The Haitian menace - They killed all wypipol and then they went to shit

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Chris Rufo looks to have gotten a verified video of a Haitian dude in the next town over from Springfield BBQing a cat from last year.

https://x.com/realchrisrufo/status/1834926318883852543
Bruh.
Either way, I don’t think infinityniggers is the proper way to help out American citizens. The deeper you look the more blatant it is that the only ones who benefit from this are the modern day plantation owners while normal Americans suffer, get shit on for suffering, and have to pay the infinityniggers for the privilege of having them oogaboogaing around.
 
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This is what needs to be said every time it happens in order to drive the point home:

In the case of Aiden Clark we have literal and actual replacement migration.

Aiden was born here and he was killed by haitian immigrant Hermanio Joseph.

Hermanio is the new "American" that takes his place.
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I keep seeing people from other latin american countries shitting on them way before the Ohio thing. So why are lefties and immigrant worshippers so adamant on defending them? Just to own le chuds?

Not to mention the disgusting opinions from self hating whitoids on how whiteys are acktually lazy drug addicts so it's okay to replace them and it's not really about elite scum getting some brown neoslaves that will be paid very little and who have no union help. Who cares if the modern slaves are fucking up my society, economy and politics! muh ethnic food and culture!!!1
That scumfuck of a dad who'd rather have a whitoid to kill his son just fills me with rage.
I'm not american or a first worlder, and I'm fucking offended by these types of people and wish them nothing but misfortune.
 
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I'm not american or a first worlder, and I'm fucking offended by these types of people and wish them nothing but misfortune.
Chances are you're getting crapped on by some similar unwanted third worlder unless you're a third worlder yourself. Gulf states are inundated with Africans and pajeets. Non-shit latin american countries get Venezuelans. Southeast Asian countries have to deal with pajeets and pedo sex tourists. Russia gets shitty rapefuckistanis from central asia. Laughably, even Iran has to deal with Afghanis. Frankly, the world should unite to just glass a very specific set of countries that we all unanimously agree are awful. Every country has its own FBI statistics group they'd like to get rid of.
 
Chances are you're getting crapped on by some similar unwanted third worlder unless you're a third worlder yourself. Gulf states are inundated with Africans and pajeets. Non-shit latin american countries get Venezuelans. Southeast Asian countries have to deal with pajeets and pedo sex tourists. Russia gets shitty rapefuckistanis from central asia. Laughably, even Iran has to deal with Afghanis. Frankly, the world should unite to just glass a very specific set of countries that we all unanimously agree are awful. Every country has its own FBI statistics group they'd like to get rid of.
If it wasn't for (((them))), they could just do it.
 
This is a video of two Haitian gorilla niggers cooking a skinned cat. Warning, this is extremely horrifying and vile to look at. To cat owners like you and me, God help us all.
 
Niggers can't into even kitchenware, they are using the stove as a fire pit for the chinese meal.
 
These events have set me wondering on the general behavior of selling local jobs to third worlders, whether your exporting the work or importing the workers.

Why dont they import native americans into our jobs? Shouldnt that be appealing to the mindless empathy crowd?
Are there too few of them? Does the gov enforce specialty work requirements that are too unaffordable?
Or are they too [whatever personal problem native americans commonly have]?
I doubt they can be any worse than Haitians though..
 
These events have set me wondering on the general behavior of selling local jobs to third worlders, whether your exporting the work or importing the workers.

Why dont they import native americans into our jobs? Shouldnt that be appealing to the mindless empathy crowd?
Are there too few of them? Does the gov enforce specialty work requirements that are too unaffordable?
Or are they too [whatever personal problem native americans commonly have]?
I doubt they can be any worse than Haitians though..
You can’t import citizens. Native Americans already are citizens. So if we want to go with the pay immigrants under the table and with lower wages concept, Native Americans would not qualify.

The issue is one of supply and demand. Businesses were coming back to Springfield and migrants already there as well as others were willing to satisfy that demand. Unless the government had a program to ensure these jobs went to migrants (which I don’t think the US even has), the fact that migrants got the jobs suggests that they were the only ones interested in working those jobs.

They fulfilled a demand that the local population was not satisfying to the extent desired within the labor market.
 
You can’t import citizens. Native Americans already are citizens. So if we want to go with the pay immigrants under the table and with lower wages concept, Native Americans would not qualify.

The issue is one of supply and demand. Businesses were coming back to Springfield and migrants already there as well as others were willing to satisfy that demand. Unless the government had a program to ensure these jobs went to migrants (which I don’t think the US even has), the fact that migrants got the jobs suggests that they were the only ones interested in working those jobs.

