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	<title>Energy Efficiency &#187; haiti</title>
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		<title>The USA&#8217;s Unwanted Hegemony Continues</title>
		<link>http://www.energyefficienthomedesign.com.au/2010/02/the-usas-unwanted-hegemony-continues/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 02 Feb 2010 09:33:57 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[The following article titled &#8216;The Fateful Geological Prize Called Haiti&#8217; is by F William Engdahl, author of Full Spectrum Dominance: Totalitarian Democracy in the New World Order. I have written observations in italics. A former US President becomes UN Special Envoy to earthquake-stricken Haiti. A born-again neo-conservative US business wheeler-dealer preacher claims Haitians are condemned for making [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The following article titled <a href="mailto:%27@iinet.net.au">&#8216;</a>The Fateful Geological Prize Called Haiti&#8217; is by F William Engdahl, author of Full Spectrum Dominance: Totalitarian Democracy in the New World Order<em>.</em> <em>I have written observations in italics. </em></p>
<p>A former US President becomes UN Special Envoy to earthquake-stricken Haiti. A born-again neo-conservative US business wheeler-dealer preacher claims Haitians are condemned for making a literal ‘pact with the Devil (<em>however, many nations consider the USA, Satan</em>).’</p>
<p>Venezuelan, Nicaraguan, Bolivian, French and Swiss rescue organizations accuse the US military of refusing landing rights to planes bearing necessary medicines and urgently needed potable water to the millions of Haitians stricken, injured and homeless. And behind the smoke, rubble and unending drama of human tragedy in the hapless Caribbean country, a drama is in full play for control of what geophysicists believe may be one of the world’s richest zones for hydrocarbons-oil and gas outside the Middle East, possibly orders of magnitude greater than that of nearby Venezuela.</p>
<p><span id="more-768"></span>Haiti and the larger island of Hispaniola of which it is a part, has the geological fate that it straddles one of the world’s most active geological zones, where the deepwater plates of three huge structures relentlessly rub against one another—the intersection of the North American, South American and Caribbean tectonic plates. Below the ocean and the waters of the Caribbean, these plates consist of an oceanic crust some 3 to 6 miles thick, floating atop an adjacent mantle. Haiti also lies at the edge of the region known as the Bermuda Triangle, a vast area in the Caribbean subject to bizarre and unexplained disturbances.</p>
<p>This vast mass of underwater plates are in constant motion, rubbing against each other along lines analogous to cracks in a broken porcelain vase that has been reglued. The earth’s tectonic plates typically move at a rate 50 to 100 mm annually in relation to one another, and are the origin of earthquakes and of volcanoes. The regions of convergence of such plates are also areas where vast volumes of oil and gas can be pushed upwards from the Earth’s mantle. The geophysics surrounding the convergence of the three plates that run more or less directly beneath Port-au-Prince make the region prone to earthquakes such as the one that struck Haiti with devastating ferocity on January 12.</p>
<p>Leaving aside the relevant question of how well in advance the Pentagon and US scientists knew the quake was about to occur and what Pentagon plans were being laid before January 12, another issue emerges around the events in Haiti that might help explain the bizarre behavior to date of the major ‘rescue’ players—the United States, France and Canada.  Aside from being prone to violent earthquakes, Haiti also happens to lie in a zone that, due to the unusual geographical intersection of its three tectonic plates, might well be straddling one of the world’s largest unexplored zones of oil and gas, as well as of valuable rare strategic minerals.</p>
<p>The vast oil reserves of the Persian Gulf and of the region from the Red Sea into the Gulf of Aden are at a similar convergence zone of large tectonic plates, as are such oil-rich zones as Indonesia and the waters off the coast of California. In short, in terms of the physics of the earth, precisely such intersections of tectonic masses as run directly beneath Haiti have a remarkable tendency to be the sites of vast treasures of minerals, as well as oil and gas, throughout the world.</p>
<p>Notably, in 2005, a year after the Bush-Cheney Administration de facto deposed the democratically elected President of Haiti, Jean-Baptiste Aristide, a team of geologists from the Institute for Geophysics at the University of Texas began an ambitious and thorough two-phase mapping of all geological data of the Caribbean Basins. The project is due to be completed in 2011. Directed by Dr. Paul Mann, it is called “Caribbean Basins, Tectonics and Hydrocarbons.” It is all about determining as precisely as possible the relation between tectonic plates in the Caribbean and the potential for hydrocarbons—oil and gas. <em>Over the last 100+ years, the USA has &#8216;removed&#8217; leaders it finds unacceptable, just as they find Cheviz, Castro, Morales and most other Latin leaders</em>.</p>
<p>Notably, the sponsors of the multi-million dollar research project under Mann are the world’s largest oil companies, including Chevron, ExxonMobil, the Anglo-Dutch Shell and BHP Billiton.<a href="http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/2010/0201.html#_edn1" target="_blank"><sup>1</sup> </a>Curiously enough, the project is the first comprehensive geological mapping of a region that, one would have thought, would have been a priority decades ago for the US oil majors. Given the immense, existing oil production off Mexico, Louisiana, and the entire Caribbean, as well as its proximity to the United States – not to mention the US focus on its own energy security – it is surprising that the region had not been mapped earlier. Now it emerges that major oil companies were at least generally aware of the huge oil potential of the region long ago, but apparently decided to keep it quiet.</p>
