his independence campaign exploited numerous existing administrators with sympathies towards independence, Brazil was de facto independent and at one point the actual seat of power for the Portuguese monarchy (who fled Europe during the Peninsular War), and the Dominican Republic had a number of issues on their path to independence but enjoyed protection by the United States during the last stages of independence. Haiti enjoyed none of this. The Haitian revolution was led in first stages by Toussaint Louverture, who was a freed slave and had little experience or political connections to rely on. He was tricked into meeting with the French under pretense of negotiations, at which point he was arrested in 1802 and died less than a year later in a French prison. Jean-Jacques Dessalines, another freed slave, largely took control of the Haitian revolutionary forces and established an independent Haiti in 1804, before being assassinated in 1806. Prior to his assassination, Dessalines ordered a mass killing of French citizens residing in Haiti, with at least 3,000 French executed and many thousands more fleeing to the United States. There were several consequences of this mass-killing, and of the general political disorder of both Loverture and Dessalines being removed from power in hostile manners in short period. The first is that the new state of Haiti was, rather uniquely for the various colonial nations that would pop up in the coming years, almost entirely devoid of Europeans. Some were spared, mostly Polish residents who had supported the revolution, but those not killed had fled. This was quite damaging as the remaining residents were largely former slaves who lacked the same education as the white citizens and the racial tension was worsened by these acts. Further, the mass execution and tales of the residents who fled to the United States inflamed the slaveowners of the South and created a paranoia about a potential mass slave revolt and mass killings of white southerners as happened in Haiti -- such paranoia continued well into the United States Civil War, with Confederates and Confederate sympathizers warning of "the horrors of St. Domingo" in the early years. This led to policy of isolation, began in 1804 by President Thomas Jefferson, and Haiti would not be officially recognized as an independent nation by the United States until *1862.* While all of this was damaging enough, the isolation also opened the door for diplomatic extortion of the Haitians. In 1825, the French government sent numerous warships to Haiti demanding the former colony pay an indemnity of 150 million francs for the property lost in the revolution (that is to say *the slaves who had revolted against them*) in exchange for diplomatic recognition. To pay the indemnity, the Haitians had to take out exorbitant loans, sometimes at interest as high as 18 per cent per annum, and as a consequence of having no international recognition were obligated to take these loans *from the French* (and later the United States) as no other countries would treat with them. It is estimated that by the late 1800s, some *eighty percent* of the total Haitian revenues were being diverted into French indemnity payments, and the French during this period maintained control over the entire Haitian treasury, which they forced to be located in Paris until the official government debts were paid back in *1893.* But while the French indemnity was repaid, this was still only *part* of the issues facing Haiti. The other issue was that even after fears of a slave revolt were quelled, the United States remained belligerent at best towards the Haitians. Andrew Johnson in 1868 had plans made for an annexation of Haiti by the United States, and in 1890 the United States sent a fleet of warships to Haiti in an attempt to pressure the Haitians to "lease" a port to the United States. Newly elected president Florvil Hyppolite refused the demands, which angered the United States (and led to them insisting that the warships sent to Haiti were merely for *peaceful negotiation,* not for any threat of violence.) Haiti's troubles continued when the Germans in 1897 demanded a pardon for German national Emile Luders, along with a formal apology, an indemnity, and a host of other embarrassing demands, backed by yet another fleet of warships. This became an issue as the United States viewed the Luders affair as a sign German influence had grown too strong in Haiti. Political instability during the following years eventually prompted US businesses to lobby the government to intervene in Haiti, an intervention that was granted by Woodrow Wilson in 1915. American marines occupied Haiti and established a military regime with a puppet government. The changes brought about by the American occupation were extreme. Where the Haitian constitution had previously banned all foreign nationals from holding property, the US occupation transferred control of all customs houses, banks, and treasuries (along with associated financial and administrative institutions) to the United States. About 40% of the Haitian wealth was seized by the United States and used to pay off loans to American banks that had been used prior to pay the French indemnity. The United States had final say over all expenditures by the Haitians, and was granted by treaty control over all foreign relations and economic affairs for ten years, later extended to twenty. When the Haitian legislature refused to ratify the new constitution being forced on them in 1917, the United States occupying forces dissolved the legislature and did not allow a new legislature to meet until 1929. At this point, prominent black Americans began protesting, with W.E.B. duBois and the NAACP decrying the conditions in Haiti. The United States occupation had effectively reversed older racial politics and granted rights to the mulatto class while suppressing the Afro-Carib classes that comprised the majority of the Haitians. Conditions continued to deteriorate as the US puppet regime began a forced labor policy in Haiti, requiring Haitian citizens to work on various "economic" projects without compensation and resulting in a large number of deaths from overwork. These deaths also were joined with the large numbers killed by US forces during revolts against the occupation. Finally in 1933, the situation had become so untenable that the United States began withdrawing from Haiti and returned control back to the Haitians. However, the United States continued to enforce the treaty stipulations that gave them financial control until debts were repaid, which was maintained until the final payments in 1947. During this final stage, the portion of Haitian revenues going to foreign debt payments still accounted for 20% the total. While the occupation did result in some infrastructure and economic reforms, the end result was not that glowing either: Haiti's education system was essentially dismantled, replacing prior comprehensive education with a strict vocational system that only taught agricultural practices and siphoning even more money from Haitian institutions in those set up by the United States. Segregation had been imported from the American South and enforced in Haiti, and altogether somewhere between 3,000 and 15,000 Haitians died during the occupation. So to give a condensed answer: a combination of French and United States hostility toward Haiti, and extortionate policy toward the island, effectively deprived Haiti of almost 125 years of economic development that they only began to recover from in 1934 (after the occupation ended) or later in 1947 (when the last of the indemnity-related debts were paid). While the colony was rich and fairly well situated, the indemnities siphoned almost all of this wealth into the hands of French and American banks while keeping the new country from actually investing its wealth.

