loyola llothta
☭☭☭
More about the Haitian elites
@Get These Nets @Mirin4rmfar @ZoeGod @LeVraiPapi @intruder
The Haitian Government was paying $12 Million USD a month to Sogener and other those private electricity companies. and those companies barely held up their part of those contracts.
@Get These Nets @Mirin4rmfar @ZoeGod @LeVraiPapi @intruder
The Haitian Government was paying $12 Million USD a month to Sogener and other those private electric companies. Those companies barely held up their part of those contracts to provide electricity.
This is why there has to be a strongman that comes and nationalizes the electricity. This makes no sense at all to pay them this amount and for them to provide subpar electricity. Honestly Haiti needs a leader with balls to arrest these boujwa santi kaka. Because they are looting the country. They are different from the elites that was in Cuba before Castro. Send them running.
@Get These Nets @Mirin4rmfar @ZoeGod @LeVraiPapi @intruder
The Haitian Government was paying $12 Million USD a month to Sogener and other private electric companies. Those companies barely held up their part of those contracts to provide electricity.
First Lady Martine Moise interview with CNN
@Get These Nets @Mirin4rmfar @ZoeGod @LeVraiPapi @intruder
The Haitian Government was paying $12 Million USD a month to Sogener and other private electric companies. Those companies barely held up their part of those contracts to provide electricity.
the press conference from last week where a US govt representative admitted the assassins received training paid for by the DOD at Ft. Polk?
Filmmaker shares his dad's connection with 1964 Haiti coup attempt
Aug. 27, 2021
Roland Chassagne combs through photos and interviews about a plot to overthrow the leader of Haiti. But these aren’t images of the July assassination of President Jovenel Moise. Chassagne is piecing together the story of a group of young Haitian exiles from New York City who set out in 1964 to overthrow the brutal and repressive leader of Haiti, Papa Doc Duvalier. Chassagne's dad was among them.
Roland has photos of his dad at anti-Papa Doc rallies and training with weapons for the coup.
In the house he grew up in Jamaica, Queens, Roland works on "Disposable Souls," his documentary on the mostly forgotten but incredibly personal events.
Chassagne's dad, Albert was the campaign manager for Louis Dejoie, who ran against Duvalier in 1957.
"Doc won the electionm and because my dad was the campaign manager of the other candidatem they were going to kill him. So my father and my mother left Haiti," Chassagne said.
They fled to New York, and Albert got involved with many anti-Duvalier groups.
"One was called 'Jeune Haiti,' which means Young Haiti Haiti. The CIA was training them," Chassagne said.
As it's told in the film, President John F. Kennedy directed the CIA and FBI to train Haitian immigrants to invade Haiti and overthrow Duvalier. After JFK ’s assassination, those plans were scrapped. But 13 members of Young Haiti decided to continue on. In 1964, they landed in the town of Jeremie. All 13, and many others in that town, were killed.
It’s still unknown why Albert didn’t go. He later wrote the book "Blood Bath in Haiti." It’s the basis for the film, which Chassagne dedicates to his late father and his mother.
Many, including Chassagne's mom, do not want him to make the film.
"Mom doesn’t want me to do it because she’s terrified of what might happen to me and the names I might mention," he said. He added that he will be naming names
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Video was put up years ago as part of a crowdfunding effort. Recent events have jumpstarted his project.