<p>Evidence that the US Administration may well have more in mind for Haiti than the improvement of the lot of the devastated Haitian people can be found in nearby waters off Cuba; (<em>actually the USA has progressively undermined Haiti for over 150 years</em>), directly across from Port-au-Prince. In October 2008 a consortium of oil companies led by Spain’s Repsol, together with Cuba&#8217;s state oil company, Cubapetroleo, announced discovery of one of the world’s largest oilfields in the deep water off Cuba. It is what oil geologists call a ‘Super-giant’ field. Estimates are that the Cuban field contains as much as 20 billion barrels of oil, making it the twelfth Super-giant oilfield discovered since 1996. The discovery also likely makes Cuba a new high-priority target for Pentagon destabilization and other nasty operations.</p>
<p>No doubt to the dismay of Washington, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev flew to Havana one month after the Cuban giant oil find to sign an agreement with acting-President Raul Castro for Russian oil companies to explore and develop Cuban oil.<a href="http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/2010/0201.html#_edn2" target="_blank"><sup>3</sup> </a></p>
<p>Medvedev’s Russia-Cuba oil agreements came only a week after the visit of Chinese President Hu Jintao to meet the recuperating Fidel Castro and his brother Raul. The Chinese President signed an agreement to modernize Cuban ports and discussed Chinese purchase of Cuban raw materials. No doubt the mammoth new Cuban oil discovery was high on the Chinese agenda with Cuba.<a href="http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/2010/0201.html#_edn3" target="_blank"><sup>4</sup> </a>On November 5, 2008, just prior to the Chinese President’s trip to Cuba and other Latin American countries, the Chinese government issued their first ever policy paper on the future of China’s relations with Latin America and Caribbean nations, elevating these bilateral relations to a new level of strategic importance. <a href="http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/2010/0201.html#_edn4" target="_blank"><sup>4</sup> </a><br /> ‘<br /> The Cuba Super-giant oil find also leaves the advocates of ‘Peak Oil’ theory with more egg on the face. <em>The only egg of face is this author, as a 20 billion barrel find is a) an estimate (to free up funding and investment) and b) no well has ever been drained dry of oil and c) based on the world&#8217;s average daily consumption of 85 million barrels a day would last just under 35 weeks</em>. Shortly before the Bush-Blair decision to invade and occupy Iraq, a theory made the rounds of cyberspace, that sometime after 2010, the world would reach an absolute “peak” in world oil production, initiating a period of decline with drastic social and economic implications. Its prominent spokesmen, including retired oil geologist Colin Campbell and Texas oil banker Matt Simmons, claimed that there had not been a single new Super-giant oil discovery since 1976, or thereabouts, and that new fields found over the past two decades had been “tiny” compared with the earlier giant discoveries in Saudi Arabia, Prudhoe Bay, Daquing in China and elsewhere. <span style="text-decoration: underline;"><sup>5</sup></span> So 20 billion barrels is a &#8216;small&#8217; amount.</p>
<p>It is critical to note that, more than half a century ago, a group of Russian and Ukrainian geophysicists, working in state secrecy, confirmed that hydrocarbons originated deep in the earth’s mantle under conditions similar to a giant burning cauldron at extreme temperature and pressure. They demonstrated that, contrary to US and accepted Western ‘mainstream’ geology, hydrocarbons were not the result of dead dinosaur detritus concentrated and compressed and somehow transformed into oil and gas millions of years ago, nor of algae or other biological material.<a href="http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/2010/0201.html#_edn6" target="_blank"><sup>6</sup> </a></p>
<p><em>The main problem with all deeper oil deposits - regardless of cooked seaweed or coming out of a giant oil machine beneath the plates &#8211; is the EROEI (energy return on energy invested) makes the deeper deposits unprofitable; even the above ground oil sands of Canada require a break-even of $80 a barrel (not counting the environmental costs)</em> The Russian and Ukrainian geophysicists then proved that the oil or gas produced in the earth’s mantle was pushed upwards along faults or cracks in the earth as close to the surface as pressures permitted. The process was analogous to the production of molten lava in volcanoes. It means that the ability to find oil is limited, relatively speaking, only by the ability to identify deep fissures and complex geological activity conducive to bringing the oil out from deep in the earth. It seems that the waters of the Caribbean, especially those off Cuba and its neighbor Haiti, are just such a region of concentrated hydrocarbons (oil and gas) that have found their way upwards close to the surface, perhaps in a magnitude comparable to a new Saudi Arabia.<a href="http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/2010/0201.html#_edn7" target="_blank"><sup>7</sup> </a></p>
<p>The remarkable geography of Haiti and Cuba and the discovery of world-class oil reserves in the waters off Cuba lend credence to anecdotal accounts of major oil discoveries in several parts of Haitian territory. It also could explain why two Bush Presidents and now special UN Haiti Envoy Bill Clinton have made Haiti such a priority. As well, it could explain why Washington and its NGO’s moved so quickly to remove&#8211; twice&#8211; the democratically elected President Aristide, whose economic program for Haiti included, among other items, proposals for developing Haitian natural resources for the benefit of the Haitian people.</p>
<p>In March 2004, some months before the University of Texas and American Big Oil launched their ambitious mapping of the hydrocarbon potentials of the Caribbean, a Haitian writer, Dr. Georges Michel, published online an article titled ‘Oil in Haiti.’ In it, Michel wrote,</p>
<p>… .[I]t has been no secret that deep in the earthy bowels of the two states that share the island of Haiti and the surrounding waters that there are significant, still untapped deposits of oil. One knows not why they are still untapped. Since the early twentieth century, the physical and political map of the island of Haiti, erected in 1908 by Messrs. Alexander Poujol and Henry Thomasset, reported a major oil reservoir in Haiti near the source of the Rio Todo El Mondo, Tributary Right Artibonite River, better known today as the River Thomonde. <a href="http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/2010/0201.html#_edn8" target="_blank"><sup>8</sup> </a></p>
