
Aid State
Elite Panic, Disaster Capitalism, and the Battle to Control Haiti
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Narrated by:
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James Lurie
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By:
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Jake Johnston
About this listen
Haiti’s state is near-collapse: armed groups have overrun the country, many government officials have fled after the 2021 assassination of President Moise, refugees desperately set out on boats to reach the US and Latin America, and the economy reels from the after-effects of disasters, both man-made and natural, that destroyed much of Haiti’s infrastructure. How did a nation founded on liberation—a people that successfully revolted against their colonizers and enslavers—come to such a precipice?
In Aid State, Jake Johnston, researcher and writer at the Center for Economic and Policy Research, reveals how US and European capitalist goals re-enslaved Haiti under the guise of helping it. To the global West, Haiti has always been a place where labor is cheap, politicians are compliant, and profits are to be made. Over the course of nearly 100 years, the US has sought to control Haiti with occupying police, military, and euphemistically-called peacekeeping forces, as well as hand-picked leaders meant to quell uprisings and protect corporate interests. Earthquakes and hurricanes only further hurt a state already decimated by the aid industrial complex.
Based on years of on-the-ground reporting in Haiti and interviews with politicians in the US and Haiti, UN officials, and Haitians who struggle for their lives, homes, and families, Aid State is a conscience-searing book of witness.
©2024 Jake Johnston (P)2024 Dreamscape MediaListeners also enjoyed...
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Good
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Brilliant insight
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descendents, now they give us right under our nose the:
AID INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX, feed it billions, watch machine washing out of and disappearance of cash like stains, wisked away. Last act, it's over now baby ! "We got this Presidehnt Sanders". Boom shak-a-la !!
Haiti Rocks, and we the people rule.
I loved this book !! Winds of peace and conciosness are blowing, says BBQ, Jimmy Cherizezs.
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investigative journalism at its best
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Great work by Johnston in lifting the mask
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A must read for anyone interested in Haiti
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