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Book by John Maxwell
How to Make Our Own News: A Primer for Environmentalist and Journalists
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Genocide a la bonne
femme
By
John Maxwell
We have some great news for dieters this week!
The Haitians, with a little help from
the Americans, the French and the Canadians, have
produced a solution to the obesity crisis that now
threatens western civilisation.
Haiti’s great and good friends in
Washington, Paris and Ottawa have, at last, after
several years of hard, grinding effort, managed to
create the condition known as ‘critical mess’ [sic]
allowing the Haitians to produce a diet which — unlike
any other slimming solution — is absolutely guaranteed
to work. Other slimming solutions have always had one
weak spot: no matter how low-calorie the diet is,
dieters can always defeat the purpose by overeating.
The new Haitian diet makes that
impossible!
No matter how much you eat you will
not get fat!!
This is sensational news!!!
Here for the information of our avid
readers is the recipe, direct from the street vendors of
Port au Prince
One caveat: the special ingredient
may have to be imported from Haiti. We haven’t yet found
a gourmet specialty shop in North America which stocks
the main ingredient— Glaise de Plateau Central—a special
kind of clay from the Central Plateau of Haiti. This
clay is yellowish in colour and the best grades contain
lots of healthy calcium, guaranteed to make your bones
stronger even as your too, too solid flesh melts away.
Method
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Take enough Glaise de
Plateau Central and dry it in the sun.
Pound (in a mortar) and
sieve the dried glaise, to remove any
small stones, twigs, insect parts, bird
droppings or other visible impurities.
Add a little water,
enough to make a soft dough
Add a little fat and a
soupçon of salt (gros sel, pounded fine)
Mix all together forming
small—say 2 inch—cookies.
Expose to the sun on a
zinc sheet (beaten as flat as possible)
When dry your mud pies
are ready to eat. |
Bon appetit!!! It may sound better in
French but it is genocide in any language.
‘And so say all of us!’
The Haitians are giving new meaning
to the phrase ‘dirt poor’.
Four years after the Americans,
Canadians and French beheaded democracy in Haiti it is
now clear that a Final Solution is in sight for the 200
year old Haitian problem.
Almost exactly three years ago, on
January 30, 2005, I wrote in this column in this paper about the world’s commemoration of the liberation of
the Auschwitz murder factory sixty year before ‘Elie Weisel, a survivor of the Nazi
Holocaust against the Jews, said eloquently:
| In those times those who were in the
death camps felt not only tortured and
murdered by the enemy, but also tortured and
murdered by what they considered to be the
world’s silence and indifference |
‘ “ … Those who committed the crimes
were not vulgar, underworld thugs, but men with high
positions in government, academia, industry and
medicine.” Weisel said.
I wrote then:
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The world is remembering Auschwitz and
the Holocaust. It is not paying any notice
to the 200 year Holocaust still underway
in Haiti. There too, the people in hazard
must feel tortured and murdered by the
indifference of a world conned into
believing that the high-minded leaders of
the United States, France, Canada and Brazil
have the interest of the Haitian people at
heart when their agents torture, murder,
maim and rape Haitians for no better reason
than that they support their democratically
elected and unconstitutionally removed
President, Jean Bertrand Aristide. |
That was in 2005.
Since then the Haitians have
continued to languish in suffering. They have had their
leaders kidnapped, tortured and murdered, innocent women
and children have been killed by the UN occupation
forces working to eliminate the enemies of the Haitian
ruling elite, the destruction of Haitian democratic
organisation meant the death of thousands from
hurricane, floods and other natural disasters, and they
have waited for hours in the heat of the sun to cast
their votes hoping that those votes would have meant a
better life for them, or at least a chance for a better
life.
That hasn’t happened.
Haiti is still paying for the foreign
aid gormandised by the Duvaliers and their allies and
they still have no roads, no hospitals, and their
medical school started by Aristide with the aid of the
Cubans is now the site of the barracks of the occupying
forces.
These Haitians are the people who
helped the Americans win their independence, destroyed
the Americans ambitions of Napoleon, destroyed slavery
and accelerated the abolition of the slave trade.
They are guilty on all counts and
obviously deserve to be punished. They inhabit one of
those places Mr Bush called ‘the dark corners of the
world.’
Three years ago, at the Holocaust
commemoration the US vice president Mr Cheney delivered
himself of these words:
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…these great evils of
history were perpetuated not in some remote,
uncivilised part of the world, but in the
very heart of the civilised world. … Men
without conscience are capable of any
cruelty the human mind can imagine.
