Posted on 01/23/2018 8:14:52 PM PST by libh8er
We have beautiful golf courses here, Mr. President, one man says. Please come cheat on them. One woman sends a message of love to Americas leader: Oprah, we love you!
OBrien even found a Norwegian immigrant who lives in Haiti. I would like to immigrate to the USA, she says, after 2020.
(Excerpt) Read more at thedailybeast.com ...
What a D. A.
Conan should concern himself with checking his White privilege.
Another libtard celeb to boycott. Yawn.
Conan is a Brookline power bottom.
Sophomoric street theater is all they got.
Release the memo.
If the Red Cross ever excluded you from donating blood because your country was grouped with active homosexuals and needle-sharing drug users as an unacceptable risk for infectious diseases, you might come from a s*hole.

Haitians' Haiti
Notice there are no trees on the hill behind Conan. If memory serves me, they stripped them bare.
I don’t wish him death, but it wouldn’t hurt my feelings one bit if he picked up a parasite...or twenty.
Better make that after 2024.
I was right. Look at Google maps of Haiti / Dominican Republic
They stripped it bare.
Idiot Conan.
Of course Multi-millionaire Conan O’Brien stayed in one of the Haiti s—thole’s best places. So what did he prove?
Out of touch elitist a-hole. Well, I guess if it’s such a paradise....they don’t need any more of our money.
Time to Make Comedy Funny Again.
Listen, everybody under the sun knows that this place is a (**&^ hole. Wealthy people can go anywhere and find paradise for the right price like private mansions or exclusive resorts etc.
Look at Thailand. It’s utter poverty and child prostitution and yet the wealthy around the world vacation there because of the beach resorts made for them.
Lets pull some stats shall we?
Crime rates in Haiti:
Level of crime 73.21 High
Problem people using or dealing drugs 66.07 High
Problem property crimes such as vandalism and theft 75.00 High
Problem violent crimes such as assault and armed robbery 73.08 High
Problem corruption and bribery 89.29 Very High
Education:
The Haitian Educational System yields the lowest total rate in the education realm of the Western Hemisphere.[3] Haiti’s literacy rate of about 61%
Poverty Rate:
The national poverty rate is 58.6 percent, the extreme poverty rate: 24.7 percent.
Economic condition:
In Haiti the average annual per capita income is about $350. About 37% of the.
population live in urban areas and their income averages $409 per year.
Disease:
With an estimated 150,000 people living with HIV/AIDS in 2016 (or an approximately 2.1 percent prevalence rate among adults aged 1549), Haiti has the most overall cases of HIV/AIDS in the Caribbean and its HIV prevalence rates among the highest percentage-wise in the region.
HEALTH ISSUES
Haiti has suffered significant environmental degradation, contributing to poor sanitation and water quality. As a result, various public health risks exist for Haitians and for people traveling to Haiti.
Vaccine-Preventable Diseases
All people traveling to Haiti should be up-to-date on routine vaccinations, including seasonal influenza and booster doses to protect against tetanus and diphtheria. Diphtheria is endemic in Haiti, and the number of reported cases has increased in recent years.
Additionally, hepatitis A vaccine and typhoid are strongly recommended, especially if travelers are staying with friends or relatives or visiting smaller cities or rural areas. Providers should also consider administering hepatitis B vaccine. Rabies affects Haiti more than any other nation in the Americas.
Prevention efforts have decreased the number of human cases of rabies transmitted by dogs, but deaths continue to be reported in Haiti. Rabies vaccination is recommended for travelers anticipating contact with animals.
Yellow fever vaccination is required for people traveling from countries where the disease is endemic. Although extremely rare in travelers, cholera is a possible risk in parts of Haiti.
Cholera vaccine is recommended for adult travelers visiting areas with cholera activity within the last year that are prone to recurrence of cholera epidemics.
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