  • @darth_olomew
    @darth_olomewАй бұрын

    I live in Ohio and there has been a huge influx of Haitian refugees. Many people are ignorant of why and find them to be a nuisance due to their driving habits. I would hate to go through what those people have been through and have this channel to thank for understanding their plight.

  • @american5564

    @american5564

    23 күн бұрын

    The people in Ohio are the real victims then.

  • @user-oz7hq5kt9i

    @user-oz7hq5kt9i

    9 күн бұрын

    Well there goes Ohio mark this post 🫡

  • @Lun602
    @Lun602Ай бұрын

    I’m Dominican and I would love to share this with my family in Spanish if such video as this detailed is around .

  • @dougules

    @dougules

    Ай бұрын

    It is possible to turn on auto-generated subtitles if that helps.

  • @caseypenk
    @caseypenk5 ай бұрын

    Imagine taking a flight to DR but your flight gets diverted to Haiti ☠️

  • @mnm5165

    @mnm5165

    5 ай бұрын

    Blame the French for that

  • @VivaLaGEOLANDIA

    @VivaLaGEOLANDIA

    5 ай бұрын

    @@mnm5165 It's the *KFC people* to blame

  • @bababababababa6124

    @bababababababa6124

    5 ай бұрын

    I pray French people who are flying to New York have their flight diverted there to see the damage they did inshallah If you want to make yourself mad, scroll down to the depths of these comments and see what the incels down there are saying about Haiti, it’ll make you sad.

  • @peterjones5243

    @peterjones5243

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@@mnm5165Is the pilot French?

  • @tombo416

    @tombo416

    5 ай бұрын

    @@peterjones5243don’t play dumb bro you know who’s fault this is

  • @ArchonLicht
    @ArchonLicht5 ай бұрын

    Honestly, giving a bunch of money to the corrupt mafia-like "government" of Haiti doesn't seem like a very good idea. It would make more sense to invest in specific infrastructure and education projects than just giving money.

  • @hughjass1976

    @hughjass1976

    5 ай бұрын

    Giving money to these places is never a good idea. Because the problem isn't lack of money, it's greed. Why feed your people when you can siphon off money to build yourself another palace?

  • @YourKingJDG

    @YourKingJDG

    5 ай бұрын

    I usually don’t agree with not paying individually but I agree in this scenario.

  • @MrPaytonw34

    @MrPaytonw34

    5 ай бұрын

    It’s not up to you if it’s a good idea it’s what owed to them. And the French and American government didn’t have any problem with the guy right up until he asked for that money. so he must not have been too bad. If you wanna call the Haitian government Mafia style, you better be calling the United States the same thing because that’s exactly how they act.

  • @geth7112

    @geth7112

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@MrPaytonw34 See, you're not wrong with calling the US governmen mafia. The differences is tho the US government is an effective mafia. Haitian government has proven not to be. It's also just concerns made by many , to just giving an unelected President money which would legitimacy him.

  • @dcl97

    @dcl97

    5 ай бұрын

    That's not going to work either. Fundamentally Haitians just love electing strong men, and "Haiti First" style politicians who not coincidentally always end up being authoritarian autocrats who try to turn themselves into eternal presidents. Haiti produces nothing of value and has no significant natural resources. It's a failed country with no realistic way forward.

  • @batissta44
    @batissta44Ай бұрын

    As an American of Dominican ancestry I find this video informative and eye opening.

  • @Puppetlesss
    @PuppetlesssАй бұрын

    I love how Dr is doing !!! I’m Dominican and we did a lot for our country ! It shouldn’t be taken away like that ! My heart goes to hati it is sad to see our Nextdoor brothers and sisters suffer like this !!! Prayers to hati!

  • @odea8505
    @odea85054 ай бұрын

    As a Haitian, I'm impressed with this documentary. Job well done sir.

  • @michaelwang6125

    @michaelwang6125

    4 ай бұрын

    I actually support the respiration request by Haiti for France to payback but... Given the instability and risk of corruption (in term of the billions being misused) I think it would be better for it to be 10-15 billion (not 21) (with adjustable inflation year by year) to be pay back and over *next 20 years* instead of 1 time payment*. Long term stability is what Haiti needs and not relaying on a sudden of a jackpot income to resolve its economic need. e.g Many nation had in the past opt to invade their neighboring island/nations as a way to stabilize/centralize their domestic control ... edit: some nation are still doing it today instead of spending the effort to resolve the problem & cultural improvement. *Payment can also be made directly such as construction of hospital, school -etc which can create the condition of making it more appealing for France citizens to accept the terms. While the target is for this to create a positive circle (reversing the negative circle created from the debt crisis) 33:08 Cross Finger this video by @RealLifeLore don't get mass flagged by Little Pinks //Taiwanese Canadian :)

  • @bobjohnson1633

    @bobjohnson1633

    4 ай бұрын

    Money doesn't matter at all. Money is just a medium of trade that is representative of labor. If they don't work, the money will be meaningless because there will b nothing to buy, and the few things available to buy will just be ultra expensive

  • @michaelmeyers3664

    @michaelmeyers3664

    4 ай бұрын

    Why don't Jesse Jackson, Al Sharpton and Oprah go and take care of their people??? Building a wall is racist!!

  • @user-dv3kq3rm4h

    @user-dv3kq3rm4h

    4 ай бұрын

    @@michaelwang6125 I agree, to deter corruption, maybe the money could be put into a neutral account and the money going directly to build the infrastructure of the country. These purchases could be overseen by the UN. Sounds a bit colonial or like policing but at least it would ensure the country's' infrastructure is slowly rebuilt.

  • @GreoGreo

    @GreoGreo

    4 ай бұрын

    @@tedundercarriage8183 Who hurt you? 😂😂

  • @nicollecespedes1299
    @nicollecespedes1299Ай бұрын

    Very descriptive! As born and raised in Dominican Republic, no even in school, teached us so much about the history of both countries. Thank you

  • @Ranguvar13

    @Ranguvar13

    Ай бұрын

    2:54 “injure more than $12,000” 💀

  • @Mayakran

    @Mayakran

    Ай бұрын

    @@Ranguvar13”twelve thousand others.”