<p>According to a June 2008 article by Roberson Alphonse in the Haitian paper, <em>Le Nouvelliste en Haiti</em>, “The signs, (indicators), justifying the explorations of oil (black gold) in Haiti are encouraging. In the middle of the oil shock, some 4 companies want official licenses from the Haitian State to drill for oil.”</p>
<p>At the time, oil prices were climbing above $140 a barrel &#8212; on manipulations by various Wall Street banks. Alphonse’s article quoted Dieusuel Anglade, the Haitian State Director of the Office of Mining and Energy, telling the Haitian press: &#8220;We&#8217;ve received four requests for oil exploration permits…We have had encouraging indicators to justify the pursuit of the exploration of black gold (oil), which had stopped in 1979.&#8221;<a href="http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/2010/0201.html#_edn9" target="_blank"><sup>9</sup> </a></p>
<p>Alphonse reported the findings from a 1979 geological study in Haiti of 11 exploratory oil wells drilled at the Plaine du Cul-de-sac on the Plateau Central and at L&#8217;ile de La Gonaive: “Surface (tentative) indicators for oil were found at the Southern peninsula and on the North coast, explained the engineer Anglade, who strongly believes in the immediate commercial viability of these explorations.”<a href="http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/2010/0201.html#_edn10" target="_blank"><sup>10</sup> </a></p>
<p>Journalist Alphonse cites an August 16, 1979 memo by Haitian attorney Francois Lamothe, in which he noted that “five big wells were drilled” down to depths of 9000 feet and that a sample that “underwent a physical-chemical analysis in Munich, Germany” had “revealed tracks of oil.” <a href="http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/2010/0201.html#_edn11" target="_blank"><sup>11</sup> </a></p>
<p>Despite the promising 1979 results in Haiti, Dr. Georges Michel reported that, “the big multinational oil companies operating in Haiti pushed for the discovered deposits not to be exploited.” <a href="http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/2010/0201.html#_edn12" target="_blank"><sup>12</sup> </a>Oil exploration in and offshore Haiti ground to a sudden halt as a result.</p>
<p>Similar if less precise reports claiming that Haitian oil reserves could be vastly larger than those of Venezuela have appeared in Haitian websites. <a href="http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/2010/0201.html#_edn13" target="_blank"><sup>13</sup> </a>Then in 2010 the financial news site Bloomberg News carried the following:</p>
<p>The Jan. 12 earthquake was on a fault line that passes near potential gas reserves, said Stephen Pierce, a geologist who worked in the region for 30 years for companies that included the former Mobil Corp. The quake may have cracked rock formations along the fault, allowing gas or oil to temporarily seep toward the surface, he said Monday in a telephone interview. ‘A geologist, callous as it may seem, tracing that fault zone from Port-au-Prince to the border looking for gas and oil seeps, may find a structure that hasn&#8217;t been drilled,’ said Pierce, exploration manager at Zion Oil &amp; Gas Inc., a Dallas-based company that&#8217;s drilling in Israel. <a href="http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/2010/0201.html#_edn14" target="_blank"><sup>14</sup> </a></p>
<p>In an interview with a Santo Domingo online paper, Leopoldo Espaillat Nanita, former head of the Dominican Petroleum Refinery (REFIDOMSA) stated, “there is a multinational conspiracy to illegally take the mineral resources of the Haitian people.” <a href="http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/2010/0201.html#_edn15" target="_blank"><sup>15</sup> </a>Haiti’s minerals include gold, the valuable strategic metal iridium and oil, apparently lots of it.</p>
<p>Marguerite Laurent (&#8216;Ezili Dantò&#8217;), president of the Haitian Lawyers’ Leadership Network (HLLN) who served as attorney for the deposed Aristide, notes that when Aristide was President &#8212; up until his US-backed ouster during the Bush era in 2004 &#8212; he had developed and published in book form his national development plans. These plans included, for the first time, a detailed list of known sites where the resources of Haiti were located. The publication of the plan sparked a national debate over Haitian radio and in the media about the future of the country. Aristide’s plan was to implement a public-private partnership to ensure that the development of Haiti’s oil, gold and other valuable resources would benefit the national economy and the broader population, and not merely the five Haitian oligarchic families and their US backers, the so-called Chimeres or gangsters. <a href="http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/2010/0201.html#_edn16" target="_blank"><sup>16</sup> </a></p>
<p>Since the ouster of Aristide in 2004, Haiti has been an occupied country, with a dubiously-elected President, Rene Preval, a controversial follower of IMF privatization mandates and reportedly tied to the Chimeres or Haitian oligarchs who backed the removal of Aristide. Notably, the US State Department refuses to permit the return of Aristide from South African exile.</p>
<p>Now, in the wake of the devastating earthquake of January 12, the United States military has taken control of Haiti’s four airports and presently has some 20,000 troops in the country. Journalists and international aid organizations have accused the US military of being more concerned with imposing military control, which it prefers to call “security,” than with bringing urgently needed water, food and medicine from the airport sites to the population.</p>
<p>A US military occupation of Haiti under the guise of earthquake disaster ‘relief’ would give Washington and private business interests tied to it a geopolitical prize of the first order. Prior to the January 12 quake, the US Embassy in Port-au-Prince was the fifth largest US embassy in the world, comparable to its embassies in such geopolitically strategic places as Berlin and Beijing.<a href="http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/2010/0201.html#_edn17" target="_blank"><sup>17</sup> </a>With huge new oil finds off Cuba being exploited by Russian companies, with clear indications that Haiti contains similar vast untapped oil as well as gold, copper, uranium and iridium, with Hugo Chavez’ Venezuela as a neighbor to the south of Haiti, a return of Aristide or any popular leader committed to developing the resources for the people of Haiti, &#8212; the poorest nation in the Americas &#8212; would constitute a devastating blow to the world’s sole Superpower. <strong>The fact that</strong> in the aftermath of the earthquake, UN Haiti Special Envoy <strong>Bill Clinton joined</strong> forces with Aristide foe <strong>George W. Bush to create something called the Clinton-Bush Haiti Fund ought to give everyone pause. </strong></p>
