home
PhillyIMC's web-radio  

IWW Delegation Returns from Haiti

by

An Industrial Workers of the World delegation has just returned from Haiti where we spent twelve days meeting with representatives of the Confederation des Travailleurs Haïtiens (Haitian Confederation of Workers) and other worker and peasant movements. Three American IWW members: Joseph Lapp, Nathaniel Miller, Justin Vitiello, and one Canadian, Cody Anderson were invited to Haiti by the CTH to document the Haitians' struggle against "le plan neoliberal." Justin and Nathaniel are both from Philly, Joseph is from Alaska, but a former resident of Philly, and Cody is from Alberta.

We kept a detailed blog and are making a video from the trip. There will be organized report backs with photos and video in June. Those interested in learning more about the trip, or how they can help the Haitians' struggle should contact nathaniel@iww.org

Read the blog here.






























Comments

Why Haiti is a threat to US global corporate power

Can't wait to see the report-back, photos, and video from the trip. The poor of Haiti can provide a powerful lesson to us in the US, where we have so many more resources for organizing.

Of course you have the powerful story of the original Haitian revolution. More recently, the early 90s, before the first US sponsored coup, Aristide was elected by 2/3 of the country, after he entered the election race, just a few months before the election. Then, following the election, after Aristide barely escaped for his life, the US's "cop-on-the-beat" Raoul Cedras and his hit-squad brutally terrorized Haitians in many ways, including by publicly hacking people to pieces with machetes. While the Haitian population was tortured, the exiled Aristide was told by Bill Clinton and his "rent-a-thug" Jimmy Carter that the terrorism would only stop and Aristide be allowed to return, if Aristide abandoned his radical economic reforms that would benefit the Haitian poor at the expense of corporate AmeriKKKa and Haiti's ruling class elite.

Over a decade later, Aristide was elected once again, and was promptly kidnapped by the US.

Haitian popular organizing is a huge threat to US global domination of the third world. As Noam Chomsky points out with his "rotten apple theory" (also used to explain US motivations in the Vietnam war and the War on Central America during the Carter-Reagan-Bush era) any positive example of poor people in the third world successfully organizing to liberate themselves is a powerful IDEOLOGICAL threat.

This is because others around the world will see that it is possible to resist US domination, it will inspire other people to do the same--challenging the overall stability of the US empire. That is the major way the US ruling class is threatened by the people of Haiti.

Like I said, can't wait to hear the report back.

Aristide's reforms

Ironically Aristide's programs weren't even very "radical:" Small minimum wage increases; schools and adult literacy centers for a largely illiterate population; hospitals in the slums; changing the written laws from French (which only 15% of the population speaks) to universally understood Kreyol; and minor redistribution of state-controlled fallow land. But even this was too much for the US and the Haitian elite who were incensed no longer monopolizing power.

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

More information about formatting options

CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
8 + 8 =
Solve this simple math problem and enter the result. E.g. for 1+3, enter 4.