  • @treasurethetime2463

    @treasurethetime2463

    Ай бұрын

    Native born people from most countries are some of the most ignorant people in the world about their own country’s history. That’s why talking to them is usually a waste of time if you want to learn history.

  • @johnvan6803

    @johnvan6803

    Ай бұрын

    Taught -- not "teached!"

  • @sageex3931

    @sageex3931

    Ай бұрын

    Yep

  • @keyblade408
    @keyblade408Ай бұрын

    As a dominican I hoping nothing this tragic happends to my homeland.

  • @angelperez-rm6vf
    @angelperez-rm6vfАй бұрын

    The construction of buildings, bridges, roads, schools, public companies and other infrastructure, during the Trujillo dictatorship, differentiate the dictatorship in Haiti.

  • @BDCF100
    @BDCF1002 ай бұрын

    I remember flying from Miami to Trinidad Is. about a dozen years ago and going directly over the border between Haiti and the DR. The pilot mentioned what we were about to cross and to "look at the difference in the two countries." Haiti looked like a barren desolate landscape and the DR a lush green land.

  • @nanounepha2600

    @nanounepha2600

    2 ай бұрын

    Well, you only saw about 10% -15% of Haiti. The 90%-85% is picturesque.

  • @jeffersonjohns6397

    @jeffersonjohns6397

    2 ай бұрын

    The first country to break away from slavery…. 🤔

  • @jeffersonjohns6397

    @jeffersonjohns6397

    2 ай бұрын

    @@nanounepha2600. Not even remotely accurate at this point in time. The “picturesque” landscape has been destroyed by the Haitians.

  • @cuatro336

    @cuatro336

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@nanounepha2600 not anymore

  • @joseluisolivares7573

    @joseluisolivares7573

    2 ай бұрын

    That right ,DOMINICAN REPUBLIC populations takes care for forest and Rivers and GOD blessing every day our nation

  • @alexistaverasparra3842
    @alexistaverasparra38425 ай бұрын

    As a dominican, THANK YOU Joseph. There are a few mistakes here and there, but this is by far the most fair and unbiased video I’ve ever seen on this topic done by an American. I appreciate how you disproved the myth that Haiti is poor solely because of the debt it had to pay to France. And thank you for not blaming DR for Haiti’s problems, something international media falsely claims all the time.

  • @cesarT921

    @cesarT921

    5 ай бұрын

    Polymater's video is also very objective. You will like it as it is also very balanced

  • @trinistar1930

    @trinistar1930

    5 ай бұрын

    Exactly 💯 they like to blame DR as if we have anything to do with haiti lacking in everything as a failed country . They did this to themselves , they assassinated their own president and still have none , they are ran by gangs and are multiplying like 🪳🪳🪳🐀. To top it all off , they worship SATAN .

  • @Tonilategola

    @Tonilategola

    5 ай бұрын

    France needs to address thier colonial history, or it will be done for them

  • @stevenkidd6761

    @stevenkidd6761

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@@TonilategolaVietnam anyone?

  • @yo2trader539

    @yo2trader539

    5 ай бұрын

    Just curious, why doesn't DR just invade/occupy Haiti? I presume Dominicans would know far more how Haiti operates than Kenyans.

  • @ojjuiceman
    @ojjuiceman8 күн бұрын

    Great video. The story of hati is a painful one but you told it well

  • @CB-jz7bo
    @CB-jz7bo18 күн бұрын

    This video was amazing

  • @patriciaR004
    @patriciaR0044 ай бұрын

    In the Dominican Republic, the government pours millions into funding forestation projects to schools and different organizations so they can go out and plant thousands of trees. There are always commercials on radio and TV about the importance of planting trees and taking care of our flora and fauna. There's seasons where you can not fish, hunt, or you'll be in a lot of trouble with authorities out there.

  • @hesedagape6122

    @hesedagape6122

    3 ай бұрын

    Haiti has not had authorities for years

  • @Slayer-33

    @Slayer-33

    3 ай бұрын

    This is 100% true, been seeing this effort since I was a child. Even in my brief stints while visiting DR you heard about these efforts.

  • @Lady_Angela1

    @Lady_Angela1

    3 ай бұрын

    That is very wise.

  • @Lunaxklk

    @Lunaxklk

    3 ай бұрын

    yeah also when you are about to graduate from the State University (UASD) they include in your bill a fee for a tree to be planted.

  • @murph1329

    @murph1329

    2 ай бұрын

    I went to Punta Cana a few years ago. Amazing place. Y'all do an outstanding job. Keep it up.

  • @DCONightingale
    @DCONightingale4 ай бұрын

    I grew up next door to a Haitian family. During the summer, a few of their relatives would come stay with them, one of them being a boy around my age. We became great friends over the next few years, until my neighbors moved and I never saw him again. Then the 2010 earthquake happened and I wondered if he’s okay. Wherever he is, I pray he and his family are safe and hopefully living somewhere in better condition than their homeland.

  • @NineCylinderDiesel

    @NineCylinderDiesel

    2 ай бұрын

    Honestly, he was probably eaten by his fellow countrymen

  • @user-fs8rw8hs1w
    @user-fs8rw8hs1w4 күн бұрын

    God bless you. Your show, your history, your teaching on history. Your program, your entities, are teaching 🌎🌍 globe history in the millions.

  • @user-ul6dc4qc4j
    @user-ul6dc4qc4jАй бұрын

    My buddy from the DR showed me a satellite picture of Hispaniola & you can see the border from space. Forest on DR side, grasslands on the Haitian side.

  • @EminencePhront
    @EminencePhront5 ай бұрын

    I read about this disparity back in 2006. Back then DR was still described as being "poor". It's amazing how much progress has been made on their side in that time.

  • @boulderbash19700209

    @boulderbash19700209

    5 ай бұрын

    Around that time, I read a book "Why Nations Fail" that put the contrast between Haiti and Dominican Republic as one of their topic examples.