<p>According to Marguerite Laurent (&#8216;Ezili Dantò&#8217;) of the Haitian Lawyers’ Leadership Network, under the guise of emergency relief work, the US, France and Canada are engaged in a balkanization of the island for future mineral control. She reports rumors that Canada wants the North of Haiti where Canadian mining interests are already present. The US wants Port-au-Prince and the island of La Gonaive just offshore – an area identified in Aristide’s development book as having vast oil resources, and which is bitterly contested by France. She further states that China, with UN veto power over the de facto UN-occupied country, may have something to say against such a US-France-Canada carve up of the vast wealth of the nation. <a href="http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/2010/0201.html#_edn18" target="_blank"><sup>18</sup> </a></p>
<p><strong>Endnotes:</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/2010/0201.html#_ednref1" target="_blank"><sup>1</sup> </a>Paul Mann, <em>Caribbean Basins, Tectonic Plates &amp; Hydrocarbons</em>, Institute for Geophysics, The University of Texas at Austin, accessed in <span style="text-decoration: underline;"><a href="http://www.ig.utexas.edu/research/projects/cbth/.../ProposalCaribbean.pdf" target="_blank">www.ig.utexas.edu/research/projects/cbth/&#8230;/ProposalCaribbean.pdf</a></span>.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/2010/0201.html#_ednref2" target="_blank"><sup>2</sup> </a>Rory Carroll, <em>Medvedev and Castro meet to rebuild Russia-Cuba relations</em>, London Guardian, November 28, 2008 accessed in <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/nov/28/cuba-russia" target="_blank">http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/nov/28/cuba-russia</a>.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/2010/0201.html#_ednref3" target="_blank"><sup>3</sup> </a>Julian Gavaghan, <em>Comrades in arms: When China’s President Hu met a frail Fidel Castro</em>, London Daily Mail, November 19, 2008, accessed in <a href="http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1087485/Comrades-arms-When-Chinas-President-Hu-met-frail-Fidel-Castro.html" target="_blank">http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1087485/Comrades-arms-When-Chinas-President-Hu-met-frail-Fidel-Castro.html</a>.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/2010/0201.html#_ednref4" target="_blank"><sup>4</sup> </a>Peoples’ Daily Online, <em>China issues first policy paper on Latin America, Caribbean region</em>, November 5, 2008, accessed in <a href="http://english.people.com.cn/90001/90776/90883/6527888.html" target="_blank">http://english.people.com.cn/90001/90776/90883/6527888.html</a>.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/2010/0201.html#_ednref5" target="_blank"><sup>5</sup> </a>Matthew R. Simmons, <em>The World’s Giant Oilfields,</em> Simmons &amp; Co. International, Houston, accessed in <a href="http://www.simmonsco-intl.com/files/giantoilfields.pdf" target="_blank">http://www.simmonsco-intl.com/files/giantoilfields.pdf</a>.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/2010/0201.html#_ednref6" target="_blank"><sup>6</sup> </a>Anton Kolesnikov, et al, <em>Methane-derived hydrocarbons produced under upper-mantle conditions</em>, Nature Geoscience,  July 26, 2009.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/2010/0201.html#_ednref7" target="_blank"><sup>7</sup> </a>F. William Engdahl, <em>War and Peak Oil—Confessions of an ‘ex’ Peak Oil believer</em>, Global Research, September 26, 2007, accessed in <a href="http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&amp;aid=6880" target="_blank">http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&amp;aid=6880</a>.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/2010/0201.html#_ednref8" target="_blank"><sup>8</sup> </a>Dr. Georges Michel, <em>Oil in Haiti</em>, English translation from French, Pétrole en Haiti, March 27, 2004, accessed in <a href="http://www.margueritelaurent.com/pressclips/oil_sites.html#oil_GeorgesMichelEnglish" target="_blank">http://www.margueritelaurent.com/pressclips/oil_sites.html#oil_GeorgesMichelEnglish</a>.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/2010/0201.html#_ednref9" target="_blank"><sup>9</sup> </a>Roberson Alphonse, <em>Drill, and then pump the oil of Haiti! 4 oil companies request oil drilling permits</em>, translated from the original French, June 27, 2008, accessed in <a href="http://www.bnvillage.co.uk/caribbean-news-village-beta/99691-drill-then-pump-oil-haiti-4-oil-companies-request-oil-drilling-permits.html" target="_blank">http://www.bnvillage.co.uk/caribbean-news-village-beta/99691-drill-then-pump-oil-haiti-4-oil-companies-request-oil-drilling-permits.html</a>.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/2010/0201.html#_ednref10" target="_blank"><sup>10</sup> </a>Ibid.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/2010/0201.html#_ednref11" target="_blank"><sup>11</sup> </a>Ibid. The full text indicated that, <em>“five big wells were drilled at Porto Suel (Maissade) of a depth of 9000 feet, at Bebernal, 9000 feet, at Bois-Carradeux (Ouest), at Dumornay, on the road Route Frare and close to the Chemin de Fer of Saint-Marc. A sample, a ‘carrot’ (oil reservoir) drilled up from the well of Saint-Marc in the Artibonite underwent a physical-chemical analysis in Munich, Germany, at the request of Mr. Broth. ‘The result of the analysis was returned on October 11, 1979 and revealed tracks of oil,’ confided the engineer, Willy Clemens, who had gone to Germany.”</em></p>
