Anonymous ID: 9152ea Jan. 24, 2022, 1:05 p.m. No.15451613   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>15451461

Kekkity! So “The Lincoln Project” along with Dems and Rhinos setting up FF just like anons have been saying.

 

So why did police let them Cover up their license plate numbers? FBI and other governmental agencies trying to justify domestic terrorist narrative

Anonymous ID: 9152ea Jan. 24, 2022, 1:19 p.m. No.15451670   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>15451176

Question is all of destruction of Haiti normal, or intended by the cabal? That island gets more events than any other.

 

You know why? Haiti and Puerto Rico gets billions in aid from the US! And none of it gets to the people. Its a money laundrring cow like Ukraine

 

Haiti—an island country 600 miles off the coast of the U.S. state of Florida—shares the Caribbean island of Hispaniola with the Dominican Republic. Haiti has received billions in foreign assistance, yet persists as one of the poorest countries and has the lowest human development index in the Americas.[1][2] There have been more than 15 natural disasters since 2001 including tropical storms, flooding, earthquakes and hurricanes. The international donor community classifies Haiti as a fragile state. Haiti is also considered a post-conflict state—one emerging from a recent coup d'état and civil war.

United States aid to Haiti

Haiti's economic and social underdevelopment has been attributed to political instability and insufficient investment by the Haitian government towards natural and human resources.[3] Between the fiscal years of 1995 and 1999, the U.S. contributed approximately US$884 million in financial assistance to Haiti.[4]Haiti received US$13 billion in foreign aid from the international community from 2011 to 2021.[5] Despite this, living conditions remain poor.[6]. According to page 35 of the Greening Aid book there are key questions that arise on where the money flows and why.

 

GONAIVES, Haiti (Sept. 26, 2008). Haitian civilians unload relief supplies from a landing craft utility assigned to Assault Craft Unit (ACU) 2 embarked aboard the amphibious assault ship USS Kearsarge (LHD 3). Kearsarge completed her humanitarian assistance and disaster relief mission in Haiti Sept. 26, delivering more than 3.3 million pounds of food, water and other supplies. U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist Seaman Apprentice Joshua Adam Nuzzo.

Among the initiatives United States funds have supported are:

 

Food assistance programs that include a school lunch program that feeds around 500,000 children daily

Agricultural development programs that have endeavored to revitalize Haiti's coffee sector and to help thousands of Haitian farmers adopt sustainable agricultural practices and protect the environment

Teacher training programs that have included 6,000 educators at the primary and secondary level

Population programs that have expanded modern family planning practices in many rural areas

Health care programs that have supported child immunization and have helped provide primary care to nearly half of the Haitian population

Economic development

Haiti has experienced decades of extremely high unemployment and underemployment. The decline in urban assembly sector jobs, from a peak of 80,000 in 1986 to fewer than 17,000 in 1994, contributed to increased unemployment. To revitalize the economy, U.S. assistance has attempted to create opportunities for stable, sustainable employment for the growing population, particularly those who compose the country's vast informal economy. A post-intervention transitional program of short-term job creation, principally in small towns and rural areas, provided employment to as many as 50,000 workers per day throughout the country. More recently, programs that help to increase commercial bank lending to small- and medium-scale entrepreneurs, especially in the agricultural sector, have helped to create jobs and foster economic growth.

 

Additional U.S. efforts in economic revitalization include the establishment of the U.S.-Haiti Business Development Council, an Overseas Private Investment Corporation commercial loan program, and inclusion of Haiti within the Caribbean Basin Initiative. These efforts provide greater market opportunities for American and Haitian businesses. Current Congressional prohibitions on providing assistance to or through the Haitian government has accelerated the move to private voluntary agencies as contractors to oversee the use of U.S. aid funds.

Throughout the 2001–2004 time period theUnited States Chamber of Commercebacked a government aid embargo upon Haiti's elected Aristide government.[9] This led to economic decline. Haiti's government budget was approximately 30-40 percent dependent on the cut-off aid….

 

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foreign_aid_to_Haiti