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February 19, 2010
Haiti And Main Stream Media Immigration Enthusiasm: Nothing New
By Joe
Guzzardi
On the immigration beat, which I have
covered for nearly a quarter of a century, some things never
change.
Among them are
Haiti,
the
New
York Times and its
advocacy journalism that knows no limits.
One thing that helps me in my column
writing is that despite my headlong slog into old age, my memory
remains pretty good when it comes to the most outrageous
violations of journalism ethics.
Following the Haiti earthquake, and the
non-stop efforts of the Main Stream Media to open America to
an unlimited number of Haitians,
I recalled an article published in the
New York Times Magazine
on June 18, 2000.
Titled
“Desperate Passage,” it’s the tale told by then-National
Geographic contributing editor Michael Finkel’s and
Times photographer
Chris Anderson’s journey from
Haiti to the United States with 46 other Haitian passengers
on a 23 feet long boat powered only by two sails. [Desperate
Passage, by Michael Finkel,
New York Times Magazine,
June 18, 2000(PDF)]
[VDARE.com
note: Paul Nachman met
Finkel in 2006. See
Speaking Up In A
"Nation of Immigrants"
Audience]
The Haitian’s mission was the same in 2000
as it is today: “to start a new life”
in America.
At the time, according to
Finkel, Haiti was suffering through an
unusually acute economic crisis. More than 80 percent of the
population lived in
“abject conditions” with the annual per capita income
hovering around $250. Only one in 50 Haitians had a job.
In February 2000,
the
State Department released the results of a survey conducted
in nine Haitian cities. According to the findings, two-thirds of
Haitians—then approximately 4,690,000 people—would leave
Haiti
if given the means and opportunity.
Most would have had to go illegally, however,
since each year the United States issued about 10,000
immigration visas to Haitian
citizens, fulfilling one-fifth of 1 percent of the estimated
demand.
Early into Finkel’s article, at least one
of his major points was clear: the U.S. needed to
issue more
visas to Haitians.
Before going further with my analysis of
Finkel’s article, let me point out the obvious that during the
elapsed decade
nothing at
all has changed in
Haiti. In ten years, Haitian
living conditions haven’t improved and the desire to get out is
unabated.
Nevertheless, Finkel provided important
insights into the depth of corruption involved in getting
Haitians to
America.
Typically, a successful journey is made in
two parts. In the first, a boat sails from Haiti to the Bahamas.
Before continuing for Florida,
passengers normally work for several months cleaning
hotel rooms
or picking crops to save the $3,000 for 90-minute the
power boat trip from the
Bimini Islands to
Broward Beach. These boats are often piloted by
unscrupulous Americans who are drawn by the high pay rate
for the limited time involved.
Only the fortunate make it all the way to
Florida.
Sometimes on the first leg, the ship’s
captain merely takes his travelers once around the Haitian side
of Hispaniola, drops them in a
deserted area and proclaims that they’ve landed in the Bahamas.
The less lucky are left to fend for
themselves in an uninhabited part of Haiti while the least lucky are dumped into the Atlantic Ocean shortly
after departure and abandoned to drown.
To facilitate his trip, Finkel hired
“David” for $30 daily
to act as his translator and guide.
As it happened, David had been to
America
before. His mother had been issued a visa and she immediately
summoned her three sons and her sister to
Naples, Florida.
Given an opportunity to pursue
“a better life,”
here’s what David did with it:
- Soon
after David’s mother died (of
AIDS),
he “fell into bad
company” and at age 17 spent nine months in jail for
stealing a car.
- At 19,
he served another stretch of a year and five days for
selling
marijuana that finally got him deported.
- In
Naples, David’s friends had called him
“Six-Four,” a
nickname he said, he earned because of his penchant for
stealing
1964 Chevy Impalas.
David confided to Finkel that if he ever
returned to Naples
he would be compelled to revert to his
“Six-Four” persona in
order to
afford the cost of Florida living.
The Finkel-David tale continued.
After numerous delays in the launch time,
“Captain Gilbert”
finally appeared, assured his passengers that they would have
ample supplies for their trip and that, with favorable winds,
they would arrive safely within four days. At the most, Gilbert
predicted, the trip would take eight days.
With good reason, Finkel was concerned about
his comfort. The boat’s mast was a thin pine with no safety
gear, no maps, no life rafts, no
tool kit and no nautical instruments of any type save for an
ancient compass. The deck boards were misaligned.
With the exception of the hold, there was
no shelter from the elements.
Gilbert readily offered up the chilling
fact that he had personally built the boat in three weeks, at a
cost of $4,000.
David added to an increasingly nervous Finkel
that in Haitian-style boat building,
nails are pulled from other craft, hammered straight and reused.
Shortly after Finkel,
Anderson and the prospective
illegal aliens set sail, everything went wrong. The boat pitched
violently. Water immediately came through the cracks. The sound
of vomiting and
voodoo prayers surrounded Finkel.
The same bucket used to retch into, once a
margarine container, also served as a portable toilet.
Eighteen hours after the journey began, the
U.S. Coast Guard intercepted the vessel. Of the 450 miles from
Haiti to the
Bahamas, only 30 had been
covered.
A Coast Guard
official said that even under the best of circumstances,
given the vessel’s rickety condition, the Bahamas were ten days
away and that the passengers would begin to die within 48 hours.
In the end, all 44 Haitians were flown to
Nassau for interviews with the United Nations High Commission
for Refugees. None qualified. They were then returned to Port-au-Prince.
Once back in Haiti, David claimed that he is through trying to
reach America
but will instead illegally immigrate to the Dominican Republic
where he’ll sell trinkets to tourists.
In his final paragraphs, Finkel concludes
that given the extraordinary number of people fleeing
Haiti
on
marginal sailboats, it’s probable that there are several
hundred unrecorded deaths each year.
That’s unquestionably true. Finkel’s story is
replete with references to previously botched trips that
involved fatalities. And the
New York Times’
extensive archive of
Haitian stories offers dozens of
additional examples.
Finkel’s conclusion and the message that he
wanted to convey to his readers: since thousands of Haitians are
willing to die to get to America, therefore
U.S. immigration policy must be
more accepting.
Personally, I came away with a completely
different solution. If the U.S.
enforced its immigration laws and actively pursued and
deported Haitian aliens living in
America, eventually
no one
would get on a boat because there would be no
“better life” waiting for them.
The United States
would no longer be perceived as a Haitian haven.
In the interim, the brutal practice of
Haitians preying on Haitians would also end.
The Haitian immigration tragedy is further
evidence of the immorality of America’s non-enforcement status
quo, which tempts people to risk their lives because the prize
if they can get here is so great.
A footnote of interest: in early 2002, the
NYT discovered that
Finkel had
falsified certain details in his story
“Is Youssouf Malé a Slave?” by creating a composite
character whose actions could not be verified. As a result of
its original investigation, the
NYT reviewed six other
Finkel stories including
Desperate Passage.
The only factual error it uncovered: the boat
was not sinking of its own accord, as Finkel reported, but the
Coast Guard accelerated its sinking to
“protect shipping lanes.”
But the
NYT did not comment on
Finkel’s larger error of missing the consequences of America’s
failed immigration policy.
Joe Guzzardi
[email
him] is a California native
who recently fled the state because of over-immigration,
over-population and a rapidly deteriorating quality of life. He
has moved to Pittsburgh, PA where the air is clean and the
growth rate stable. A
long-time instructor in English at the Lodi Adult School,
Guzzardi has been writing a weekly column since 1988. It
currently appears in the
Lodi News-Sentinel. |