<p><a href="http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/2010/0201.html#_ednref12" target="_blank"><sup>12</sup> </a>Dr. Georges Michel, op. cit.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/2010/0201.html#_ednref13" target="_blank"><sup>13</sup> </a>Marguerite Laurent, <em>Haiti is full of oil, say Ginette and Daniel Mathurin</em>, Radio Metropole, Jan 28, 2008, accessed in <a href="http://www.margueritelaurent.com/pressclips/oil_sites.html#full_of_oil" target="_blank">http://www.margueritelaurent.com/pressclips/oil_sites.html#full_of_oil</a>.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/2010/0201.html#_ednref14" target="_blank"><sup>14</sup> </a>Jim Polson, <em>Haiti earthquake may have exposed gas, aiding economy</em>, Bloomberg News, January 26, 2010.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/2010/0201.html#_ednref15" target="_blank"><sup>15</sup> </a><em>Espaillat Nanita revela en Haiti existen grandes recursos de oro y otros minerals</em>, Espacinsular.org, 17 November, 2009, accessed in <a href="http://www.espacinsular.org/spip.php?article8942" target="_blank">http://www.espacinsular.org/spip.php?article8942</a>.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/2010/0201.html#_ednref16" target="_blank"><sup>16</sup> </a>The Aristide development plan was contained in the book published in Haiti in 2000, <em>Investir dans l’Human. Livre Blanc de Fanmi Lavalas sous la Direction de Jean-Bertrand Aristide</em>, Port-au-Prince, Imprimerie Henri Deschamps, 2000. It contained detailed maps, tables, graphics, and a national development plan for 2004 “covering agriculture, environment, commerce and industry, the financial sector, infrastructure, education, culture, health, women&#8217;s issues, and issues in the public sector.” In 2004, using NGOs and the UN and a vicious propaganda campaign to vilify Aristide, the Bush administration got rid of the elected President.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/2010/0201.html#_ednref17" target="_blank"><sup>17</sup> </a>Cynthia McKinney, <em>Haiti: An Unwelcome Katrina Redux</em>, Global Research, January 19, 2010, accessed in <a href="http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&amp;aid=17063" target="_blank">http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&amp;aid=17063</a>.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/2010/0201.html#_ednref18" target="_blank"><sup>18</sup> </a>Marguerite Laurent (Ezili Danto), <em>Did mining and oil drilling trigger the Haiti earthquake</em>?, OpEd News.com, January 23, 2010, accessed in <a href="http://www.opednews.com/articles/1/Did-mining-and-oil-drillin-by-Ezili-Danto-100123-329.html" target="_blank">http://www.opednews.com/articles/1/Did-mining-and-oil-drillin-by-Ezili-Danto-100123-329.html</a>.</p>
<p><strong>Copyright © 2010 F. William Engdahl</strong><br /> <a href="http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/main.html" target="_blank">Editorial Archive</a></p>
<p>*<strong>F. William Engdahl</strong> is author of  <em><strong>Seeds of Destruction: The Hidden Agenda of Genetic Manipulation</strong></em> (<a href="http://www.globalresearch.ca/" target="_blank">www.globalresearch.ca</a>). He also authored <em><strong>A Century of War: Anglo-American Oil Politics and the New World Order</strong></em> (Pluto Press). His newest book, <em><strong>Full Spectrum Dominance: Totalitarian Democracy in the New World Order</strong></em> (Third Millennium Press) is now in print and will be available by mid-June. He may be contacted over his website, <a href="http://www.engdahl.oilgeopolitics.net/" target="_blank">www.engdahl.oilgeopolitics.net</a>.</p>
<p>contact information</p>
<p><strong>F. William Engdahl</strong> | <a href="mailto:info@engdahl.oilgeopolitics.net?subject=Visitor%20Comment%20from%20FinancialSense.com" target="_blank">Email</a> | <a href="http://www.engdahl.oilgeopolitics.net/" target="_blank">Website</a></p>
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		<title>Haiti Quakes Under USA Military Invasion</title>
		<link>http://www.energyefficienthomedesign.com.au/2010/01/haiti-quakes-under-usa-military-invasion/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 28 Jan 2010 01:30:32 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[haiti]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.energyefficienthomedesign.com.au/?p=756</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The sick joke of an American armed to the teeth saying &#8216;whats my oil doing under their sand&#8217; is revisited with the theft of Haiti being swift as well as crude. On 22 January, the United States secured “formal approval” from the United Nations to take over all air and sea ports in Haiti, and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The sick joke of an American armed to the teeth saying &#8216;whats my oil doing under their sand&#8217; is revisited with the theft of Haiti being swift as well as crude. </p>
<p>On 22 January, the United States secured “formal approval” from the United Nations to take over all air and sea ports in Haiti, and to “secure” roads.</p>
<p>No Haitian signed the agreement (which has no basis in law), the power rules in an American naval blockade and the arrival of 13,000 marines, special forces, spooks and mercenaries, none with humanitarian relief training.</p>
<p>The airport in the capital, Port-au-Prince, is now an American military base and relief flights have been re-routed to the Dominican Republic. All flights stopped for three hours for the arrival of Hillary Clinton.</p>
<p><span id="more-756"></span>Critically injured Haitians waited unaided as 800 American residents in Haiti were fed, watered and evacuated. Six days passed before the US Air Force dropped bottled water to people suffering thirst and dehydration.</p>
<p>The first TV reports aired in the USA played a critical role, giving the impression of widespread criminal mayhem. Matt Frei, the BBC reporter dispatched from Washington, seemed on the point of hyperventilation as he brayed about the “violence” and need for “security”. In spite of the demonstrable dignity of the earthquake victims, and evidence of citizens’ groups toiling unaided to rescue people, and even an American general’s assessment that the violence in Haiti was considerably less than before the earthquake, Frei claimed “looting is the only industry” and “the dignity of Haiti’s past is long forgotten.” Thus, a history of unerring US violence and exploitation in Haiti was consigned to the victims. “There’s no doubt,” reported Frei in the aftermath of America’s bloody invasion of Iraq in 2003, “that the desire to bring good, to bring American values to the rest of the world, and especially now to the Middle East … is now increasingly tied up with military power.”  [Is it any wonder that Americans are so loathed and feared around the world.]</p>
<p>In a sense, he was right. Never before in so-called peacetime have human relations been as militarised by rapacious power. Never before has an American president subordinated his government to the military establishment of his discredited predecessor, as Barack Obama has done. In pursuing George W. Bush’s policy of war and domination, Obama has sought from Congress an unprecedented military budget in excess of $700 billion. He has become, in effect, the spokesman for a military coup</p>