They fulfilled a demand that the local population was not satisfying to the extent desired within the labor market.
This is a fully funded invasion. link | archive
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Is the land in Haiti just completely unsuitable for agriculture? Why are they like this?
Haiti does not practice any kind of coppicing or pollarding for firewood to sustainably manage their forests so they just mindlessly burn everything down for charcoal. gas or electric power is very expensive in such a shithole and usually controlled by gangs that extort for access to it. Haiti only has 4% of it's old growth forest left and charcoal burning is an entirely grey market there.

"The former Haitian Minister of the Environment, Dieuseul Simon-Desras, confessed that throughout his mandate he could not identify a single entrepreneur who financed this business. In addition, he said that there has been no real will from this or previous governments to fight against this trafficking....Over the last century, the country’s natural forest cover has declined from 60% of the land area to 4%, according to the United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO.) Deforestation has damaged the integrity of ecosystems, increased the risk of natural disasters and threatens biodiversity, which is essential for the healthy production of several agricultural and forestry species. Haiti’s brutal deforestation, which has reached almost 98% of its territory, is attributable to the absence of a forest policy, lack of forest guards (who are poorly paid and poorly equipped,) the extreme exploitation of this resource and, finally, to its unrestricted use by the vast majority of the population."
https://ghostarchive.org/archive/WTOWR

Haiti’s largest industry is ghostly. The charcoal business generated US$300 million in 2012 according to the Office of Mines and Energy. The money changes hands without putting a name and a face on those who pocket the colossal sum. It’s a total lack of transparency.

Carbon production is done by farmers in wooded areas in Grand’Anse, on the country’s southern and northwestern sides. The wood, turned into carbon, satisfies 70% of the country’s energy needs and is used to cook, in laundromats and bakeries, among others.

None of the knowledgeable sources of this informal industry were able to give Le Nouvelliste and the Center for Investigative Journalism the names of the entrepreneurs behind the savage exploitation of this non-renewable resource, which is wood. However, three sources consulted for this investigation claim that these phantom entrepreneurs sell coal to retailers in major cities. Most of the consumption takes place in large cities, such as Port-au-Prince, Cap-Haïtien, Gonaïves, and Cayes, among others.

The former Haitian Minister of the Environment, Dieuseul Simon-Desras, confessed that throughout his mandate he could not identify a single entrepreneur who financed this business. In addition, he said that there has been no real will from this or previous governments to fight against this trafficking.

Also René Jean-Jumeau, former Minister in charge of Energy Security, confirmed the lack of willpower on the part of the governments. “There is no real will to rationalize the use of coal. A real will to manage the problem of charcoal passes through a rational and sustainable production and the use of alternatives, like other forms of coal or a portion of propane and agricultural waste,” said the man who is currently the executive director of Haiti’s Institute of Energy, a private institution

The uncontrolled tree-cutting leads directly to deforestation and causes erosion, landslides and floods. Several experts confirm that Haiti’s high vulnerability to the effects of climate change is mainly related to accelerated deforestation and the weakness of its government to curb this problem.

Over the last century, the country’s natural forest cover has declined from 60% of the land area to 4%, according to the United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO.) Deforestation has damaged the integrity of ecosystems, increased the risk of natural disasters and threatens biodiversity, which is essential for the healthy production of several agricultural and forestry species.

Haiti’s brutal deforestation, which has reached almost 98% of its territory, is attributable to the absence of a forest policy, lack of forest guards (who are poorly paid and poorly equipped,) the extreme exploitation of this resource and, finally, to its unrestricted use by the vast majority of the population.

Coal sale is a profitable activity

Haiti’s Bureau of Mines and Energy (BME), an autonomous state agency, confirms in one of its publications that this activity generates an abundant source of income. In fact, the production and distribution of coal slaughters a low-skilled workforce in rural and urban areas. That is, deforestation and carbonization provide a significant income for the rural poor. In urban areas, it is mainly retailers who depend on the industry to generate their living income.

“Unlike agriculture, which depends on rainfall and follows specific harvest cycles, charcoal is a means of obtaining income to meet urgent economic needs, to pay school tuition and expenses related to ceremonies such as weddings and funerals, or costs of medical care,” says a report by the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP,) published in October 2016.

Coal and firewood are relatively easy and cheap to produce, and their supply chains are unregulated.

For businessman François Chavenet, former president of the Chamber of Commerce and Industry, it is necessary to distinguish between people who prepare (coal) and those who finance it. Then there are those in the business of coal finance and transport.

