The CPT and Allies, Calmly Say, "Let the Chips Fall Where They May!"

As Haiti crashes against an iceberg of violence—with nearly 7,000 deaths in one year, 1 million displaced, devastated communities, nearly 5 million starving, decimated businesses, and countless others forced into bankruptcy in an economy that has been in depression for six years, where tears, blood, sorrow, rage, despair, and uncertainty are the promises of tomorrow—the CPT calmly says, "let the ship sail," an expression that first appeared around 1450-1500 in La Farce de Maître Mimin.

As Haiti crashes against an iceberg of violence—with nearly 7,000 deaths in one year, 1 million displaced, devastated communities, nearly 5 million starving, decimated businesses, and countless others forced into bankruptcy in an economy that has been in depression for six years, where tears, blood, sorrow, rage, despair, and uncertainty are the promises of tomorrow—the CPT calmly says, "let the ship sail," an expression that first appeared around 1450-1500 in La Farce de Maître Mimin.

Despite this disas

Si vous avez déjà créé un compte, connectez-vous pour lire la suite de cet article.

Pas encore de compte ? Inscrivez-vous