<p>For the people of Haiti the implications are clear, if grotesque. With US troops in control of their country, Obama has appointed George W. Bush to the “relief effort”: a parody surely lifted from Graham Greene’s The Comedians, set in Papa Doc’s Haiti. As president, Bush’s relief effort following Hurricane Katrina in 2005 amounted to an ethnic cleansing of many of New Orleans’ black population. In 2004, he ordered the kidnapping of the democratically-elected prime minister of Haiti, Jean-Bertrand Aristide, and exiled him in Africa. The popular Aristide had had the temerity to legislate modest reforms, such as a minimum wage for those who toil in Haiti’s sweatshops.</p>
<p>When I was last in Haiti, I watched very young girls stooped in front of whirring, hissing, binding machines at the Port-au-Prince Superior Baseball Plant. Many had swollen eyes and lacerated arms. I produced a camera and was thrown out. Haiti is where America makes the equipment for its hallowed national game, for next to nothing. Haiti is where Walt Disney contractors make Mickey Mouse pjamas, for next to nothing. The US controls Haiti’s sugar, bauxite and sisal. Rice-growing was replaced by imported American rice, driving people into the cities and towns and jerry-built housing. Years after year, Haiti was invaded by US marines, infamous for atrocities that have been their specialty from the Philippines to Afghanistan.</p>
<p>Bill Clinton is another comedian, having got himself appointed the UN’s man in Haiti. Once fawned upon by the BBC as “Mr. Nice Guy … bringing democracy back to a sad and troubled land”, Clinton is Haiti’s most notorious privateer, demanding de-regulation of the economy for the benefit of the sweatshop barons. Lately, he has been promoting a $55m deal to turn the north of Haiti into an American-annexed “tourist playground”.</p>
<p>Not for tourists is the US building its fifth biggest embassy in Port-au-Prince. Oil was found in Haiti’s waters decades ago and the US has kept it in reserve until the Middle East begins to run dry. More urgently, an occupied Haiti has a strategic importance in Washington’s “rollback” plans for Latin America. The goal is the overthrow of the popular democracies in Venezuela, Bolivia and Ecuador, control of Venezuela’s abundant oil reserves and sabotage of the growing regional cooperation that has given millions their first taste of an economic and social justice long denied by US-sponsored regimes.</p>
<p>The first rollback success came last year with the coup against President Jose Manuel Zelaya in Honduras who also dared advocate a minimum wage and that the rich pay tax. Obama’s secret support for the illegal regime carries a clear warning to vulnerable governments in central America. Last October, the regime in Colombia, long bankrolled by Washington and supported by death squads, handed the US seven military bases to, according to US air force documents, “combat anti-US governments in the region”.</p>
<p>Media propaganda has laid the ground for what may well be Obama’s next war. On 14 December, researchers at the University of West England published first findings of a ten-year study of the BBC’s reporting of Venezuela. Of 304 BBC reports, only three mentioned any of the historic reforms of the Chavez government, while the majority denigrated Chavez’s extraordinary democratic record, at one point comparing him to Hitler.</p>
<p>Such distortion and its attendant servitude to western power are rife across the Anglo-American corporate media. People who struggle for a better life, or for life itself, from Venezuela to Honduras to Haiti, deserve our support.</p>
<p>www.johnpilger.com<br />__._,_.</p>
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		<title>Mad Haiti &#8216;Party&#8217;</title>
		<link>http://www.energyefficienthomedesign.com.au/2010/01/mad-haiti-party/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 19 Jan 2010 03:02:42 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[haiti]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.energyefficienthomedesign.com.au/?p=718</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The parasites of the IMF (International Monetary Fund) and the USA are at it again. The IMF wants to &#8216;loan&#8217; Haiti $100 million (of course with restrictions that helped put the country where it is today &#8230; bankrupt) and the USA is offering help with $100 million dollars (again conditional to American companies winning contracts [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The parasites of the IMF (International Monetary Fund) and the USA are at it again.</p>
<p>The IMF wants to &#8216;loan&#8217; Haiti $100 million (of course with restrictions that helped put the country where it is today &#8230; bankrupt) and the USA is offering help with $100 million dollars (again conditional to American companies winning contracts for work and ripping even more money out of the place), but if the USA is as helpful to Haiti as it is/was to its own citizens in New Orleans, then &#8216;god help them&#8217; because based on the combined efforts of their burauracy, various government agencies and armed forces etc, they are further doomed. </p>
<p>Beware of Bankers and or the USA bearing gifts; as one wag said, &#8216;there&#8217;s nothing like a banker for kicking someone when they&#8217;re down&#8217;.  The following is a overview of how &#8216;helpful&#8217; countries have been to Haiti over the last 200 years or so&#8230;&#8230;.<br /><span id="more-718"></span><br />Since a devastating earthquake rocked Haiti on Tuesday (killing tens of thousands of people) there&#8217;s been a lot of well-intentioned chatter and twitter about how to help Haiti. Folks have been donating millions of dollars to Wyclef Jean&#8217;s Yele Haiti (by texting &#8220;YELE&#8221; to 501501) or to the Red Cross (by texting &#8220;HAITI&#8221; to 90999) or to Paul Farmer&#8217;s extraordinary Partners in Health, among other organizations. I hope these donations continue to pour in, along with more money, food, water, medicine, equipment and doctors and nurses from nations around the world. The Obama administration has pledged at least $100 million in aid and has already sent thousands of soldiers and relief workers. That&#8217;s a decent start.</p>
<p>But it&#8217;s also time to stop having a conversation about charity and start having a conversation about justice&#8211;about recovery, responsibility and fairness. What the world should be pondering instead is: What is Haiti owed?</p>
