"He went down afterwards to rescue them, and to do some benefits to raise
money for food, etc..because a lot of the supposed charities were so deep
in the corruption that none of the money being sent was actually being used for
food or shelter."


Did he tell you about the cholera outbreak caused by the UN?

How the U.N. Caused Haiti's Cholera Crisis -- and Won't Be Held Responsible
(
http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2013/02/how-the-un-caused-haitis-cholera-crisis-and-wont-be-held-responsible/273526/
 )

If a multinational corporation behaved the way the U.N. did in Haiti, it
would be sued for stratospheric amounts of money. And that's just for
starters: Were Unilever or Coca-Cola responsible for a cholera outbreak
that killed 8,000 people and infected 640,000 more, and for subsequently
covering up its employees' failure to adhere to basic sanitation standards,
it is likely their executives would have difficulty visiting countries
claiming universal legal jurisdiction. They would have to contend with
Interpol red notices, along with the occasional cream pie attack. And the
companies themselves would go into damage control mode, akin to BP's
post-oil-spill public relations blitz, or Wal-Mart's pivot toward promoting
American-made products. They'd acknowledge the need to convince skeptical
consumers that their corporate behavior had changed.

The U.N. and its leadership won't have to worry about any of this. But
maybe it should.

As award-winning journalist Jonathan Katz established in a bombshell
chapter of his recent book, The Big Truck That Went By, a base for Nepalese
U.N. peacekeepers next to the Artibonite River was the origin of the
cholera epidemic that swept through Haiti in October of 2010. There had
been no reported cases of cholera in Haiti for a century; now, the disease
is endemic, and it is projected to kill as many as 1,000 people a year
until it is eradicated, according to Brian Concannon, director of the
Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti and a lawyer representing
Haitian claimants against the U.N. Former president Bill Clinton, the
U.N.'s special envoy for Haiti, has admitted that U.N. peacekeepers were
responsible for the outbreak. But Katz, the AP's Haiti correspondent in the
years after the country's devastating 2010 earthquake, was at the receiving
end of a bungled U.N. cover-up of the epidemic's cause. The World Body
actively discouraged and even impeded journalists and public health
investigators attempting to trace the causes of the pestilence. The U.N.
never admitted responsibility, even as a U.N. commissioned-report left
little room for doubt (the entire saga is recounted in Katz's chapter,
which should be read in full).



In my opinion, the US should immediately leave the UN.

J

-

Ninety percent of politicians give the other ten percent a bad reputation.
- Henry Kissinger

Politicians are people who, when they see light at the end of the tunnel,
go out and buy some more tunnel. - John Quinton


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