  • @paisan8766

    @paisan8766

    4 ай бұрын

    It’s not when you consider the US & France’s actions against Haiti since ~mid-1800s. It’s literally clear cause & effect up thru the 2004 ousting of the best leader Haiti’s had.

  • @nvelsen1975

    @nvelsen1975

    4 ай бұрын

    @@paisan8766 There's always a racist desperate to blame western countries instead of the actual cause.... You should feel ashamed, racist.

  • @JB-yb4wn

    @JB-yb4wn

    4 ай бұрын

    @@paisan8766 Well obviously your corrupt government at the time accepted these terms without first telling France to drop dead. Your leaders were obviously bribed to accept the deal as they didn't give a fuck about anyone else but themselves. France was in no position to invade Haiti in 1870 when the Germans kicked their ass so bad. I would imagine had the leadership of Haiti at the time had approached the Germans for weapons (like the Boers did), they would have given France a bloody nose if they even thought of invading the place. But no, as long as those lighter skinned elites got their cut, why should they give a damn about anything else?

  • @daslynnter9841

    @daslynnter9841

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@paisan8766yea, crazy how much active destabilization by two world leaders can keep a small island nation destabilized.

  • @dannytaveras1521
    @dannytaveras15214 ай бұрын

    I m a Dominico-American in the Dominican Republic. Also, a soldier. A lot of people think we hate each other, but we don't, many Haitians in DR. Many welcome, studying and working very hard. Others are not, like criminals and and gang members. Thanks for sharing the knowledge 👍.

  • @emanueldelacruz1101

    @emanueldelacruz1101

    4 ай бұрын

    We just want them to go back to Haiti. No resentment here

  • @ytpr9420

    @ytpr9420

    4 ай бұрын

    That’s interesting. I must say every Haitian I know claims that the Dominicans and Haitians do not get along.

  • @Tanner2real

    @Tanner2real

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@ytpr9420 exactly same with me

  • @user-lp2ug7yk6d

    @user-lp2ug7yk6d

    4 ай бұрын

    false i lived in D.R for 4 years and dominicans treats haitians like lower class citizens even worse and dominicans is not as smart as haitians but dominicans are very cruel toeards haitians

  • @pablovf

    @pablovf

    4 ай бұрын

    After reading La Fiesta del Chivo by Mario Vargas Llosa I had the feeling Dominicans despised their island brothers. Glad to know that isn't always the case.

  • @lurekayaklrf
    @lurekayaklrfАй бұрын

    Every week there’s literally another reason my ‘fuck France’ tattoo is the most truthful bit of ink on my body.

  • @hectorpena5194
    @hectorpena5194Ай бұрын

    Great job 👍

  • @TheAlexberry
    @TheAlexberry4 ай бұрын

    I was a part of a humanitarian mission to South America in 2022. Every other country we stopped in we went into port or anchored right off shore. In Haiti we had to stay far offshore and do circles due to the gangs potentially targeting our ship. Also, hundreds of Haitians tried to get to our ship via makeshift rafts to escape the country. We were accompanied by American coast guard ships that had to cut off the rafts and help them back to shore. When we set up or medical site on shore it was guarded by a detachment of Marines and fenced in. There was a big desperate crowd who could have overrun the site. We had a plan in place in which if the site was started to get overrun we would drop everything and run to the transport boats. We only provided care for a day when one of cranes bringing up our people on a transport ship snapped and dumped everyone into the water. Everyone survived, and we noped out of there before anything worse happened.

  • @gracequach6769

    @gracequach6769

    4 ай бұрын

    Zoinks!

  • @user-ww5qw8jd3b

    @user-ww5qw8jd3b

    4 ай бұрын

    It's so damn hard

  • @axileastilemaxoy137

    @axileastilemaxoy137

    4 ай бұрын

    δεν έχεις καμιά πιθανότητα να σώσεις αυτούς τούς ανθρώπους διότι δεν μπορούν να εκπολιτιστουν, βλ. και όλες τις χώρες της Αφρικής..

  • @quintyss1290

    @quintyss1290

    Ай бұрын

    Wow, I had no idea things were that desperate, and it breaks my heart. Love to all of you angels who tried to help.

  • @technoguyx
    @technoguyx5 ай бұрын

    The Haiti-República Dominicana conflict is one that's rarely talked about in mainstream media, myself I had no idea about it until I met a Dominican colleague last year who told me the entire history, territorial claims etc. So it's great to see quality content about this topic in this channel. Keep up the great work

  • @WarrenFearchild

    @WarrenFearchild

    5 ай бұрын

    They claim DR belong to them😂😂💀Dominicans were created in the island, they were brought in the late 1700s 100-200 years after the creation of the dominican people

  • @LaSombraa

    @LaSombraa

    5 ай бұрын

    DR will take over the entire island one day lol

  • @cavebabybezerkers

    @cavebabybezerkers

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@LaSombraaThey will get 👏

  • @cavebabybezerkers

    @cavebabybezerkers

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@LaSombraaDR is enemy to every single black nation on planet earth 🌏

  • @deac19201

    @deac19201

    4 ай бұрын

    same here im dominican , thanks for the attention!

  • @bethc5905
    @bethc5905Ай бұрын

    Very good documentary

  • @mermarseo
    @mermarseo2 ай бұрын

    I visited the DR 20 years ago on my honeymoon. It was a natural wonder, just beautiful. I remember all the lovely celebrity homes. It was hard to understand how the island had such different countries on it. We didn't visit Haiti, but have fond memories of the Dominican Republic.

  • @piobmhor8529

    @piobmhor8529

    Ай бұрын

    It’s even better today. The Dominicans are lovely friendly people, the by-product of increasing prosperity and employment. Although I was there for work, I took time to tour around. You are right, it is a natural wonder.

  • @javiazar

    @javiazar

    Ай бұрын

    It's not hard to understand. One side has been run by Haitians, and the other side by Dominicans. It's like failing to understand why Japan is awesome and Ethiopia sucks... It's the people. It's always the people.