“Since this is a business that does not honor [the person who does it], many people who finance it will not reveal themselves or admit it publicly,” said Chavenet, estimating that it is easier for them to hide behind a truck driver who gives the impression of that he is the character that does business, when, in fact, he is financed by someone else.

A complex and impenetrable sector

Most supply networks in rural areas generally operate with intermediaries, either in regional urban centers or in the main markets of Port-au-Prince, the capital. “They can be intermediaries that seek to redistribute coal among sellers, who in turn sell it in smaller quantities, or who want to buy large quantities in rural areas to sell it to other intermediaries or to sales deposits in the capital, which in turn sell and distribute this coal,” said François Chavenet.

While the existing wood energy sector supply networks may seem disorganized, in reality they cannot function properly without great creativity, ingenuity and perseverance. Like many types of companies, they depend, above all, on reliable social relationships and logistical networks. “They are also extremely complex and difficult for a foreigner to penetrate,” UNEP concluded after a survey of coal and fuel supply chains in southern Haiti in September 2016.
 
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I really fucking wish these fucking people would show their Goddamned work, oilfield guy. I have no idea what he searched, how he put everything together, or what program he used to "extract all the data and put it in a digestible format in seconds".
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I did a quick search and found a fed website with "refugees and migration funding opportunities" but I'm not able to go through it and verify what this guy put out.
I do want to point out that oilfield is trying to flex on or expose "non profits". The Ohio Department of Job & Family Services is a state agency.
It's not letting me access their site at my location. Assuming that he really did his work and didn't just populate some random budget shit that means a state agency got $104 million dollars to ship in a fuck ton of voodoo cultists and let them illegally work while taking housing away from the people of Clark County.

He apparently wasn't the first guy to talk about this.
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tweeted pics.
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No clue what article it came from as this hot shot reporter links not a fucking thing. He did write about the importation of Hattians back in March of this year but it makes no mention of Ohio.

Brietbart also put out a piece on the flood of 20k Hattians into Springfield on July 10th, 2024.
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Schizo tin foil time:
News starts breaking about 20,000 Hattians wrecking a small and hurting midwest town. Buried in this story is how there is a trackable money scheme where federal dollars are given to state agencies and non profits to corporations by the tens to hundreds of millions for the express purpose of replacing the citizenry with low IQ, low paid, and low standard of living people. Three days later no one talks about this for 2 months because a distraction in the form of a shot Trump came around.

I need to stress that I have no proof of this level of shenanigans but it's fun to think about, in a very depraved way.
 
Brietbart
Speaking of which, they wrote a story about something identical going on in PA -- at wk rn, so I'm a better skimmer than poster for the next few hrs.
Updated:
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the story is titled "Small Town in Crisis: Charleroi, PA, Is a Case Study in Biden-Harris Border Policy Failures"

Pennsylvania Town Is a Case Study in Biden-Harris Border Policy Failures​

Small Town in Crisis: Charleroi, PA, Is a Case Study in Biden-Harris Border Policy Failures​

