Serious question

What’s the point of Haiti still existing? Normally weaker countries just get absorbed into stronger countries.

Attached: 156DB9B4-2F55-4958-8D6B-CC5910A86B93.jpg (1242x1338, 1.1M)

Other urls found in this thread:

bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-09-23/dominican-republic-s-abinader-says-haiti-is-now-regional-concern
theguardian.com/world/2015/feb/12/dominican-republic-lynching-haiti-fears-human-rights
cubaproxima.org/team/peter-hakim
thedialogue.org/experts/peter-hakim/
uniq.edu/direction-tth/
twitter.com/AnonBabble

>Normally weaker countries just get absorbed into stronger countries.

everyone point and laugh at the world's only imperial nation

No one wants them.

Look at what dominicans used to look like in the 1950's vs what they look like now

imagine annexing haiti, lmao

If you touch it you own it.

There are a surprising amount of big houses in the mountains of Haiti, theres a lot of crazy shit that goes on there that no one really talks about. It’s a very trippy place the ultra extremes in wealth. If you have decent money you can live like a king there with lots of servants.

Attached: 1AF007A2-2799-4196-9D15-F50ECC170B38.jpg (576x768, 38.17K)

What was it? There's a bunch of boomers in the Dominican Republic that still look the same as every else today. Show me your cherry picked pictures.

It's a nigger breeding pen for future rural Midwestern American villagers.

Poland

>No one wants them.
Poland

>vs what they look like now
half poles

>imagine annexing haiti, lmao
poland would

>If you touch it you own it.
poland touched it alright, they touched the haitians, too, had sex with them, I kid you not

>theres a lot of crazy shit that goes on there that no one really talks about.
including haitians being half polish

>It's a nigger breeding pen for future rural Midwestern American villagers.
it's a nigger breeding pen for past polish patriots

Attached: polish haitians.png (1902x797, 297.67K)

The Dom Rep do not want them.

Who the fuck could possibly want a land greviously over-populated by hungry, violent, and corrupt niggers?
Everyone in Haiti needs to die of a plague

>bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-09-23/dominican-republic-s-abinader-says-haiti-is-now-regional-concern
>theguardian.com/world/2015/feb/12/dominican-republic-lynching-haiti-fears-human-rights
The Dominicans do not like the Haitian immigrants one bit. The ones that stay there and are living there are 90% of the time workers or doctors.

There is nothing of value in Haiti, it's would be a mistake for any other nation to absorb Haiti because that would mean that Haiti would be their problem now. Haiti is unironically better as it is, or as a nuclear wasteland.

Clinton human trafficking

The sad truth is, the only people who will have the resources to go to Haiti from now on are going to be the ones going there to exploit them further.
Their liberation has turned into a cage.

is populated by 10 million low IQ niggers. Do you you want to remove them?

Because the Dominicans want nothing to do with the shithole. That is literally why. Cuba doesn’t either but even if they did they know it would provoke a conflict with the US so they wouldn’t anyway

Chill out Pierre. At least I can go outside at this time of night in my country. How about you?

Why would anyone want to absorb it? This isn't a game of Risk

This man is Peter Hakim. Peter Hakim is a a senior fellow of the Inter-American Dialogue and was its former president from 1993 to 2010. The Inter-American Dialogue is a globalist institution that's dedicated to amalgamating the "America" hemisphere nations into a single regional government superstructure like European Union.

Hakim was also a member of the Council on Foreign Relations which is obviously the Round Table Group in the United States. It looks like they just removed his list from the roster but it was there up until very recently... that's very suspicious.

However, he's also on the board for both the Round Table Groups in Haiti (Think Tank Haiti) and Cuba (Cuba Proxima). All of these Caribbean countries belong to the Round Table Group network, just like virtually every other nation.

If you're not aware, the Roundtable Groups are essentially shadow governments made up of the elites in their respective countries; policy makers, ambassadors, bankers, corporate CEOs and board members, military officers, the heads of tax-exempt foundations and think tanks, NGO leaders, academic professors and deans, university presidents, heads of intelligence agencies, journalists, etc. They're all part of a larger global network centered out the Royal Institute of International Affairs in the UK.

Peter Hakim at cubaproxima.org:
cubaproxima.org/team/peter-hakim

Member of the International Advisory Board
American, political analyst and president emeritus of the Inter-American Dialogue, based in Washington.

Attached: peterhakim.jpg (400x401, 47.7K)

Peter Hakim. United States. President Emeritus & Senior Fellow, Inter-American Dialogue at thedialogue.org:
thedialogue.org/experts/peter-hakim/

Peter Hakim
United States, President Emeritus & Senior Fellow, Inter-American Dialogue

Peter Hakim is president emeritus and a senior fellow at the Inter-American Dialogue. From 1993 to 2010, he served as president of the organization. Hakim writes and speaks widely on hemispheric issues and has testified more than a dozen times before the U.S. Congress. His articles have appeared in Foreign Affairs, Foreign Policy, New York Times, Washington Post, Miami Herald, Los Angeles Times, and Financial Times, and in newspapers and journals in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, China, Colombia, Canada, Cuba, El Salvador, Italy, Mexico, Peru, and Spain. From 1991 to 2001, he wrote a monthly column for the Christian Science Monitor, and now serves as a board member of Mexico’s Foreign Affairs Latinoamérica and editorial advisor to the Chilean-based América Economia.

Prior to joining the Dialogue, Hakim was a vice president of the Inter-American Foundation and worked for the Ford Foundation in New York, Argentina, Brazil, Chile, and Peru. He taught at MIT and Columbia, and has served on boards and advisory committees for the World Bank, Council on Competitiveness, Inter-American Development Bank, Canadian Foundation for Latin America (FOCAL), Partners for Democratic Change, Human Rights Watch, and the Council on Foreign Relations.

Attached: cubaproxima.jpg (900x900, 72.55K)

Direction for Think Tank Haiti at uniq.edu:
uniq.edu/direction-tth/

Direction:
TTH Steering committee
Think Tank Haiti is managed by a steering committee, whose personalities are as follows:

President: Rector of Quisqueya, Jacky Lumarque

Michaëlle Jean, former Governor General of Canada

Peter Hakim, President Emeritus of Dialogue; Joan Caivano, Senior Advisor to Dialogue;

Attached: Foreign Affairs - CFR.png (664x279, 89.49K)

There’s like 10 or 11 million niggers on half an island. Can you imagine the smell?

So basically to answer your overall question, the Roundtable Group network doesn't have to militarily annex every country in order to control them. They simply have to incorporate them into the global government network, coordinate with their local elites to set up organizational bodies and then put a few key individuals into the administration of those institutions. The old imperial model, while still used occasionally when necessary, is no longer the most efficient way to control different demographics of people. People are much less likely to cause problems if they falsely believe that their country has independence and their own national sovereignty than if it's apparent to the masses that their nation is under the heel of foreign elites and/or nations.

Attached: royalinstituteofinternationalaffairs.jpg (613x397, 163.85K)

Because mid-tier to shitty nations in the Western hemisphere need at least one country they can look at and say "at least we're not Haiti."