  • @ugandalorian495

    @ugandalorian495

    Ай бұрын

    @@piobmhor8529just don’t try and go too towards other places that aren’t tourist

  • @mohammadhmaidan1217

    @mohammadhmaidan1217

    Ай бұрын

    @@javiazar the people play a role thats for sure but to a certain degree the people in charge hold a much more significant role in where society is headed. Now I don't know much about Haiti but I do know much about Iraq's, Lebanon's, Lybia's, and Egypt's history where in every single country since WW1 the west especially the US, UK, and France always supported tyrants that the people don't want over actual good leaders who wanted whats best for the country and the people. literally every single time a good leader emerges the superpowers would wage direct and indirect warfare just to place a tyrant in his place and this continual degradation in leadership supported by the west will ultimately create the society that is often looked down upon as "uncivilized". unfortunate.

  • @ZoeBando

    @ZoeBando

    Ай бұрын

    Haiti is just as beautiful.

  • @Izzy_B241
    @Izzy_B2415 ай бұрын

    Just being a French colony puts any country at a massive disadvantage

  • @jelly4frog498

    @jelly4frog498

    5 ай бұрын

    haha funny france bad 😐

  • @amaze_z1953

    @amaze_z1953

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@@ronlacker326???

  • @MausWulf

    @MausWulf

    5 ай бұрын

    @@ronlacker326?

  • @SmokestackOG

    @SmokestackOG

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@ronlacker326 then why is rawanda , Jamaica , Atlanta, tulsa Oklahoma, booming then?

  • @sjm8510

    @sjm8510

    5 ай бұрын

    Large parts of North America and Vietnam used to be French colonies, all doing great today, only the black colonies are in total disarray, all of them.

  • @johnmoran4469
    @johnmoran446914 күн бұрын

    Good video well done.

  • @asullivan4047
    @asullivan404720 күн бұрын

    Interesting/informative/entertaining. Excellent still-motion photography pictures/maps enabling viewers to better understand what the orator is describing. What's preventing the gang violence from spilling over into Dominican republic -???😳

  • @amaurysu3190

    @amaurysu3190

    19 күн бұрын

    The fact that any violence is met with equal or more force, and that may threaten innocent families already residing on Dominican soil.

  • @josuealexanderolaverrianie3169
    @josuealexanderolaverrianie31694 ай бұрын

    As a Dominican I thank you for bringing awarenes to this topic! Stay strong my fellow Haitians, there's still hope for a brighter future.

  • @lelnin

    @lelnin

    4 ай бұрын

    The only hope is for DR to reconquer their land and establish isla Hispañola.

  • @allydr90

    @allydr90

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@lelnin I don't think Haitians or Dominicans want that any time soon.

  • @albertoalvarez893

    @albertoalvarez893

    4 ай бұрын

    @@lelnin Nope

  • @Rfpenab

    @Rfpenab

    4 ай бұрын

    @@lelninhell nah

  • @AngelicaEstherxo

    @AngelicaEstherxo

    4 ай бұрын

    @@lelninHaitians wont want that. There’s a big use of voodoo which will be a problem. If they didn’t do that, we would be happily united.

  • @cambyses1529
    @cambyses15294 ай бұрын

    I lived in DR for about a year, we did a day trip to Haiti. This was almost 20 years ago. The difference between the two was extraordinary. Trees on one side, near desert on the other, houses on one side, hovels on the other. And I remember while the ordinary people were clearly mired in abject poverty with whole families of children literally sharing one person's clothes between them - hanging around in the background were well dressed (and clearly dodgy) young men on motorbikes watching everything. I'm not sure when Haiti wasn't in really bad way.

  • @CountYulith

    @CountYulith

    4 ай бұрын

    Sheer human greed and lack of any foresight for the future is why the Haitian side is so heavily deforested. In 1923 over 60% of Haiti's land was forested. In 2006, less than 2% of the land was forested, even worse today I am sure. They violated that land like the trees were goods in a supermarket and they just looted it until there was nothing left.

  • @godofthisshit

    @godofthisshit

    4 ай бұрын

    @@CountYulith Forced poverty drive people to desperation. Paying reparations for slavers, with what should've been your closest ally(the U.S) backing it is disgusting.

  • @jacobjames5536

    @jacobjames5536

    4 ай бұрын

    @@godofthisshitThe US loved slavery and kept it for longer than Haiti. Haiti has been by itself and attacked since day 1 by the French and other western colonial/imperial powers. This current intervention is meant to set up a new puppet government in Haiti so that the US can continue to rob Haiti. The Haitians would be better off with the gangs/warlords organizing a new government than what’s set come from outside forces.

  • @gracequach6769

    @gracequach6769

    4 ай бұрын

    @@godofthisshit Unfortunately, lack of foresight is lack of foresight no matter how much your situation sucks, and trees won't feel sorry for you and grow faster

  • @godofthisshit

    @godofthisshit

    4 ай бұрын

    @@gracequach6769 I disagree. If someone runs out of $500 is a lot different than if someone runs out of $500 million. $500 must be spent to survive, $500 million isn't required for one person to survive.

  • @julioc5227
    @julioc5227Ай бұрын

    Excellent video

  • @USMC49er
    @USMC49erАй бұрын

    The Dominican Republic has a huge tourist economy that has existed for decades, which Haiti never had at the same level. Punta Cana is one of the biggest resorts in the Caribbean and that was founded by a New York entrepreneur and a Dominican entrepreneur back in the late 60s. DR was also heavily featured in Jurassic Park, so Hollywood added yet more value to the nation back in the 90s. While DR caught lightning in a bottle with all the support, shame that Haiti got struck by lightning twice in the past decade with the Earthquake and gang wars. The DR is still a pretty impoverished country as my mom was born and immigrated from there when she turned 18. Many places still don't have regular plumbing or even paved roads.