World Kitchen LLC's Pyrex factory stands along the Monongahela River in Charleroi, Pennsyl
Victor J. Blue/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Warner Todd Huston15 Sep 2024
14:10
The small Pennsylvania town of Charleroi has been stunned by the federal government’s deliberate one-two punch of economic devastation and out-of-control migration.
Free trade has allowed major investor-owned companies to move their factories from this and other U.S. towns to Mexico, and open-door migration allowed the remaining companies to hire wage-cutting migrants that enter the U.S. from Mexico. The result is a steep loss in well-paid jobs for Americans, a dying-off of local businesses, an explosion of poverty, and the collapse of city tax revenues.
The pressures being put on Charleroi, Pennsylvania, is a case study of the massive failures of the Biden-Harris border crisis, according to a local city council member. But Charleroi is typical of hundreds of American small towns in the problems Biden and Harris have foisted upon them.
Breitbart News spoke exclusively with long-time city councilman Larry Celaschi, and he detailed the massive problems his borough is facing from job loss and the growing migrant crisis, all of which can be ascribed to Biden’s failed economic and border policies.
Celaschi told Breitbart News, “We are a small town of about 4100 in population. And we are not even a mile long.”
But despite its small size, Celaschi adds that back in the day, his Pennsylvania borough was a mercantile mecca for the area. When the steel mills were running at peak output back in the 60s and 70s and before, Charleroi served as a major shopping area for the many bedroom communities whose inhabitants worked at the steel mills, or Anchor Hocking glass factor — where Pyrex cook wear is made — and more recently food maker Quality Pasta.
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But almost all of these jobs are now going away as Bidenomics continues to cause U.S. manufacturing to contract or move jobs to facilities in foreign countries, such as Mexico. Just this month, both Anchor Hocking and Quality Pasta have announced that they are looking to scale back, which will result in hundreds of jobs lost in the area.
The closures will leave the city of Charleroi with no large employers and will devastate the town, Celaschi told Breitbart News.
“So, the loss of those jobs decades ago [when the steel mills closed], we saw a trickle down effect that was devastating to Charleroi,” Celaschi lamented. “We had close to 312 stores within our borough. And now, like I said, the devastating effect from the mills, we saw a punch in the gut really, it really did devastate our town.”
Today, with the glass plant and food plant announcing their shutdowns, Celaschi says Charleroi is poised to suffer even more blight and economic devastation.
Celaschi added that town officials are working with Anchor Hocking and Quality Pasta to save their jobs, but if that fails, the loss of the big employers — both of which paid a lot of taxes and used the city-owned water and sewer system — is going to be a major blow to both the citizens and the city.
“Our tax revenue for our borough, and the budget that we have, which we have about a $3 million budget, that’s going to be impacted, you know, the school districts as well, families are going to have to relocate to find another job. So, a lot of these employees living in Charleroi, they walk to work, and now we don’t have any other jobs for them to start over again — to get the same benefits, the same salary, have the same seniority — that’s been stripped from them, and you know, the family sustaining jobs are going to be tough for them to come upon.”
While that is all bad enough, the flood of Haitian and Liberian migrants forced upon the town by failed Biden-Harris policies is making matters worse for the struggling town, Celaschi said.
“Well, you know, again, this is a macro problem. You’re losing jobs. And frankly, you know, we’re losing jobs because of the Biden-Harris administration. And Charleroi is a case study right now,” the councilman said. “It’s [Donald] Trump’s narrative of what he’s been talking about with the border, the immigration influx into different communities and cities within the country, always just a little molecule on the map. You probably never even heard of us. Maybe you did, but I’m gonna say you probably didn’t until you still saw all this blow up.”
In fact, the former president recently mentioned the troubles Charleroi is facing during a campaign stop.
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Celaschi went on to explain that Charleroi has always been a predominantly white area, but a few years ago, thousands of Haitian and Liberian migrants began flooding into the area, enticed by federal policy and the jobs in the area. So many of these migrants moved in that it pushed out the town’s small population of Mexican migrants.
“The influx of immigrants started a few years ago,” Calaschi said, “and all of a sudden, you know, we have immigrants from multiple nationalities relocated into the borough of Charleroi, and the citizens here, naturally, one’s got to think, ‘how did they get here? Why are they here? What effects are they going to have now on our community? They don’t speak our language. They’re not accustomed to our culture.'”
Now, when residents go into the town’s Dollar General store, they no longer hear English spoken. “You know, they got dumped off in our community, and here they don’t speak any English. You go into Dollar General, and what once was filled with the English language is now filled with a foreign language that we don’t understand. They don’t understand us,” he said.
But before any of the individual migrants even had a chance to make an impact on Charleroi, their influx as a whole caused a major change to the town, the councilman said.
“Our community used to be approximately 70% homeownership, 30% landlord, tenant, and just within a matter of the past five years, that percentage has flip flopped, and honestly, I would be safe to say that we are at 70% landlord tenant and 30% homeownership,” he said.
This has occurred because longtime residents have up and moved away and rental corporations have spent millions buying up homes to convert them into rentals to get the government subsidized money that follows the migrants.
The “flip flop” in home ownership worries Calaschi because if the town does lose some of its last remaining large employers, even the migrants won’t have jobs and they may also leave. That could leave a large portion of homes sitting empty in the near future, and that leads to decaying properties and blight — a problem the city has been dealing with for a generation already.
