• @nac82@lemm.ee
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    4 months ago

    And as we all know, nobody else on the planet is influencing anything ever. It’s all a result of American influence.

    Nazi Germany only happened because America didn’t conquer Germany in the 1890’s.

    Russia invading Ukraine? Also, America. Gang violence in Haiti? America.

    Tianamen Square? Believe it or not. America.

    • @CarbonIceDragon
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      174 months ago

      I never said nobody else was, just that Haiti in particular has a history that has seen the US act to hinder it’s development on a number of occasions. The same for that matter can be said of France in this case. My point was not that Haiti’s situation is the exclusive fault of the United States, but rather that the US does at least have some responsibility for how it has turned out.

      • @PugJesus@lemmy.world
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        04 months ago

        My point was not that Haiti’s situation is the exclusive fault of the United States, but rather that the US does at least have some responsibility for how it has turned out.

        Some responsibility is undeniable, but I think saying Haiti’s poverty is ‘largely though not entirely a result of the actions of the US’ is vastly overstating the role of the US in this particular scenario. I don’t think “The US refuses to intervene to buoy the junk debts acquired by US banks in the 1910s-40s” fundamentally changes the trajectory of Haiti’s history.

        • @CarbonIceDragon
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          164 months ago

          The US literally took over the country’s central bank, occupied the country for a period of over a decade, and forced it to pay a huge percentage of it’s national income for that period to US banks to repay a debt that it never fairly acquired in the first place (admittedly, one that the US had basically taken over from France, which had forced it on Haiti in the first place, which is one of the reasons I also named France as a contributor in one of these replies). The country was prevented from using this revenue to invest in itself for a significant chunk of time, and that kind of investment has compounding effects that would have made the country at least somewhat better off had it not been basically robbed of it’s income at gunpoint. As things like organized crime thrive under an environment of poverty and desperation, it isn’t that unreasonable to think that the gangs would be less severe a problem had this development been allowed to occur.

          • @PugJesus@lemmy.world
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            04 months ago

            That would be much more compelling, except for the fact that Haiti was poor and unstable even before France imposed the debt, and that subsequent regimes, including US-friendly and US-hostile, did nothing to improve the situation. Haiti’s issues are far more fundamental than “The US reduced and redirected investment in the Haitian economy while extracting debts owed to US investors back in the 1910s-1940s”.

            Obviously, this is ignoring the moral issue of the occupation of Haiti (which is, of course, an atrocity), as the discussion is currently centered around responsibility for modern Haitian poverty and instability.

            • NoneOfUrBusiness
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              54 months ago

              That would be much more compelling, except for the fact that Haiti was poor and unstable even before France imposed the debt,

              Haiti didn’t exist before France’s debt AFAIK.

              • @PugJesus@lemmy.world
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                14 months ago

                The debt was imposed some 30 years after the Haitian Revolution, if memory serves. Taking on the (punitive and ridiculous) debt was the condition for France recognizing Haiti’s independence, though it had been de facto independent for a generation.

                • @barsoap@lemm.ee
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                  44 months ago

                  Yeah and before that Haiti was a French slave plantation. Poor goes without saying, unstable of course once the few owners who lived there lost their backup.

                  • @PugJesus@lemmy.world
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                    14 months ago

                    Yeah, Haiti was swimming against the current from the start. There are a large number of other factors, most of them bad. And most of them related to its origins as a slave plantation and its unsteady road to independence.

                    My primary point is just that Haiti minus US involvement would be unlikely to fundamentally look much different than Haiti plus US involvement. We (the US) are responsible for a good deal of suffering in Haiti’s history, but the underlying problems are much more integral.

                • NoneOfUrBusiness
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                  4 months ago

                  Oh I see. Then let me change my stance a bit:

                  Haiti gained independence through a slave uprising. It makes sense that they would start off poor, but it’s deliberate Western interference that kept them down. Now it can be argued that this is so long ago it shouldn’t matter anymore, but these things are very much subject to the butterfly effect. Poverty generates poverty and the country was directly robbed of the ability to improve for 122 years, and faced with decolonization that left them with a power vacuum and political instability. And it’s not like US intervention stopped then. The US and France are about 80% responsible for Haiti’s modern situation; not to say they’d have necessarily been a developed country but they wouldn’t be this bad.

                  Edit: Just to be clear, I’m not saying decolonization is a bad thing, but decolonization without care for the colony’s post-decolonization government is setting it up for failure. See: Botswana, whose modern prosperity is a direct result of not having to deal with this.

                  • @PugJesus@lemmy.world
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                    4 months ago

                    The US and France are about 80% responsible for Haiti’s modern situation; not to say they’d have necessarily been a developed country but they wouldn’t be this bad.

                    I guess this is really where we come into conflict. I’m in agreement with everything else, but this ends up as “The broken fingers and the .50 cal through my heart are about 80% responsible for my death.”

                    The US is a piece of the puzzle, but not really a fundamental one. The situation’s not like Cuba.

                    In any case, we are certainly in agreement that Haiti was dealt a bad hand from the start, and the entire ‘system’ of colonial international relations in the 19th century bore its full weight against them, with France in particular being vindictive towards its former colony; and the entire post-WW1 system being ‘designed’ (for lack of a better word; I dislike the implication that larger-scope intentions were involved in its creation instead of an ad hoc mess) to privilege importers of raw resources, rather than exporters. And that US exploitation didn’t help Haiti’s situation in the least. A vulture picking at a man not-yet-dead.

      • @nac82@lemm.ee
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        -44 months ago

        Unlike the people of Haiti. Or the Gangs of Haiti. Or the government of Haiti. Or any of Haiti’s neighboring countries. Or any of the other world super powers.

        America is the primary operator in Haiti.

        • @CarbonIceDragon
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          84 months ago

          Where did i suggest that none of this contributes? A thing can have more than one contributing cause.

            • @CarbonIceDragon
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              54 months ago

              I did not say all, I said largely, and the reason for that is that the US has intervened more with Haiti in particular than it did in most countries, and in a way that stripped it of much of it’s wealth and ability to develop itself for a significant period of time. I was not making some generic “America bad” comment here, I was trying to point out that Haiti in particular has a long and particularly negative history with the United States.