  • @arh1234

    @arh1234

    Ай бұрын

    I think it's a little chicken vs egg. Haiti has been too dangerous for even aid workers for most of my life; not so the DR

  • @skillet9141

    @skillet9141

    Ай бұрын

    My mother left La Romana at around 20. Still knows almost nothing in English. 😅

  • @klocugh12
    @klocugh124 ай бұрын

    Great video as usual. Small correction: feedback loop crashing Haiti's economy is also a POSITIVE feedback loop. Positive/negative feedback does not refer to whether effects are positive or negative. It refers to whether effects of loop balance out to equilibrium (negative feedback) or spiral out of control to even bigger effects in the future (positive feedback).

  • @atashgallagher5139

    @atashgallagher5139

    4 ай бұрын

    Negative feedback means that a decrease leads to a decrease. Positive feedback means that an increase leads to an increase. Basically if the output of a process decreases that process its a negative feedback loop. Whereas if the product of a process leads to an increase in that process its a positive feedback loop. Positive feedback would be like global warming melting ice that's trapping methane causing more global warming causing more ice melting releasing more methane and so on. A negative feedback loop would be the outcome of trees growing shading the ground leading to fewer trees growing in that spot.

  • @klocugh12

    @klocugh12

    4 ай бұрын

    @@atashgallagher5139 negative feedback decreases output if output deviates upwards of equilibrium, if output is below equilibrium, it will increase back towards it. Point is NOT whether output increases/decreases in general, but whether it spirals out of control from equilibrium or does it return to it. Think a ball in the bottom of the valley. Give it a shove. It will roll a little upwards, stop, roll downwards and a little back and forth, but eventually due to friction, oscillation will die down and ball will be sitting in the bottom again. Positive feedback would be ball on top of the hill. Give it a shove. It will roll down from the top in direction you gave it a shove even further, even faster.

  • @mabru9816

    @mabru9816

    4 ай бұрын

    @@atashgallagher5139 Negative feedback loop is a process of checks and balances. Positive feedback is entropy allowing to build without being able to stop it. If more energy into a system slows that system down in a way that is beneficial, it's a negative feedback loop. If more energy into a system speeds that system up in a way that spirals out of control, it is a positive feed back loop. An input that leads to a decrease or an input that leads to an increase. What @klocugh12 is saying is correct.

  • @obtuseangler768

    @obtuseangler768

    4 ай бұрын

    @klocugh12 ...whatever are you going on about!? You might have fooled 182 people that you have a clue what you're talking about but the first reply here is correct whereas you are totally incorrect. You could barely misunderstand feedback loops more if you actually tried🤓

  • @klocugh12

    @klocugh12

    4 ай бұрын

    @@obtuseangler768 if you can't follow a simple example, commonly given on control theory courses, and even in research papers, you have some learning to do. You were incorrect in the first reply indeed. What is decreased by negative feedback loop is NOT always the output of process, but DEVIATION from equilibrium. Another, simpler example: a process with negative feedback loop, and equilibrium at 1, perturbed downwards to 0.8, will INCREASE output back to 1* and NOT decrease it as you claimed. Likewise, in such conditions a positive feedback loop would FURTHER decrease output and NOT increase it, again, unlike what you said in first comment. *This will hardly ever be instantaneous in real world processes due to all kinds of factors that can collectively (but not necessarily accurately) be named inertia. But after said inertia is overcome, it will indeed happen.

  • @koriifaloju2051
    @koriifaloju2051Ай бұрын

    You hit many key issues on the head Well done

  • @cleogiraffeingtonthefourth1542
    @cleogiraffeingtonthefourth154211 күн бұрын

    My country dom rep 🇩🇴

  • @Angelfyre.
    @Angelfyre.4 ай бұрын

    I stopped to think why DR didn’t intervene in Haiti or why they didn’t just annex the region once it collapsed fully, and it’s quite clear why they did neither. It would cost DR a lot of time, money, & man power to annex the region and bring stability back. Some Haitians probably don’t want to be apart of the DR inciting rebellious guerrilla warfare sorta like what’s seen in Israel/Palestine. So from the DRs perspective building a wall and wanting nothing to do with their failed neighbor is the easiest most cost effective way to deal with the problem.

  • @thesunflowchannel1995

    @thesunflowchannel1995

    4 ай бұрын

    We need to build a wall 🇺🇸

  • @MargeeRD

    @MargeeRD

    4 ай бұрын

    That’s right

  • @chuckschillingvideos

    @chuckschillingvideos

    4 ай бұрын

    Haiti is a cesspool which cannot be fixed. The ONLY thing the DR can do is isolate as much as possible from the rot that is its neighbor.

  • @Eldeibi84

    @Eldeibi84

    4 ай бұрын

    DR is better off than Haiti by a lot, but DR is still a poor country overall, getting somewhat better every year but still poor. It would be suicide for DR to absorb Haiti. Imagine assimilating 12 M of the poorest people in the world, it would turn DR in the poorest country in the Americas. Not even Mexico or Brazil economies can absorb 12 M poor people.

  • @user-pd7ki5qs5i

    @user-pd7ki5qs5i

    4 ай бұрын

    Plus the video also said that Haiti invaded and occupied the DR for 20 years after they received independence. Dominicans see the Haitians as the invaders and occupiers.

  • @JapeCity
    @JapeCityАй бұрын

    British: "We're the most heartless colonial force" French: "Hold my croissant"

  • @jpb2366

    @jpb2366

    Ай бұрын

    what France did is nothing surprising. It's called "war reparations". A very very commun war negotiation. People just feel bad because "black people sad"

  • @Domhnall1989

    @Domhnall1989

    Ай бұрын

    Haiti has been independent for over 300 years

  • @helenachase5627

    @helenachase5627

    Ай бұрын

    Well said, and with humour

  • @CabbageYe

    @CabbageYe

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@Domhnall1989it's easier to blame colonialism 🤭

  • @mradventurer8104

    @mradventurer8104

    Ай бұрын

    @@Domhnall1989 since 1808 but you are right that is along time: 216 years!

