@Waerloga @racuna I agree that Haiti has had a hard lot. Calling it amazing in 1804 is a bit of a stretch. By the end of the Haitian Revolution Port au Prince had been burned down (for the second time iirc). Most of the infrastructure on the island had been destroyed. Within a few short years the only way to get the economy back on track was for Dessalines to force (former) slaves to work in plantations again.
Haiti suffered from the same problems that most Latin American revolutions suffered from in that it became a string of strongmen that wanted autocratic rule and to fleece the population to enrich themselves and close friends.
Haiti had had tons of trials from outside sources as well, but it’s disingenuous to say that’s the only source of its troubles. Could it have been a better place if the world embraced it directly and immediately? I don’t know and neither does anyone else.
Also, man, that shit with the president’s assassin being an FBI informant is fucked up.
Being Afro-Caribbean myself, I would have rather been in Haiti in 1805 as an ex-slave than elsewhere in the Caribbean as a slave.
@racuna