RICH Side of HAITI 🇭🇹| They Don't Show You This Part of Port Au Prince
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 28 มิ.ย. 2024
- Exploring The Richest Neighborhoods in HAITI 🇭🇹| They Don't Show You This Luxury Estates in Port Au Prince
Footages | Credit to 👇🙏
@RandolphAscencio
@sightseeing40
@LostExplorations
#haiti #haitian #portauprincehaiti
Haiti 🇭🇹 is So Beautiful
I’ve been to Haiti very very beautiful place . I’m so proud of my Haitians brothers and Sister . 1st Free Black Republic since 1804 .
that was beautiful thanks for sharing❤❤❤❤❤
Thank you for sharing ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Great of you showing better content of Haiti. Before I say anything first, that is the first thing I should mention. Thank you again! HOWEVER, the slide from 4:28 is not Haiti. You also share another video which isn't Haiti in into as well. Keep it up.
Thanks for showing! I don't even have a chance to explore my Country yet!
It’s the same when those people say that Haiti is pire, but they dindn’t say on new how many times they came to steel gold, souffre, specially Canada and USA
Port au Prince stretched 30 miles into the hills and mountains,even more in coastlines. We have cities,towns in PAP.Place is huge and sophisticate
FIRST black Republic 🇭🇹mistreated🇭🇹🇭🇹🇭🇹🇭🇹🇭🇹🇭🇹🇭🇹
Nice video. ❤️You have NO affinity with what trash.👏👏👏👏👏
❤❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
My brother if you're going to talk about Haiti please use only videos from Haiti that way you do not give a false image. Apart from that I love the video. Thank you for bringing awareness to my country and not showing a negative view like most people do specially Americans.
These are Haiti I can tell you the name of every neighborhood in the video. He re used drone footage from a smaller Haitian TH-camr for this. It’s all Haïti
@@diachiwest1804 I have no doubt that you, so than can you tell me which area of Haiti is that at 1:08, 4:28 and at 7:04? I am interested know that way I can visit.
@@mickensj2805I’m talking about the houses shown. That’s his fault for showing random images while editing
@@diachiwest1804 that’s what I’m saying. Like I said I love the video.
👏👏👏👏👏
Great job!
🙏🙏✅
He's not ugly for no reason
I WANNA THANK YOU FOR SHOWING SOME PART OF THE CAPITAL,BUT SOME PART IS NOT HAITITHANK YOU FOR UR WORK BRO,THIS GUY WHO SAID (ernest merlin) its seems you dont know really HAITI its true some part is not HAITI cooldown my bro.
Every country on earth has nice areas. What drives me crazy is how we are obsessed by showing 1 good neighborhood and saying: "This is the side they don't show, they try to denigrate us etc..." A real developed country is characterized by how well people in the countryside live. In Japan for example, even the smallest most remote town has: running water, electricity, internet, access to health care and education and zero violent crime. Can you say the same about Haiti? or any Big modern African city that we like to show and brag about? How are the countryfolks living? That is the question. They are, after all, the majority of the population in most of our countries.
Thank you, they show only bad thing but they don’t thing how the consult of USA, Canada or France spleep in Haiti
Why Haiti began and remains poor (pt 1 of 7).
During its colonial days, Haiti’s slave plantations supplied over half of the world’s sugar.
But after the slaves gained their freedom from the brutal regime and the country declared independence in 1804, sugar disappeared from the economy as small farms produced coffee, subsistence agriculture, and food for local markets.
In 1950, when Haiti was at least producing some sugar, its exports were far behind comparable countries: sugar exports in Puerto Rico were 35 times higher, and in the Dominican Republic exports were 14 times higher.
A common explanation for Haiti’s resistance to producing sugar is that Haitian culture rejected the industry because of the associated historical traumas. However Haitians went to the DR, Cuba, even Puerto Rico to harvest sugar cane so there was not much of a cultural stigma towards the sugar industry.
A major contributor to Haiti’s failure to restore its sugar economy was historical property rights institutions that created significant transaction costs to starting large-scale farms.
3 post-Independence property rights institutions: (1) a large redistribution of the former French plantations; (2) inheritance patterns on peasant land that gave every family member a veto right to selling it; and (3) a constitutional ban on foreigners owning land in Haiti.
But the property rights institutions in Haiti are important because they were not established by colonists; instead, they were created by a newly independent nation in reaction to colonists. These are post-colonial institutions.
From 1900 to 1960, sugar accounted for 76 percent of Cuba’s export value, 51 percent of the Dominican Republic’s, 46 percent of Puerto Rico’s, and 26 percent of Jamaica’s. Sugar contributed only 5 percent to Haiti’s exports. Less than 10% of Haiti's sugar production was exported whereas for the other Caribbean countries about 90% was exported. Since 1987 (demise of HASCO) sugar in Haiti has been a cash crop raised by peasants rather than by large-scale plantations.