  • @samlouback3161
    @samlouback3161Күн бұрын

    Very good video 😊

  • @hermanajoseph4578
    @hermanajoseph4578Ай бұрын

    Amazing video

  • @edelyncordero
    @edelyncorderoАй бұрын

    As a Dominican born, raised and currently living in the country, I can only say that we have worked very hard to make our lives better. We are nowhere near a second or first world quality of life level, but we are trying, and pushing, and working very hard. We deserve to have a government that cares for us, a good healthcare system and education, and we continue to strive to achieve that.

  • @MrMAIRENEE

    @MrMAIRENEE

    Ай бұрын

    Exactly, they put things like if were easy for us.

  • @jpb2366

    @jpb2366

    Ай бұрын

    This video is a bit "black people biais" where anything bad happening to blacks is because of oppression and anything good happening to white (Dominican being white is very subjective) is because of luck and privilege. Classic. Nothing about the massacres of Haitians whites are one of the main reason for their catastrophic history for the next 300 years. Why you think France was mad?

  • @oneshotrobb7272

    @oneshotrobb7272

    Ай бұрын

    Wtf do you think that has to do with your nations culpability in this situation?

  • @edelyncordero

    @edelyncordero

    Ай бұрын

    @@oneshotrobb7272 the way the Dominican republic is portrayed in the video makes is seem as if we have had an easy ride. And also, I wanted to point out that every country is responsible for their own growth, so there's that sweetie.

  • @edelyncordero

    @edelyncordero

    Ай бұрын

    Plus, if we are making a comparison between two countries, it's only fair that people who are actually involved in the matter and living in one of those countries, are allowed to provide their own pov.

  • @francoisgrimard5816
    @francoisgrimard58164 ай бұрын

    Having lived in Haiti for many years as a foreigner in the “good years”, my heart breaks for the country’s kind and hard working citizens 😔

  • @mick-berry5331

    @mick-berry5331

    4 ай бұрын

    I feel the same, having lived in Haiti at the beginning of the 1980s. 😢

  • @lefantomer

    @lefantomer

    4 ай бұрын

    @@mick-berry5331 I visited Haiti twice about 40 years ago to supervise some work at a textile factory. Despite the poverty the people were welcoming and courteous, I used public transportation without fear and stayed at a wonderful hotel in the hills. It is so sad to see what has happened to that country and I am so sorry for its people.

  • @xTROLLINGx

    @xTROLLINGx

    4 ай бұрын

    And thanks to this video we can now blame the french.

  • @trekk2063

    @trekk2063

    4 ай бұрын

    Nope, not paying a penny to old issues that happened well before my birth

  • @yolandacroes5491

    @yolandacroes5491

    4 ай бұрын

    So why did the Haitians have to pay for things that happened a century before their birth?

  • @JC_Cali
    @JC_Cali21 күн бұрын

    One of the most detailed, informative, fair, and honest videos about Haiti's history on the internet. I never knew that Haiti literally conquered it's neighbor for a minute that explains so much - but damn does France own so much of the blame - and the bulk of reparations (with its ally, the USA)

  • @gsdistribution7417
    @gsdistribution7417Ай бұрын

    Thanks. I am domincan and Haiti Is a very strange country to us. Their culture, language etc

  • @patriciabrown8757
    @patriciabrown87572 ай бұрын

    As a Jamaican praying for Haiti that one day thing will get better thank u sir for this document

  • @AnitaAnge

    @AnitaAnge

    2 ай бұрын

    Without european trade or american help jamaica would be in the same spot soon lol

  • @Mrs.T305

    @Mrs.T305

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@AnitaAngeI highly doubt that

  • @AnitaAnge

    @AnitaAnge

    2 ай бұрын

    @@Mrs.T305 Why doubt what you can do your own research

  • @rushrush6754

    @rushrush6754

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@AnitaAngedo you realized they are the source of Haiti problems??? Now you are saying without their help same situation. 😂😂😂

  • @AnitaAnge

    @AnitaAnge

    2 ай бұрын

    @@rushrush6754so sing the old song how france is reason , Please do tell old wise one 😂 Why isn't the DR experiencing in these problems like hati Why is most If not all black countries experienceing these sorts of problems even the ones that where never Colonized tell me why whitey is to blame

  • @domingoherrera-go5hs
    @domingoherrera-go5hs3 ай бұрын

    As a Dominican I’m very sad to hear how Haiti has fallen into anarchy, I prey that Haiti will rise again

  • @_.lilbodybigheart._

    @_.lilbodybigheart._

    3 ай бұрын

    dang

  • @VinhTran-lu6gm

    @VinhTran-lu6gm

    2 ай бұрын

    becareful what you wish for they willl ruin your country

  • @AnitaAnge

    @AnitaAnge

    2 ай бұрын

    One day soon they will start blaming the Dominicans for their problems Because whites are waking up and we realize we're not there problem .

  • @DonnaChamberson

    @DonnaChamberson

    2 ай бұрын

    Walls don’t work. CNN told me so.

  • @gunsilou424

    @gunsilou424

    2 ай бұрын

    Pray

  • @thomtorrez7618
    @thomtorrez761814 күн бұрын

    Voo Doo . There's your answer .

  • @ZitMaGaming
    @ZitMaGamingАй бұрын

    I went to the DR last year. If you look beyond the areas deep into the heart of the country that are still very much not booming, there are many very fast developments around the big cities.

  • @charlottecamila2859

    @charlottecamila2859

    Ай бұрын

    People on the countryside like that simple lifestyle. Its more of a preference thing at this point. They can always leave but they choose to stay there. Especially the older people.

  • @quackwoofjav
    @quackwoofjavАй бұрын

    This video aged so well, as of today you can add " but wait! , there's more!"

  • @saguntum-iberian-greekkons7014
    @saguntum-iberian-greekkons70142 ай бұрын

    So... haiti is basically a sub-saharan african country in the middle of the americas, in the caribeans

  • @sauronthegreat5799

    @sauronthegreat5799

    2 ай бұрын

    The blacks were brought there by the French as slaves to work the sugar plantations. The carib Indians who were the indigenous peoples were wiped out.

