As the years go by
I find myself reflecting more and more on what I have experienced and seen over the years living and working in the 7 countries I was fortunate enough to have experienced, with the languages, cultures, and food of those countries. The conclusion I came to, is that we are all the same, and have the same objectives in life, no matter where we live, what language we speak, or what skin color, we all have the same problems, issues, worries, and illnesses. The only thing that separates us from one another is the language we speak, the distance between us, and the governments that decide our well-being!
The Administration’s FY2018 foreign assistance request would have reduced funding for every country and regional program in Latin America and the Caribbean.
The FY2018 request included $460 million to continue the U.S. Strategy for Engagement in Central America, which would have been a $240 million (34%) cut compared to FY2017. The strategy is designed to address the underlying conditions driving irregular migration from Central America by promoting good governance, economic prosperity, and improved security. The request included $46.3 million for El Salvador (a 36% reduction), $80.7 million for Guatemala (a 43% reduction), $67.9 million for Honduras (a 29% reduction), and $2 million combined for Belize, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, and Panama (a 90% reduction). It also included $263.2 million for the Central America Regional Security Initiative (CARSI; a 20% reduction). The request would have shifted the balance of aid for Central America toward security efforts and away from governance and economic growth programs. ????
Colombia
would remain the single largest recipient of U.S. assistance in Latin America and the Caribbean under the Administration’s FY2018 request; however, aid would have fallen to $251.4 million—a $135 million (35%) reduction compared to FY2017. Colombia has received significant amounts of U.S. assistance to support counternarcotics and counterterrorism efforts since FY 2000. The FY2018 request included funds to support the implementation of Colombia’s new counternarcotics strategy, including eradication and interdiction efforts. The request also included funds to support the implementation of the Colombian government’s peace accord with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) by fostering reconciliation within Colombian society, expanding state presence to regions historically under FARC control, and supporting rural economic development in marginalized communities.
Haiti,
which has received high levels of aid for many years as a result of its significant development challenges, would have remained the second-largest recipient of U.S. assistance in the region in FY2018 under the Administration’s request. U.S. assistance increased significantly after Haiti was struck by a massive earthquake in 2010 but has gradually declined from those elevated levels. The Administration’s FY2018 request would have provided $157.5 million to Haiti to improve food security, foster economic and educational opportunities, develop the rule of law, and address health challenges—particularly HIV/AIDS. This would have been a $27 million (15%) cut compared to FY2017.
Mexico
would have received $87.7 million of assistance under the FY2018 request, which would have been a $51 million (37%) cut compared to FY2017. Mexico traditionally had not been a major U.S. aid recipient due to its middle-income status, but it began receiving larger amounts of assistance through the Mérida Initiative in 2008.
After reading these facts I ask myself?
“What happened to all that money?”
As you can see from the list above, the United States supports most of the countries where these people are leaving to gain entrance to the United States, besides supporting and subsidizing the countries they come from they now expect to enter the US and take advantage of all the social benefits that a legally admitted immigrant or refugee, after waiting for months, sometimes for years, would receive?!
These people are not leaving their country because of war, turmoil, or social unrest, they are leaving because their government is unable to provide them with jobs, security, and social benefits, because the government can’t control, root out, and abolish the drug lords and gangs causing these people to leave in the first place, and because the governments are corrupt.
It is a shame the human race is unable to recognize and appreciate the miracles, the creation of life, and all the beauty of this planet, from one continent to another, the miracles of our creations and how the planet provides us, the human race, with water and food to survive. Only for the human race to screw it all up because of hate, greed, and power.
I don’t have the solution,
no one else has one, and even if there was a solution, it wouldn’t change the way this human race is living and behaving on this planet of ours.
After seeing and experiencing just some of the world’s issues, I decided to give my humble opinion about it, which some of you probably don’t agree with, or you may have another point of view, that I would love to hear 0f.
I love North America,
where I spent 40 years of my life and I love my native country Switzerland as well, where most of my family members live, but I realized that the further you are from where you started the closer you get to where you belong!
That is why I am back to where I started, here in Switzerland, watching it all unfold for the remaining time of my life.
My contribution to this planet can only be a tiny part, such as cleaning the lakeside in my home state of contaminating, harmful stuff, teaching my grandson to treat his environment with respect, and writing articles and blogs that may reach an audience to create awareness, and hopefully make a few people take part and contributing, making the planet a better place for future and our kids.
Yours truly Ulrich Koepf