Therefore we must teach every generation the
values of tolerance and decency and moral
courage. And in every generation, free
nations must maintain the will, the
foresight and the strength to fight tyranny
and spread the freedom that leads to peace. |
And so say all of us! And so say all
of us!! And so say all of us!!!
Meanwhile, the Haitians eat dirt.
Gimmick Development
Caribbean culture—the product of a
tiny proportion of the world’s people—is awesome. We
have produced Jean Jacques Dessalines, Marcus Garvey,
Fidel Castro and Norman Manley, Capablanca and George
Headley, Alexandre Dumas, Arthur Lewis and Derek
Walcott, Ernesto Lecuona, Bob Marley and the Mighty
Sparrow, Karl Parboosingh and Cecil Baugh, Colin Powell
and Malcolm X to name only a few who have changed the
world. Visitors to the region, especially to Jamaica,
are unlikely to discover any of this.
Caribbean culture is the magnet that
draws foreign visitors to these countries but once they
get here, they could be anywhere.
They don’t eat Caribbean food or meet
Caribbean people or hear any but the most formulaic,
tired Caribbean music.
There are exceptions of course. But
Caribbean tourism is largely not a Caribbean product.
The people who are the stewards of the flame that draws
the visitors have very little part in the industry. In
Jamaica the people are losing their beaches and even
their landscapes to so called ‘developments’ which
accord no respect nor pay attention to their Jamaican
context.
The Jamaica of song and story is
replaced by petting zoos featuring captive camels
parakeets and dolphins and other exotica imported from
other places.
‘Development’ in Jamaica follows the
maxim quoted in the 1954 World Bank Report on Jamaica:
| In Jamaica, the absolute ownership of
land means in practice the absolute right of
the owner to ruin the land in his own way. |
These days one does not even have
to be the absolute owner. If, like Robert Cartade, one
can persuade the right people one can get permission to
destroy Hope Gardens and if the ‘proles’ protest too
much, Long Mountain instead. If you are the government
you can pour concrete and sterilise an area half the
size of Hanover to build a Doomsday Highway that, as I
predicted, will be impossible to pay for. We can try to
rescue disastrous developments like the Port Antonio
Marina by making an even bigger bet on a new airport.
(for flying yachts?) We can destroy Falmouth so that
financiers can make millions from cruise ships before
they are sunk by the price of petroleum in five or ten
years.
We can destroy Kingston Harbour by
pollution or by dredging and we are now told that the
parish of Portland is so beautiful and so attractive
that it must be saved for foreigners and covered with
villas and other attractions which will change it into
Las Vegas by the sea.
The latest ‘development’ proposals
for St Thomas mean that the people will give up some of
the most valuable farmland in Jamaica for our fourth —
fourth! international airport. Jamaica already has one
mile of roadway for every square mile of land. We will
now have one international airport for every thousand
square miles of land or one international airport for
every 200 square miles of reasonably level land.
And all this is to be done without
consultation with the Jamaican people whose sacrifice is
essential for these ‘developments’. Although we are
bound by the Treaty of Rio, by the Cartagena Convention
and other national and international laws, the people of
Jamaica will be asked to yield their treasure as the
Arawaks/Tainos were ‘asked’ to yield theirs.
“I claim this land in the name of
Development!” So There!
Give us a break.
Endnote: Isit just me? Or is anyone else disturbed by
the heavy promotion of the film “Vantage Point” on CNN
in concert with news reports and programmes about the US
party presidential primaries. ‘Vantage Point” is about
the assassination of an American President, and the
promos, especially when they follow Barack Obama
political advertisements, give me the creeps.
Copyright©John Maxwell /
jankunnu@gmail.com
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Disregard for Haiti—According
to the Associated Press, 80 percent of Haitians live
off of two dollars a day, making it one of the most
impoverished in the world. If you say, Mr.
President, that "America is leading the fight
against global poverty," why is it that such a tiny
island-nation like Haiti is in so much pain and
disarray? Do not lie or mislead if you cannot
acknowledge a problem so close to the United States.
The situation Haiti is facing is beyond appalling.
It is inexcusable on the part of this administration
and the president, who boasted that the United
States is the source of more that half of the
world's food aid. It is clear that this aid, which
very well may (accurately) be as vast as he states,
is not getting to the Haitian people, who must
stretch out, at most, those two dollars over the
course of the day. . . . Action is needed in Haiti
and it must be taken now.—Dan
Keenan
posted 2 February 2008
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