  • @benm38

    @benm38

    2 ай бұрын

    Yes…. But…. There’s so much else 😅

  • @Brandon-kg9ue

    @Brandon-kg9ue

    2 ай бұрын

    Yea basically said lets go back to stone age

  • @MFnDahk

    @MFnDahk

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@benm38 no, there's really not..

  • @djstackademikz

    @djstackademikz

    2 ай бұрын

    @@Brandon-kg9ue na

  • @celsovazquez7175
    @celsovazquez7175Ай бұрын

    One of the major reasons the Dominican Republic thrived and Haiti did not was that the French once they exploited Haiti they left and completely forgot Haiti to this day. In the other hand, today Spain is the Dominican Republic's third largest foreign investor (after the United States and Canada). When the European powers left Haiti became lawless and The Dominicans with trial and error build a Democratic/Republic country that attracted Investors from all over the world. You have to give Dominicans a lot of credit, after Spain left the got invaded by Haiti and were able to later reclaim their country and thrive as a nation.

  • @sttarch5150
    @sttarch5150Ай бұрын

    Whether it's Haiti, S. Africa or South Chicago, you can pour unlimited funds into them, but unless their cultures change, they will be forever doomed. Otherwise, any money sent there will be wasted.

  • @chrisbrossette
    @chrisbrossette3 ай бұрын

    I have not been back to Haiti in several years. The last trip was to bring a young Haitian back to the US for a college degree. He went back after finishing his degree, married his girlfriend and had a child. He has not been able to accomplish much due to the political environment with the gangs. We will not go back even though we used to fly in into Port-au-Prince and drive ourselves across the island without any major worries. We have friends on the island, in Haiti and the DR, who are struggling to survive. What ‘government’ is there makes it hard to help. I was in Jacmel after the earthquake and remember the sights of buildings pancaked. The horror of the loss of life could hardly be imagined. One day, I pray the island finds peace.

  • @soniacanalla900

    @soniacanalla900

    Ай бұрын

    Do this person with his family have a way to get out?

  • @chrisbrossette

    @chrisbrossette

    Ай бұрын

    @@soniacanalla900 Unfortunately they do not. They have contacts in Florida Haitian Community that have been trying to get them and others out of the country legally but that is a challenge with their non-existent government, the corruption of public officials, and the limited access to the US Embassy.

  • @kylebrothers5910
    @kylebrothers59104 ай бұрын

    I am/ was a US Marine. I was deployed to Haiti as a very young man and it was my first experience in another country. Haiti then back in 2003 doesn't look any different than what Haiti looks like in this video in 2023. I will quote Roudolf Bandings WW1 account, " Rubbish doesn't require and explanation it always looks the same...." While I was there the same problems and happenings were prevalent. Trash is just heaped into the streets, the gangs were ruthless, usually they can't even bury their dead then and used to in some areas put a corpse on a pile of trash and pigs would eat them. I as a young man felt very sorry for the people of this nation. I wish for the best of folks that live in Haiti and it is only the people there that can get their country on its feet, asking the world to intervene may not be the answer they seek.

  • @bscottb8

    @bscottb8

    4 ай бұрын

    Don't expect much in a country with an average IQ of 67.

  • @als3022

    @als3022

    4 ай бұрын

    Correct, no matter how much the outside world funnels into Haiti, if it doesn't help itself it is just throwing money away. They have to change it themselves.

  • @jesss428

    @jesss428

    4 ай бұрын

    I totally agree

  • @DomingoGStudio
    @DomingoGStudioАй бұрын

    I know well DR cuz my wife is dominican and we spend 1 month a year there. Love it poeple, culture, music, food, everything. I'm very sad for haïti, i hope this country find the peace and prosperity that it deserves.

  • @ixsandsxi7938
    @ixsandsxi7938Ай бұрын

    Leave the country alone to do what it wants and build a big, secure border along the DR. The Developed World is living in debt and people are hurting there with their own problems. People need to learn to look after themselves.

  • @TheDragonSeer

    @TheDragonSeer

    Ай бұрын

    Yes. The US needs to end its protective policies over Latin American and Caribbean countries and let them do whatever they want.

  • @Gayhan-
    @Gayhan-4 ай бұрын

    I speak for every Dominican born and breed, in the country and abroad, when I say we needed this video. So many international countries keep blaming the DR for their problems and calling us racist when that so far from the truth. I will be sharing this in all my social media! Thanks again !

  • @Tronefficial

    @Tronefficial

    4 ай бұрын

    France and the Us

  • @Jade-tf5kb

    @Jade-tf5kb

    4 ай бұрын

    @@Tronefficial nah the blame lies with the people in the country if you vote for shit and don’t care that’s what happens

  • @apl9814

    @apl9814

    4 ай бұрын

    Every racially inclusive society will have racists...but to put it on a whole nation is ridiculous as if all Dominicans are racist is upsurd and hateful in itself. 🫤

  • @willeats

    @willeats

    4 ай бұрын

    I love Dominicans! I have so many friends! My qualm is with the Dominicans that are darker than me but refuse to identify with their African descent. It’s just weird to me 😅

  • @elperronimo

    @elperronimo

    4 ай бұрын

    If I was from the DR I would be racist to Haitians too it's ok

  • @gatsbyreality9986
    @gatsbyreality99864 ай бұрын

    i keep seeing the influx of haitian immigrants into mexico, and i as a mexican person wanted to find out more about what’s been going on with haiti. My god, can this country and people just get a break!!!!! nothing but interventions, disasters, and ,isfortunes. I send blessings to the unfortunate people from haiti.

  • @Assata_Shakur

    @Assata_Shakur

    4 ай бұрын

    Do you live in Mexico.. Or the U.S.?

  • @gatsbyreality9986

    @gatsbyreality9986

    4 ай бұрын

    @@Assata_Shakuri live in USA, but travel to mexico often to visit family.

  • @RolyBelle

    @RolyBelle

    Ай бұрын

    thank you for your blessings