Sugar Exported (Million lbs)
...............Haiti.......Dom.Rep.......P.Rico.......Jamaica.......Cuba
1900______1_______150________200_________2_______1,000
1910______1_______250________500_________3_______2,000
1920______2_______300________700________10_______5,000
1930______3_______550______1,000________50_______2,000
1940______4_______700______1,500_______200_______4,500
1950______5_______900______1,600_______400_______7,000
In 2014, on coffee:
Country__________________Haiti______Dom.Rep.____Cuba______Jamaica
Production (tonnes)______19,500_____13,500______9,000_____1,620
Export (tonnes)___________120______1,020________660_____1,320
Export/Production (%)_______0.6________7.6_________7.3_______81.5
Population (M)_____________10.4_______10.3_______11.3_______2.8
Area (1000 km^2)___________27.8_______48.7______110.9______11.0
Beautiful world with crazy ass people Ops
Why don't you speak Creole so everyone may understand? It would be better.
Who’s everyone?😂
m pa konprann angle sa yo menm
All the places he showed are Haiti, I used to lived in Petion- ville I know many of those places and others most beautiful places in Haiti, people who say those places are not Haiti are same always plot to trash Haiti and show the bad side of Haiti, they are hated peoples.
NAA.
Redo the video and remove some of the few parts that are not Haiti.
No thanks I'll pass no no nooo
Why Haiti began and remains poor (pt 3 of 7).
(E) Subsistence Economy. The old and recent historical data show that exports are a small part of Haiti's economy. Settling for a Subsistence Economy, a Survival Economy is OK. There are tribes living the Stone Age style deep in the Amazon forest and in the jungles of the Congo and Papua New Guinea for thousands of years. Subsistence Economy can be done. However the Planet is populated with Predatory Nations. Fortunately for the Stone Age inhabitants of the Amazon, Central Africa and Papua New Guinea, they have the military protection of the sovereign countries in which they live. The Amish lives in a somewhat Subsistence Economy and there is no Amish Nation: the Amish community is part of the USA and is thus protected by the USA. Trying to maintain proper military power with a Subsistence Economy cannot be sustained for long.
(F) The low trust character of Haitian society. The Haitian and French revolutions have a few things in common: they are both based on J.E.A.R. = Jealousy, Envy, Anger, Resentment. JEAR is the blood of Socialism and Communism. The concern for "equality" is the launchpad for JEAR. Words "equal(ity)", "democracy" appears
_________________________________Equal(ity)____Democracy
US Declaration of Independence_____1_____________0
US Constitution____________________0_____________0
French Constitution 1793___________3_____________1
French Constitution 1958__________10_____________4
Haiti Constitution 1805___________3_____________0
Haiti Constitution 1987___________7_____________4
All the freed slaves in Haiti were given a plot of land and then the fun began. The Ancients had it correct: give 3 people equal amount of money at sunrise and they will become unequal before sunset. Dessalines was on his way to deal with some land speculators when he was assassinated. The point is: large-scale farms are much more efficient than small-scale farms and cooperative farms in Haiti were difficult to establish and these rare cooperatives did not last long. Thus time after time, Haiti falls back to a Subsistence Economy.
Are there today (2024 AD) large landowners (you know, them evil, nasty, greedy oligarchs!)? Yes. However, in 1950, 80% of the Artibonite Valley (where rice is grown) was still in the hands of the small farmers. The national economic dynamics is still dominated by small-land farmers.
The Amish, again. Amish companies are usually no more than 5 employees. Yet said small companies frequently combine together for large tasks. The trust aspect of Amish culture is rare in Haitian society. Mind you, Amish runs a mainly Subsistence Economy, not an Industrial Economy. If Haiti were Amish country, Haiti would be in much better shape. Mind you, the Amish are not warmongers and they would not invade the Dominican Republic.
Summary. Saint Domingue was a super producer of sugar in the late 1700's because of large-scale farming. Then came Independence of 1804. Land Reform: everyone gets equal share of the Land. Consequence of Land Reform: small-scale farming which brings about at best a Subsistence Economy, a Survival Economy. Haiti thus lost the status of Sugar Super-Producer and started on the Road to Poverty. Constant political turmoil is characteristic of a low-trust society. The low trust nature of Haitian culture makes difficult the establishment of cooperative farming needed for economic growth.
Seems like your giving us the exclusive lecture ✅✅ I Appreciate your comments broh🙏
@@tideone97, All that shine is not gold. He has yet to explain how the heavy ransom that Haiti had to pay France affected the development of Haiti. He didn’t explain the impact of the commercial embargo that was placed on Haiti by the slave owning nations . Neither was Haiti allowed to have a Navy. He didn’t mention either that the United States sugar investors placed their industries in Cuba and the DR, but collected the slave labor force in Haiti. I would certainly like to hear the professor educate me about the stigma of AIDS and the death of tourism in Haiti. Please tell me about the eradication of creole pigs , which, represented the bank account of the peasants. Don’t stop there, explain to us how Haiti ended up being the number one victim of globalization. The end result is that all government owned factories and industries were sold to the transnational corporations. The said corporations closed them and then we started to import everything. If the professor is not too tired, he will give us a crash course on how the Haitian government was forced to lower its import tariffs from 30% to 3% so subsidized rice from Arkansas can flood the Haitian market.
Please Einstein, tell us when exactly did Haiti invade the Dominican Republic? I can’t wait to hear that.
many of these clips are not of haiti.
The only clips that aren’t are the marina ones with boats.
Actually they are just the ones said above.