Some convoluted logic there, Vacara. So much so that I don't know where to start my rebuttal. There is so much to rebut and so little time. Is your tactic to overwhelm with ridiculous assertions, or is that just a naturally occurring by-product of illogic and disinformation?
You seem to trying to validate your argument by applying terminology in a very abstract context, sort of like fitting a square peg in a round hole.
For example, yes, Trujillo was in power for 31 years, and yes, that makes him unique. However, that uniqueness is what made him common-place. In other words, his reign displaced, in theory, approximately 8 four-year term presidents. Moreover, his power increased exponentially with each passing year, which made him far more influential (again, in a very negative way) than those theoretical 8 presidents would have ever been.
I though unique & common were mutually exclusive but beat me, I'm not from the greater Massachusetts area.
You also attempt to negate, or excuse, his atrocities with a power-point presentation of his "magnanimous" program of public works, and his establishment of a so-called "stable" society.
You stated that Trujillo's influence was worse than all of the others Dominicans presidents combined, in order to rebuttal that statement I have to show you all the benefits he was able to provide the country or I'll be defeating the purpose of the post, so don't complain when you read my list of his accomplishment. Even so, that can hardly qualify as an attempt to excuse his atrocities, since when calling Trujillo a "cold blooded murderer capable of killing his mother" qualify as an "excuse" for his crimes?
If stability that is based on the elimination of political opponents and ruling by terror and intimidation is the desired outcome, than I suppose you could include Hitler, Stalin, Mussolini, Franco, Castro, and a few others in your list of "great leaders"
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Please Catcherine, leave the
straw man arguments outside of the discussion cuz that's not going to help anybody, again you are misquoting me, I never said Trujillo was a "great leader" but nobody can negate the fact that when it comes to infrastructure he did more than all the others presidents combined and that right outside the gate defeats your statement regarding his influence.
Trujillo did plenty of wrong, but so did the others, he treated the country as his backyard but took care of it like no other before him. In 1930, with an illiteracy rate higher than 70% DR was not the right place for democracy and the only way to create the political stability that would enable the productive sectors of the nation to start moving was with a government like his.
Regarding your list of great leaders; Hitler lasted only 12 years of which 6 witnessed the bloodiest war the world have ever seen, plus he destroyed Germany so no he didn't bring any stability. Stalin lets see..........killing more than 40 million people with famine and repression can't be called stability either. Mussolini was the "chavez" of Europe at that time, this clown had a chance of going into WWII with the allied but choose Hitler instead and you know the results, his invasion of Africa probably cost the Axis the war and I personally hate him cuz due to his policies today the catholic church has a budget of half a trillion dollars anually, so no stability there either.
Francisco Franco, I don't see how taking a country from the horrors of a civil war and putting it on the road to become one of the richest in the world and a very solid democracy can not be called stability. Try as you might but you won't be able to make a case of the contrary, and yes he was a great leader.
Fidel Castro, for the life of me I never though I'd see the day when somebody who sympathize with the Haitian cause would bash the guy who put and end to the disrespect and abuses Haitians were being subjected to by the Machados and Batistas of this world, including -but not limited to- the deportation of what some estimates 100,000 Haitians from Cuba, being put in a boat without telling them where they were going and not even providing them with water or food (the Haitian ambassador stole the money), can anybody say "gratitude"?.
A number of those Haitian deportee ended up in DR, it was 1937 so you know what happened. I wonder if you rather have Machado or Batista than Fidel?
Your last contradiction is the most absurd, if that is possible. Simply having the support of corrupt government officials in Haiti, at that time, does not justify the actions Trujillo took against Haitians. One corrupt government paying off another corrupt government is not a high-point of international diplomacy.
Do I see a pattern here? again you are making an argument for me I never intended to. The fact that Trujillo got plenty, way more than plenty political, economic support from the Haitian government does not justify his crimes against humanities, but with new evidence coming out everyday this Trujillo's legacy is a baby Haitians gonna have to pay child support for, Haitians are responsible in more ways than it is genetically possible for Trujillo's regime.
Take a careful look at this picture, can you say by the look of it that the man on the left had just ordered the massacre of thousands of countrymen of the man on the right?, Is there words to describe how much perversity is contained in this image?
Did you know that Jhonny Abbes Garcia, director of Trujillo's secret service and responsible for the death of hundreds of Dominicans was receiving money directly from the Haitian government?
Did you know that Trujillo's fortune, calculated at about 500 millions dollars probably wouldn't have been possible without the help of the Haitian government?.
Did you know that while Dominicans were risking their life to bring down the tyranny Stenio Vincent was rounding up Trujillo's political opponents and giving them to the regime at the border?. This Stenio Vincent is the same one who worked with Trujillo to cover up the massacre of 1937 and later accepted peanuts money as compensation, effectively beheading the momentum by the international community to get rid of Trujillo. Just think for a minute the benefits of having Angel Morales as president of DR in 1937, and with Balaguer and Bosch 30 years younger competing to run the country, no time for Trujillo to instigate his racial propaganda and hatred bet. the two countries.
Trujillo killed thousands of Haitians, but Stenio Vincent killed the aspirations of millions of dominicans to have a better life and better political condition.