To try and mitigate the blight, Charleroi has already spent millions in city funds and grant money to tear down dilapidated homes and businesses that have sat empty for years. And Calaschi worries that the most recent loss of jobs and the influx of poor — often government subsidized — migrants will cause the town to deteriorate into a ghetto-like condition.
The spending on migrants is also a serious drain on Charleroi, especially with the schools.
“The impact of the immigrants has affected our school district tremendously,” Calaschi explained, “and so from the borough standpoint, it’s impacted our budget to where and the school districts. We weren’t prepared for any of this. We did not get any help from the federal government or the state government.”
“From the trickle down effect of the Biden-Harris administration, allowing the immigrants to be crossing the border — maybe some legally, a lot illegally — and we’ve had some of that in the community as well, too … our budget is suffering,” the councilman said. “I placed on our agenda just last week that we need to reconstruct all of our traffic signs in our entire town because of the amount of automobile accidents that are taking place from the immigrants. And, you know, Creole being the most dominant second language, we now need to have the English language and Creole language on our stop signs.”
“But guess who pays for it? We do, right? We’re not a very big community, and we don’t have a large budget. That’s an unexpected expense, sure, and we don’t have the revenue coming in,” Calaschi added.
With the looming loss of even more jobs, Calaschi added that the town’s revenue will be devastated and that will have serious impact on the schools.
“And now look at the loss of jobs, you know? I mean, that’s going to devastate not only the borough, it is going to devastate the school district. It’s going to devastate our city-owned water and sewage company,” he exclaimed.
“The school district, it’s going to affect them because families are leaving the borough and then being replaced by the Haitian community, or Liberian, or the immigrants in general, to where they’ve had to hire interpreters. They’ve had to pay for resources that they weren’t prepared for and restructure the way the learning process is in the Charleroi school district,” Calaschi continued.
“All that has an impact on the American student, to where they have to learn how to coexist, right? And that’s a tough thing for the teachers and the school district. And I tell you what, I give them big kudos for the job that they do up there, and we’re not seeing a dime coming in. They have cried for monies from the state and federal government, and they’re not receiving it,” he said.
Calaschi also blames all of this on the Biden-Harris regime.
“You know when, you’re coming in and you’re changing the mirror image of a town, and who’s changing it? Well, the government’s changing it, and it’s sure not our local government,” Calaschi insisted. “It’s not us. It’s coming from the top, Biden-Harris, and then it goes down to the state. It went back to Governor [Tom] Wolf, and now it’s Governor [Josh] Shapiro, and I’m not going to target whether you’re Republican or Democrat. I don’t care, you’re the government. You should have had a plan for every community that this was going to affect, and they didn’t have a plan. And so you dump it on us. Come on, we’re just small communities. We don’t have the resources.”
If they could have provided the resources and the knowledge and the team to come in to first educate us before this was going to happen, it would have been great,” he said. “Well, they didn’t do any of that, and that was just totally unfair. And it’s trying to ride a bicycle for the first time, and that’s how I would probably compare it. Your parents put you on a bicycle, and you’re trying to balance yourself and trying to pedal and trying to make the bicycle go forward. And it’s a disaster in the beginning.”
Recently, U.S. Sen. Dave McCormick (R, PA) blasted the Biden-Harris regime for the failed border policy so badly impacting Charleroi.
“Weak immigration policy is hurting Pennsylvania communities. Take the small town of Charleroi, which has grown by 2,000% due to an influx in migrants. Roads are dangerous, schools are overwhelmed and police are struggling to keep up with the surge. We need strong leadership to fix our immigration crisis and protect Pennsylvania,” said Dave McCormick.
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Finally, the crime has also risen in Charleroi, a town that had already been forced to disband its own police force and replace it with a regional cooperative whose 12 officers are tasked with responding to several other local communities along with Charleroi.
On top of the petty crimes — often having to do with marijuana trafficking — car accidents have also skyrocketed as migrants somehow get hold of cars and drive without either licenses or insurance, or even knowing the rules of the road.
All these pressures are sending the borough of Charleroi into a tail spin of alarm and depression, Calaschi said. And the number of migrants — if they stay — will further result in material changes to the area. Indeed, the time is not very far off when migrants will be voting in the town’s political representatives.
“I guarantee you that right now, if they were able to and they were registered to vote, they could take over. We have seven members of Borough Council and a mayor, I will tell you that it’s a majority. Would probably be the immigrants if they were to hold an election in Charleroi today, they would hold the majority of the seats, and possibly the mayor,” he said.
But, in the end, the town simply has no choice but to “move forward,” Calaschi said.
“We got to move forward. This is the hand that has been dealt to the borough of Charleroi. I just want to see the federal and state government step up to the plate and come here and deliver a truckload of funding for us, OK, to be able to improve our community and improve the lives of the immigrants that are now here,” he concluded.
But the cost has already been so high for the town, said Calaschi, who comes from a long line of city officials and whose father was the chief of police back in the 60s.
“I hear this statement from a lot of families. Larry, your dad would be rolling over in his grave if he saw what happened to the borough. And then we had a former congressman in our town that lived here, Frank Mascara. And I hear Frank Mascara would be rolling over in his grave if he could see what happened to his Charleroi,” Calaschi said. “They are gone. We are here, and we have to deal with it.”
Follow Warner Todd Huston on Facebook at: facebook.com/Warner.Todd.Huston, or Truth Social @WarnerToddHuston.
 
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