MrJokerRager
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- Nov 2, 2019
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Bruh.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
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.I'm not american or a first worlder, and I'm fucking offended by these types of people and wish them nothing but misfortune.
If it wasn't for (((them))), they could just do it.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.
That is quite a level of nigger. I wonder how they figured out turning the stove on.Niggers can't into even kitchenware, they are using the stove as a fire pit for the chinese meal.
I'm sure their leader Barbeque or was it Cook Cook? Has given instructions on how to cook.That is quite a level of nigger. I wonder how they figured out turning the stove on.
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.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..
This is a fully funded invasion. link | archiveYou 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.
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.Is the land in Haiti just completely unsuitable for agriculture? Why are they like this?
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.
This is a fully funded invasion.
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Speaking of which, they wrote a story about something identical going on in PA --Brietbart
And somehow these niggers, the white cheerleaders, and their jewish masters will find a way to blame whitey for their own actions. God, I hope these haitians get wiped out by their neighbour.