<p>Haiti&#8217;s vulnerability to natural disasters, its food shortages, poverty, deforestation and lack of infrastructure, are not accidental. To say that it is the poorest nation in the Western hemisphere is to miss the point; Haiti was made poor&#8211;by France, the United States, Great Britain, other Western powers and by the IMF and the World Bank.</p>
<p>Now, in its attempts to help Haiti, the IMF is pursuing the same kinds of policies that made Haiti a geography of precariousness even before the quake. To great fanfare, the IMF announced a new $100 million loan to Haiti on Thursday. In one crucial way, the loan is a good thing; Haiti is in dire straits and needs a massive cash infusion. But the new loan was made through the IMF&#8217;s extended credit facility, to which Haiti already has $165 million in debt. Debt relief activists tell me that these loans came with conditions, including raising prices for electricity, refusing pay increases to all public employees except those making minimum wage and keeping inflation low. They say that the new loans would impose these same conditions. In other words, in the face of this latest tragedy, the IMF is still using crisis and debt as leverage to compel neoliberal reforms.</p>
<p>For Haiti, this is history repeated. As historians have documented, the impoverishment of Haiti began in the earliest decades of its independence, when Haiti&#8217;s slaves and free gens de couleur rallied to liberate the country from the French in 1804. But by 1825, Haiti was living under a new kind of bondage&#8211;external debt. In order to keep the French and other Western powers from enforcing an embargo, it agreed to pay 150 million francs in reparations to French slave owners (yes, that&#8217;s right, freed slaves were forced to compensate their former masters for their liberty). In order to do that, they borrowed millions from French banks and then from the US and Germany. As Alex von Tunzelmann pointed out, &#8220;by 1900, it [Haiti] was spending 80 percent of its national budget on repayments.&#8221;</p>
<p>It took Haiti 122 years, but in 1947 the nation paid off about 60 percent, or 90 million francs, of this debt (it was able to negotiate a reduction in 1838). In 2003, then-President Aristide called on France to pay restitution for this sum&#8211;valued in 2003 dollars at over $21 billion. A few months later, he was ousted in a coup d&#8217;etat; he claims he left the country under armed pressure from the US.</p>
<p>Then of course there are the structural adjustment policies imposed by the IMF and World Bank in the 1990s. In 1995, for example, the IMF forced Haiti to cut its rice tariff from 35 percent to 3 percent, leading to a massive increase in rice-dumping, the vast majority of which came from the United States. As a 2008 Jubilee USA report notes, although the country had once been a net exporter of rice, &#8220;by 2005, three out of every four plates of rice eaten in Haiti came from the US.&#8221; During this period, USAID invested heavily in Haiti, but this &#8220;charity&#8221; came not in the form of grants to develop Haiti&#8217;s agricultural infrastructure, but in direct food aid, furthering Haiti&#8217;s dependence on foreign assistance while also funneling money back to US agribusiness.</p>
<p>A 2008 report from the Center for International Policy points out that in 2003, Haiti spent $57.4 million to service its debt, while total foreign assistance for education, health care and other services was a mere $39.21 million. In other words, under a system of putative benevolence, Haiti paid back more than it received. As Paul Farmer noted in our pages after hurricanes whipped the country in 2008, Haiti is &#8220;a veritable graveyard of development projects.&#8221;</p>
<p>So what can activists do in addition to donating to a charity? One long-term objective is to get the IMF to forgive all $265 million of Haiti&#8217;s debt (that&#8217;s the $165 million outstanding, plus the $100 million issued this week). In the short term, Haiti&#8217;s IMF loans could be restructured to come from the IMF&#8217;s rapid credit facility, which doesn&#8217;t impose conditions like keeping wages and inflation down.</p>
<p>Indeed, debt relief is essential to Haiti&#8217;s future. It recently had about $1.2 billion in debt canceled, but it still owes about $891 million, all of which was lent to the country from 2004 onward. $429 million of that debt is held by the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), to whom Haiti is scheduled to make $10 million in payments next year. Obviously, that&#8217;s money better spent on saving Haitian lives and rebuilding the country in the months ahead; the cancellation of the entire sum would free up precious capital. The US controls about 30 percent of the bank&#8217;s shares; Latin American and Caribbean countries hold just over 50 percent. Notably, the IDB&#8217;s loans come from its fund for special operations (i.e. the IDB&#8217;s donor nations and funds from loans that have been paid back), not from IDB&#8217;s bonds. Hence, the total amount could be forgiven without impacting the IDB&#8217;s triple-A credit rating.</p>
<p>Finally, although the Obama administration temporarily halted deportations to Haiti, it hasn&#8217;t granted Haitians temporary protected status (TPS), which would save them from being deported back to the scene of a disaster for as long as 18 months, allow them to work in the US and, crucially, send money back to relatives in Haiti. In the past, TPS has been given to countries like Honduras and Nicaragua in 1998 after Hurrican Mitch, but it has never been extended to Haitians, even after the 2008 storms, presumably because immigrations officials fear a mass exodus from Haiti.</p>
<p>But decency, as well as fairness, should trump those fears now. As Sunita Patel, an attorney with CCR, told me, &#8220;We have granted TPS to El Salavador, Honduras, Nicaragua, Somalia and Sudan following natural disasters. To apply different rules here would fly in the face of the administration&#8217;s efforts to build good will abroad.&#8221;</p>
<p>(UPDATE: It has just been announced that the Obama administration has granted Temporary Protected Status to Haiti. This is a great relief to Haitians in the US and a victory for those who pressured the administration to do so.)</p>
<p>http://www.thenation.com/blogs/notion/517494</p>
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		<title>Haitian Earthquake &#8211; Deaths &#8211; Made in the USA</title>
