Yes, it absolutely matters. It matters to me and I believe it

Yes, it absolutely matters.

It matters to me and I believe it matters to the 80% living in abject poverty how a nation went from France's richest colony to the hemisphere's most impoverished nation in less than a century after independence.

It's not about breeding hatred or inciting violence, it's about the Haitian people knowing who are our friends or who are our enemies, who did good by us and who did not. So the first critical hundred years of our nation ought to be discussed and taught thouroughly.

"Black Majority Been in Power For Last 100 years " is misinformation since the Americans favor the mulatto during the occupation.

Hence we, historians and history analysts, call the period of 1915 - 1946 'Occupation and the third mulatto supremacy'.

I analyze within the context of the whole 204 years of independence.

This is more or less how it' s broken down:

A. 1633 - 1789 European Domination and Slavery
B. 1789 - 1804 Revolution and Quest for Liberty
C. 1804 - 1849 First Mulatto Supremacy & National Uncertainty
C-1. 1807 - 1820 Despotism and Progress
D. 1849 - 1859 First Black Power and Military Decadence
E. 1859 - 1879 Second Mulatto Supremacy and Foreign Inteference
F. 1879 - 1915 Second Black Power and the Caco Factor
G. 1915 - 1946 US Occupation and the Third Mulatto Supremacy
H. 1946 - 1986 Return of Militarism and Third Black Power
I. 1986 - 1991 Anti-Militarism and Quest for Democracy
J. 1991 - present Democracy is an illusion

Had Jean-Pierre Boyer not destroyed Christophe's school system, had the ultra-liberal party (hard-line mulatres) let Boisrond spread some education, had the Americans concern themselves with educating the black majority in 1915, there would not have been uneducated rich black people to move into your neighborhood today and hurt your relatives.

welcome to the revolution

The topic is: liste de nos chefs d'Haïti
This is a reply to Msg 8790
Posted by Rubens F. Titus on May 23 2008 at 1:02 AM