The time has come to put an end to the political confusion that has paralyzed Haiti for far too long. How can someone who claims to be of the left in Haiti align ideologically with the Kremlin, without a hint of shame, while simultaneously claiming to fight against imperialism?
This glaring contradiction exposes the emptiness of a pseudo-progressive discourse, imported and detached from the realities of the nation.
Many criticize the West while sending their children to study in Europe, having their wives give birth in Canada, and parking their savings in American banks. These contradictions, rooted in hypocrisy and dependency, reveal the absence of a genuine national vision and the moral bankruptcy of a political elite lacking firm ideological roots.
B. The Irrationality of a Left Without a Plan.-
The Haitian left has long claimed to defend the people, yet it has never managed to construct a sustainable development project or an economic emancipation strategy.
Its speeches have become empty incantations, and its slogans instruments of manipulation to keep the people in poverty and emotional dependence.
Scientifically speaking, Haiti’s economic data illustrate the failure of this stance:
* Between 1990 and 2020, GDP per capita declined by over 25%;
* The rate of extreme poverty exceeds 58%, according to the World Bank;
* The country relies on imports for nearly 70% of its food, due to the absence of a national production policy.
Meanwhile, self-proclaimed “leftists” celebrate foreign ideologies without ever producing a coherent Haitian model. The result is tragic: a country without direction, without faith, without political backbone.
C. Russia and the Geopolitical Illusion.-
It is imperative to clarify a major error: President Vladimir Putin is not a leftist.
The Kremlin operates under an authoritarian nationalist logic, not popular socialism. Aligning with Moscow in the name of alleged “anti-Western” solidarity reflects a profound intellectual confusion.
Today’s Haiti neither has the means nor the interest to become a pawn in the ideological wars of global powers. The true challenge is not to “flee the West,” but to build a strong, sovereign, and sustainable Haiti capable of engaging as an equal with all nations.
D. The Real Issue: Absence of Vision and Moral Collapse.-
Haiti does not suffer from excessive foreign imperialism, but from a deficit of national vision.
It is because elites have replaced critical thinking with imitation, and political science with militant rhetoric, that the country has sunk into instability and dependence.
Rather than investing in education, research, technology, or sustainable agriculture, leaders have preferred to maintain ideological clientelism. The result: a demoralized people, a youth without guidance, and a nation without a collective project.
E. Haitian Renaissance: From Ideological Confusion to the Humanist Dessalinian Right.-
Haiti does not need lost ideologues or populists serving foreign powers. It needs a national doctrine rooted in the visionary spirit of Emperor Jean-Jacques Dessalines, adapted to the contemporary demands of sustainable development and social justice.
This is the vision of the Humanist Dessalinian Right, a political and philosophical doctrine initiated by Yvon Bonhomme, proposing a complete refoundation of the Haitian model.
Far from the sterile foreign divisions, this doctrine places humans, national production, sovereignty, women, and youth at the heart of the national project.
Under this banner, the political party Patriyòt Rasanble pou Sov Lakay (PARASOL) launches its monumental program, “Renaissance (Leave No One Behind)”, structured around Thirteen Commandments — a true roadmap for the Second Republic.
This program offers a holistic approach to development — economic, ecological, spiritual, and institutional — in which every Haitian becomes an active participant in national reconstruction.
Thus, in the face of the contradictions of a Haitian left without bearings and an elite seeking refuge in Moscow or Washington, the Humanist Dessalinian Right represents a return to coherence, responsibility, and enlightened popular sovereignty.
It is this path — neither servile capitalist nor dependent pseudo-socialist — that can restore Haiti to its historical grandeur, social balance, and continental destiny.
Signed:
Yvon BONHOMME
Stoic, Engaged Researcher, Feminist,
President-Founder of PARASOL – Patriyòt Rasanble pou Sove Lakay,
Former Director General, Ministry of Haitians Living Abroad (MHAVE),
Initiator and Architect of the Dessalinian Right Doctrine,
Founder of the Madan Sara Movement.