		<link>http://www.energyefficienthomedesign.com.au/2010/01/haitian-earthquake-deaths-made-in-the-usa/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 17 Jan 2010 03:39:33 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.energyefficienthomedesign.com.au/?p=703</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[As grim accounts of the earthquake in Haiti came in, the accounts in U.S.-controlled state media all carried the same descriptive sentence: &#8216;Haiti is the poorest country in the Western hemisphere&#8230;&#8221;  So how did that happen? According to Ted Rall, the USA has Blood on Their Hand. You&#8217;d think Haiti would be loaded. After all, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>As grim accounts of the earthquake in Haiti came in, the accounts in U.S.-controlled state media all carried the same descriptive sentence: &#8216;Haiti is the poorest country in the Western hemisphere&#8230;&#8221;  So how did that happen?</p>
<p>According to Ted Rall, the USA has Blood on Their Hand.</p>
<p>You&#8217;d think Haiti would be loaded. After all, it made a lot of people rich. So how did Haiti get so poor?</p>
<p>Despite a century of American colonialism, occupation, and propping up corrupt dictators?</p>
<p>The CIA even staged coups d&#8217;état against every democratically elected president they ever had &#8230;<br /><span id="more-703"></span><br />An earthquake isn&#8217;t just an earthquake, if the same 7.0 tremor hit San Francisco it wouldn&#8217;t kill nearly as many people as in Port-au-Prince. &#8216;Looking at the pictures, essentially it looks as if (the buildings are of) breezeblock or cinderblock (besser block) construction; what you need in an earthquake zone is metal bars that connect the blocks so that they stay together when they get shaken&#8217; notes Sandy Steacey, director of the Environmental Science Research Institute at the University of Ulster in Northern Ireland; &#8216;in a wealthy country with good seismic building codes that are enforced, you would have some damage, but not very much&#8217;.</p>
<p>When a pile of cinderblocks falls on you, your odds of survival are long. Even if you miraculously survive, a poor country like Haiti doesn&#8217;t have the equipment, communications infrastructure or emergency service personnel to pull you out of the rubble in time. And if your neighbors get you out, there&#8217;s no ambulance to take you to the hospital&#8211;or doctor to treat you once you get there.</p>
<p>Earthquakes are random events. How many people they kill is predetermined. In Haiti this week, don&#8217;t blame tectonic plates. Ninety-nine percent of the death toll is attributable to poverty.</p>
<p>So the question is relevant. How&#8217;d Haiti become so poor?</p>
<p>The story begins in 1910, when a U.S. State Department-National City Bank of New York (now called Citibank) consortium bought the Banque National d&#8217;Haïti&#8211;Haiti&#8217;s only commercial bank and its national treasury&#8211;in effect transferring Haiti&#8217;s debts to the Americans. Five years later, President Woodrow Wilson ordered troops to occupy the country in order to keep tabs on &#8220;our&#8221; investment.</p>
<p>From 1915 to 1934, the U.S. Marines imposed harsh military occupation, murdered Haitians patriots and diverted 40 percent of Haiti&#8217;s gross domestic product to U.S. bankers. Haitians were banned from government jobs. Ambitious Haitians were shunted into the puppet military, setting the stage for a half-century of U.S.-backed military dictatorship.</p>
<p>The U.S. kept control of Haiti&#8217;s finances until 1947.</p>
<p>Still&#8211;why should Haitians complain? Sure, we stole 40 percent of Haiti&#8217;s national wealth for 32 years. But we let them keep 60 percent.</p>
<p>Whiners.</p>
<p>Despite having been bled dry by American bankers and generals, civil disorder prevailed until 1957, when the CIA installed President-for-Life François &#8220;Papa Doc&#8221; Duvalier. Duvalier&#8217;s brutal Tonton Macoutes paramilitary goon squads murdered at least 30,000 Haitians and drove educated people to flee into exile. But think of the cup as half-full: fewer people in the population means fewer people competing for the same jobs!</p>
<p>Upon Papa Doc&#8217;s death in 1971, the torch passed to his even more dissolute 19-year-old son, Jean-Claude &#8220;Baby Doc&#8221; Duvalier. The U.S., cool to Papa Doc in his later years, quickly warmed back up to his kleptomaniacal playboy heir. As the U.S. poured in arms and trained his army as a supposed anti-communist bulwark against Castro&#8217;s Cuba, Baby Doc stole an estimated $300 to $800 million from the national treasury, according to Transparency International. The money was placed in personal accounts in Switzerland and elsewhere.</p>
<p>Under U.S. influence, Baby Doc virtually eliminated import tariffs for U.S. goods. Soon Haiti was awash predatory agricultural imports dumped by American firms. Domestic rice farmers went bankrupt. A nation that had been agriculturally self-sustaining collapsed. Farms were abandoned. Hundreds of thousands of farmers migrated to the teeming slums of Port-au-Prince.</p>
<p>The Duvalier era, 29 years in all, came to an end in 1986 when President Ronald Reagan ordered U.S. forces to whisk Baby Doc to exile in France, saving him from a popular uprising.</p>
<p>Once again, Haitians should thank Americans. Duvalierism was &#8220;tough love.&#8221; Forcing Haitians to make do without their national treasury was our nice way or encouraging them to work harder, to lift themselves up by their bootstraps. Or, in this case, flipflops.</p>
<p>Anyway.</p>
<p>The U.S. has been all about tough love ever since. We twice deposed the populist and popular democratically-elected president Jean-Bertrand Aristide. The second time, in 2004, we even gave him a free flight to the Central African Republic! (He says the CIA kidnapped him, but whatever.) Hey, he needed a rest. And it was kind of us to support a new government formed by former Tonton Macoutes.</p>
<p>Yet, despite everything we&#8217;ve done for Haiti, they&#8217;re still a fourth-world failed state on a fault line.</p>
<p>And still, we haven&#8217;t given up. American companies like Disney generously pay wages to their sweatshop workers of 28 cents an hour.</p>
<p>What more do these ingrates want?</p>
<p>Ted Rall is the author of the new book &#8220;Silk Road to Ruin: Is Central Asia the New Middle East?,&#8221; an in-depth prose and graphic novel analysis of America&#8217;s next big foreign policy challenge.</p>
<p>© Copyrighted 1997-2009 <a href="www.commondreams.org">www.commondreams.org</a></p>
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